Archive for United Kingdom

Closest single star like our Sun may have habitable planet

tau_ceti-sytemAn international team of astronomers led by the University of Hertfordshire in the United Kingdom has discovered that Tau Ceti, one of the closest and most Sun-like stars, may host five planets — with one in the star’s habitable zone.

At a distance of 12 light-years and visible with the naked eye in the evening sky, Tau Ceti is the closest single star that has the same spectral classification as our Sun. Its five planets are estimated to have masses between two and six times the mass of Earth — making it the lowest-mass planetary system yet detected. One of the planets lies in the habitable zone of the star and has a mass around five times that of Earth, making it the smallest planet found to be orbiting in the habitable zone of any Sun-like star.

The international team of astronomers from the United Kingdom, Chile, the United States, and Australia combined more than 6,000 observations from three different instruments and intensively modeled the data. Using new techniques, the team has found a method to detect signals half the size previously thought possible. This greatly improves the sensitivity of searches for small planets and suggests that Tau Ceti is not a lone star but has a planetary system.

“We pioneered new data modeling techniques by adding artificial signals to the data and testing our recovery of the signals with a variety of different approaches,” said Mikko Tuomi from the University of Hertfordshire. “This significantly improved our noise modeling techniques and increased our ability to find low mass planets.”

“We chose Tau Ceti for this noise modeling study because we had thought it contained no signals. And as it is so bright and similar to our Sun, it is an ideal benchmark system to test out our methods for the detection of small planets,” said Hugh Jones from the University of Hertfordshire.

“Tau Ceti is one of our nearest cosmic neighbors and so bright that we may be able to study the atmospheres of these planets in the not too distant future,” said James Jenkins from the University of Chile. “Planetary systems found around nearby stars close to our Sun indicate that these systems are common in our Milky Way Galaxy.”

More than 800 planets have been discovered orbiting other worlds, but planets in orbit around the nearest Sun-like stars are particularly valuable. “This discovery is in keeping with our emerging view that virtually every star has planets, and that the galaxy must have many such potentially habitable Earth-sized planets,” said Steve Vogt from the University of California, Santa Cruz. “They are everywhere, even right next door! We are now beginning to understand that nature seems to overwhelmingly prefer systems that have multiple planets with orbits of less than 100 days. This is quite unlike our own solar system where there is nothing with an orbit inside that of Mercury. So our solar system is, in some sense, a bit of a freak and not the most typical kind of system that nature cooks up.”

“As we stare [at] the night sky, it is worth contemplating that there may well be more planets out there than there are stars — some fraction of which may well be habitable,” said Chris Tinney from the University of New South Wales.

Article source: http://www.astronomy.com/~/link.aspx?_id=21782439-e500-4b2b-9175-930a0d71a025

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Tributes for "Father of Astronomy" Sir Patrick Moore

Tributes for Father of Astronomy Sir Patrick Mooreby Alice Monroe

Tributes from around the world have been paid to “great science communicator” Sir Patrick Moore, who passed away aged 89

LONDON, United Kingdom — Showbiz and science stars have paid tribute to Sir Patrick Moore, the famed astronomer and broadcaster, who died peacefully at his East Sussex home on Sunday.

Aged 89, he lost a brief battle with an infection.

His family released a statement on Sunday, which read: “After a short spell in hospital last week, it was determined that no further treatment would benefit him, and it was his wish to spend his last days in his own home, Farthings, where he today passed on, in the company of close friends and carers and his cat Ptolemy.”

Having written more than 70 books on astronomy, and presenting the BBC TV series “BBC Sky at Night” for 55 years, Moore has inspired generations of star gazers.

Queen guitarist Brian May, a fellow astronomer and friend, said the world had “lost a priceless treasure that can never be replaced”.

“There will never be another Patrick Moore. But we were lucky enough to get one,” May said.

BBC science correspondent Pallab Ghosh hailed Moore’s enthusiasm as “unstoppable”, pointing out that “on occasions he would talk at 300 words a minute.”

Comedian Sue Perkins took to Twitter to express her thoughts: “RIP Patrick Moore – you taught me to look up.”

Television presenter and physicist Prof Brian Cox also posted a message on Twitter: “Very sad news about Sir Patrick. Helped inspire my love of astronomy. I will miss him,” Cox tweeted.

Sir Patrick, who received a knighthood in 2001, won a Bafta for services to television and was a honorary fellow of the Royal Society.

His family confirmed a “quiet ceremony of interment” would take place, followed by a “farewell event planned for what would have been Patrick’s 90th birthday in March 2013.”

Article source: http://www.onenewspage.com/n/Science/74rkhvwko/Tributes-for-Father-of-Astronomy-Sir-Patrick-Moore.htm

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Cosmic GDP crashes as star formation slumps

Cosmic-evolutionWhile parts of the world experience economic hardship, a team of Portuguese, United Kingdom, Japanese, Italian, and Dutch astronomers has found an even bigger slump happening on a cosmic scale. In the largest ever study of its kind, the international team of astronomers has established that the rate of formation of new stars in the universe is now only one-thirtieth of its peak and that this decline is only set to continue.

The accepted model for the evolution of the universe predicts that stars began to form about 13.4 billion years ago, or around 300 million years after the Big Bang. Many of these first stars are thought to have been monsters by today’s standards, and were probably hundreds of times more massive than our Sun. Such beasts aged very quickly, exhausted their fuel, and exploded as supernovae within a million years or so. Lower-mass stars, in contrast, have much longer lives and last for billions of years.

Much of the dust and gas from stellar explosions was (and is still) recycled to form newer and newer generations of stars. For example, scientists think that our Sun is a third-generation star and has a very typical mass by today’s standards. But regardless of their mass and properties, stars are key ingredients of galaxies like our Milky Way. Unveiling the history of star formation across cosmic time is fundamental to understanding how galaxies form and evolve.

In the new study, scientists, lead by David Sobral of the University of Leiden in the Netherlands, used the UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT), the Very Large Telescope (VLT) and the Subaru Telescope to carry out the most complete survey ever made of star-forming galaxies at different distances, with around 10 times the data of any previous effort. With the range of distances, the time taken for the light to reach us means that we see identically selected galaxies at different periods in the history of the universe, so we can really understand how conditions change over time.

By looking at the light from clouds of gas and dust in these galaxies where stars are forming, the team was able to assess the rate at which stars are being born. They found that the production of stars in the universe as a whole has been continuously declining over the past 11 billion years, being 30 times lower today than at its likely peak, 11 billion years ago.

“You might say that the universe has been suffering from a long, serious ‘crisis,’” Sobral said. “Cosmic GDP output is now only 3 percent of what it used to be at the peak in star production!”

If the measured decline continues, then no more than 5 percent more stars will form over the remaining history of the cosmos, even if we wait forever. The research suggests that we live in a universe dominated by old stars. Half of these were born in the “boom” that took place between 11 and 9 billion years ago, and it took more than five times as long to produce the rest. “The future may seem rather dark, but we’re actually quite lucky to be living in a healthy, star-forming galaxy which is going to be a strong contributor to the new stars that will form,” Sobral said. “Moreover, while these measurements provide a sharp picture of the decline of star-formation in the Universe, they also provide ideal samples to unveil an even more fundamental mystery which is yet to be solved:  Why?”

Article source: http://www.astronomy.com/~/link.aspx?_id=3f4faee5-4b03-4984-9a34-9efa4cebff11

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Alien life may be found in 40 years

Alien life beyond our solar system could be discovered within the next 40 years, a top astronomer from the United Kingdom has said.

According to Lord Martin Rees, the president of the Royal Society of London, developments in astronomy mean that astrophysicists could be able to

view images of distant planets outside of our solar system as soon as 2025, and potentially discover whether there is some form of life on them, the Daily Mail reported.

The question of whether earth is alone in supporting living organisms has puzzled scientists, philosophers for centuries. “We know now that stars are orbited by retinues of planets just as our sun is. We have learned this in just the last decade, essentially,” Rees said.

“Within 10 or 20 years we will be able to image other planets like the earth, orbiting other stars. That will be a really exciting subject to see if there is evidence for [extra-terrestrial] life or not,” Rees was quoted as saying by the paper.

Speaking at a debate on the meaning of life for the launch of Professor Stephen Hawking’s new show Grand Design, he added that finding out more about the “origin of life, the place where it exists, and whether aliens exist, is going to be crucial over the next four decades”.

“There may be some questions that our brains will never understand, in the same way that chimpanzees couldn’t understand quantum theory, that are just beyond human brains,” Rees added.

Last year Lord Rees had said it was possible that aliens were “staring us in the face” in a form that humans are unable to recognise. “I suspect there could be life and intelligence out there in forms we can’t conceive,” he added.

Article source: http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/Europe/Alien-life-may-be-found-in-40-years/Article1-926312.aspx

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"Deflector shields" protect the lunar surface

Scientists from RAL Space at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the United Kingdom have solved a lunar mystery, and their results might lead the way to determining if the same mechanism could be artificially manipulated to create safe havens for future space explorers. Their work focused on the origin of the enigmatic “lunar swirls” — swirling patches of relatively pale lunar soil, some measuring several tens of miles across, which have been an unresolved mystery until now.

In the Apollo era, it was realized that lunar swirls were associated with localized magnetic fields in the lunar crust — so-called lunar “magnetic anomalies.”

Several unmanned spacecraft, like NASA’s Lunar Prospector, JAXA’s Kaguya, and India’s Chandrayaan-1, have taken a special interest in the regions of magnetic anomalies. Lunar Prospector first identified magnetic anomalies that had created fully formed but miniature “magnetospheres” similar to what Earth’s planetary-wide magnetic field does on a much larger scale.

Using a combination of the space data and laboratory-scale experiments that use a “solar wind tunnel,” the team was able to identify how such small-scale magnetic “bubbles” were more efficient in deflecting the solar wind particles bombarding the Moon.

“When we first tried the experiment in the solar wind tunnel and it worked, it was very exciting,” said Ruth Bamford from the Center for Fundamental Physics and RAL Space at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.

“The active force, which deflect the solar wind particles, is electric, not magnetic. The electric field is created naturally by the edges of the Moon’s magnetic ‘bubbles,’” Bamford said. “What matters is the ‘gradient’ in the magnetic field, rather than the overall size of the magnetic bubble. So they can be as small as you like as long as the gradient is steep enough.”

Understanding how “mini-magnetospheres” produce a cavity in the solar wind and exclude the interplanetary magnetic field might lead the way to determining if the same mechanism could be artificially manipulated to create safe havens for future space explorers.

“We still need to determine quite how effective this mechanism would be at deflecting the real hazardous, higher-energy particles,” Bamford said. “The jury is still out on that one, but such an active shield could make the difference between survivable and certain death for astronauts on their way to Mars.”

The lunar soil was originally white but is known to have been darkened over time by exposure to the charged particles of the solar wind.

It has long been thought that the swirls were a result of magnetic shielding of the lunar surface from the solar wind, but nobody understood how the relatively weak magnetic fields associated with lunar swirls could sufficiently protect the Moon’s surface over hundreds of millions of years to prevent surface darkening and produce such finely detailed patterns.

According to Bamford, “Close to the Moon’s surface, the strength of a magnetic anomaly is likely to be very irregular, featuring overlapping cavities and gradients. We cannot know the precise arrangement without going there to see for ourselves,” but the result on the surface would be a corresponding pattern of retarded and accelerated “space weathering,” visible as areas of lighter material separated by dark lanes. Over an estimated 3.8 billion years, these anomalies would have been deflecting the solar wind particles streaming in from space, slowly creating these amazing patterns, which can be clearly seen on the lunar surface today.

The idea was confirmed by experiments done in the laboratory with the University of York in the United Kingdom using their “plasma wind tunnel.” The particles generated were, indeed, corralled by a narrow electrostatic field, thereby protecting areas of the exposed surface.

The interaction of the solar wind with the magnetic field anomalies have been shown to be effective enough to create protected voids above the surface of the Moon, sufficient to stave off against weathering caused by the bombardment of solar particles.

Article source: http://www.astronomy.com/~/link.aspx?_id=cb880398-42df-4a79-8240-5474af1661a3

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UK Infrared Telescope discovers "impossible" binary stars

A team of astronomers have used the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) on Hawaii to discover four pairs of stars that orbit each other in less than four hours. Until now it was thought that such close-in binary stars could not exist.

About half of the stars in our Milky Way Galaxy are, unlike our Sun, part of a binary system in which two stars orbit each other. Most likely, the stars in these systems were formed close together and have been in orbit around each other from birth onward. Scientists always thought that if binary stars form too close to each other, they would quickly merge into one single, bigger star. This was in line with many observations taken over the past three decades showing the abundant population of stellar binaries, but none with orbital periods shorter than five hours.

For the first time, the team have investigated binaries of red dwarfs, stars up to 10 times smaller and a thousand times less luminous than the Sun. Although they form the most common type of star in the Milky Way, red dwarfs do not show up in normal surveys because of their dimness in visible light.

For the past five years, UKIRT has been monitoring the brightnesses of hundreds of thousands of stars, including thousands of red dwarfs, in near-infrared light, using its state-of-the-art Wide-Field Camera. This study of cool stars in the time domain has been a focus of the European (FP7) Initial Training Network “Rocky Planets Around Cool Stars” (RoPACS), which studies planets and cool stars.

“To our complete surprise, we found several red dwarf binaries with orbital periods significantly shorter than the five-hour cut-off found for Sun-like stars, something previously thought to be impossible,” said Bas Nefs from Leiden Observatory in the Netherlands, lead author of the study. “It means that we have to rethink how these close-in binaries form and evolve.”

Because stars shrink in size early in their lifetime, the fact that these very tight binaries exist means that their orbits must also have shrunk as well since their birth; otherwise, the stars would have been in contact early on and have merged. However, it is not at all clear how these orbits could have shrunk by so much.

One possible answer to this riddle is that cool stars in binary systems are much more active and violent than previously thought.

It is possible that the magnetic field lines radiating out from the cool star companions get twisted and deformed as they spiral in toward each other, generating the extra activity through stellar wind, explosive flaring, and starspots. Powerful magnetic activity could apply the brakes to these spinning stars, slowing them down so that they move closer together.

“Without UKIRT’s superb sensitivity, it wouldn’t have been possible to find these extraordinary pairs of red dwarfs,” said David Pinfield of the University of Hertfordshire in the United Kingdom. “The active nature of these stars and their apparently powerful magnetic fields has profound implications for the environments around red dwarfs throughout our galaxy.”

Article source: http://www.astronomy.com/~/link.aspx?_id=379829e5-5100-4ef1-b5b3-b486eb2f0f37

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BaBar data hint at cracks in the standard model

Recently analyzed data from BaBar, a high-energy physics experiment in the U.S., may suggest possible flaws in the standard model of particle physics — the reigning description of how the universe works on subatomic scales. The data from BaBar, a particle accelerator at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, which was built by 10 countries including the United Kingdom, show that a particular type of particle decay happens more often than the standard model says it should.

The data refers to a particle called the B-bar meson that decays into a D meson, an antineutrino, and a tau lepton. This particular decay of a B meson should, theoretically, only happen in one in every 100 cases, but the new results from BaBar show it is happening too often. While the level of certainty of the difference, or excess, is not enough to claim a break from the standard model, the results are a potential sign of something amiss and are likely to impact existing theories.

“The excess over the standard model prediction is exciting,” said Michael Roney from the University of Victoria in Canada. “The results are significantly more sensitive than previously published studies of these decays. But before we can claim an actual discovery, other experiments have to replicate it and rule out the possibility this isn’t just an unlikely statistical fluctuation.”

“This result is very interesting, and, if confirmed, could be a sign of physics beyond the standard model,” said Adrian Bevan from Queen Mary, University of London.

“Our current theory about the fundamental forces of the universe, which has been around for nearly 40 years, is beginning to show signs of failure,” said Fergus Wilson from STFC’s Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. “Just as exciting, our new measurement indicates that any replacement theory will need to be more exotic and complex than we could have hoped or imagined. Although we must not jump to conclusions based on just one measurement, this new result is one of the most compelling yet. It follows on from previous indications recently reported by us, all of which point in the same direction.”

The BaBar experiment, which collected data from 1999 to 2008, was designed to explore various mysteries of particle physics, including why the universe contains matter but no antimatter. Data from the collaboration, which includes 75 institutions from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Russia, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the U.S., helped confirm a matter-antimatter theory for which two researchers won the 2008 Nobel Prize in physics. At its peak, some 90 British particle physicists and engineers from 11 institutions took part in the experiment.

Researchers continue to apply BaBar data to a variety of questions in particle physics. “This result will help guide teams of researchers looking for potentially related new physics effects at the Large Hadron Collider and at other particle physics labs around the world,” said Bevan.

“If the excess decays shown are confirmed, it will be exciting to figure out what is causing it,” said Abner Soffer from Tel Aviv University in Israel. “Other theories involving new physics are waiting in the wings, but the BaBar results already rule out one important model called the Two Higgs Doublet Model. We hope our results will stimulate theoretical discussion about just what the data are telling us about new physics.”

The researchers also hope their colleagues in the Belle collaboration, which studies the same types of particle collisions, see something similar. “If they do, the combined significance could be compelling enough to suggest how we can finally move beyond the standard model,” said Roney.

Article source: http://www.astronomy.com/~/link.aspx?_id=0d72dd90-f4f9-413a-a749-11a08e6985bc

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UK astronomers lament telescope phase-outs

British astronomers are incensed after the UK Science Technology Facilities Council on 30 May revealed plans to phase out operations of two telescopes in Hawaii. It would cease support for the 3.8-metre United Kingdom Infra-Red Telescope (UKIRT) in September 2013, while the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), a 15-metre sub-millimetre telescope, would get support until September 2014.

The UKIRT board reacted to that decision today, issuing a statement complaining that it made no sense to curtail operations of the UKIRT before the JCMT since both telescopes are operated through the Joint Astronomy Centre in Hawaii. The board says the marginal cost of operating UKIRT (pictured) until September 2014 would be less than £100,000. “I feel this is very short-sighted and a big mistake,” says Peter Sarre, a molecular astrophysicist at the University of Nottingham and a former member of the UKIRT board.

The move is the latest by the United Kingdom to shed commitments to astronomical observatories worldwide. In 2007, it suddenly withdrew from the Gemini partnership, twin 8-metre telescopes in Hawaii and Chile, only to be reinstated a few months later. But two years later, the funding crisis forced the UK to withdraw from Gemini for good, with its time on the telescopes ending this year.

Image: UKIRT

Article source: http://blogs.nature.com/news/2012/05/uk-astronomers-lament-telescope-phase-outs.html

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Macomb High, WIU grad to offer lecture on astronomy

Astronomer and Macomb native Matthew Walker, Macomb High School class of 1994 and Western Illinois University class of 1999, will deliver a public lecture entitled “Dark Matter in Galaxies… for the Backyard Astronomer” at the Western Illinois Museum in Macomb, 201 S. Lafayette St., at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, April 30.  

Walker received his PhD degree in Astronomy Astrophysics from the University of Michigan in 2007. He worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, from 2007 to 2010, and is now a research fellow at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass.

In his presentation, Walker will summarize current research on the topic of dark matter — the nature of which remains one of astronomy’s enduring mysteries — and will include results from his own observations of the dwarf galaxies that orbit the Milky Way.  

The program will be geared for non-scientists. Anyone curious about the night sky is encouraged to attend. A question and answer period will follow. The doors open at 7:15 p.m. and light refreshments will be served.

Article source: http://www.mcdonoughvoice.com/newsnow/x596782036/Macomb-High-WIU-grad-to-offer-lecture-on-astronomy

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Stunning NASA time-lapse video shows journey around Earth

NASA has released a spectacular video featuring a series of time-lapse sequences photographed by the Expedition 30 crew aboard the International Space Station.

The four-minute video is set to the song Walking in the Air, by Howard Blake.

Thie video, NASA says, displays a journey around the world, through auroras, and over dazzling lightning displays.

Here is a breakdown of video sequences:

:01 – Stars over southern United States

:08 – U.S. West Coast to Canada

:21 – Central Europe to the Middle East

:36 – Aurora Australis over the Indian Ocean

:54 – Storms over Africa

1:08 – Central United States

1:20 – Midwest United States

1:33 – United Kingdom to Baltic Sea

1:46 – Moonset

1:55 – Northern United States to Eastern Canada

2:12 – Aurora Australis over the Indian Ocean

2:32 – Comet Lovejoy

2:53 – Aurora Borealis over Hudson Bay

3:06 – United Kingdom to Central Europe

Article source: http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2012/04/stunning-nasa-time-lapse-video-shows-journey-around-earth-/1

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