Showing posts with label American Astronomical Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Astronomical Society. Show all posts
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Why There is Always a Lot of Astronomy News in Early January
I'll share a little secret with you. If you follow astronomy developments, you might have noticed that there are a lot of news stories that come out at the beginning of January. The reason is that the nation's professional astronomers have their big meeting each year in early January, and many universities and observatories save up their big announcements to coincide with a talk or paper being delivered at that meeting.
This year was no exception -- many thousands of astronomers gathered for the winter meeting of the American Astronomical Society in National Harbor, a shopping-center-ambiance convention center (and tourist trap,) a short distance from Washington, DC. I was only there at the beginning, leading a workshop on education for young astronomers, because I had to get back for the start of the winter quarter at Foothill College. But the cosmic news stories were descending on us thicker than the snow in the northeast in the same week.
Here are just a few of the "stellar" news items from the week:
* The Kepler mission (searching for planets orbiting other stars) announced the confirmation of several dozen planets among the thousands first glimpsed with Kepler. Among them were five rocky planets bigger than Earth. Two of them are 40% bigger than our planet and have densities similar to lead!
* Scientists working with the Spitzer Space Telescope -- which views the universe of heat rays (infra-red) and not light -- made observations of brown dwarfs (failed stars). They found that many of them have huge storms in their atmospheres (like the giant storm on Jupiter we call the "Great Red Spot.") The stormy atmospheres of these stars is what the artist's impression in the accompanying image tries to show. Such storms probably have giant lightning bolts and torrential rain. But it's too hot for the rain to be water, so the droplets could hot sand, molten iron, or salts. Bring a strong umbrella if you go.
* A graduate student at Vanderbilt University has discovered what appear to be ordinary stars that have been kicked out of our Galaxy at speeds of a million miles per hour. Such "hyper-velocity stars" have been found before, but they were thought to be a special category of big blue stars kicked out by unfortunate encounters with the monster black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. The ones in the current study come from the direction of the main disc of our pinwheel shaped galaxy, not from the the center. So what could have given them such enormous speeds is a complete mystery.
I will tell you about other discoveries in future posts. In the meantime, if you have some science background and want to see what it feels like to be a science reporter at one of these meetings, you can go to the page where the Society archives the press conferences:
http://aas.org/media-press/archived-aas-press-conference-webcasts
and check out one or two of them. Or just take a minute and contemplate how really alien and strange the worlds beyond our planet are turning out to be.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
More Planets Out There and Too Much Astronomy News
This week, 2800 astronomers are gathered in Southern California for the winter meeting of the American Astronomical Society and the news from the meeting is coming so fast and furious even seasoned astronomy fans are somewhat overwhelmed. Let me just list a few of the news stories for you for now and we will explore some of them further in future posts.
The picture I have attached above shows new information about the planet orbiting the star Fomalhaut, the 17th brightest star in the night sky (and, at a distance of only 25 light years, one of the closer stars to us.) The faint distant planet, one of the first planets outside the solar system to be actually photographed, is shown here in an image from the Hubble Space Telescope.
In the image, the bright star has been covered up by a dark disk (in the middle) that the Hubble telescope can use to block light. That allows us to see the planet and the huge dusty disk surrounding the star. The planet has an orbit that takes it around its star in about 2000 Earth years. (Compare that to a 1-year orbit for Earth and a 12-year orbit for Jupiter.) So some astronomical commentators are suggesting it might be more of a giant comet or a distant ice-dwarf (like Pluto) and not really the kind of planet we first think of when we talk about planets.
In a related story, the Kepler mission team, searching for planets that "eclipse" their stars (see earlier posts of mine on this mission), is reporting 461 new planet candidates, bringing their total number of possible planets to 2,740! Four of the new candidates are less than twice the size of Earth and orbiting where conditions are Earth-like.
Nest, teams of astronomers using orbiting telescopes have filed the most detailed "weather report" yet about clouds in the atmosphere of a "brown dwarf" -- the name we give to a failed star. These objects begin life like stars do, but can't keep making energy in the way our Sun and others stars can. It's amazing that we can now probe for the existence of Earth-sized clouds in the outer layers of these remote, faint objects.
Plus there is the possible discovery of floating icebergs on Saturn's moon Titan, an asteroid belt around the bright star Vega, and much more. (The reason there is so much news all at once is that astronomers save their discoveries for announcement at this annual winter meeting, so they can share the results with their colleagues and argue about them right then and there. With almost 3000 astronomers gathered in the same convention center, there is a good clump of experts to dissect and admire each discovery.)
More details in posts to come.
Labels:
American Astronomical Society,
astronomy,
astronomy news,
astronomy pictures,
brown dwarfs,
exoplanets,
extrasolar planets,
Fomalhaut,
Kepler mission,
planets,
Saturn,
space,
space news,
Titan,
Vega
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