Astro/Physics Student | Golden Skate

Astro/Physics Student

dlkksk8fan

Medalist
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
My son Kyle is an Astro/Physics student. This summer while doing research he had a discovery. Here is the press release from UC Santa Cruz.

Serendipitous observations reveal rare event in life of distant quasar

In this artist's depiction of the huge flow of gas from a quasar discovered by UCSC and UF astronomers, the outflow of blue gas emerges from the accretion disk that surrounds the black hole in the quasar. Image by University of Florida/Myda Iamiceli.
Thanks to the sharp eyes of a UC Santa Cruz undergraduate, astronomers have obtained a surprise view of a never-before-observed event in the birth of a galaxy.

A team of astronomers from UCSC and the University of Florida discovered the onset of a huge flow of gas from a quasar, the super-bright core of an extremely remote young galaxy. The gas was expelled from the quasar and its enormous black hole sometime in the space of four years around 10 billion years ago--an extremely brief and ancient blip detectable only through the unlikely convergence of two separate observational efforts.

"It was completely serendipitous," said Fred Hamann, a UF astronomy professor. "In fact, the only way it could have happened is through serendipity."

The discovery was initiated when UCSC undergraduate Kyle Kaplan earlier this spring noticed peculiarities in the spectra, or wavelengths of light, that had been observed and recorded from the quasar. Kaplan was working with Jason X. Prochaska, associate professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UCSC, who had gathered the spectra in 2006 (together with former UCSC undergraduate Stephane Herbert-Fort) as part of an effort to study the galaxies between the quasar and Earth. Prochaska was aware of Hamann's work on quasars and asked him to take a closer look.

"It is much to Kyle's credit that he chose not to ignore these changes in the quasar, which were unrelated to his research," Prochaska said. "As with many great discoveries in astronomy, one must always be open to the unexpected."

A paper about the research appeared online this month in the Letters of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Quasars are enormously bright cores of very distant galaxies thought to contain supermassive black holes a billion times larger than our sun. They are seen only in the centers of very distant galaxies that formed long ago--galaxies whose light is just now reaching Earth after billions of years in transit. The quasar in question is about 10.3 billion light years from Earth.

The black holes within quasars are invisible, but the cosmic material cascading toward them builds up and forms hot "accretion" disks, the source of quasars' intense light. Some of the incoming material also can be expelled from quasars to form enormous gas clouds that zoom out at extremely high speeds. With the quasar in question, the gas is flowing at an astonishing rate of 58 million mph, Hamann said.

But while astronomers had observed the presence of such gas clouds with other quasars, they had never witnessed one actually coming into being--until now.

Following up on Kaplan's observations, Hamann and other astronomers checked the 2006 spectra against the spectra of the same region recorded in a separate sky survey in 2002. To their surprise, they found no evidence of the gas cloud in 2002.

"So that's how we know this appeared between 2002 and 2006," Hamann said.

The discovery opens a window to understanding more about how quasars come into being and their role in the evolution of galaxies.

"The fact that we saw one appear in so short a time frame means that it's a volatile type of structure," Hamann said. "It could be an evolutionary phase, or maybe a transition stage from one phase to another."

Astronomers hope future observations will prove telling.

"One interesting question in astronomy is how does the evolution of quasars relate to the evolution of galaxies?" Hamann said. "The matter ejected from quasars might be the key to this relationship because it can disrupt or regulate the formation of galaxies around quasars. This discovery is a small piece of that story that we can see happening in real time, and what we are going to do now is keep watching."

Other coauthors of the paper are Paola Rodriquez Hidalgo, a UF graduate student, and Stephane Herbert-Fort, now a graduate student at University of Arizona and a UCSC alumnus.
 

sillylionlove

Medalist
Joined
Oct 27, 2006
Wow that is totally over my head. :confused:

But I bet it's right down Mathman's alley!! :rofl:

Congrats to him though!!
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Wow, Donna, your family must be over the moon (so to speak ;) ). Congratulations to your son. This is the discovery of a lifetime. Yes, there is always a certain amount of luck involved is astronomical discovery -- looking in the right place at the right time.

Still... :rock: :rock: :rock:

For the curious -- the purpose of these experiments is to study the gravitational fields of distant galaxies. Quasars are incredibly distant and enormously energetic objects, almost at the edge of possible observation. The light from these galactic black-holes-in-the-making is distorted as it passes by galaxies between the quasar and the earth. By studying this light, astronomers can map the gravitation filed of the galaxies and gather information about dark energy, for instance.

Young Kyle had the insight and the moxie to follow up on a strange anomaly -- and the anomaly turned out to be more important than the thing they were actually trying to study. I say moxie because undergraduate students do not always have the courage of their convictions to tell their famous professors, hey, man, forget that, look at THIS! :laugh:
 
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dlkksk8fan

Medalist
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Wow, Donna, your family must be over the moon (so to speak ).
Yes, yes, my husband and I are very proud. Astronomy has always been a passion of Kyle's since he was 6 years old. An average student in high school he spent three years at our local jr college studying computer science. I encouraged him to finish his college education in something that he has a passion for, so he chose Astro/Physics with a Geology minor. He was lucky to get a research grant at UC Santa Cruz this last summer and that is where he found the wavelengths. I'm just hoping that something financial will come along so he can continue to study and complete his Masters and PhD.
 
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