A Space & astronomy forum. SpaceBanter.com

Go Back   Home » SpaceBanter.com forum » Astronomy and Astrophysics » Amateur Astronomy
Site Map Home Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Amateurs needed



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #1  
Old December 20th 05, 12:25 AM posted to sci.astro.amateur
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Amateurs needed

Wanted: Amateur stargazers to help solve supernova mystery

Ohio State University scientists have thought of a new way to solve an
astronomical mystery, and their plan relies on a well-connected
network of amateur stargazers and one very elusive subatomic particle.

To understand what happens inside exploding stars, or supernovae,
scientists need to study particles called neutrinos, explained John
Beacom, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Ohio State.
Neutrinos are formed in the nuclear reactions that make stars like our
sun shine. Exploding stars overflow with the particles, and flood the
universe with them.

Neutrinos should be everywhere, but they are very hard to detect – so
hard to detect, in fact, that even though countless neutrinos burrow
through our planet every second, scientists only capture a few of them
each day.

Scientists know that most neutrinos they do detect probably come from
our own sun, from nuclear reactors in terrestrial power plants, or
from cosmic radiation interacting with our atmosphere. There has been
no way to distinguish whether a particular neutrino came from
elsewhere, until now.

That's why Beacom and his team's discovery – that each year, one or
two of the neutrinos detected on Earth can probably be matched to the
exploding star that made them – represents a major step forward for
supernova astrophysics.

The discovery also comes at a special time, Beacom said. The method
will fully exploit the capabilities of the next generation of neutrino
detectors, which are now being planned, and take advantage of a
growing number of amateur astronomers who are capable of discovering
supernovae.

For a study appearing in a recent issue of the journal Physical Review
Letters, Beacom and his coauthors developed a kind of litmus test for
finding supernova neutrinos: If a detector on Earth registers two of
the particles within ten seconds, odds are high that they came from a
supernova in a nearby galaxy. Alternatively, if an astronomer –
amateur or otherwise – spots a supernova, scientists at neutrino
detectors can look back through their records to see if they captured
a neutrino around that time.

Given that a few supernovae occur in nearby galaxies every year, and
given the sensitivity of neutrino detectors on Earth, they've
determined that at least one of those scenarios – the
two-in-ten-seconds event or the identification of a supernova neutrino
after the fact – should be able to happen about once a year.

The professionals need amateur astronomers to help spot new supernovae
fast, so scientists can quickly match captured neutrinos with the
exploding stars that made them.

"Even with all our modern telescopes, the professionals can't look at
the whole sky at once," Beacom said. "But the amateurs are everywhere.
With relatively small telescopes, they can see these nearby
supernovae, which are very bright – often brighter than their host
galaxies."

Here, "relatively small" means smaller than a telescope in an
astronomical observatory, but larger than the average backyard
telescope.

Coauthor Hasan Yüksel, a postdoctoral researcher at Ohio State ,
explained that many of today's so-called amateur astronomers aren't
really so amateur. "You can think of them more as 'professional
amateurs,'" he said.

These are the semi-pro players of the hobby set – skilled folks who
build custom telescopes. They have day jobs, but they scan the skies
at night, and share their findings with other amateurs over the
Internet. Often, they have ties to professional astronomers. When a
major discovery is made, they know as soon as the professionals do.

Yüksel also pointed out that since 2002, there were at least nine
supernovae identified in galaxies within about 30 million light years
(180 trillion miles) of our Milky Way, and more than half of those
were discovered by amateurs.

Surprisingly, the Ohio State physicists got their idea in a "eureka"
moment -- after a discussion with colleagues at the Department of
Astronomy's morning coffee event. This daily review of new journal
papers posted to an online archive (http://arXiv.org) has been going
on since the 1990s, and often inspires faculty and students to pursue
new lines of research.

Walking back to their offices after coffee, Yüksel asked Beacom and
visiting scholar Shin'ichiro Ando about a special class of galaxies
called starburst galaxies, in which unusually high numbers of stars
are being born. Wouldn't those galaxies also have large numbers of
supernovae? Wouldn't nearby starburst galaxies be good places to look
and find out?

Beacom said that something clicked.

"We realized that maybe it's not totally crazy to look for neutrinos
from supernovae in nearby galaxies," he said.

The three performed detailed calculations about supernova rates in
nearby galaxies, and found that the explosions probably happen more
often than people once thought – about three times a year. Then they
looked at the rates at which neutrinos are caught in giant underground
detectors on Earth.

Their discovery came down to calculating the odds: it's highly
unlikely that a neutrino detector on Earth would capture two particles
within any 10 second interval unless both of those neutrinos came from
a supernova – in fact, the same supernova.

"We were kicking ourselves for not thinking of this before," Beacom
said.

He cited Supernova 1987A, which occurred in a galaxy that is a very
close companion to the Milky Way. Because detectors on Earth captured
20 neutrinos in only a few seconds during that event, astronomers knew
for sure that they came from 1987A.

But since then?

"A big fat zero," he said. "What if using this technique, we could
have been identifying one additional supernova neutrino per year? By
now, we would have collected a sample as big as that burst in 1987."
With the much larger neutrino detectors that are now being devised,
and with the large number of supernovae that are being spotted these
days, it could be done.

Galaxies up to 200 times farther away than the one that spawned
Supernova 1987A are still considered near by astronomical standards,
and amateurs would be able to spot supernovae in them. Those galaxies
may give us only one or two neutrinos per year, but that's still more
than scientists would be able to study otherwise.

"These are somewhat desperate measures," Ando admitted. "Why are we so
desperate? Since a supernova expends 99 percent of its energy in
neutrinos, those neutrinos tell the story of how the explosion works,
and therefore we have to find them." Supernova neutrinos are
everywhere, but the vastness of space keeps them hidden.

So, at least a thousand years after people first noticed supernovae in
the skies, what's happening inside these exploding stars is still a
mystery. When scientists simulate supernovae on computer, something
always goes wrong. The explosion starts, and then it fizzles.

"If we can't make a supernova blow up on the computer, that means
we're missing something. We need clues. We need to find those
neutrinos," Ando continued.

Beacom envisions that scientists at neutrino detectors could sound an
alarm whenever they detect two particles in ten seconds. Since
supernovae emit neutrinos at the very start of the explosion, the
particles would reach Earth hours before the supernovae would be
visible in telescopes, and the announcement would amount to a
supernova forecast.

Alternatively, when astronomers spot a nearby supernova, they could
ask the scientists at the detectors to look back through their data
from previous hours to find any particle events.

At Beacom's suggestion, scientists working at the Japanese neutrino
detector Super-Kamiokande are going to search their records for events
that could be linked to nearby supernovae in past years.

"While this detector is smaller than those envisioned for the future,
it's been in operation for a decade or two, so it actually stands a
good chance of having detected the first neutrino from an identified
supernova beyond the Milky Way and its closest companions," Beacom
said.

Source: Ohio State University




This news is brought to you by PhysOrg.com

 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Dan Millar's Death Programmed by God (Jologicon) - Dan was oneof the 6 NEW GODS Jologicon Needed to Select Cardinal Chunder History 8 August 14th 05 07:36 PM
New Measures Needed to Keep NASA Spacecraft From Contaminating Mars(Forwarded) Andrew Yee Astronomy Misc 0 August 2nd 05 04:51 PM
KSetiSpy question Eric SETI 12 November 23rd 03 05:51 PM
Space amateurs preparing to track China's first manned space flight James Oberg Space Shuttle 2 October 12th 03 04:01 PM
Space amateurs preparing to track China's first manned space flight James Oberg Misc 4 October 12th 03 04:01 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:45 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 SpaceBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.