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  • NASA telescope’s ‘non-detection’ of first interstellar object in solar system leads NAU team to conclusions about mystery object’s size, reflectivity
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Astronomy and Planetary Science

NASA telescope’s ‘non-detection’ of first interstellar object in solar system leads NAU team to conclusions about mystery object’s size, reflectivity

Posted by Heather Tate on November 14, 2018

David Trilling sitting at a computer.

Nov. 14, 2018

In November 2017, a team of scientists pointed NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope toward a comet-like object known as ’Oumuamua—the first interstellar body ever found in our solar system—but the object proved too faint for the infrared telescope to detect.

Though initially disappointing, this non-detection of ’Oumuamua eventually provided new information about the cosmic interloper, according to a new… Read more

Filed Under: Astronomy and Planetary Science Tagged With: asteroids, Astronomy, Comet, David Trilling, NASA, Oumuamua, Spitzer Space Telescope

Think twice before moving to Mars—NAU planetary scientist refutes terraforming in NASA study

Posted by Heather Tate on July 30, 2018

Terraforming the Martian Atmosphere illustration Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

Colonizing Mars as a backup planet for Earth has been a theme in both science fiction and popular science for decades, and NASA plans to send human explorers to the Red Planet within the next 20 years.

But how feasible is it for humans to explore or colonize Mars? With an average daily… Read more

Filed Under: Astronomy and Planetary Science Tagged With: atmosphere, Christopher Edwards, CO2, mars, NASA, terraforming

NAU astronomer on team that discovered 12 new moons of Jupiter

Posted by Heather Tate on July 20, 2018

 

Moons of Jupiter Illustration

The Carnegie Institution for Science recently announced the discovery of 12 new moons of Jupiter, bringing the total number of moons orbiting the solar system’s largest planet to 79—a finding that has garnered international media coverage, including NBC News, The Washington Post, BBC, the New York Times, CNN and NPR.

The discovery team, led by Carnegie astronomer Scott Sheppard,… Read more

Filed Under: Astronomy and Planetary Science Tagged With: Chad Trujillo, discovery, discovery channel telescope, jupiter, moons, solar system

Studying Mars on Earth: NAU scientist conducting astrobiological research in Mojave Desert

Posted by Heather Tate on June 13, 2018

Christopher Edwards
Much research in the field of astrobiology—the study of life in the universe—focuses on the habitability of extraterrestrial environments in our solar system and beyond. NASA’s Planetary Science and Technology from Analog Research (PSTAR) program sponsors research exploring the Earth’s extreme environments to develop a sound basis for conducting astrobiological research on other solar system bodies. By identifying, exploring and characterizing terrestrial… Read more

Filed Under: Astronomy and Planetary Science Tagged With: Christopher Edwards, mars, mojave desert, NASA, PSTAR

NAU planetary scientist’s study suggests widespread presence of water on the Moon

Posted by Heather Tate on April 3, 2018

Moon NAU assistant professor of planetary science Christopher Edwards co-authored a paper recently published in Nature Geoscience that has generated interest among scientists in the field as well as in mainstream science news, such as Science Dailyand Outer Places.

The researchers analyzed remote-sensing data from two lunar missions and concluded that water appears to be evenly spread across the surface of the moon, not confined to a particular region or type of terrain as… Read more

Filed Under: Astronomy and Planetary Science Tagged With: Christopher Edwards, moon, NASA, planets, remote sensing, Space Science Institute, water

Good news, bad news: NAU study finds fewer meteoroids close to Earth, but likelihood of impact just as great

Posted by Heather Tate on September 5, 2017

David Trilling standing outside of the Discovery Telescope in Happy Jack, AZ.What happens when a meteoroid the size of a house comes too close for comfort? When a 17-meter rock hurled through Earth’s atmosphere in 2013 and exploded mid-air above the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, it unleashed a shock wave equivalent to 10 times the energy of the Hiroshima atomic bomb, shattering windows… Read more

Filed Under: Astronomy and Planetary Science Tagged With: atmosphere, David Trilling, impact, meteoroid, near earth objects, telescope

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