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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Giant ringed planet likely cause of mysterious eclipses
    http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/newsandevents/pressreleases/giant_ringed_planet

    A giant gas planet – up to 50x the mass of Jupiter, encircled by a ring of dust – is likely hurtling around a star
    over 1000 light years away from Earth, according to international team of astronomers, led by University of Warwick

    Light from young star - PDS 110 in the Orion constellation - is regularly blocked by large object, thought to be an orbiting planet

    Next eclipse predicted to take place in September this year, and amateur astronomers across the world will be able to witness it

    Moons may be forming in the habitable zone around the star – leading to possibility that life could thrive within system

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Physics - Viewpoint: Neutron-Star Implosions as Heavy-Element Sources
    https://physics.aps.org/articles/v10/89

    A dramatic scenario in which a compact black hole eats a spinning neutron star from inside might explain a nearby galaxy’s unexpectedly high abundance of heavy elements.

    The lightest of the chemical elements—hydrogen, helium, and lithium—were created in the hot, early phase of the Universe, about a minute after the big bang. Heavier elements
    were forged later—in the nuclear fires of many generations of stars and during supernova explosions. But the origin of many rare chemical species, particularly the heaviest
    elements, remains uncertain. In particular, recent observations of a nearby galaxy enriched with heavy elements challenge traditional nucleosynthesis models. George Fuller
    of the University of California, San Diego, and colleagues now propose a novel scenario for the origin of the heaviest elements, including gold, platinum, and uranium. Their
    hypothesis involves tiny black holes inducing neutron-star implosions and, if viable, would in one fell swoop offer solutions to other astrophysical riddles beyond heavy element
    synthesis.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Čištění a výměna reflexní vrstvy prim. zrcadla VLT.
    Ani jsem nedýchal, když jsem na to koukal. Největší respekt!

    ESOcast 120: Chile Chill 10 – “VLT Main Mirror Recoating” | ESO Česko
    http://www.eso.org/public/czechrepublic/videos/esocast120a/

    ESOcast 120: Chile Chill 10 – “VLT Main Mirror Recoating”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKAaFOuVvKs
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    JULIANNE: Kdybych nebyl v práci, tak se u toho snad rozbrečím.
    Už víc než rok plánuji výpravu na start, v práci jsem zařídil termín, a teď vše padlo.
    Ta zpráva o kolizním start. okně se objevila už před několika měsíci, ale to ještě
    vypadalo optimisticky na volbu jiného nosiče. Dnes už nahlas mluví o několikaměsíčním
    zpoždění. Katastrofa. Delay se může natáhnout klidně i na půl roku.

    Jediná limitace start. okna JWST je zvýšená sluneční aktivita, jinak můžou letět kdykoliv.
    A je mi jasné, že chtějí mít ne 100 ale 1000% jistotu, že vše klapne. Ach jo... :-(((
    JULIANNE
    JULIANNE --- ---
    VIRGO: To snad ne :(!
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/jpl/pia21340/prometheus-and-the-ghostly-f-ring

    The thin sliver of Saturn's moon Prometheus lurks near ghostly structures in Saturn's narrow F ring in this view from NASA's Cassini spacecraft.
    Many of the narrow ring's faint and wispy features result from its gravitational interactions with Prometheus (86 kilometers, or 53 miles across).

    The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 680,000 miles (1.1 million kilometers) from Saturn. Image scale is 4 miles (6 kilometers) per pixel.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Magnetic Fields in Massive, Star Formation Coressu201729 | www.cfa.harvard.edu/
    https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/su201729

    Studies of molecular clouds have revealed that star formation usually occurs in a two step process. First, supersonic flows compress the clouds into dense
    filaments light-years long, after which gravity collapses the densest material in the filament into cores. In this scenario, massive cores (each more than
    about twenty solar–masses) preferentially form at intersections where filaments cross, producing sites of clustered star formation. The process sounds
    reasonable and is expected to be efficient, but the observed rate of star formation in dense gas is only a few percent of the rate expected if the material
    really were freely collapsing. To solve the problem, astronomers have proposed that magnetic fields support the cores against the collapse induced by self-gravity.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Tak tohle je peklo. :((

    http://www.spaceflightinsider.com/...ssions/space-observatories/james-webb-space-telescope-delayed/

    The much delayed and over budget next-generation +James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) (JWST) has suffered another setback prior to its journey
    to the launch pad: the October 2018 launch may be in conflict with Europe’s BepiColombo mission to Mercury. Both spacecraft are to be flown
    on Ariane 5 boosters, but the spaceport at Kourou, French Guiana, cannot support two flights in the same month. BepiColombo has priority due
    to the tight launch window to reach Mercury. This will result in the JWST having its launch date pushed back to 2019 at the earliest.

    ---

    https://www.nasa.gov/.../2017/sunshield-layers-fully-integrated-on-nasa-s-james-webb-space-telescope

    The five sunshield layers responsible for protecting the optics and instruments of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope are now fully installed.

    Northrop Grumman Corporation in Redondo Beach, California who designed the Webb telescope’s optics and spacecraft bus for NASA’s Goddard Space
    Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, integrated the final flight layers into the sunshield subsystem. The team is now folding and stowing the
    layers, in preparation for deployment tests in August.

    The sunshield layers work together to reduce the temperatures between the hot and cold sides of the observatory by approximately 570 degrees
    Fahrenheit. Each successive layer of the sunshield, made of kapton, is cooler than the one below. All layers were installed and tested in June
    and July 2017 at Northrop Grumman Corporation’s Space Park facility in Redondo Beach.

    “This is a huge milestone for the Webb telescope as we prepare for launch,” said Jim Flynn, Webb sunshield manager, Northrop Grumman Aerospace
    Systems. “The groundbreaking tennis court sized sunshield will shield the optics from heat and assist in providing the imaging of the formation
    of stars and galaxies more than 13.5 billion years ago.”

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Home > OSHI - Online Showcase of Herschel Images
    http://oshi.esa.int/#detail=image.html?id=82

    An image from +European Space Agency, ESA's Herschel space observatory of the iconic Eagle Nebula. This is a three-colour composite with colours
    assigned as blue=70um, green=160um, red=250um. Herschel’s far infrared instruments were able for the first time to peer through the vast swathes
    of optically opaque material at this level of detail, showcasing the thermal emissions from the vast clouds and dust, which make up the nebula.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    https://www.nasa.gov/...ard/2017/nasa-s-transiting-exoplanet-survey-satellite-passes-critical-review

    NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) has moved one step closer to launch after successfully passing its Systems
    Integration Review (SIR), an independent review from independent technical and scientific experts who have deemed the mission
    ready to begin installation of its scientific instrument onto the spacecraft.

    Scheduled for launch in March 2018, TESS will be NASA’s next planet-hunting mission, searching for planets orbiting stars outside
    our solar system, known as exoplanets. TESS will use four wide-field cameras to scan nearly the entire sky, monitoring the nearest
    and brightest stars for temporary dips in the light they emit that may indicate a planet passing in front — an event known as a transit.

    TESS Camera Mounting Timelapse
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOj1PCtG2yk
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    An artificial eclipse for imaging extrasolar planets | Stanford News
    http://news.stanford.edu/2017/08/07/artificial-eclipse-imaging-extrasolar-planets/

    As anyone anticipating this month’s eclipse knows, one way to dim a star is to block it with something else – a moon,
    perhaps. Or in the case of distant stars whose light masks orbiting exoplanets, a shade-throwing satellite might do.

    JULIANNE
    JULIANNE --- ---
    JULIANNE: Tak zpět; jak jsem se v novém článku (Patruno & Kama 2017) dočetla dál, je to tam, i když jen jako maličká sekce (dva krátké odstavce a tabulka na str. 9). Zdá se, že proti ztrátě atmosféry by stačilo magnetické pole srovnatelné se zemským, což mě překvapuje.
    JULIANNE
    JULIANNE --- ---
    DARKMOOR: Vyloženě k planetám pulsarů jsem na to nenarazila, ale existuje dost modelů k planetám silně aktivních hvězd hlavní posloupnosti, které by se snad daly upravit pro příslušný účel. To bohužel neumím.
    DARKMOOR
    DARKMOOR --- ---
    JULIANNE: JULIANNE: Zkoušel někdo spočítat jak silné by muselo být planetární magnetické pole, aby ochránilo atmosféru planety u neutronové hvězdy?
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    http://aasnova.org/2017/08/04/collisions-around-a-black-hole-mean-mealtime/

    When a normally dormant supermassive black hole burps out a brief flare, it’s assumed that a star was torn apart and
    fell into the black hole. But a new study suggests that some of these flares might have a slightly different cause.

    JULIANNE
    JULIANNE --- ---
    DARKMOOR: Ale mně to nevadí, jen mě to překvapilo :). Tomuhle tématu jsem se stejně alespoň protentokrát neměla v úmyslu do hloubky věnovat. A oni alespoň v prvním oddílu článku pracují s daty místo pouze teoretických předpovědí, co je ještě zachytitelné. Já jsem se momentálně zasekla na efektivní teplotě PSR B1257+12. Dostatečně jasnou hodnotu jsem zatím nedohledala, v různých pracích se liší i řádově a obecně teploty neutronových hvězd se liší přes několik řádů. Už se nedivím, že autoři nejnovější práce považují planety v systému za pravděpodobně zmrzlé, zatímco třeba Miller a Hamilton by je odpařili...
    DARKMOOR
    DARKMOOR --- ---
    JULIANNE: Je to jasné, vycucli ti tu myšlenku z hlavy. Pro příště neváhat, psát a publikovat ;)
    JULIANNE
    JULIANNE --- ---
    VIRGO: JULIANNE: Zatím alespoň úvod:

    Feasibility and benefits of pulsar planet characterization

    Abstract
    Planets orbiting neutron stars seem to be rare, but all the more interesting for science due to their origins. Characterizing the composition of pulsar planets could elucidate processes involved in supernova fallback disks, accretion of companion star material, potential survival of planetary cores in the post-MS phase of their stars, and more. However, the small size and unusual spectral distribution of neutron stars make any spectroscopic measurements very difficult if not impossible in the near future. In this work, we set to estimate the feasibility of spectroscopy of planets orbiting specifically pulsars, and to review other possible methods of characterization of the planets, such as emissions from aurorae.

    1. Introduction
    The first ever confirmed extrasolar planets were discovered by Alexander Wolszczan and Dale Frail in 1992 around the stellar remnant PSR B1257+12. The existence of planets around such an extreme stellar object caused much surprise, and yet they have received comparably little attention after discoveries of planets around main sequence (MS) stars, starting with 51 Pegasi b (Mayor & Queloz 1995). Two more pulsar systems have been discovered up to date (Sigurdssson et al. 2003, Bailes et al. 2011), but pulsar planets remain rather understudied. This is understandable due to the apparent scarcity of these systems, the difficulty of learning anything but the mass of the planet(s) through pulsar timing, and the absence of direct relevance for search for Earth-like planets and conditions for life. However, their indirect importance may be high (not speaking of direct relevance for many other fields), and the formation, evolution and characteristics of pulsar planetary systems may prove relevant even for the popular topic of searching for “Earth 2.0”.
    To start with their formation, there are five basic ways how a pulsar may acquire planets: i) they could be remnants of planetary cores of objects formed in-situ, ii) they could be objects formed in-situ from the fallback debris after a supernova explosion, iii) they could be objects formed in-situ from a debris disk from a merger of two white dwarfs, which also gave existence to the pulsar, iv) they could be remnants of a stellar companion that lost most of its mass either to the pulsar, or during the supernova explosion, or v) they could be captured objects, most likely from a companion star, less likely rogue planets. Podsiadlowski (1993) used finer criteria to describe different formation processes, and summarized the following options: planet survival; fallback disk origin; WD-WD/WD-NS merger; disrupted companion forming a disk; planet capture; evaporation of a stellar companion; ablation of a close binary during the supernova explosion; Be binary model (where a massive disk is accreted from a massive companion); massive binary model (where a circumbinary planet is dragged in during the Thorne-Żytkov phase); TŻO deflation (where the TŻO envelope deflates to form a massive disk); protostellar disk capture by a millisecond pulsar; planets surviving around an overmassive WD. We refer the reader to study the possible frequency and predictions of the individual models in the Podsiadlowski (1993) paper.
    Considering the PSR B1257+12 system (Wolszczan & Frail 1992, Wolszczan 1994), Podsiadlowski (1993) concluded that a white dwarf merger is the likeliest scenario. Margalit and Metzger (2016) proposed a formation by tidal disruption of a C/O white dwarf companion by the pulsar, specifying a more general companion disruption scenario (Yan et al., 2013) and providing valuable scenarios of disk evolution for both WD-NS merger disks and supernova fallback disks.
    PSR B1620-26 b is a circumbinary planet orbiting a pulsar and a white dwarf, and likely formed around the white dwarf precursor, with its system later captured by the pulsar, giving rise to a binary, while the pulsar’s original stellar companion was ejected (Sigurdssson et al. 2003). In a globular cluster with high star density, where this system is present, such an event is more likely than in the galactic disk. Finally, the PSR J1719-1438 system contains most likely a remnant of a disrupted WD companion that narrowly avoided its complete destruction, based on its minimum density (Bailes et al. 2011).
    The nearly coplanar orbits of the first three discovered pulsar planets around PSR B1257+12 (REF) suggest formation in-situ. The possibility of an in-situ formation, especially by a WD-WD/NS-WD merger or companion disruption, is further supported by the discovery of a circumstellar disk of the magnetar 4U 0142+61 (Wang et al. 2006), and a tentative asteroid belt around the millisecond pulsar B1937+21 (Shannon et al. 2013). There is also evidence of an asteroid or in-falling debris around PSR J0738−4042, a middle-aged, isolated radio pulsar (Brook et al. 2013).
    But we cannot completely discount the option of planetary cores surviving a supernova explosion, however unlikely it seems, and although it’s not applicable to planets of recycled pulsars. Podsiadlowski (1993) notes that in case of an asymmetric explosion, if the neutron star receives a kick of the order of the orbital velocity of the planet (and in a direction similar to the planet’s motion during the supernova explosion), the stellar remnant may retain the planet, which would otherwise become gravitationally unbound in case of a symmetric explosion. In this scenario, the planets’ composition would likely be heavily altered by the event. Not only would likely only cores of massive and preferably distant planets survive, but the conditions during a supernova explosion, especially the strong neutrino flow, could change the core’s chemical make-up as well, but a detailed model of the compositional changes is out of the scope of this study.
    Planets formed from the supernova fallback material – if possible despite its low angular momentum – would also exhibit likely very distinct properties; we could expect metal-rich composition and a variety of short-lived isotopes. Planets arising from WD disruption disks can be expected to have a predominantly carbonaceous composition – essentially to be “diamond planets” (Margalit & Metzger 2016, Kuchner & Seager 2005). On the other hand, planets captured after the explosion would not possess the above-described distinct properties. Finally, planets arising directly from WDs would be recognizable by their extreme density.
    Recently, another formation possibility has been mentioned by Greaves & Holland (2017), based on observation of the Geminga pulsar’s interaction with the interstellar medium (ISM). ISM dust grains seemed to be able to penetrate into the pulsar wind nebula. With enough infalling dust, a disk around the pulsar might form. While ISM in general is composed mainly of hydrogen and helium, the dust particles contain a lot of oxygen, iron, magnesium and other heavier elements (Pinto et al. 2013), so it is conceivable that such a disk would provide a planetary-forming environment. These planets would likely manifest properties akin to those orbiting MS stars.
    Could pulsar planets possess atmospheres? The answer to that question depends on the star-planet distance and the formation mechanism. Detailed models that are out of the scope of this paper are needed to answer it more reliably; what follows in the rest of the paragraph remains pure speculation insofar. We expect that captured planets could hold onto their atmospheres, if their orbital separation is sufficiently large. The chance of atmospheres on cores surviving the supernova explosion or formed around the pulsar seems low, even if there is sufficient fallback material. Planets originating from a companion disruption disk might be able to form an atmosphere, most likely CO-dominated (Kuchner and Seager, 2006). But since most of pulsars’ spin-down energy is released in the form of relativistic particles – pulsar wind –, any atmosphere might be quickly eroded unless the planet also possessed a magnetic field. This particular case would increase the chances of characterization.
    Patruno and Kama (2017) have recently investigated the survival of pulsar planets’ atmospheres and the potential habitability of these worlds. __________________(doplnit)
    Do the great distance of known pulsar systems and the faintness of the light source present insurmountable obstacles for now and the near future, or could they be resolved? We try to provide estimates for expected planetary characteristics and future observation in the next sections of our paper.
    JULIANNE
    JULIANNE --- ---
    VIRGO: Taky pravda. Pak sem nahodím draft, až bude působit jako celistvý text. Doufám, že to stihnu do úterka.
    Pak už na arxiv, nasbírat feedback - a vytvořit poster na EPSC.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    JULIANNE: :-))

    Ostych stranou, tato témata jsou dnes už "na pořadu (každého) dne." :D
    Kliknutím sem můžete změnit nastavení reklam