Thursday, August 28, 2014

A Peek at the Earliest Stars

Summary: At the beginning of our universe, stars were not made of the same elements that they are today. Everything in the early universe was composed of completely hydrogen and helium. It is the very first stars that created the heavier elements like carbon, oxygen, and iron. The supernovae from these stars are what spread these elements throughout the rest of our universe. But what about these first stars that were formed before these heavy elements were common? Scientists have just maybe found some hints of these that confirm this theory. A team of astronomers has found one of these low-metallicity stars.

Using spectroscopy to look at the elements in the star with the Japanese Subaru telescope, the scientists noticed that some colors, visual representations of elements, were missing. It had very low levels of heavy metals.

With the available telescopes on earth, we cannot get much more than the barest hints of these early stars. We wait, instead, for the future and the James Webb Space Telescope to look back far into the past and help cement our current observations and find stars from even earlier times.


BBC News
Science Mag

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Rosetta updates

Summary: Rosetta is a esa spacecraft that is currently trailing behind a 10-ton comet. The spacecraft with later touchdown and begin studying the object in detail, but important parameters still need to be found out about the comet first. In order to determine a perfect landing spot, there are currently five remaining candidates, the exact center of mass needs to be determined. This means finding out information about the size and material makeup of the celestial body. So far most of the data has confirmed what the scientists already knew and hopefully should not delay the initial touchdown in November of this year.


BBC News