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Results tagged “stars” from Breaking Orbit

Watching a Planet's Birth in Real Time

Posted on September 24, 2009 | 1 Comments

Your friendly neighborhood geologist will tell you that the age of the Earth is 4.54 billion years, give or take 45 million.

Since modern humans have been around for only about 60,000 years of that time, it's hard for us to even guess at how exactly the planet was born.

Luckily we have a variety of tools at our disposal to make sure we're making highly educated guesses, including orbiting observatories like the Spitzer Space Telescope.

Using its infrared vision to peer through dust and thick gases, Spitzer has seen plenty of evidence for young star systems taking shape since it was launched in 2003. But most of that evidence has been fairly static, considering that it takes planets millions of years to develop.

Now, in a rare catch, astronomers using Spitzer think they've witnessed an early stage of planet formation in real time.

spitzer-planet-disk.jpg

—Image courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)

The team watched one young star, LRLL 31, for five months, recording changes in its infrared light. The star had previously been called out for having a type of debris ring known as a transitional disk.

According to a popular theory of planet formation, some stars are surrounded by thick disks of dust and gases. Over time, larger grains within these disks start to collect material, and, like rolling snowballs, they grow larger as they pull more material unto themselves.

At some point, objects get so large that they carve gaps in the original disk, creating what's known as a transitional disk.

Spitzer showed that LRLL 31 has such a disk with both an inner and outer gap. What's more, the infrared light from the inner disk changes its brightness and wavelength every few weeks.

The team thinks the changes are due to a "companion"—some body circling the star inside the inner gap. As it orbits the star, this body pushes the disk's material around like a cornering boat pushes water, creating a "wave" that periodically changes the disk's height.

Higher waves facing Earth mean more and hotter material reflecting the host's starlight, so more infrared radiation and at shorter wavelengths. The wave also casts its shadow on the outer disk, blocking its longer-wavelength light.

The opposite scenario is true when the wave crests between Earth and the star.

Astronomers aren't 100 percent sure if the body creating the wave is really a developing planet or some other companion, maybe even another star.

But lead study author James Muzerolle, of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, notes in a statement: "For astronomers, watching anything in real-time is exciting. It's like we're biologists getting to watch cells grow in a petri dish, only our specimen is light-years away."

Bored by chocolates and jaded with roses? Give your sweetie the gift of the heavens for Valentine's Day this year.

betelgeuse.jpg

I'm talking about the Valentine's Day star, which graces the skies with its brilliant red glow each year in early February.

—Image courtesy A. Dupree (CfA), R. Gilliland (STScI), NASA

Now, this isn't exactly a name recognized by the International Astronomical Union—officially the Valentine's Day star is called Betelgeuse (pronounced kinda like "beetlejuice").

The holiday-themed moniker was coined by famed stargazer Jack Horkheimer, and there's a bunch of reasons why it's pretty darn apt. So step one will be to understand why the star is so romantic, and step two will be to find it!

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Dissecting an Anemic Galaxy

Posted on February 5, 2009 | 0 Comments

The milky swirl seen here is NGC 4921, one of the very few spiral galaxies in the thousand-member Coma galaxy cluster about 320 million light-years away.

hubble-anemic.jpg

—Image courtesy NASA, ESA, K. Cook (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA)

The Hubble image, released today, is one of the deepest looks yet at this particular object, revealing a rich amount of new detail about a galaxy we've known of since the 1700s.

In addition to spotting some ghostly dwarf galaxies near the rim, Hubble picks up in sharp detail clusters of bluish dots that show where new stars are forming.

Astronomers consider this galaxy to be anemic, because its rate of star formation is unusually low. [A nice juxtaposition to yesterday's news about a galaxy undergoing a period of hyper-starburst.]

But perhaps the coolest part of this picture is that's actually a glass of proverbial lemonade, made when Hubble handed scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Lab one really big lemon.

Kem Cook and colleagues had been using the space telescope's Advanced Camera for Surveys to search for what are known as Cepheid variable stars, a type of pulsating star that astronomers can use as a standard light source for telling how far away cosmic objects are from Earth.

But in early 2007 the ACS up and broke, leaving Cook's data set incomplete.

Lucky for us, 80 of his images—50 taken with a yellow filter and 30 in near-infrared—could be combined to make the above snazzy snapshot.

Biggest Star Party in the Universe

Posted on February 4, 2009 | 0 Comments

The following is a guest post from Anne Minard, an accomplished writer and fellow space geek. Anne writes for NatGeo News a bunch and has even written a whole book [and a good one, too] on poor demoted Pluto.

Like what you read? Check out more of Anne's blogginess at 100 Days of Science.

hyperstarburst.jpg

—Left image courtesy Sloan Digital Sky Survey; center image courtesy National Radio Astronomy Observatory; right image courtesy Plateau de Bure Interferometer

A massive galaxy at the edge of the known universe harbors the largest and most intense star factory astronomers have ever seen.

And it sounds like an incredible setting for a Wii space flight game.

Fabian Walter, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany, led a research team that glimpsed the galaxy, whimsically named SDSS J1148+5251, with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer in France. Their results are out in this week's issue of Nature.

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Sun Storms: The Ultimate Homewreckers

Posted on December 18, 2008 | 0 Comments

I've been a baaaad blogger.

Headed out to San Francisco for the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union, I had grand ambitions of doing it all: writing stories, editing copy, meeting scientists, hobnobbing with other writers, and of course live blogging from the meeting.

Life, it seems, had other plans. But never fear. Now that the crush of press conferences is abating, I've had some time to do almost everything on that wishlist, including getting caught up on planetary news.

I've got a couple things in the works culled from AGU, including news on arctic Mars and possibly some bits about habitable exoplanets, auroras on Jupiter and Saturn, and the controversy over lightning on Venus.

First, though, I sat in on a talk about solar storms and the surprising find that Earth's magnetosphere has been leaking big time and is even now building up a layer of solar particles.

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About This Blog

The moon
From dwarf planets to hot Jupiters, join NatGeo News space and tech editor Victoria Jaggard in a global discussion about all things extraterrestrial.


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