Archive for postdoctoral researcher

Astronomer Finds Most Compact Planetary System Known

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

Scientists have found one particular planetary system that crams five planets into a region less than one twelfth the size of the Earth’s orbit.

Dr. Darin Ragozzine, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Florida, reported the team’s findings of KOI-500 at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society’s Division for Planetary Sciences. The planetary system is about 1,100 light-years away in the constellation Lyra, also called The Harp.

“All five planets zip around their star within a region 150 times smaller in area than the Earth’s orbit, despite containing more material than several Earths (the planets range from 1.3 to 2.6 times the size of the Earth). At this rate, you could easily pack in 10 more planets, and they would still all fit comfortably inside the Earth’s orbit,” Ragozzine said.

NASA’s Kepler mission has helped to discover these compact planetary systems by observing over 160,000 stars simultaneously, and identifying small dips in a star’s brightness. KOI-500 is the most compact planetary system found so far.

“From the architecture of this planetary system, we infer that these planets did not form at their current locations. The planets were originally more spread out and have ‘migrated’ into the ultra-compact configuration we see today,” said Ragozzine.

Theories for the formation of the large planets of the outer solar system involve planets moving during the formation process, and it is unclear how the inner planets in solar systems like our own avoided this fate.

Astronomers can use Kepler data to measure the sizes and orbits of the planets orbiting Sun-like stars more precisely than ever before.

Planets in KOI-500′s case are so closely together their mutual gravity pushes and pulls on their orbits, causing slight changes in the times that the planets pass in front of their host star.

Astronomers recently confirmed that the two candidates orbiting farthest from KOI-500 were actually planets.

Ragozzine’s work confirms additional planets and characterizing their masses and orbits. Ragozzine and his colleagues suggests that planetary migration helped to synchronize the planets.

“By precisely characterizing the delicate arrangement of planets in this extraordinarily crowded system, Kepler is providing insights into the formation of KOI-500 and other compact planetary systems,” said Eric Ford, an associate professor of astronomy at the University of Florida and a contributor to the study.

Ragozzine said KOI-500 is the most compact system of a new compact population of planets, and it will become a touchstone for future theories that will attempt to describe how compact planetary systems form.

“Learning about these systems will inspire a new generation of theories to explain why our solar system turned out so differently,” he said in a press release.

Article source: http://www.redorbit.com/news/space/1112713617/kepler-planetary-system-koi-500-101612/

Tags: , , , , , , <BR/>

Astronomers Observe Type 1a Supernova Progenitor System

Video: Binary Star System that Produces Recurrent Novae

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

For the first time, astronomers have observed a Type 1a supernova progenitor system, according to a report in the journal Science.

Previous evidence pointed to the merger of two white dwarf stars as the originators of other Type 1a supernovae. However, this new study led by Ben Dilday, a postdoctoral researcher in physics at UC Santa Barbara and at Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network (LCOGT), begs to differ.

The results are the first time astronomers have shown that at least some thermonuclear supernovae come from a recurrent nova.

The astronomers discovered supernova PTF 11kx in a galaxy 600 million light years away, which is actually pretty close in terms of astronomy.

The supernova was different, as its surrounding gas was moving too slowly to be from the supernova, but too fast to be a typical stellar wind.

Lars Bildsten, director of UCSB’s Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, believed it was material shot out from a previous nova eruption.  UCSB graduate student Kevin Moore performed calculations that proved Bildsten’s hypothesis to be plausible, and would lead to gas moving at speeds seen in the observations. Also, the fact that the material moved at two different speeds added weight to the theory.

New observations showed that supernova ejecta was smashing into the interior shell of material.

“This was the most exciting supernova I’ve ever studied,” Dilday said in a prepared statement. “For several months, almost every new observation showed something we’d never seen before.”

Although a Type 1a supernova is considered rare, the team said that finding a Type 1a progenitor system like PTF 11kx is even more rare.

“You maybe find one of these systems in a sample of 1,000 Type 1a supernovae,” said Peter Nugent, a senior scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a co-author on the paper.

The team used a robotic telescope mounted on the 48-inch Samuel Oschin Telescope at Palomar Observatory in southern California to scan the sky.

As observations were taken, the team detected the supernova and immediately followed up on the event with spectroscopy observations from the Shane telescope at the University of California’s Lick Observatory.

The observations revealed a strong calcium signal in the gas and dust surrounding the supernova. The signal was so strong that they asked other astronomers to grab the Keck Telescope in Hawaii and have a look.

“We basically called up a fellow UC observer and interrupted their observations in order to get time critical spectra,” Nugent said.

In the months following the supernova, the team watched the calcium signal drop and then vanish. After 58 days the supernova went off, sending out a strong burst of calcium, indicating that the new supernova material had finally collided with the old material.

“Because we’ve looked at thousands of systems and PTF 11kx is the only one that we’ve found that looks exactly like this, we think it is probably a rare phenomenon. However, these systems could be somewhat more common, and nature is just hiding their signatures from us,” UC Berkeley postdoctoral researcher Jeffrey Silverman said.

Article source: http://www.redorbit.com/news/space/1112681205/type-1a-supernova-progenitor-082412/

Tags: , , , <BR/>

Planets hiding in stars’ spiral arms?

Share this article


Print Print

DiggStumbleUponRedditDeliciousTechnorati FavoritesYahoo BookmarksGoogle BookmarksGoogle BuzzYahoo BuzzNewsVineLiveJournalTypePad PostWordPressBlogger PostTumblrPosterousMySpaceLinkedInGoogle ReaderFriendFeedInstapaperEvernoteSlashdotMixxFarkBeboOrkutNetvibes Share 

Republish this article

Creative Commons License

The text of this article by Futurity is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives License.

More
Science Technology

Diverse mollusks share family tree

Diverse mollusks share family tree

Permian dieoff: Animals faced brave new world

Permian dieoff: Animals faced brave new world

Mineral on Mars needs water to form

Mineral on Mars needs water to form

No worries: Nanoparticles are nothing new

No worries: Nanoparticles are nothing new

Pull skin-like sensor. Watch it bounce back

Pull skin-like sensor. Watch it bounce back

Embryo: When (and where) arms, legs grow

Embryo: When (and where) arms, legs grow

iPhones needed in NY to track stink bug

iPhones needed in NY to track stink bug

Train crops to survive floods

Train crops to survive floods





The disk structures could hint at the presence of still-unseen planets around the star some 456 light years from Earth.

The image comes from research that is part of the Strategic Exploration of Exoplanets and Disks with Subaru project, a five-year-long study in the near-infrared spectrum of young stars and their surrounding dust disks using the Subaru Telescope atop Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

The work involves more than 100 scientists from 25 institutions, including John Wisniewski, a postdoctoral researcher in astronomy at the University of Washington.

“What we’re finding is that once these systems reach ages of a few million years, their disks begin to show a wealth of structure—rings, divots, gaps, and now spiral features,” Wisniewski says.

“Many of these structures could be caused by planets within the disks.”

The newly imaged disk surrounds SAO 206462, a star in the constellation Lupus. Astronomers estimate that the system is only about 9 million years old. The gas-rich disk spans some 14 billion miles, which is more than twice the size of Pluto’s orbit in our own solar system.

The Subaru image shows two spiral features arcing along an outer disk. Models indicate that a single embedded planet could produce a spiral arm on each side of a disk. The structures around SAO 206462 do not form a matched pair, suggesting the presence of two unseen worlds, one for each arm.

But processes unrelated to planet formation also could give rise to the spiral arms, and Wisniewski says the researchers will try to determine whether that is the case through further observation and theoretical modeling.

The research is led by Carol Grady of Eureka Scientific Inc. in Oakland, Calif. She presented the image this month at the Signposts of Planets meeting at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

More news from the University of Washington: www.washington.edu/news/

Article source: http://www.futurity.org/science-technology/planets-hiding-in-stars%E2%80%99-spiral-arms/

Tags: , , , , <BR/>

Crab Nebula’s powerful beams just ‘jaw-dropping’

When astronomers detected intense radiation pumping out of the Crab Nebula, one of the most studied objects in space, at higher energies than anyone thought possible, they were nothing short of stunned.

The inexplicably powerful gamma-rays came from the very heart of the Crab Nebula, where an extreme object called a pulsar resides.

“It was totally not expected — it was absolutely jaw-dropping,” Andrew McCann, a Ph.D. candidate at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, and a co-author of the new study, told Space.com. “This is one of the hottest targets in the sky, so people have been looking at the Crab Nebula for a long time. Now there’s a twist in the tale. High-energy rays coming from the nebula are well-known, but coming from the pulsar is something nobody expected.”

Details of the study, which was led by Nepomuk Otte, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz, are published in the Oct. 7 issue of the journal Science.

The Crab’s mysteries

The photogenic Crab Nebula is really the wreckage of a long-dead star that emitted an explosion of light that reached Earth in the year 1054, and was seen and recorded by Chinese and Native American skygazers. The dying star was located 6,500 light-years away from Earth in the constellation Taurus when it erupted in a brilliant supernova explosion.

At the heart of the nebula’s colorful layers of gas is a so-called pulsar, which is the remains of the original star’s core that collapsed in on itself into a super-dense, spinning neutron star. The Crab pulsar spins 30 times a second and is so dense that it has a greater mass than the sun.

A pulsar emits a continuous beam of radiation that sweeps around like a lighthouse, but appears to pulse when it is viewed through ground-based telescopes.

The gamma-ray beams that were detected from the Crab pulsar exceeded 100 billion electron-volts, stronger than anyone or any theories projected — a million times more energetic than medical X-rays and 100 billion times stronger than visible light, the researchers said.

“If you asked theorists a year ago whether we would see gamma-ray pulses this energetic, almost all of them would have said, ‘No,’” study co-author Martin Schroedter, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., said in a statement. “There’s just no theory that can account for what we’ve found.”



NASA / ESA and Jeff Hester (Arizona State University)

In fact, the findings were so unlikely that some researchers told Otte that he was crazy to look for such highly energetic emissions from the pulsar.

“It turns out that being persistent and stubborn helps,” Otte said in a statement.

Shaking up the field

These new details of the Crab pulsar could change scientists’ understanding of gamma-ray emissions and how they are generated, Otte added.

“We thought we understood the gamma-ray emission, and this was really becoming a foundational feature of our models, but that’s now thrown out,” McCann explained. “The reason why this is so exciting is that it’s turning things around in the field.”

The gamma-ray beams from the Crab pulsar were detected by the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System (VERITAS), which is located at the Smithsonian’s Whipple Observatory, just south of Tucson, Ariz.

Possible explanations for the Crab pulsar’s intense beams have been suggested, but the researchers said that plenty more data will need to be collected before the mechanisms behind these gamma-ray pulses can be better understood.



    1. NASA / JPL-Caltech


      Nobel Prize highlights physics’ biggest puzzles


      Science editor Alan Boyle’s Weblog: Most of the research recognized by a Nobel Prize has to do with solutions, but this year’s physics prize highlights a problem that’s been bugging scientists for more than a decade.


    2. Can urine whiz rockets to Mars?


    3. Space tourism dreams fade as years pass by


    4. Destination for first starship? Someplace livable

Scientists also expect to refine their observations once VERITAS undergoes an upgrade in the summer of 2012 to make its instruments more sensitive, McCann said. Other planned next-generation observatories — such as the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA), a project to build a very high-energy gamma-ray instrument — should also further this research.

“It’s much more long term, but once CTA comes on, it’s really going to write the book on this,” McCann said.

VERITAS, which began collecting full-scale observations in 2007, is used to examine the remains of exploded stars, distant galaxies, powerful gamma-ray bursts, and to search for evidence of mysterious dark matter particles.

You can follow Space.com staff writer Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

© 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Article source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44808214/ns/technology_and_science-space/

Tags: , , <BR/>

Massive black holes found in distant galaxies

Massive black holes found in distant galaxies
Washington: The find of supermassive black holes growing in surprisingly small galaxies suggest that central black holes form at an early stage in galaxy evolution, U.S. astronomers say.

All massive galaxies host a central supermassive black hole, but active black holes are rarely seen in small “dwarf” galaxies.

“It’s kind of a chicken or egg problem: Which came first, the supermassive black hole or the massive galaxy? This study shows that even low-mass galaxies have supermassive black holes,” said first author Jonathan Trump, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

The galaxies observed with the help of the Hubble Space Telescope are about 10 billion light-years away, giving astronomers a view of galaxies as they appeared when the universe was less than a quarter of its current age.

“When we look 10 billion years ago, we’re looking at the teenage years of the universe. So these are very small, young galaxies,” Trump said.

Massive black holes found in distant galaxies



The findings also challenge current beliefs about black hole formation.

“Up to now, observations of distant galaxies have consistently reinforced the local findings — distant black holes actively accreting in big galaxies only,” said coauthor Sandra Faber, University Professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UC Santa Cruz and CANDELS principal investigator.

“We now have a big puzzle: What happened to these dwarf galaxies?”

One possibility is that at least some of them are the progenitors of present-day massive galaxies like the Milky Way.

“Their star formation rate is about ten times that of the Milky Way,” Trump said.

Massive black holes found in distant galaxies

“There may be a connection between that and the active galactic nuclei. When gas is available to form new stars, it’s also available to feed the black hole,” he added.

The study will be published in the Astrophysical Journal.

ANI

Article source: http://zeenews.india.com/news/space/massive-black-holes-found-in-distant-galaxies_731859.html

Tags: , , , , <BR/>