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Detailing the formation of distant solar systems with Webb Telescope by Claire Blome for Hubble News Baltimore MD (SPX) Dec 17, 2020
We live in a mature solar system-eight planets and several dwarf planets (like Pluto) have formed, the latter within the rock- and debris-filled region known as the Kuiper Belt. If we could turn back time, what would we see as our solar system formed? While we can't answer this question directly, researchers can study other systems that are actively forming-along with the mix of gas and dust that encircles their still-forming stars-to learn about this process. A team led by Dr. Thomas Henning of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany, will employ NASA's upcoming James Webb Space Telescope to survey more than 50 planet-forming disks in various stages of growth to determine which molecules are present and ideally pinpoint similarities, helping to shape what we know about how solar systems assemble. Their research with Webb will specifically focus on the inner disks of relatively nearby, forming systems. Although information about these regions has been obtained by previous telescopes, none match Webb's sensitivity, which means many more details will pour in for the first time. Plus, Webb's space-based location about a million miles (1.5 million kilometers) from Earth will give it an unobstructed view of its targets. "Webb will provide unique data that we can't get any other way," said Inga Kamp of the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute of the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. "Its observations will provide molecular inventories of the inner disks of these solar systems." This research program will primarily gather data in the form of spectra. Spectra are like rainbows-they spread out light into its component wavelengths to reveal high-resolution information about the temperatures, speeds, and compositions of the gas and dust. This incredibly rich information will allow the researchers to construct far more detailed models of what is present in the inner disks-and where. "If you apply a model to these spectra, you can find out where molecules are located and what their temperatures are," Henning explained. These observations will be incredibly valuable in helping the researchers pinpoint similarities and differences among these planet-forming disks, which are also known as protoplanetary disks. "What can we learn from spectroscopy that we can't learn from imaging? Everything!" Ewine van Dishoeck of Leiden University in the Netherlands exclaimed. "One spectrum is worth a thousand images."
A 'Mountain' of New Data Some data already exist about these inner disks-NASA's retired Spitzer Space Telescope served as a pathfinder-but Webb's sensitivity and resolution are required to identify the precise quantities of each molecule as well as the elemental compositions of the gas with its data, known as spectra. "What used to be a very blurry peak in the spectrum will consist of hundreds if not thousands of detailed spectral lines," van Dishoeck said. Webb's specialty in mid-infrared light is particularly important. It will enable researchers to identify the "fingerprints" of molecules like water, carbon dioxide, methane, and ammonia-which can't be identified with any other existing instruments. The observatory will also determine how starlight impacts the chemistry and physical structures of the disks. Protoplanetary disks are complex systems. As they form, their mix of gas and dust is distributed into rings across the system. Their materials travel from the outer disk to the inner disk-but how? "The inner portion of the disk is a very dynamic place," explains Tom Ray of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies in Ireland. "It's not only where terrestrial-type planets form, but it's also where supersonic jets are launched by the star." Jets emitted by the star lead to a mixing of elements in the inner and outer disks, both by sending out particles and permitting other particles to move inward. "We think that as material leaves, it loses its spin, or angular momentum, and that this allows other material to move inward," Ray continued. "These exchanges of material will obviously impact the chemistry of the inner disk, which we're excited to explore with Webb."
Exciting Insights Await With dozens of targets on their list, it's difficult for team members to play favorites. "I love them all," Henning said. "One question I'd like to answer concerns the connection between the composition of planet-forming disks and the planets themselves. With Webb, we will observe far more detail about which types of material are available for a potential planet to accrete." After refining the data, his team will apply the discrete data points to models. "This will allow us to do a graphic reconstruction of these systems," he continued. These models will be shared with the astronomical community, enabling other scientists to examine the data, and make their own projections or glean new findings. These studies will be conducted through a Guaranteed Time Observations (GTO) program.
Stargazers given once in-a-lifetime opportunity to see 'Great Conjunction' of Saturn and Jupiter Exeter UK (SPX) Dec 15, 2020 Budding astronomers will be given a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to witness a truly special celestial event in the run-in to Christmas. This month, the gas giants Saturn and Jupiter - the two largest planets in our Solar System - will be so close in the sky that they'll both be visible through a telescope eyepiece at the same time. The planets will reach their once-every-20-years conjunction on December 21 - which will be their closest alignment since 1623, almost 400 years ago. To m ... read more
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