Archive for astronomy and astrophysics

Astronomy seminar kicks off

An initiative to demystify the two complex disciplines for children began at the Tamil Nadu Science and Technology Centre on Saturday. The event, a three-day summer school on astronomy and astrophysics, commenced here which was attended by as many as 70 students from various city schools. The children were from classes VII, VIII and IX.    Visiting scientist at the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, K S V S Narasimhan held the audience, the bundle of energy that were the children, in a trance as he went about explaining the concept.

Article source: http://newindianexpress.com/cities/chennai/Astronomy-seminar-kicks-off/2013/05/14/article1588561.ece

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Across the Zooniverse – keeping an eye on citizen astronomy

Amateur astronomers in Russia made a discovery last week any professional would envy – it seems they may have identified the remnants of the ill-fated Soviet Mars 3 lander, 30 years after it lost contact with Earth.

Photos taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) in 2007 show what appears to be the parachute, heat shield, and retrorocket of the Mars 3 lander.

But finding object as small as an 11-metre-wide parachute on the surface of Mars takes a lot of work, especially as the most promising photo contains 1.2 billion pixels and requires 2,500 computer screens to view the entire image at full resolution.

This is the most recent example of how citizen science is blossoming – and getting results – within the field of astronomy.

There is a wealth of amateurs who pursue backyard observations as a hobby and their efforts make headlines worldwide.

Some have historically contributed to science by finding comets, tracking asteroids, the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) program, and monitoring stars.

One of the most visible citizen-science projects in astronomy and astrophysics is the “Zooniverse” which invites members of the public to analyse data ranging from determining the shape of galaxies to trying to detect if any planets outside our solar system orbit stars.

The Galaxy Zoo

The Zooniverse project grew out of the Galaxy Zoo project which was set up to determine the shape, or morphology, of galaxies.

Galaxy shape is a useful visual indicator to professional astronomers about the state of the galaxy and the physical processes which may be going on inside it.

While there are many types of galaxy shapes, bright galaxies usually fall into one of three categories:

- spiral
- elliptical
- irregular

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey, an internationally funded project to map the sky, photographed and mapped more than 930,000 galaxies over eight years.

Faced with an overwhelming amount of data to sift through, astronomers conceived of the Galaxy Zoo idea to ask the general public for help to look through all the data and classify the shapes of galaxies.

Since this requires little background knowledge, any member of the public can help so long as they have an internet connection.

Using a simple, clickable interface, users can say whether galaxies are rounded, have spiral arms, have any unusual or distinguishing features, or whether they want to discuss the objects in more detail.

This is especially important in a data-rich field like astronomy: users can sometimes be the first human being to actually look at a galaxy since most of the processing of the images they examine have been done by computers.

Getting the numbers up

For all the excellent work done by the general public, there will still be disagreement about the exact classification of galaxy shapes – and this, fundamentally, raises questions about data integrity.

This is why the Galaxy Zoo project aims to have at least 20 people attempt to classify each galaxy.

To use the data in professional research, astronomers have to look for disagreements between members of the general public.

Taking a threshold level is one way to solve the problem. If, say, 80% of respondents say a galaxy is a particular shape, that is a reasonable way forward and is perfectly suitable for some analysis purposes.

The cost of this may be that there is a high number of “unclassified” galaxies where there is large disagreement, perhaps caused by very few individuals having looked at a galaxy.

And the results are …

There have been a healthy number of scientific publications arising from the Galaxy Zoo project team, including the relationship between galaxy colour and environment and studies of highly unusual objects such as “Hanny’s Voorwerp” – a possible light echo from quasars (the brightest objects in the known universe).

In my own research, we recently used data from Galaxy Zoo to explore the connection between galaxy morphology, galaxy mass, and the likelihood of hosting an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) in a massive cluster of galaxies – a collection of gravitationally bound galaxies and one of the most extreme “environments” in which a galaxy can live.

We used the data to explain an earlier result that red and passive spiral galaxies are, in the majority, also massive and similar in nature to most of the massive elliptically shaped cluster galaxies.

We then inferred that the life cycle of high and low mass cluster galaxies are markedly different.

But we wouldn’t have been able to make these conclusions without the citizen scientists who classified the bulk of the data for us – something for which we are extremely appreciative.

And who knows? As shown by the Russian amateur astronomers sifting through NASA’s high-resolution photos, the next big astronomy discovery could be made by you.

Article source: http://www.sciencealert.com.au/opinions/20132204-24296-2.html

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Charles Lawrence to present Marker Lectures in Astronomy and Astrophysics

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Charles Lawrence, senior research scientist and principal scientist at the California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory, will present the Russell Marker Lectures in Astronomy and Astrophysics on April 22, 24 and 25, at the Penn State University Park campus. The lecture series includes a presentation intended for a general audience, “Measuring the Universe,” which will be held at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 25, in 101 Thomas Building. In the lecture, Lawrence will describe how astronomers are able to determine the fundamental properties of the universe such as its age, size, composition and expansion rate, with an emphasis on the recent advances made possible by large ground-based surveys and sophisticated space missions. In addition to the public lecture, Lawrence will give two specialized lectures on April 22 and 24, in S5 Osmond Laboratory. Both of these lectures will be held at 4 p.m. The Marker Lectures are sponsored by the Penn State Eberly College of Science.

Lawrence is the U.S. project scientist for the Planck satellite, a third-generation mission launched in 2009 that is investigating the cosmic microwave background — radiation produced only 370,000 years after the Big Bang. These observations, frequently described as “the photograph of the infant universe,” reveal the conditions present in the universe when it first became transparent to radiation. The initial cosmological results from Planck were released in March of 2013. Lawrence will describe these findings and place them in context to our current understanding of the cosmos.

After receiving a doctoral degree in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983, Lawrence moved to the California Institute of Technology. He has a wide range of research interests, including the properties of extragalactic radio sources, gravitational lensing and the cosmic microwave background. Since 1998 he has been the deputy project scientist for the Spitzer Space Telescope, a major NASA mission that studied infrared radiation. He also was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.

The Marker Lectures were established in 1984 through a gift from Penn State professor emeritus of chemistry Russell Earl Marker, whose pioneering synthetic methods revolutionized the steroid-hormone industry and opened the door to the current era of hormone therapies, including the birth-control pill. The Marker endowment allows the Penn State Eberly College of Science to present annual Marker Lectures in astronomy and astrophysics, the chemical sciences, evolutionary biology, genetic engineering, the mathematical sciences and physics.

For more information, contact Donald Schneider at 814-863-9554 or dps7@psu.edu, Peter Meszaros at nnp@psu.edu or Niel Brandt at nbrandt@astro.psu.edu. For access assistance, contact Laurie Dasher at 814-865-0418 or lad31@psu.edu.

Article source: http://news.psu.edu/story/272645/2013/04/11/academics/charles-lawrence-present-marker-lectures-astronomy-and

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Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee Meeting 1 March 2013

[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 33 (Tuesday, February 19, 2013)] [Notices] [Page 11685] From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov] [FR Doc No: 2013-03691]

NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION

Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee 13883; Notice of Meeting

In accordance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act (Pub. L. 92- 463, as amended), the National Science Foundation announces the following meeting:

Name: Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee (13883).

Date and Time: March 1, 2013 12:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m. EST.

Place: Teleconference National Science Foundation, Room 390, Stafford I Building, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22230.

Type of Meeting: Open.

Contact Person: Dr. James Ulvestad, Division Director, Division of Astronomical Sciences, Suite 1045, National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22230. Telephone: 703-292-8820.

Purpose of Meeting: To provide advice and recommendations to the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) on issues within the field of astronomy and astrophysics that are of mutual interest and concern to the agencies.

Agenda: To discuss the Committee’s draft annual report due 15 March 2013.

Dated: February 13, 2013. Susanne E. Bolton, Committee Management Officer. [FR Doc. 2013-03691 Filed 2-15-13; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 7555-01-P

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Article source: http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=43395

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Undergraduate astronomer helps people see star clusters

Undergraduate astronomer helps people see star clusters

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Blair Porterfield, a Penn State astronomy major, studies the light emitted by star clusters.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – When Blair Porterfield outgrew her local summer-camp options at age 14, her father suggested an astronomy camp at the University of Arizona. “I’m not sure why he wanted me to go,” Porterfield mused. “I hadn’t been interested in science at all up until that point.”

In a case of “father knows best,” astronomy camp couldn’t have been a more perfect choice. “After the first camp, I was absolutely hooked,” Porterfield said. “As soon as I got back home, I knew I wanted to be an astronomer. I knew what I wanted to do with my life.” She returned to the camp three more times, and each time her love for astronomy grew stronger.

By the time she turned 16 — the age at which she was expected to find a part-time job — Porterfield knew that only an astronomy-related job would suit her. She contacted family friend and Penn State professor of astronomy and astrophysics Mercedes Richards. Richards told her about an opportunity with NASA’s Swift satellite, whose science and flight operations are controlled by Penn State from the Mission Operations Center in State College, Pa.

Porterfield jumped at the opportunity. “The thought of being there when a gamma-ray burst goes off, and knowing about it before anybody else was so exciting to me,” she explained. Even when the work she was assigned wasn’t so dramatic, her enthusiasm didn’t wane. “I started out doing data mining,” Porterfield recalled. “It was pretty simple stuff. I hadn’t taken physics or calculus yet, and without that knowledge there wasn’t much I could do scientifically.”

But she’s come a long way in her six years on the job. Now a Penn State senior majoring in astronomy and astrophysics, Porterfield has collaborated on major research projects, and has co-authored nine published research papers. Most recently, she’s been working with Penn State research associate Michael Siegel, who leads the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) team. They’ve been using the data captured by the UVOT to study the light emitted by star clusters. Some of the results of their work recently were released in the form of a huge online image gallery — a collection of some of the best pictures ever taken by the UVOT, including some very early images that had never before been published.

“My job was to make visual representations of what these star clusters might look like if we could actually see them,” Porterfield explained. “We can’t actually see anything in the ultraviolet, but using the data from these star-cluster studies, we can assign a visible-light color to each of the three UV filters aboard Swift.” This process of matching visible-light colors with UV wavelengths emitted by the star cluster produces a “false color” image — an image that approximates how the star cluster looks to the telescope in a way that the human eye can see.

“Blair proved to have a flair for making color images from the UV data, so I just handed it over and let her run with it,” explained Siegel. “One of the most satisfying things about working with students is watching their progress. When Blair first worked for us, we mainly assigned her repetitive but straight-forward data analysis. Now she’s doing more complex work, and coming up with ideas and insights of her own.”

With graduation looming large, Porterfield is contemplating what comes next in her astronomy career. “I’m interested in getting a job as a telescope operator, although I don’t necessarily have a particular observatory in mind,” she said. “Any observatory would be pretty cool.”

 

 

 

Article source: http://live.psu.edu/story/63968

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Undergraduate astronomer helps people see star clusters

Undergraduate astronomer helps people see star clusters

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Blair Porterfield, a Penn State astronomy major, studies the light emitted by star clusters.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – When Blair Porterfield outgrew her local summer-camp options at age 14, her father suggested an astronomy camp at the University of Arizona. “I’m not sure why he wanted me to go,” Porterfield mused. “I hadn’t been interested in science at all up until that point.”

In a case of “father knows best,” astronomy camp couldn’t have been a more perfect choice. “After the first camp, I was absolutely hooked,” Porterfield said. “As soon as I got back home, I knew I wanted to be an astronomer. I knew what I wanted to do with my life.” She returned to the camp three more times, and each time her love for astronomy grew stronger.

By the time she turned 16 — the age at which she was expected to find a part-time job — Porterfield knew that only an astronomy-related job would suit her. She contacted family friend and Penn State professor of astronomy and astrophysics Mercedes Richards. Richards told her about an opportunity with NASA’s Swift satellite, whose science and flight operations are controlled by Penn State from the Mission Operations Center in State College, Pa.

Porterfield jumped at the opportunity. “The thought of being there when a gamma-ray burst goes off, and knowing about it before anybody else was so exciting to me,” she explained. Even when the work she was assigned wasn’t so dramatic, her enthusiasm didn’t wane. “I started out doing data mining,” Porterfield recalled. “It was pretty simple stuff. I hadn’t taken physics or calculus yet, and without that knowledge there wasn’t much I could do scientifically.”

But she’s come a long way in her six years on the job. Now a Penn State senior majoring in astronomy and astrophysics, Porterfield has collaborated on major research projects, and has co-authored nine published research papers. Most recently, she’s been working with Penn State research associate Michael Siegel, who leads the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) team. They’ve been using the data captured by the UVOT to study the light emitted by star clusters. Some of the results of their work recently were released in the form of a huge online image gallery — a collection of some of the best pictures ever taken by the UVOT, including some very early images that had never before been published.

“My job was to make visual representations of what these star clusters might look like if we could actually see them,” Porterfield explained. “We can’t actually see anything in the ultraviolet, but using the data from these star-cluster studies, we can assign a visible-light color to each of the three UV filters aboard Swift.” This process of matching visible-light colors with UV wavelengths emitted by the star cluster produces a “false color” image — an image that approximates how the star cluster looks to the telescope in a way that the human eye can see.

“Blair proved to have a flair for making color images from the UV data, so I just handed it over and let her run with it,” explained Siegel. “One of the most satisfying things about working with students is watching their progress. When Blair first worked for us, we mainly assigned her repetitive but straight-forward data analysis. Now she’s doing more complex work, and coming up with ideas and insights of her own.”

With graduation looming large, Porterfield is contemplating what comes next in her astronomy career. “I’m interested in getting a job as a telescope operator, although I don’t necessarily have a particular observatory in mind,” she said. “Any observatory would be pretty cool.”

 

 

 

Article source: http://live.psu.edu/story/63968

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Celestia – The Astronomy and Astrophysics Club of BITS Goa



Celestia is the Astronomy and Astrophysics club of BITS Pilani Goa Campus and no, they are not a a group of students who simply strain their necks looking at nothing in particular in the night sky, as is the popular perception. They are an extremely talented and dedicated bunch whose sole aim is to promote astronomy and astrophysics in the the campus. The club which has members across all years is on a never ending quest to find answers to: What is the cosmos?
Why are we here? Why is the cosmos the way it is? and other such fundamental questions.

The Club, which was formed in 2009, periodically organizes Lectures Guest Talks by eminent physicists scientists from IUCAA, TIFR, NASA, ISRO, CERN. Apart from this it also holds observational tours. In spring of 2012, the club organized its first all night star observation session in collaboration with AFA (Association for Friends of Astronomy) in Goa. To themselves update about regular developments in the field, they also have a Student Lecture Series- where members of the club take lectures on current topics of their own interests like quantum tunneling , Meisser objects, Einstein equations, dark matter dark energy,etc. To its credit the club organized one of its mega events Storming Aurora on 18th November this year on campus where eminent researchers like Dr Dan Werthimer, co- founder of SETI (Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence), Dr Urvashi Rao, Assistant Scientist at National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO)-New Mexico, Prof. Subhendra Mohanty, professor at the Physical Research Laboratory-Ahmedabad, Dr Ramesh Koul (HOD Astrophysics, BARC), Pushkar Vaidya-head of IARC (Indian Astrobiology Research Centre), Niruj Mohan Ramanujam-from the team which controls the GMRT (Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope) near Pune, spoke about their fields of interest. To know more about Storming Aurora refer to this article.

Celestia recently uncovered its very first astronomy astrophysics based magazine which is now live on Scribd called – “Cosmic Times”, a copy of which is available in the library. An online copy is also available for download: http://www.scribd.com/doc/113779560/Cosmic-Times

Do visit Celestia’s official website: http://celestiaclub.org/ for more updates and to appreciate the great scientific fervor and dedication shown by this group of thinkers.

Article source: http://www.coolage.in/2012/12/25/celestia-the-astronomy-and-astrophysics-club-of-bits-goa/

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McGill researchers explore big questions about universe

A research team led by McGill University Physics Prof. Alexander Maloney is among the winners of the New Frontiers in Astronomy and Cosmology International Grant and Essay Competition who will present their winning proposals and essays in a joint conference Oct. 12 and 13 at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.

The competition, led by Donald G. York, the Horace B. Horton Professor in Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Chicago, will award more than $4 million in research grants to 20 scientists and more than $200,000 to 21 student essayists worldwide.

The funds were provided through a grant from the John Templeton Foundation to encourage scientists and students across the globe to explore fundamental, big questions in astronomy and cosmology that engage groundbreaking ideas on the nature of the universe.

The amount of the award for the McGill team led by Maloney is $180,000 (U.S.), which will be used to fund postdoctoral researchers and graduate students. Along with his co-investigators at McGill – professors Robert Brandenberger (Physics), Johannes Walcher (Mathematics and Statistics and Physics) and Patrick Hayden (Computer Science) – Maloney will address basic conceptual problems at the interface of quantum physics and cosmology.

“Through these awards, the New Frontiers program aims to support bold, innovative research with the potential to expand boundaries and catalyze breakthrough discoveries, as well as inspire students to pursue scientific knowledge and become original, forward-looking big question thinkers of tomorrow,” York said.

The program invited research proposals addressing four big questions that have potential to expand the boundaries and deepen the foundation of scientific inquiry:

+ What was the earliest state of the universe?
+ Is our universe unique or is it part of a much larger universe?
+ What is the origin of the complexity in the universe?
+ Are we alone in the universe? Or, are there other life and intelligence beyond the solar system?
Prof. Maloney’s team at McGill aims to answer two sub-questions related to the earliest state of the universe:

+ What are the scientific ways to test various theories of the earliest state of the universe?
+ If space and time are not fundamental in the deepest scientific description of the universe, how did they emerge?

“Current models of cosmology based on Einstein’s theory of general relativity successfully describe many features of our universe at its largest scales. Yet they fail to describe the dynamics of the universe at very early times where a quantum theory of gravity becomes necessary,” Maloney notes.

“Finding answers to these questions will advance scientists’ understanding of the quantum structure of space-time in cosmological settings, of the emergence of structure from the Big-Bang singularity and of the measurable and observable implications of quantum cosmology.”

Article source: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/McGill_researchers_explore_big_questions_about_universe_999.html

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OAD Shoots for the Stars

The International Astronomical Union’s (IAU) Office of Astronomy for Development (OAD) programme is announcing a number of exciting new partnerships that will assist with the IAU’s decadal strategic plan, aimed at realising the societal benefits of astronomy. These landmark decisions involve establishing two new coordinating centres that use astronomy as a tool for development in the East and South East Asian regions, as well as launching an array of exciting programmes and events with different institutions across the world.

The first of these pioneering agreements, concerning a coordinating centre to be established in the East Asian region (in China), was signed on Tuesday 21 August 2012 by a consortium of institutes: the Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics (KIAA, Peking University), Beijing Planetarium and Yunnan Astronomical Observatory.

The consortium is supported in their efforts by various important partners including the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC), the East Asian Core Observatories Association (EACOA), and Pyongyang Astronomical Observatory (PAO).

The centre will cover two important functions: a regional node, which will coordinate astronomy for development activities in countries within the general geographical region of East Asia, and a Language Expertise Centre, which will deal with all aspects relating to (mainly) Chinese language and culture.

A second regional node will be established in the South East Asian region (in Thailand) and coordinated by the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT).

These agreements are the first of their kind to be signed anywhere in the world. They follow the IAU’s Announcement of Opportunity that went out in January 2012, and which has attracted 31 letters of intent and 15 full proposals (received from every populated continent) to establish coordinating nodes.

In addition to these exciting announcements, the OAD, in partnership with The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP) has launched a call for proposals for a number of global activities aimed at using astronomy to stimulate high quality education and research at university level.

One of these activities is the Associate Scientists programme, where scientists and lecturers from developing regions, who are interested in using astronomy to develop university-level education in their home countries, will be provided with the means to travel to the ICTP in Italy and stay for a period of up to six weeks per year. Individual travel grants, funds for meetings and workshops as well as regional schools for young scientists are also included in this programme.

An additional agreement with the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA, based in Pune, India) will provide training for potential leaders in the development of astronomy education at university, school and public levels, as well as facilitate visits from skilled experts.

A separate agreement with the University of Central Lancashire will award 12 scholarships for their distance learning astronomy programme to African students.

These scholarships will target individuals who have demonstrated a potential to lead astronomy activities in their home countries and are in need of a professional qualification in the field.

These announcements are an important step towards cultivating the field of astronomy in developing regions and allowing them to benefit from it as a tool for development.

Anyone interested in submitting a proposal for any of the OAD programmes, including earlier initiatives (not mentioned in this release) relating to universities and research, children and schools and the public are invited to visit here.

Article source: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/OAD_Shoots_for_the_Stars_999.html

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Budget cuts threaten astronomical research

Posted on Aug 30, 2012 in Opinion

A new report from the Division of Astronomical Sciences of the National Science Foundation found that United States’ funding for ground-based astronomy could drop to as low as 50 percent of the projected budgets. Every decade, the astronomical community puts forward a review that identifies the most important astronomy and astrophysics research projects for the next decade and recommends new goals.

Due to budget cuts since the last review in 2010, the actual funding for astronomy has been much lower than that projected by the review. The 2012 budget was $45 million less than the review’s predictions, and the deficit is projected to grow to between $75 million and $100 million by 2014.

To cope with the reduced funding, the Division of Astronomical Sciences is recommending the closure of some iconic observatories including the Green Banks Telescope, the Very Long Baseline Array and four telescopes on Kitts Peak in Arizona.

The Green Banks Telescope is the world’s largest steerable radio telescope. It has returned many discoveries, including new millisecond pulsars and interstellar magnetic fields. The Very Long Baseline Array is a group of 10 radio telescopes scattered across the country. When operated simultaneously using interferometry to combine their observations, they become a single 8,600-mile diameter telescope with unparalleled resolution.

Funding cuts are not just the troubles of the United States. The English astronomy budget was also cut, and the United Kingdom’s Science and Technology Facilities Council will be closing down two of the oldest telescopes atop Mauna Kea, Hawaii. The United Kingdom Infrared Telescope will close in September 2013, followed by the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope a year later. All that would be needed to keep UKIRT operational is about $150,000 a year.

Funding for astronomy, though it may seem obscure and of little application to human life, is crucial for the survival of our species. A commonly overlooked fact of life is that the Earth is not a fortress, able to withstand cataclysms after cataclysm. It is rather a fragile greenhouse in the inhospitable darkness of space. Many forces threaten to destroy our home, ranging from asteroids on collision courses of the earth to the deadly gamma ray bursts from a nearby supernova.

It may seem that asteroids and gamma ray bursts are rare and will never strike Earth, but that view is only due to humanity’s extremely short existence. Approximately 65 million years ago an asteroid is said to have struck Earth, killing off approximately 75 percent of all species on Earth, including the dinosaurs. During the Great Dying 252 million years ago, a combination of asteroids and terrestrial factors caused over 96 percent of marine species and 70 percent of all terrestrial species to become extinct. During the Ordovician extinction 450 million years ago, a gamma-ray burst killed over 60 percent of all marine life.

Astronomy and astrophysics seek to understand the greater world around us. By understanding the inner workings of the universe, we will be better able to identify possible threats to our existence. If we can identify threats early, humanity will be able to prepare for and possibly avert certain extinction. However inapplicable astronomy funding seems to everyday life, it will one day ensure that everyday life will continue to exist.

Tianjlo Zhan
Staff Writer
tzhang@uab.edu
Continue reading “Budget cuts threaten astronomical research” »

Article source: http://studentmedia.uab.edu/2012/08/budget-cuts-threaten-astronomical-research/

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