
Objects In Space -- research questions
... of our solar system. Pay close attention to the sizes of your planets compared to each other, the outer planets and the sun. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the names of the 4 inner planets, in order from the sun (closest to ...
... of our solar system. Pay close attention to the sizes of your planets compared to each other, the outer planets and the sun. Answer the following questions: 1. What are the names of the 4 inner planets, in order from the sun (closest to ...
Article PDF - IOPscience
... north–south direction and a minor axis in the east–west direction (as observed here). The emission null we detect due north is seen on both sets of Subaru images, at the K band and in the mid-IR as well. ...
... north–south direction and a minor axis in the east–west direction (as observed here). The emission null we detect due north is seen on both sets of Subaru images, at the K band and in the mid-IR as well. ...
Powerpoint file
... • No planets in globular cluster 47 Tuc and open cluster Hyades, one candidate in globular M4 • “Impossible” planet HD 188753 Ab is not real • HIP 13044 b, a giant planet of extragalactic origin? ...
... • No planets in globular cluster 47 Tuc and open cluster Hyades, one candidate in globular M4 • “Impossible” planet HD 188753 Ab is not real • HIP 13044 b, a giant planet of extragalactic origin? ...
Life of stars, formation of elements
... • Many more similar starformation regions buried deep inside cloud. ...
... • Many more similar starformation regions buried deep inside cloud. ...
Solar system - (SKA) South Africa
... and three dwarf planets are the largest bodies in our solar system. ...
... and three dwarf planets are the largest bodies in our solar system. ...
Harpell/Astro 10
... b) These planets were captured from other solar systems. c) These planets are jovian in nature and were able to form close to their stars because their solar nebulas were very cold in temperature. d) Despite their large masses, these planets are terrestrial in nature and therefore could form in thei ...
... b) These planets were captured from other solar systems. c) These planets are jovian in nature and were able to form close to their stars because their solar nebulas were very cold in temperature. d) Despite their large masses, these planets are terrestrial in nature and therefore could form in thei ...
Star Jeopardy Review #2
... They are young enough to not have most of their hydrogen not fused into helium. They do not evolve off until helium is built up. Most of stars life time is spent as a main sequence star. ...
... They are young enough to not have most of their hydrogen not fused into helium. They do not evolve off until helium is built up. Most of stars life time is spent as a main sequence star. ...
What is a pulsar planet ? How do planets form ?
... Pulsars are generated as result of supernovae explosions of massive stars. When do planets form ? before explosions ? after explosions ? ...
... Pulsars are generated as result of supernovae explosions of massive stars. When do planets form ? before explosions ? after explosions ? ...
Star Formation
... protostar looks starlike after the surrounding gas is blown away, but its thermal energy comes from gravitational contraction, not fusion 4) The collapsing gas becomes a young stellar object with an accretion disk and jets 4) When the young stellar object begins fusing hydrogen into helium it become ...
... protostar looks starlike after the surrounding gas is blown away, but its thermal energy comes from gravitational contraction, not fusion 4) The collapsing gas becomes a young stellar object with an accretion disk and jets 4) When the young stellar object begins fusing hydrogen into helium it become ...
Terrestrial planet formation in exoplanetary systems with a giant
... us to consider two possible scenarios: 1) the perturbing massive planet was fully formed when the planetesimals in the inner zone were still in their early phases of accumulation, and 2) the giant planet reached its final mass only later on when lunar-sized embryos were already present in the inner ...
... us to consider two possible scenarios: 1) the perturbing massive planet was fully formed when the planetesimals in the inner zone were still in their early phases of accumulation, and 2) the giant planet reached its final mass only later on when lunar-sized embryos were already present in the inner ...
Exoplanet_talk_at_Vanderbilt_for_HEP
... (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), and K. Stapelfeldt and J. Krist (NASA ...
... (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), and K. Stapelfeldt and J. Krist (NASA ...
1. The Sun has a surface temperature of about 6000 K.
... and metals. Out farther, ices could freeze onto the dust grains, so they got included in the planetesimals. In addition, the more massive planetary cores made of rocks, metals, and ices could pull gasses in. This made them even more massive. There are many asteroids, mostly outside of Mars’ orbit, a ...
... and metals. Out farther, ices could freeze onto the dust grains, so they got included in the planetesimals. In addition, the more massive planetary cores made of rocks, metals, and ices could pull gasses in. This made them even more massive. There are many asteroids, mostly outside of Mars’ orbit, a ...
Our Solar System
... center, where it accumulated to form the Sun. These dust particles stuck together to make clumps, then clumps stuck together to make rocks, then rocks collided to make planets. ...
... center, where it accumulated to form the Sun. These dust particles stuck together to make clumps, then clumps stuck together to make rocks, then rocks collided to make planets. ...
What have we learned?
... • How is gas recycled in our galaxy? – Gas from dying stars mixes new elements into the interstellar medium, which slowly cools, making the molecular clouds where stars form. – Those stars will eventually return much of their matter to interstellar space. ...
... • How is gas recycled in our galaxy? – Gas from dying stars mixes new elements into the interstellar medium, which slowly cools, making the molecular clouds where stars form. – Those stars will eventually return much of their matter to interstellar space. ...
GRB Progenitors and their environments
... • Collapsar Models: Can be produced in single and binary stars. Single star models require high rotation with minimal angular momentum loss in winds (perhaps rotationally-induced mixing can help?). Binary systems are used to i) remove the hydrogen envelope without losing angular momentum, ii) spinni ...
... • Collapsar Models: Can be produced in single and binary stars. Single star models require high rotation with minimal angular momentum loss in winds (perhaps rotationally-induced mixing can help?). Binary systems are used to i) remove the hydrogen envelope without losing angular momentum, ii) spinni ...
Water ice lines and the formation of giant moons around super
... habitable moons. Here we simulate the accretion disks around super-Jovian planets and find that giant moons with masses similar to Mars can form. Our results suggest that the Galilean moons formed during the final stages of accretion onto Jupiter, when the circumjovian disk was sufficiently cool. In ...
... habitable moons. Here we simulate the accretion disks around super-Jovian planets and find that giant moons with masses similar to Mars can form. Our results suggest that the Galilean moons formed during the final stages of accretion onto Jupiter, when the circumjovian disk was sufficiently cool. In ...
Astronomy 102, Spring 2003 Solutions to Review Problems
... Given that we’ve talked about how far apart stars are in the galaxy, they almost never run into each other. (It’s a different matter in the cores of globular clusters, and even right at the center of our galaxy, but consider the Solar neighborhood for now.) Thus, if there is a binary star system, al ...
... Given that we’ve talked about how far apart stars are in the galaxy, they almost never run into each other. (It’s a different matter in the cores of globular clusters, and even right at the center of our galaxy, but consider the Solar neighborhood for now.) Thus, if there is a binary star system, al ...
Star Formation: Interstellar Gas and Dust
... • Blows away gas trying to fall onto forming star. ...
... • Blows away gas trying to fall onto forming star. ...
ASTRONOMY: WHAT DO YOU NEED TO KNOW
... compressed by the fast gases as the red giant collapses into a white dwarf Know the characteristics and lifespan characteristics of white dwarfs. Does not undergo nuclear fusion but rather contains degenerate matter; contains no gas but radiates energy into space which can take many billions of year ...
... compressed by the fast gases as the red giant collapses into a white dwarf Know the characteristics and lifespan characteristics of white dwarfs. Does not undergo nuclear fusion but rather contains degenerate matter; contains no gas but radiates energy into space which can take many billions of year ...
White Dwarfs
... In a binary system, each star controls a finite region of space, bounded by the Roche Lobes (or Roche surfaces). ...
... In a binary system, each star controls a finite region of space, bounded by the Roche Lobes (or Roche surfaces). ...
formation1
... • This pocket of over density is much bigger than a single star. • This over dense region is not uniform, but has within it other, smaller regions of high density. • As the over density begins to be drawn together by gravity, it fragments into smaller pockets of gas which go on to form individual st ...
... • This pocket of over density is much bigger than a single star. • This over dense region is not uniform, but has within it other, smaller regions of high density. • As the over density begins to be drawn together by gravity, it fragments into smaller pockets of gas which go on to form individual st ...
The Milky Way
... In a binary system, each star controls a finite region of space, bounded by the Roche Lobes (or Roche surfaces). ...
... In a binary system, each star controls a finite region of space, bounded by the Roche Lobes (or Roche surfaces). ...