Large Synoptic Survey Telescope tagged posts

Minor Mergers are Major Drivers of Star Formation

A NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope view of the spiral galaxy NGC 7714, which has been dramatically distorted in shape by a close interaction with another nearby galaxy. Minor, but frequent, disturbances such as this cause a burst of star formation, accounting for around half of all new stars being formed in the local Universe. Credit: NASA/ESA

A NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope view of the spiral galaxy NGC 7714, which has been dramatically distorted in shape by a close interaction with another nearby galaxy. Minor, but frequent, disturbances such as this cause a burst of star formation, accounting for around half of all new stars being formed in the local Universe. Credit: NASA/ESA

Around half of the star formation in the local Universe arises from minor mergers between galaxies, according to data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The patch of sky called Stripe 82 is observed repeatedly to produce high-quality images of spiral galaxies...

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Object located around a Black Hole 5 Billion light-years from Earth has been measured

Two of the authors of this paper: Evencio Mediavilla (IAC) and Jorge Jímenez Vicente (UGR). Credit: Two of the authors of this paper: Evencio Mediavilla (IAC) and Jorge Jímenez Vicente (UGR).

Two of the authors of this paper: Evencio Mediavilla (IAC) and Jorge Jímenez Vicente (UGR). Credit: Two of the authors of this paper: Evencio Mediavilla (IAC) and Jorge Jímenez Vicente (UGR).

Researchers have succeeded in measuring the inner edge of the disk of matter that orbits around a supermassive black hole in a quasar > 5B light yrs from earth(an object the size of our solar system that emits as much energy as a whole galaxy). It’s the most accurate measure achieved until now of such a small and distant object, and it has been achieved thanks to the so-called gravitational microlensing effect, caused by stars belonging to a galaxy between us and the quasar, and which may magnify tiny regions within the quasar.

In particular, they have managed to measure the inner edge of the disk o...

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‘Space Warps’ and other Citizen Science Projects reap major dividends for Astrophysics

The Zooniverse citizen science project Space Warps recently reported that its online volunteers have helped to discover 29 new gravitational lenses.

The Zooniverse citizen science project Space Warps recently reported that its online volunteers have helped to discover 29 new gravitational lenses, and 30 other possible lenses from the Canada France Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey. Not only are these important discoveries in their own right but they also prove just how good citizen scientists are at hunting down unusual objects. Credit; http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/science-blog/hunting-%E2%80%98halos%E2%80%99-universe-0

Thanks to the Internet, amateur volunteers known as “citizen scientists” can readily donate their time and effort to science–in fields ranging from medicine to zoology to astrophysics...

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Einstein’s Cross under the Gravitational Microlens

Einstein’s Cross. Credit: Image courtesy of Asociación RUVID

Einstein’s Cross. Credit: Image courtesy of Asociación RUVID

The Spanish interuniversity group has obtained precise measurements for the innermost region of a disc of matter in orbital motion around a supermassive black hole tucked inside the quasar known as Einstein’s Cross (Q2237-0305). It constitutes the most precise set of measurements achieved to date for such a small and distant object, and was made possible thanks to years of monitoring as part of the OGLE and GLITP gravitational microlensing projects, which have had their lenses trained on this quasar for 12 and 9 years, respectively.

Typically, astronomers can only detect bright objects that emit a lot of light or large objects that block background light...

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