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Science: AAA

Ask an Astronomer

This page was originally created by Leo Burtscher, filled with the help of many others, and discussed at Galaxy Coffee on May 7, 2009 in preparation of the 2009 Open Day. We revisited it on the July 19, 2012 galaxy coffee in preparation of the 2012 open day.

Some questions we didn't yet discuss, for others we couldn't come up with good answers. The ones where answers are pending are highlighted.

Planets and Stars

Exoplanets / Life in the Universe

can refer to persons other than the discoverer, landmarks, cities, mythological creatures, and much more like e.g. an institute like MPIA itself), comets are named after the discoverer. Exoplanets always get these boring numbers. This is just a convention astronomers have been using. A possible explanation might be that exoplanet research is a comparatively young field and today large groups are involved in designing and building instruments and telescopes to do the observations in the first place and more people are involved in performing the observations, analysing the data and interpreting them.

Dangerous Universe

It is very unlikely that such an object would visit us.

...but see http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v459/n7248/full/nature08096.html - you might not even need a fly-by; major collisions could happen just like that...

Before that, the sun will get more luminous, making the earth considerably warmer. This is because of hydrogen-helium conversion, the mean particle weight in the core becomes larger, thus increasing density/pressure, causing Hydrogen burning to proceed more efficiently

  • Update 2012: http://arxiv.org/abs/0801.4031, which seems to be pretty thorough has the Earth not engulfed as the Sun expands, but it gets swallowed later as tidal interactions alter its orbit.

Little is known about the origin of these highest-energy particles; they are most likely produced in cosmic accelerators outside the Milky Way, possibly active galactic nuclei (AGNs) or gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). There is a well-understood reason why no cosmic rays with energy much above 10^20 electron volt arrive at Earth, known as the GZK cutoff: a particle of that energy would collide with low-energy photons from the cosmic microwave background radiation, quickly losing energy. Only very close to one of these most powerful cosmic accelerators could cosmic rays above the GZK cutoff exist, but another simple estimate (not given here) shows that AGN and GRBs can only accelerate up to ~ 10^20 electron volt. Curiously cosmic ray accelerators run out of steam at the same energy where the universe is no longer transparent. A cosmic ray of 10^20 eV interacts in matter of density 1 g / cm^3 --- like water, or your head :-) --- on average after travelling a distance of ~ 100 cm. This means that only about every 10th UHECR passing through your head will interact. If there is an interaction, on the order of 100 new particles will be created. These again have a chance of 10 % to interact before leaving your head, which means that in total ~ 10 particles will have interacted. These 10 interactions will happen in different cells in your head, destroying one molecule per cell, most likely water molecules. Overall, the damage to your head is negligible. Besides, you would have to be an astronaut, because on Earth you are shielded by the atmosphere.

  • Roberto Decarli adds: About an AGN jet shooting towards a star / planet, it may be worth of mentioning the unique case of 3C321, a radio galaxy whose jet is blasting away the interstellar medium of the companion galaxy: press release

Other

Pluto's mass was originally grossly over-estimated, leading to a falls planetary status assignment. But we don't know really ;-)

Largest stars (in diameter) can be ~2100 Rsun, i.e. ~10 AU.

radiation belts (space weather)? If the sun has an outburst, the astronouts have to stay in :-)

Non-science questions

Galaxies & Cosmology

Black Holes

Neutron stars

Cosmology

Other

Other AAA pages

Tags: link-collection, outreach, q-n-a, science
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