Brandon Q. Morris's Blog, page 16
October 29, 2020
Hotter than a star
WASP-189 b is a rather unusual planet. The gas giant was already discovered two years ago. Now researchers have discovered new details about it with the help of the CHEOPS satellite. Thus WASP-189b orbits its star 20 times closer than the earth the sun. For a complete orbit it needs only 2.7 days. Its home star is larger and over 2,000 degrees hotter than the Sun, which is why it appears to glow blue.
“We only know of a handful of planets that orbit around such hot stars. In addition, this syste...
October 28, 2020
In search of dark matter with pendulums
Current experiments that search for dark matter are mostly based on the idea that dark matter should somehow show up, i.e. by interacting with normal matter. Now, however, the only thing we really know about this important part of the universe is that an interaction with normal matter occurs via gravity. This is what first made researchers realize that dark matter exists.
Is it perhaps because the search has so far been fruitless? Then a method could help, which researchers of the NIST and their...
October 26, 2020
BepiColombo photographs Venus in flight
The ESA-JAXA mission BepiColombo has completed the first of two flybys of Venus needed to put it on course for the innermost planet of the solar system, Mercury. The closest approach to the Earth’s hot sister took place this morning (15. 10.) at 03:58 GMT at a distance of about 10 720 km from the planet’s surface.
Launched on 20 October 2018, the spacecraft will require nine gravity assist fly-bys – one to Earth, two to Venus and six to Mercury – before it can enter orbit around Mercury in 2025....
October 25, 2020
Why it snows on Pluto’s mountains
In 2015, the New Horizons space probe discovered spectacular snow-covered mountains on Pluto that are strikingly similar to the mountains on Earth. Such a landscape had never before been observed anywhere else in the solar system. However, there is one major difference: On Earth, atmospheric temperatures decrease with altitude. On Pluto, however, they increase with altitude due to the sun’s radiation. So where does this ice come from?
An international team of researchers has now investigated ...
October 24, 2020
Massive black hole turns star in solar size into spaghetti
About 215 million years ago the fate of a star was fulfilled: It was swallowed by a black hole with a million solar masses. The death struggle dragged on for a whole month. Meanwhile, the dying star was bidding farewell, a high-energy flare that emitted enough energy in the X-ray range alone to accelerate the Earth to one percent of the speed of light.
This flare, called AT2019qiz and registered on Earth in 2019, was a gift to terrestrial astronomers. It is the first star death of this kind that...
October 23, 2020
Galaxies in a cosmic spider web made of dark matter
Using ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), astronomers have found six galaxies orbiting a supermassive black hole when the universe was less than a billion years old. The galaxies are in a kind of cosmic “spider web” of gas that covers an area 300 times the size of the Milky Way. “The filaments of the cosmic web are like spider web threads,” explains Marco Mignoli, astronomer at the National Institute of Astrophysics (INAF) in Bologna, Italy, and lead author of the new research published today in A...
October 22, 2020
Who’s watching us?
Earthly astronomers are busy scanning distant star systems for planets. There is one limitation: With the popular transit method, we can only detect planets if they move in front of their star from our point of view and change its brightness. Of course, this limits the selection quite a bit, it is a big coincidence if the orbital plane of an exoplanet is roughly parallel to our viewing direction to the star.
Now you can also ask different questions. Let’s assume that aliens were looking for othe...
October 21, 2020
Astronomers are searching for the super planet
Again and again, astronomers proudly present exoplanets that would be suitable for life as we know it – i.e. made of solid rock and illuminated by their stars in such a way that water exists on their surface in a liquid state. But is our home planet really ideal for the development of life? After all, when the sun was still young and shone with a third less power, it was still quite cold here until CO2 finally created a greenhouse effect.
A study under the direction of the scientist Dirk Schulze...
October 20, 2020
Why Jupiter’s storms behave so strangely
At the south pole of Jupiter there is an impressive sight – even for a gas giant covered with colored bands, which carries a red spot larger than the earth. Near its south pole, a cluster of swirling storms has formed, arranged in a geometric pattern. Since they were first sighted by the NASA space probe Juno in 2019, the storms have puzzled scientists. Basically, they resemble hurricanes on Earth. However, storms on our planet do not gather at the poles and swirl around each other as a pentagon...
October 3, 2020
Black holes reveal themselves in the X-ray spectrum
Black holes are the remnant of stars with more than eight solar masses. Everything we know points to their existence – the theory of relativity, cosmology, etc. And yet, only one supermassive black hole – with a mass of more than 6 billion solar masses – has been “photographed” to date with the help of surrounding radiation in the radio wavelength range. But stellar-mass black holes have not yet been seen.
That’s why scientists are pleased that an international team of astrophysicists has now fo...