4,509 research outputs found
The surface age of Sputnik Planum, Pluto, must be less than 10 million years
Data from the New Horizons mission to Pluto show no craters on Sputnik Planum
down to the detection limit (2 km for low resolution data, 625 m for high
resolution data). The number of small Kuiper Belt Objects that should be
impacting Pluto is known to some degree from various astronomical surveys. We
combine these geological and telescopic observations to make an order of
magnitude estimate that the surface age of Sputnik Planum must be less than 10
million years. This maximum surface age is surprisingly young and implies that
this area of Pluto must be undergoing active resurfacing, presumably through
some cryo-geophysical process. We discuss three possible resurfacing mechanisms
and the implications of each one for Pluto's physical properties.Comment: 6 pages; 1 figure; in press at PLOS ON
Comments on the commercialization of expendable launch vehicles
The President's national space policy encourages private sector investment and involvement in civil space activities. Last November, the President designated the Department of Transportation as lead agency for the commercialization of expendable launch vehicles. This presents a substantial challenge to the United States Government, since the guidelines and requirements that are set now will have great influence on whether American firms can become a viable competitive industry in the world launch market. There is a dual need to protect public safety and free the private sector launch industry from needless regulatory barriers so that it can grow and prosper
The Incidence of Debris Disks at 24 {\mu}m and 670 Myr
We use Spitzer Space Telescope 24 {\mu}m data to search for debris disks
among 122 AFGKM stars from the \sim 670 Myr clusters Hyades, Coma Ber, and
Praesepe, utilizing a number of advances in data reduction and determining the
intrinsic colors of main sequence stars. For our sample, the 1{\sigma}
dispersion about the main sequence V-K, K-[24] locus is approximately 3.1%. We
identify seven debris disks at 10% or more (\geq 3{\sigma} confidence level)
above the expected K-[24] for purely photospheric emission. The incidence of
excesses of 10% or greater in our sample at this age is 5.7 +3.1/-1.7%.
Combining with results from the literature, the rate is 7.8 +4.2/-2.1% for
early- type (B9 - F4) stars and 2.7 +3.3/-1.7% for solar-like (F5 - K9) stars.
Our primary sample has strict criteria for inclusion to allow comparison with
other work; when we relax these criteria, three additional debris disks are
detected. They are all around stars of solar-like type and hence reinforce our
conclusion that disks around such stars are still relatively common at 670 Myr
and are similar to the rate around early-type stars. The apparently small
difference in decay rates between early-type and solar-like stars is
inconsistent with the first order theoretical predictions that the later type
stellar disks would decay an order of magnitude more quickly than the earlier
type ones.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Trans-Neptunian Objects with Hubble Space Telescope ACS/WFC
We introduce a novel search technique that can identify trans-neptunian
objects in three to five exposures of a pointing within a single Hubble Space
Telescope orbit. The process is fast enough to allow the discovery of
candidates soon after the data are available. This allows sufficient time to
schedule follow up observations with HST within a month. We report the
discovery of 14 slow-moving objects found within 5\circ of the ecliptic in
archival data taken with the Wide Field Channel of the Advanced Camera for
Surveys. The luminosity function of these objects is consistent with previous
ground-based and space-based results. We show evidence that the size
distribution of both high and low inclination populations is similar for
objects smaller than 100 km, as expected from collisional evolution models,
while their size distribution differ for brighter objects. We suggest the two
populations formed in different parts of the protoplanetary disk and after
being dynamically mixed have collisionally evolved together. Among the objects
discovered there is an equal mass binary with an angular separation ~ 0."53.Comment: 16 page, 10 figures, accepted by Ap
Space-Based Thermal Infrared Studies of Asteroids
Large-area surveys operating at mid-infrared wavelengths have proven to be a
valuable means of discovering and characterizing minor planets. Through the use
of radiometric models, it is possible to derive physical properties such as
diameters, albedos, and thermal inertia for large numbers of objects. Modern
detector array technology has resulted in a significant improvement in spatial
resolution and sensitivity compared with previous generations of space-based
infrared telescopes, giving rise to a commensurate increase in the number of
objects that have been observed at these wavelengths. Space-based infrared
surveys of asteroids therefore offer an effective means of rapidly gathering
information about small body populations' orbital and physical properties. The
AKARI, WISE/NEOWISE, Spitzer, and Herschel missions have significantly
increased the number of minor planets with well-determined diameters and
albedos.Comment: Chapter for Asteroids IV book (accepted for publication
BVRI photometry of 53 unusual asteroids
We present the results of BVRI photometry and classification of 53 unusual
asteroids, including 35 near-Earth asteroids (NEAs), 6 high
eccentricity/inclination asteroids, and 12 recently-identified asteroid-pair
candidates. Most of these asteroids were not reportedly classified prior to
this work. For the few asteroids that have been previously studied, the results
are generally in rough agreement. In addition, we merge the results from
several photometric/spectroscopic surveys to create a largest-ever sample with
449 spectrally classified NEAs for statistical analysis. We identify a
"transition point" of the relative number of C/X-like and S-like NEAs at
H~18D~1km with confidence level at ~95% or higher. We find that the
C/X-like:S-like ratio for 18<=H<22 is about two times higher than that of H<18
(0.33+/-0.04 versus 0.17+/-0.02), virtually supporting the hypothesis that
smaller NEAs generally have less weathered surface (therefore, less reddish
appearance) caused by younger collision ages.Comment: 18 pages, 9 table
Formation of massive planets in binary star systems
As of today over 40 planetary systems have been discovered in binary star
systems. In all cases the configuration appears to be circumstellar, where the
planets orbit around one of the stars, the secondary acting as a perturber. The
formation of planets in binary star systems is more difficult than around
single stars due to the gravitational action of the companion on the dynamics
of the protoplanetary disk. In this contribution we first briefly present the
relevant observational evidence for planets in binary systems. Then the
dynamical influence that a secondary companion has on a circumstellar disk will
be analyzed through fully hydrodynamical simulations. We demonstrate that the
disk becomes eccentric and shows a coherent precession around the primary star.
Finally, fully hydrodynamical simulations of evolving protoplanets embedded in
disks in binary star systems are presented. We investigate how the orbital
evolution of protoplanetary embryos and their mass growth from cores to massive
planets might be affected in this very dynamical environment. We consider, in
particular, the planet orbiting the primary in the system Gamma Cephei.Comment: To appear in Proceedings: Extrasolar Planets in Multi-body Systems:
Theory and Observations Eds. K. Gozdziewski, A. Niedzielski and J. Schneide
Is it possible to regulate broadcasting for ‘Distinctiveness’?
Founding Director of the Media Policy Project Damian Tambini offers a view on the recently-published white paper about the future of the BBC
Education and the Soviet aircraft industry
Cover title"#1123"--handwritten on cover"Project Education"--coverIncludes bibliographical referencesScience and technology in the Soviet schools / by Alexander Korol -- Education and the Soviet aircraft industry / Leon Trillin
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