Radio flashes from plasma storms around exoplanets
Main Colloquium
Dr. Harish Vedantham
ORATED
Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy, Dwingeloo
Low frequency (< few hundred MHz) radio observations uniquely trace
several processes that determine the habitability of exoplanets.
Coronal
plasma ejections that erode planetary atmospheres can be detected using
the characteristic radio bursts they emit. Planetary magnetic fields
that largely determine the planetary defence against the stellar
onslaught can also be detected using radio observations. Radio
observations of such phenomena in the solar system are commonplace. I
will argue that the extrasolar frontier is now also within reach thanks
to powerful new low-frequency telescopes such as LOFAR and uGMRT. I
will
describe an observational program using LOFAR to systematically survey
the low-frequency radio sky for stellar, brown dwarf and exoplanetary
emission with unprecedented sensitivities reaching a fraction of a
milliJansky at 150 MHz and below. I will present some early successes
of
this campaign including (a) the discovery of evidence for magnetic
interaction between a star and its planet and (b) the discovery of a
cold brown dwarf directly in the radio band using its magnetospheric
emissions. I will end with an outlook for harnessing radio
astronomy’s
unique diagnostic capabilities to advance exoplanet science.
Magnetic fields and turbulence in molecular clouds - Observation and interpretation
Special Colloquium
Prof. Hua-bai Li
ORATED
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
The Zeeman effect and dust grain alignment are two major methods for
probing magnetic fields (B-fields) in molecular clouds, mainly
motivated
by the study of star formation, as the B-field may regulate
gravitational contraction and channel turbulence velocity. I will
review
our recent observations of B-fields and how we interpret them with
numerical simulations. We found that turbulence is sub-Alfvénic in
bulk
cloud volumes but can turn slightly super-Alfvénic in cloud cores due
to the density enhancement. The consequences of the largely ordered
cloud B-fields on fragmentation, turbulence, and star formation are
observed. If time allows, I will also introduce the first direct
detection of ambipolar diffusion between neutral/ion turbulent eddies.
Astrochemistry at the Cryogenic Storage Ring
SFB Colloquium
Dr. Holger Kreckel
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Heidelberg
The Cryogenic Storage Ring (CSR) at the Max Planck Institute for
Nuclear
Physics in Heidelberg is the largest electrostatic storage ring project
in the world. The CSR combines electrostatic ion optics with extreme
vacuum and cryogenic temperatures. The storage ring has a circumference
of 35 m, and all deflectors are housed in experimental vacuum chambers
that can be cooled down to 5 K. It has been shown that within a few
minutes of storage inside the CSR infrared-active molecular ions (e.g.,
CH+, HeH+ and OH-) cool to their lowest rotational quantum states by
spontaneous emission of radiation.
Equipped with an ion-neutral collision setup and a low-energy electron
cooler, the CSR offers unique possibilities for astrochemical
experiments under true interstellar conditions. I will present an
overview of the capabilities of the CSR, along with first experimental
results on collision experiments between cold molecular ions and
neutral
atoms, free electrons, and photons, yielding quantum state-selective
rate coefficients for astrophysically important processes.
Searching for life and habitability in our Solar System
Main Colloquium
Dr. Geronimo Villanueva
ORATED
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, USA
We recently established that Mars lost an ocean’s worth of water,
while the Curiosity rover has recently detected organics on the Martian
surface and in the atmosphere. Venus may have been covered by water,
while organic rich oceans have been suggested to exist under the
surface
of Europa, Enceladus and on Titan. If these planets/moons had a rich
chemical and diverse past, how much of these biomarkers were lost to
space, and how much are currently available for life? Are sub-surface
habitable niches connecting now with the atmosphere?
The answers to these fundamental questions of planetary evolution and
habitability lie in robotic investigations of the planet’s surface
and
atmosphere. In the last decade, we have obtained the most comprehensive
search for organic material in the Martian atmosphere and we are now
sending powerful probes to Venus and beyond, permitting us to probe
these planets/moons with unprecedented sensitivity.
In particular, we are preparing for the human exploration of Mars, and
these recent insights about Mars’ past habitability are greatly
assisting us in identifying the most promising research sites. In this
talk, I will present our latest discoveries with ExoMars/TGO about
Mars,
our exploration plans with JWST of Europa and Enceladus, and our latest
findings with SOFIA and ground-based observatories of Venus, Europa and
Mars.
TBD
Main Colloquium
Dr. Mark Walker
CANCELED
Manly Astrophysics, Australia
TBD
Detecting and characterising the filamentary pattern of the cosmic web
Main Colloquium
Dr. Nabila Aghanim
ORATED
Institut d'astrophysique spatiale, Université Paris-Saclay, France
The cosmic web is made of nodes, filaments, sheets and voids that are
well traced by the distribution of galaxies. Numerical simulations
suggest that about 40% of the total baryons in the cosmic web are in
the
form of warm/hot baryons hidden in the filamentary structure between
clusters of galaxies. I will present how the combined use of surveys in
the optical, in the millimeter (via the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich signal
measured by Planck) and in the X-rays allows us to study the largest
structures of the Universe. Combining these observables, we detect the
cosmic web elements, measure their gas content and tackle the problem
of
characterising and quantifying the hot hidden baryons in the
filamentary
structure of the cosmic web.
Measuring black hole mass and the expansion rate of the Universe with X-ray reverberation mapping
Main Colloquium
Dr. Adam Ingram
ORATED
Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Stellar-mass black holes accreting gas from a binary partner (X-ray
binaries) and supermassive black holes accreting gas from their host
galaxy (active galactic nuclei, AGN) can emit a huge X-ray flux from
the
vicinity of the black hole event horizon. This can be exploited to
probe
the strong field regime of General Relativity and measure the
properties
of the black hole: its mass and angular momentum. For all but two
objects in the Universe, the vicinity of the accreting BH is far too
small to directly image, necessitating the use of mapping techniques
that exploit rapid X-ray variability. I will talk about X-ray
reverberation mapping, which utilises the relativistically broadened
iron emission line that results from centrally emitted X-rays
reflecting
from the disk. Modelling the light-crossing delay between reflected and
directly observed X-rays returns a black hole mass measurement. I will
summarise our efforts to measure the mass of stellar and supermassive
black holes with our X-ray reverberation mapping code RELTRANS,
including our first proof-of-principle constraint on Cygnus X-1. I will
then describe how we can use RELTRANS for an even more ambitious goal:
measuring the Hubble constant, H0. This is possible because the shape
of
the reflection spectrum depends on the intensity of illuminating flux,
meaning that modelling with RELTRANS can effectively turn bright nearby
AGN into standard candles. New, independent methods to measure H0 are
currently highly desirable because modelling of the cosmic microwave
background returns an H0 value in >4 sigma tension with the value
derived from the traditional distance ladder. I will show that the
statistical precision required to prefer one of these two discrepant
values is achievable with a sample of ~25 AGN. I will discuss the
improvements to our model that are required to achieve such a
measurement in reality.
The latest results from the Event Horizon Telescope: Zooming into the heart of Centaurus A
Special Colloquium
Dr. Michael Janssen
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
Centaurus A is the closest radio galaxy to Earth and has been studied
extensively as a laboratory for AGN feedback and potential UHECR source
after its discovery as one of the first extragalactic radio sources in
1949. I will present the results from our EHT observations of this
southern source. Compared to previous VLBI studies, we have imaged the
AGN jet of Cen A at a 16x sharper resolution and 10x higher observing
frequency. This allows us to probe the launching region of an
extragalactic radio jet on sub-lightday scales. We can directly compare
our image to VLBI observations of M87 at a lower frequency, as both
probe the same size scales in terms of gravitational radii. Based on
the
similarity of these jets, we show that our observations provide further
support for the fundamental plane of black hole activity in an
intermediate mass regime. From the location of the resolved radio core
in Cen A, we predict the source's black hole shadow to be visible at
THz frequencies, which marks Cen A for future high-frequency space VLBI
missions. I will conclude with an outlook of our next observational and
modeling steps.
Realistic Mock kSZ Observations + AR Coating Design for Silicon Optics
Special Colloquium
Theodore Macioce
ORATED
Caltech, Pasadena, USA
Part 1: Measuring the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel’dovich (kSZ) effect is a promising technique to constrain both cosmic growth and galaxy cluster formation. Detecting the kSZ effect in massive galaxy clusters will become increasingly feasible as millimeter-wave telescopes gain sensitivity and resolving power over multiple frequency bands. While such kSZ measurements will have unprecedented sensitivity, they will also be contaminated by emission from dusty star-forming galaxies, primary anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), and the typically dominant thermal SZ signal, making analysis efforts difficult. Current kSZ forecasts account for these contaminants in a simplified way, relying on assumptions that may not apply in the high-resolution regime. Moreover, they typically use Fisher matrix analyses, which cannot give a fully accurate description of the degeneracies among the physical parameters describing the cluster. We present a new mock observation and analysis pipeline for kSZ images that uses more detailed noise models and more sophisticated analysis methods to extract peculiar velocities, temperatures, and optical depths more accurately. With these mock observations, we will inform the designs of next-generation millimeter telescopes targeting kSZ observations by identifying the optimal instrumentation choices for both cosmological and cluster-scale constraints. The software pipeline we develop will also be directly usable as an analysis tool once observations from such telescopes become available. Part 2: Silicon optics can greatly benefit future millimeter and submillimeter astronomical instruments thanks to silicon's useful properties such as low loss, high refractive index, and high strength. However, silicon's high index (n = 3.4) necessitates antireflection (AR) treatment, which has proven a major challenge, especially for the multilayer treatments required for wide spectral bandwidths. In this talk, we present our approach to this challenge, in which we develop a wide-bandwidth integral AR structure for silicon optics that uses a novel fabrication technique that combines deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) and wafer bonding. We have previously demonstrated a two-layer AR structure for windows over a 1.6:1 bandwidth and are currently fabricating a four-layer coating for a 4:1 bandwidth. Here, we focus on a design for a six-layer structure optimized to give -20 dB reflection between 80 and 420 GHz (5.25:1 bandwidth), which will be useful for future multicolor SZ observations.
Magnetic fields in relativistic jets
Main Colloquium
Prof. Talvikki Hovatta
ORATED
Finnish Centre for Astronomy with ESO, University of Turku, Finland
Blazars are active galactic nuclei where relativistic plasma jets are
launched from the vicinity of the supermassive black hole at the center
of the galaxy. These jets are efficient particle accelerators and can
transport energy from the nucleus of the galaxy to the integalactic
medium far outside the galaxy itself. Magnetic fields are thought to
play a crucial role in both launching and collimation of blazar jets,
keeping them collimated all the way to kiloparsec scales. In my talk, I
will discuss how polarization observations in the radio, millimeter,
and
optical bands can be used to constrain the magnetic field structure in
parsec- and kiloparsec-scale jets of blazars. I will use the archetypal
blazar 3C273 as an example, and present new results from ALMA
millimeter
wavelength observations of the central region and the termination
hotspot.
Unravelling magnetic fields and particle acceleration mechanisms in galaxy clusters through radio observations
Main Colloquium
Prof. Annalisa Bonafede
ORATED
Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia, Università di Bologna, Italy
Galaxy clusters are a gold mine to understand particle acceleration
mechanisms in plasmas. The intra-cluster medium is indeed composed of a
hot and tenuous gas co-existing with a large-scale magnetic field, that
can originate synchrotron radio emission in presence of relativistic
cosmic-ray electrons. Synchrotron radio emission is observed from
galaxy
clusters in several forms. Theoretical models link the diffuse radio
emission to turbulent and shock acceleration during cluster mergers,
but
the mechanisms are still poorly understood. The advent of low frequency
radio instruments such as LOFAR, MeerKAT, and ASKAP, has allowed us to
make important steps forwards in this field. At the same time, new
unexpected sources of emission have been discovered, posing new
questions about particle acceleration and magnetic field amplification
in these environments. In this talk, I will present the new picture
that
is emerging in these years, focussing
both on what we have understood and on the questions that new
discoveries are posing.
What can black hole jets do for you?
Main Colloquium
Prof. Alexander Tchekhovskoy
ORATED
Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA
In this talk, I will review the physics of accretion and outflows,
focusing on the relativistic jets, as revealed by 3D general
relativistic simulations of magnetized plasma near spinning black holes.
I will discuss the conditions necessary for jet formation, what the jets
can reveal about the central engine, the effects the jets can have on
their environment.
Discovering the highest energy neutrinos with radio detectors
Special Colloquium
Prof. Abigail Vieregg
ORATED
University of Chicago
The detection of high energy astrophysical neutrinos is an important
step toward understanding the most energetic cosmic accelerators.
IceCube, a large optical detector at the South Pole, has observed the
first astrophysical neutrinos and identified at least one potential
source. However, the best sensitivity at the highest energies comes
from
detectors that look for coherent radio Cherenkov emission from neutrino
interactions. I will give an overview of the state of current
experimental efforts, including recent results, and then discuss a
suite
of new experiments designed to discover neutrinos at the highest
energies and push the energy threshold for radio detection down to
overlap with the energy range probed by IceCube, thus covering the full
astrophysical energy range out to the highest energies, and opening up
new phase space for discovery. These include ground-based experiments
such as RNO-G and IceCube-Gen2, as well as the balloon-borne experiment
PUEO.
The cloud-scale baryon cycle across the nearby galaxy population
Main Colloquium
Dr. Mélanie Chevance
ORATED
Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Zentrum für Astronomie der Universität Heidelberg
The cycling of matter in galaxies between molecular clouds, stars and
feedback is a major driver of galaxy evolution. However, it remains a
major challenge to derive a theory of how galaxies turn their gas into
stars and how stellar feedback affects the subsequent star formation on
the cloud scale, as a function of the galactic environment. Star
formation in galaxies is expected to be highly dependent on the
galactic
structure and dynamics, because it results from a competition between
mechanisms such as gravitational collapse, shear, spiral arm passages,
cloud-cloud collisions, and feedback processes such as supernovae,
stellar winds, photoionization and radiation pressure. A statistically
representative sample of galaxies is therefore needed to probe the wide
range of conditions under which stars form. I will present the first
systematic characterisation of the evolutionary timeline of the giant
molecular cloud (GMC) lifecycle, star-formation and feedback in the
PHANGS sample of star-forming disc galaxies. I will show that GMC are
short-lived (10-30 Myr) and are dispersed after about one dynamical
timescale by stellar feedback, between 1 and 5 Myr after massive stars
emerge. Although the coupling efficiency of early feedback mechanisms
such as photoionisation and stellar winds is limited to a few tens of
percent, it is sufficient to disperse the parent molecular cloud prior
to supernova explosions. This limits the integrated star formation
efficiencies of GMCs to 2 to 10 per cent. These findings reveal that
star formation in galaxies is fast and inefficient, and is governed by
cloud-scale, environmentally-dependent, dynamical processes. These
measurements constitute a fundamental test for numerical sub-grid
recipes of star-formation and feedback in simulations of galaxy
formation and evolution.
The early stages of stellar cluster formation: fragmentation of molecular clouds
Main Colloquium
Dr. Aina Palau
ORATED
Instituto de Radioastronomía y Astrofísica, UNAM, Morelia, Mexico
How stellar clusters form and what determines their number of objects
and stellar densities are long-standing questions, intimately related
to
the fragmentation properties of molecular clouds. It is thought that a
number of properties of molecular clouds could influence and determine
how clouds fragment. Some of these properties are the density and
temperature structure, related to thermal support and gravity,
turbulence, stellar feedback, initial angular momentum, and magnetic
fields. In this talk I will present an observational campaign aimed at
disentangling which of these properties finally control the
fragmentation process in the dense parts of molecular clouds, from 0.2
to 0.005 pc scales. Special emphasis will be put on our latest result,
a
study of the relation between fragmentation and the magnetic field,
where we observationally tested, for the first time in a statistically
significant sample, the theoretical prediction that a strong magnetic
field should suppress fragmentation.
Perspectives of the SOFIA project
Special Colloquium
Dr. Bernhard Schulz
ORATED
Deutsches SOFIA Institut and NASA Ames Research Center
The Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) continues
to operate in its 9th Cycle with ever increasing efficiency. SOFIA is
the only general user observatory for the next 15 years that reaches
the
for ground-based observatories largely inaccessible infrared/submm
wavelength range. As such it maintains a regular delivery of unique
astronomical results from this important spectral window. The talk will
provide a short
description of this US/German collaboration and its capabilities, a
selection of scientific highlights, and insights into the status of the
project. It will discuss the implementation of important transformative
changes over the past two years and planned future developments. In
particular included are NASA's long-term instrumentation roadmap and
the currently ongoing complementary effort on the German/European side
to exploit a key capability of this observatory, keeping its
instrumentation at the cutting edge of technology and further
optimizing
its scientific output.
Euclid: exploring the dark Universe
Main Colloquium
Prof. Henk Hoekstra
ORATED
Leiden Observatory, the Netherlands
In past century we have learned much about the origin and evolution of
the Universe. We now know the Universe is 13.8 billion years old, but
its main ingredients remain a mystery: atoms make up only 5%. The rest
consists of dark matter and dark energy, components for which we lack a
fundamental physical theory. Better observations are needed to guide
theory and ESA’s Euclid satellite is designed to do just that. Euclid
is scheduled for launch in 2022 and will map the distribution of dark
matter in the Universe as a function of cosmic time. However many
challenges remain if we want to extract accurate cosmological
information from these complex data.
High-mass stars: fantastic beasts and where to find (and form) them
Main Colloquium
Prof. Alvaro Hacar
ORATED
Institute for Astrophysics, University of Vienna
High-mass stars determine the physical and chemical evolution of the
Universe. High-mass stars are typically found in dense stellar clusters
and are associated to densest and more dynamic gas structures in our
Galaxy. However, the precise formation mechanisms of these massive
objects in clusters remain under debate, particularly in comparison to
the better understood origin of low-mass objects formed in isolation.
The new EMERGE ERC-StG project (http://emerge.alvarohacar.com) proposes
a novel approach for the study of the initial conditions for the
formation of high-mass stars with ALMA. During my talk I will present
the first technical and scientific results of this project exploring
where and how the origin of stars of different masses and the different
modes of star formation are closely
connected to the structure and properties of the gas prior to their
formation.
Numerical simulations of astrophysical plasmas through Particle-Gas Hybrid Schemes in the PLUTO Code
Main Colloquium
Prof. Andrea Mignone
ORATED
Università di Torino, Italy
Recent advancements for the state-of-the-art modelling of astrophysical
plasma via numerical simulations are presented. The talk focuses mainly
on the development of particle-gas hybrid schemes, suitable for the
numerical modeling of different astrophysical environments, such as
proto-planetary disks with dust, ion kinetic processes such as
diffusive
shock acceleration, large-scale transport of cosmic rays (CR) electrons
and related non-thermal emission signatures. The MHD-PIC hybrid
equation
model, for the interaction between a collisionless thermal plasma and a
population of non-thermal cosmic-ray (CR) particles, is examined in
detail and applications to diffusive shock acceleration are presented.
The physical structure of massive star-forming clumps
Promotionskolloquium
Yuxin Lin
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
Galactic-scale surveys from millimeter to infrared wavelengths in the
last decades have identified numerous massive molecular clumps (~1 pc in
size, >500 M_solar in mass), which are believed to be nurseries of OB
star clusters. In this thesis, we report intermediate spatial
resolution (~0.1 pc) observations towards selected samples of massive
clumps and reveal their physical structures, including fragmentation
properties, density, temperature, dynamical state and their evolution
during massive proto-cluster formation. In the first project, we analyse
350 micron dust images using APEX-SABOCA of >200 massive clumps.
Combined with space-based submm/FIR archival data, we obtain 10'' dust
temperature and hydrogen column density maps, providing accurate
estimates of physical properties. We resolved large populations of
quiescent and star-forming cores and show that a large clump mass
reservoir is essential for the mass accumulation onto massive cores. In
the second project, using wide-band SMA and APEX spectroscopic
observations at 1 mm, we present evolutionary variations of the radial
profiles of temperature, density and dynamical state of the massive
clumps, corroborated by abundance ratios of molecules as evolutionary
indicators. We find that most of the clump temperature profiles on
spatial scales of 0.1-1 pc are strongly shaped by centrally emerging
protostars. The gas densities and the gradient of gas densities increase
with the clump's luminosity-to-mass ratio, and is compatible with the
variations of radial profiles of the virial parameter, suggesting a
gravo-turbulent picture of clump gas dynamics. The hierarchical gas
structure of massive clumps are unveiled by quantifying both the radial
density profiles of the bulk gas (~10^4 cm^-3) and the dense gas
(>~10^6-10^8 cm^-3) structures, which indicate spatially and temporally
varying dense gas conversions and star formation efficiencies. Finally,
this line of work is extended to five early-stage massive clumps in
W43-main, an extreme Galactic OB cluster forming massive cloud. With
wide-band NOEMA and IRAM 30m observations at 3 mm, we investigate in
particular the impact of cloud-cloud collisions on the enhancement of
dense gas, and on the formation and fragmentation of early-stage cores.
[Referees: Prof. Dr. Karl Menten, Prof. Dr. Pavel Kroupa, Prof. Dr. Ian
Brock, Prof. Dr. Hubert Schorle]
TBD
Special Colloquium
TBD TBD
CANCELED
TBD
TBD
Improved techniques for pulsar data analysis
Promotionskolloquium
Prajwal Voraganti Padmanabh
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
Pulsars are rapidly rotating, strongly magnetised neutron stars with
spin periods ranging from few milliseconds to tens of seconds. They emit
beams of electromagnetic radiation that are predominantly detected as
periodic pulsations at the radio end of the spectrum. Since the first
pulsar detection in 1967, there have been close to 3000 such systems
discovered and they have proven to be excellent tools for a variety of
scientific applications. Despite the large number of discoveries, there
exist several open questions pertaining to fundamental physics as well
as pulsar evolution that can be addressed by pushing the boundary of
pulsars beyond the current population census. The first part of my talk
will focus on radio pulsar searches conducted with the MeerKAT radio
telescope. I describe a processing infrastructure built with open source
tools for conducting wide field-of-view searches with hundreds of
synthesised beams. I use this setup for targeted binary pulsar searches
on globular cluster Terzan 5. I also introduce the MPIfR Galactic plane
survey (MGPS), a commensal survey covering science cases for pulsars,
fast transients, Galactic magnetic fields, continuum emission, and
spectral lines. My focus will be on pulsar searches conducted on a pilot
survey as part of MGPS. The second part of my talk will focus on two
projects. First, I will talk about a collaboration with the technology
firm SAP to use their Data Intelligence framework for comparing machine
learning models for pulsar candidate classification on a large scale
using 3.2 million candidates generated from the HTRU South low-latitude
survey. Second, I will present an investigation of the pulse profile
instability of PSR J1022+1001, a pulsar belonging to two pulsar timing
arrays and thus of interest for nanohertz gravitational wave searches.
In this analysis, data spanning 20 years including two different
recording instruments from the Effelsberg telescope and a recording
instrument from the Parkes telescopes were used. By accounting for
instrumental effects like polarisation miscalibration and propagation
effects like interstellar scintillation, up to 25 per cent of the
instability could be explained. This indicates that the observed
instability is most likely intrinsic to the pulsar. [Referees: Prof.
Dr. Michael Kramer, Prof. Dr. Frank Bertoldi, Prof. Dr. Simon Stellmer,
Prof. Dr. Robert Glaum]
AHA: The Accretion History of AGN
Main Colloquium
Prof. C. Megan Urry
ORATED
Yale Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics, New Haven, USA
Every massive galaxy has a supermassive black hole at its center, which
has grown episodically during phases of rapid accretion. Surveys of
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) probe this growth history and thus are
important both for understanding the properties of supermassive black
holes and for quantifying their impact on galaxy evolution. We show
that
multi-wavelength data are particularly important for mitigating strong
selection
biases, since most AGN are heavily obscured and thus look like inactive
galaxies in optical surveys. Furthermore, a “wedding cake”
combination of survey depths and areas is needed to sample the full
range in luminosity and redshift. With the AHA survey at
X-ray+infrared+optical wavelengths, we measured supermassive black hole
growth over the last ~12 billion years, and thus the amount of energy
deposited in AGN host galaxies throughout that time. Contrary to
leading
theoretical models, a close look at AGN host galaxies suggests that for
only a minority does merger-triggered AGN “feedback” cause rapid
quenching of star formation.
Exploration of the Jupiter system with a small submillimetre wave telescope onboard the JUICE satellite
Main Colloquium
Dr. Paul Hartogh
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Göttingen
JUICE – JUpiter ICy moons Explorer – is the first large class
mission of ESA’s Cosmic Vision 2015 - 2025 programme. The JUICE
satellite is planned to be launched in September 2022 and its Jupiter
orbit insertion is foreseen in 2031. The primary mission in the Jupiter
system will take about three years. The focus of the mission is Jupiter
itself and the Galilean satellites, their internal oceans and potential
habitability. Recent ground-based observations of Europa and Ganymede
showed water vapour plumes, probably related to geysers on their
surfaces. JUICE intends to identify the geysers, monitor their
potential
activity and molecular and isotopic composition in order to constrain
satellite formation models and development processes (of chemical,
physical and potentially biologic nature) in the interior of their
oceans. Jupiter itself is seen as an archetype of a gas giant. A better
understanding of its atmospheric processes will be a baseline for a
better understanding of gas giants outside our solar system. JUICE will
characterize the general circulation of Jupiter’s atmosphere, its
meteorology, chemistry and structure between the
upper cloud deck and the ionosphere and magnetosphere. The
Submillimetre
Wave Instrument (SWI) is one of 10 scientific instruments on the JUICE
satellite. SWI covers two spectral bands between 530 and 1275 GHz.
Details will be presented about the functionality and specifications of
the instrument, required technology developments during the last
decades
and how the unique capabilities of SWI will help to answer key JUICE
science questions.
Properties of relativistic jets in X-ray binaries
Promotionskolloquium
Richa Sharma
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
X-ray binaries are stellar systems consisting of a compact object
(either a neutron star or a black hole) accreting matter from a
companion star. Some of the X-ray binaries form relativistic jets where
plasma accelerates close to the speed of light. The relativistic jets
have been extensively studied, and the most advanced research in this
field investigates changes in the jets’ core position and short-term
flaring events. The thesis approaches the former topic with a
semi-analytical code and the latter topic with new observations. First,
we explored and established the relationship between the core position
and jet spectrum using a code of a synchrotron emitting, self-absorbed
jet by varying the jet inclination angle and relativistic electron
density. Then, we investigated short-term variability in the flux of
the X-ray binary system LSI +61°303. We used radio and X-ray data of
the source obtained with WSRT and Suzaku telescopes, respectively.
Timing analysis revealed periodic oscillations of ∼ 1 h (radio) and
∼ 2.5 h (X-ray), albeit at different epochs. To explore the
simultaneous radio and X-ray emission from the source, we observed it
with AMI-LA and XMM–Newton telescopes. Correlation analysis
established for the first time that emission at both wavelengths is
highly correlated and has implications on the nature of the physical
processes in the system. [Referees: Priv.-Doz. Dr. Maria Massi, Prof.
Dr. Norbert Langer, Prof. Dr. Ian Brock, Prof. Dr. Zeinab Abdullah]
The physical and chemical conditions of molecular clouds on large scales
Promotionskolloquium
Nina Brinkmann
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
Observations of molecular emission lines in the radio and
(sub)millimetre wavelength regimes provide insights into the interiors
of molecular clouds which are inaccessible by other forms of radiation.
Technological advancements are now allowing observations of molecules
in
distant galaxies, but our ability to interpret these data are limited
by
our knowledge of exactly how and where molecular emission lines
originate within our own galaxy. Until recent years, observational
biases caused by pre-selection of either certain positions in a
molecular cloud or of a few molecular lines only allowed very
selective studies. This thesis describes the acquisition and analysis
of
the first spectroscopically unbiased data set of the northern part of
the prominent Orion A molecular cloud in the 1.3 mm atmospheric window.
We develop templates of distinct regions and contrast their respective
emission profiles, explore the reliability of commonly used line ratios
as a tool to infer physical parameters, examine correlations between
different molecular species and isotopologues, and calculate line
luminosities. We further report on the surprising first detection of
larger-scale CF+ emission in a variety of environments and aim to
explain its widespread and fairly uniform distribution. Our data set
also enables us to examine the nature of the so-called radical region
within Orion A and to determine whether or not it is a distinct entity
characterised by unusual molecular abundances. [Referees: Prof. Dr.
Karl
M. Menten, Prof. Dr. Pavel Kroupa, Prof. Dr. Klaus Desch, Prof. Dr.
med.
Ines Gütgemann]
Galaxy Evolution with MeerKAT: scientific and technical synergies with VLBI
Main Colloquium
Prof. Roger Deane
ORATED
University of the Witwatersrand and University of Pretoria, South Africa
MeerKAT is the world’s most sensitive radio interferometer in its
class and has demonstrated its potential through several impressive and
in some cases, unexpected results. This has been enabled in large part
by the excellent imaging fidelity offered by the 64-antenna array.
However, several attributes of the telescope and decimetre radio sky
make full scientific utilisation a challenge, necessitating significant
algorithmic development. I will present a suite of my group’s early
MeerKAT results related to galaxy and AGN evolution, and discuss some
of
the synergistic scientific potential with respect to VLBI programmes. I
will also discuss how technical development has been and will continue
to be leveraged between MeerKAT (and MeerKAT+, SKA1-mid) with both
centimetre and millimetre-wave VLBI arrays, including the African VLBI
Network and the (ng)EHT.
Fast Radio Bursts: a cosmological conundrum or why I finally left the Galaxy
Main Colloquium
Prof. Victoria Kaspi
ORATED
McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are a newly recognized and puzzling phenomenon
consisting of few-millisecond bursts of radio waves coming from
cosmological distances. They are ubiquitous, with all-sky rates of
roughly 1000 per day, signaling a not uncommon yet powerful explosion
of
presently unknown origin. Recently there has been significant
observational progress on understanding FRBs and recognizing their
potential as novel cosmological probes, in large part thanks to the
Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment Fast Radio Burst Project
(CHIME/FRB). In this talk I review what is known about FRBs, and
describe some of the latest CHIME/FRB results
related to FRB origin and distribution in the Universe.
Unveiling the Small Magellanic Cloud with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder
Main Colloquium
Prof. Naomi McClure-Griffiths
ORATED
The Australian National University, Canberra
The evolution of galaxies is partially regulated by their infall and
outflow of gas. Many simulations of galaxy formation and evolution have
highlighted the importance of feedback in reproducing the observable
Universe. Huge superbubbles and outflows, formed from the stellar winds
and supernovae, dominate the observed structure of neutral hydrogen
within many galaxies, including the nearby Small and Large Magellanic
Clouds, which we can study with a physical resolution unmatched anywhere
else in the Universe. As the most numerous galaxies in the Universe,
dwarf galaxies may be important candidates for populating the
intergalactic medium with enriched gas. Although star formation rates in
dwarf galaxies can be lower than their more massive, starburst
counterparts, these low mass systems have small gravitational potential
wells and thereby find it difficult to maintain their star-forming
material in the presence of intense stellar feedback. In this talk I
will present new atomic hydrogen (HI) data from the Australian SKA
Pathfinder (ASKAP) on the Small Magellanic Cloud. Using these data we
have discovered that the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) has massive
stellar feedback driven HI outflows. The outflows are comprised of cold
filamentary gas extending up ~2 kpc from the main galaxy, with
temperatures of T< 500 K and widths as small as 50 pc. We estimate a
significant atomic gas mass flux in the range 0.2 - 1 solar mass per
year, which may contribute to feeding the Magellanic Stream. I will also
discuss recent observations and future plans for the Magellanic System
with Galactic ASKAP Survey.
The Obscured Universe in the first Two Billion Years
Special Colloquium
Prof. Caitlin Casey
ORATED
University of Texas, Austin, USA
Although rare in the nearby Universe, gas-rich galaxies with
extraordinary star-formation rates (100-1000x the Milky Way, at >100
Msun/year) represent the typical massive galaxy in the early Universe
~10 billion years ago. These galaxies’ high star-formation rates are
predominantly obscured by dust which absorbs and re-radiates >95% of
the
energy from massive stars in the (sub)millimeter/far-infrared, hence
they are often called dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs). Though our
physical understanding of this highly obscured, heterogeneous
population
has matured significantly over the past decade thanks to ALMA, the
prevalence of such systems at higher redshifts (z>4) is highly
uncertain. I will discuss current efforts with ALMA and future surveys
to learn more about these highly obscured galaxies beyond z~4. The
detection of incredibly dust-rich systems (>10^9 Msun of dust) at these
early epochs is key to understanding both the early formation
mechanisms
of dust (from supernovae, AGB stars and via grain growth in the ISM)
and
the assembly history of the Universe’s most massive galaxies and
their
rich, over dense environments. Last, I will also discuss efforts to
transform our understanding of the reionization process of the Universe
using future JWST datasets aimed at studying rare galaxies and sampling
the Universe’s large scale structure.
Small Molecules, Big Impact: Investigating hydrides in the interstellar medium
Promotionskolloquium
Arshia Jacob
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
The nature and distribution of atomic and molecular gas in the
interstellar medium (ISM) is of great interest to astrophysicists
because it is this gas that provides the raw material for the formation
of new stars. This thesis investigates hydride molecules in the ISM and
their use as diagnostics of its different phases. Particular emphasis is
given to the central CH radical, a probe of diffuse and translucent
molecular clouds, including those not traced by the otherwise common CO.
I will detail our searches for the rare isotopologues of CH and address
questions regarding the origin of another molecule, CH2, which despite
being chemically associated with the ubiquitous CH, has largely remained
elusive. And lastly, I will discuss the transition from the diffuse
atomic to the diffuse and translucent molecular phases of the ISM by
extending our view of the chemistry of argonium, ArH+, a tracer of
almost purely atomic gas. [Referees: Prof. Dr. Karl M. Menten, Prof. Dr.
Pavel Kroupa, Prof. Dr. Simon Stellmer, Prof. Dr. Hubert Schorle]
Cosmological simulations as laboratories to test theories on galaxy formation and particle physics
Main Colloquium
Dr. Sylvia Plöckinger
ORATED
Lorentz Institute for theoretical physics, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Simulations are an invaluable tool in astrophysics to test theories
relating to processes that take millions and billions of years. Within
the last decades, cosmological simulations have drastically improved on
their power to compare simulation with observations: from simulations
only tracing the gravitational effects of cosmic structure formation
("dark matter only / N-body simulations") to fully hydro-dynamic
simulations that form galaxy populations resembling observed galaxies.
An upcoming new generation of cosmological simulations further advances
the opportunities for a more direct comparison to observed galaxies.
This is not only achieved by an increased mass and spatial resolution,
but also by an innovative physical and chemical model of the gas phases
of the interstellar medium (ionized, neutral atomic, molecular). This
allows to self-consistently model the multi-phase interstellar medium
(ISM) and produce more realistic mock observations. I will present
first
results of these new simulations and show how a multi-phase ISM can
impact some of the small-scale challenges of the current standard
cosmological model. This improved model for baryon physics also allows
us to better study the impact on the formation of dwarf galaxies on the
assumed dark matter particle. This will be illustrated by performing
statistical test on the galaxy populations within cold and warm
(sterile
neutrino) dark matter simulations.
Resolved dust continuum and CII measurements of high-redshift protocluster members
Master Colloquium
Aparna Venkateshwaran
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
SPT2349-56 is a protocluster discovered via the 2500 deg2 South Pole
Telescope (SPT) survey (Williamson et al., 2011). In this thesis, we
study the kinematics and morphologies of the galaxies that are found in
the core of SPT2349-56 using high-resolution (~ 1.7 kpc scale at z =
4.303) 850-micrometer dust continuum and [CII] data. Kinematical
modelling of the galaxies using the 3DFIT task in 3DBAROLO gives a mean
V/sigma = 5.0 +- 2.3. This implies that the galaxies agree with
simulations that suggest galaxies at this redshift should be
dynamically
hotter, or dispersion dominated. To study the surface brightness
profiles of the SPT sample, we use the ELLPROF task in 3DBAROLO and a
PYTHON code to first construct the observed 850-micrometer dust and
[CII] gas profiles. We then fit beam-convolved Sérsic functions to the
observed profiles
and derive the intrinsic brightness profiles. Lastly, we compare the
intrinsic profiles to the intrinsic 160-micrometer dust profiles of
three local (z ~ 0.1) starburst-galaxies – Centaurus A, NGC253 and
NGC4945. [Referees: Prof. Dr. Karl Menten, Prof. Dr. Pavel Kroupa]
TBD
Master Colloquium
Aparna Venkateshwaran
CANCELED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
TBD
Empirical Formulae and Coincidences in the Gravity’s Dark Sector
Main Colloquium
Dr. Hongsheng Zhao
ORATED
University of St Andrews, UK
A rare coincidence of scales in standard particle physics is needed to
explain why \$\Lambda\$ or the negative pressure of cosmological
dark
energy (DE) coincides with the positive pressure \$P_0\$ of random
motion
of dark matter (DM) in bright galaxies. As a specific proof of concept
we construct a smooth extension of GR with a simple kinetic Lagrangian
of a four-velocity vector field \$V^\mu\$. We check whether the
pressure
from the V-field can bend space-time sufficiently to replace the roles
of DE, Cold DM and heavy neutrinos in explaining anomalous
accelerations
at all scales.
A dust-unbiased view of high-redshift star formation
Main Colloquium
Prof. Jacqueline Hodge
ORATED
Leiden Observatory, the Netherlands
A substantial fraction of the Universe's star formation is heavily
enshrouded by dust, and this basic fact has long been a hindrance to
the
development of a complete picture of galaxy evolution. Now, thanks to
the advent of the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) and the
upgrades
to the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA), our view of dusty star
formation at high-redshift is undergoing a radical transformation. I
will present recent ALMA and JVLA observations of the gas, dust, and
dust-unbiased star formation in high-redshift galaxies down to ~kpc and
even sub-kpc scales, providing key insight into the morphology,
dynamics, dark matter halo masses, and ISM physics in these systems.
These observations have important implications for our understanding of
the formation of the dustiest galaxies in the universe, which will soon
be revealed in unprecedented detail by JWST.
Polarimetric view of magnetically arrested accretion flows onto a black hole
Special Colloquium
Prof. Monika Moscibrodzka
ORATED
Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
The Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration, who produced the first ever
image of a black hole, has just revealed a new view of the massive
object at the centre of the M87 galaxy: how it looks in polarised
light.
This is the first time astronomers have been able to resolve
polarisation this close to the edge of a black hole. A detailed
theoretical understanding of near black hole processes is now crucial
to
interpret these new observations. I will review our current efforts to
model polarimetric properties of light produced in synchrotron
processes
in plasma falling towards the event horizon and on theoretical insigths
from the new observations of M87 core. The particular focus will be
given to modeling and understanding the circular polarization of near
horizon emission and its spatial and temporal handedness stability.
Feeding of supermassive black holes in galactic nuclei by supernova expanding shells
Main Colloquium
Prof. Jan Palous
ORATED
Astronomical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague
We explore the possibility of feeding the Super Massive Black Holes in
galactic centers by expanding Supernova remnants. The shell expansion
is
simulated with hydrodynamical codes FLASH and RING using different
approximations describing the thin shell expansion in the ISM. The
simulations are performed in the homogeneous and also in the
inhomogeneous turbulent medium. It shows that the supernovae occurring
at specific places near the galaxy rotational axis can feed the central
accretion disk surrounding the SMBH. The mass deposited into the
central
parsec by individual supernovae varies between 10 and 1000 solar masses
depending on the ambient density and the distribution of supernovae in
space. Supernovae occurring in the aftermath of a starburst event near
a
galactic center can supply within 30 Myr two to three order of
magnitude
more mass into the central parsec. The fate of that mass splits between
the growth of the SMBH and outflow from the nuclear disk.
Simulating star formation with the radiation transport code TreeRay
SFB Colloquium
Dr. Richard Wünsch
ORATED
Astronomical institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague
I will present a novel fast radiation transport algorithm TreeRay,
suitable to work together with hydrodynamic codes. It is based on
reverse ray tracing combined with tree-based accelerated integration.
TreeRay is implemented in the adaptive mesh refinement code FLASH,
however, the method itself is independent of the host code and can be
implemented in any grid based or particle based hydrodynamics code. A
key advantage of TreeRay is that its computational cost is independent
of the number of sources, making it suitable for simulations with many
point sources (e.g. massive star clusters) as well as simulations where
diffuse emission is important. A very efficient communication and
tree-walk strategy enables TreeRay to achieve almost ideal parallel
scalings. TreeRay can easily be extended with modules to treat
radiative
transfer at different wavelengths and to implement related physical
processes. I will focus on the module calculating ionising radiation
using the On-the-Spot approximation and describe various tests
demonstrating that complicated simulations of star clusters with
feedback from multiple massive stars become feasible with TreeRay.
Finally, I will show several applications where TreeRay has been used,
including project SILCC (SImulating Life Cycle of Clouds) - complex
simulations of the interstellar medium in a part of the galactic disk,
designed to capture the full matter cycle between gas and stars.
The build-up of galactic nuclei: how do black holes get there?
Main Colloquium
Dr. Nadine Neumayer
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Heidelberg
The centers of massive galaxies are special in many ways, not least because apparently all of them host supermassive black holes. Since the discovery of a number of relations linking the mass of this central black hole to the large scale properties of the surrounding galaxy bulge it has been suspected that the growth of the central black hole is intimately connected to the evolution of its host galaxy. However, at lower masses, and especially for bulgeless galaxies, the situation is much less clear. Interestingly, these galaxies often host massive star clusters at their centers, and unlike black holes, these nuclear star clusters provide a visible record of the accretion of stars and gas into the nucleus. I will present our ongoing observing programme of the nearest nuclear star clusters, including the ones in our Milky Way and the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. These observations provide important information on the formation mechanism of nuclear star clusters, allow us to measure potential black hole masses and give clues on how black holes get to the centres of galaxies.
Direct imaging of transient relativistic outflows from neutron star mergers with VLBI
Main Colloquium
Prof. Adam Deller
ORATED
Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn, Australia
The detection in gravitational waves of two merging neutron stars by
LIGO/Virgo in 2017 fired the starting gun on a new era of
multi-messenger GW/EM astronomy. Observations of GW170817 provided a
wealth of information, first identifying its host galaxy and distance
via the short-lived optical/NIR kilonova that followed the merger, and
later with an extended campaign monitoring the relativistic outflow
launched in the final throes of the merger. Radio and X-ray light
curve
modelling provided considerable insight as to the nature of this
outflow, but even half a year after the merger, it was still unclear
whether the highly relativistic jet launched by the merger had been
contained by the mildly relativistic cocoon of material it slammed
into,
or if it had in fact punched free. The smoking gun evidence for a
successful jet, of the kind observed in short GRBs, came only when
milliarcsecond resolution radio imaging precisely measured the apparent
superluminal motion of the source position. In this talk, I will
revisit the results of VLBI observations of GW170817 and show how these
were compared to hydrodynamical and analytical models to constrain the
jet parameters and system viewing angle. I will show how this
information was used to provide an improved standard siren measurement
of the Hubble constant compared to the GW data alone, and review how
improving VLBI instrumentation (higher sensitivities, wider
fields-of-view) will enable similar measurements to be made for more
distant merger afterglows in future LIGO/Virgo runs.
Constraining the Cosmic Baryon Cycle with ALMA
Main Colloquium
Dr. Fabian Walter
ORATED
MPIA, Heidelberg
I will report on some of the results emerging from the ALMA large
program ASPECS that obtained deep (sub-)millimeter imaging of the
Hubble
Ultra-Deep Field (H-UDF). The observations provide a census of dust and
molecular gas in the H-UDF, down to masses that are typical of
main-sequence galaxies at redshifts 1-3. The resulting data enable a
great range of studies, from the characterisation of individual
galaxies, capitalizing on the unique multi-wavelength database
available
for the H-UDF, to CO excitation studies that constrain the gas
properties. Stacking analyses in dust continuum and CO line emission,
using available H-UDF galaxy catalogues and precise redshifts from
VLT/MUSE, helped to constrain the emission of galaxy samples that are
too faint to be detected individually. The nature of the observations
(full ALMA spectral scans) provides a census of dust and molecular gas
in the cosmic volume defined by the H-UDF. The resulting cosmic
molecular gas density as a function of redshift shows an order of
magnitude decrease from z~2 to z=0. This is markably different from the
atomic gas phase that shows a rather flat redshift dependence. With
other measurements from the literature, these results are used to put
additional observational constraints on the gas (net) accretion flows,
needed to explain the build-up of stellar mass in galaxies, and are
compared to cosmological galaxy formation simulations.
The complex chemistry of young stars
SFB Colloquium
Prof. Jes Jørgensen
ORATED
Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen
The environments in which young stars form show a rich and varied
chemistry. Understanding how, when and where complex organic and
potentially prebiotic molecules are formed in these regions is a
fundamental goal of astrochemistry. With the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) we are moving into a new
territory
for these studies with ALMA's high sensitivity for faint lines, high
spectral resolution which limits line confusion, and high angular
resolution making it possible to study the structure of young
protostars
on solar-system scales. In this talk I will present some of our
recent ALMA results concerning the chemistry taking place in star
forming regions. I will discuss the implications of these results on
the
formation of complex organic molecules around young protostars and the
link between the birth environments of these protostars, the conditions
in their protoplanetary disks and eventually the chemistry in emerging
solar systems.
Black Hole Physics at the Horizon Scale
Main Colloquium
Prof. Feryal Özel
ORATED
University of Arizona
Recent observational advances with the Event Horizon Telescope, GRAVITY,
and LIGO/VIRGO have opened up new avenues for studying black hole
physics at horizon scales. In this talk, I will discuss what we have
learned about the spacetimes of astrophysical black holes and how
strong-field gravity is imprinted on their images. I will also present
how the observations help us model and understand the heating and
acceleration of plasmas on horizon scales.
Cosmic flows crank up the tension in cosmology
Main Colloquium
Prof. Mike Hudson
ORATED
University of Waterloo, Canada
Peculiar velocities - deviations from Hubble expansion - are the only
practical probe of the growth of matter density fluctuations on very
large scales in the nearby Universe. I will discuss recent measurements
of cosmological parameters based on our approach of predicting peculiar
velocities from the density field. This yields interesting results for
the rms density fluctuations on 8 Mpc/h scales and their growth rate
that may require new physics beyond the standard Lambda Cold Dark Matter
model.
The Transient Radio Sky: Pulsars and Fast Radio Bursts
Promotionskolloquium
Marilyn Cruces
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
I present the study of two radio transient phenomena: pulsars and Fast
Radio Bursts (FRBs). Pulsars are superb natural laboratories for
fundamental physics such as placing limits on the equation of state of
ultra-dense matter and testing theories of gravity in the strong-field
regime. FRBs are bright flashes of millisecond duration detected
exclusively at radio frequencies. Their astrophysical origin is yet
unknown. I present the ongoing pulsar survey using the world largest
single-dish radio telescope, the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical
radio Telescope (FAST). In the follow-up observing campaign at
Effelsberg, I monitored 10 pulsars discovered in the early commissioning
phase of FAST. A highlight is PSR J2338+4818, the widest pulsar--white
dwarf binary system with the most massive companion known to-date. In
the following section, I model the long-term evolution of millisecond
pulsars to understand their lower magnetic field strengths when compared
to normal pulsars. I show that the observed magnetic field strengths of
pulsars in binary systems can be well reproduced by a magnetic field
decay driven by ambipolar diffusion. Lastly, I present an extensive
multi-wavelength campaign on FRB121102, the first discovered repeating
FRB. With 36 bursts detected with Effelsberg over four years, I find a
periodic window of activity of 161+/-5 days. [Referees: Prof. Dr.
Michael Kramer, Prof. Dr. Norbert Langer, Prof. Dr. Simon Stellmer, and
Prof. Dr. Volkmar Gieselmann]
A radio pinwheel associated with WR147
Main Colloquium
Prof. Luis Rodríguez
ORATED
Instituto de Radioastronomia y Astrofisica, UNAM, Mexico
Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars are evolved massive stars, characterized by high
luminosities and fast and dense stellar winds. We have detected a radio
continuum pinwheel associated with WR 147, a nitrogen-rich WR star.
These structures have been detected in the infrared around a handful of
late-type carbon-rich WR stars with massive companions, where dust has
formed in the zone where the two winds collide and produced a plume of
dense gas and dust that is carried out with the WR wind. As the binary
system rotates, an Archimedean spiral is produced. The resulting
pinwheel contains information on wind speeds, wind-momentum ratio, and
orbital parameters. However, WR 147 is a WN star and the formation of
dust is unlikely, so a different emission mechanism must be at work. Our
analysis of the data suggests that in this case the emission is
dominantly of a nonthermal nature (synchrotron). It is possible that the
pinwheels associated with WN stars will be detectable only as nonthermal
emitters at radio wavelengths. From the characteristics of the pinwheel
we estimate a period of 1.7 yr for the binary system (the WN star and a
companion yet undetected directly) that is responsible for the pinwheel.
The Restless Universe
Main Colloquium
Prof. Shrinivas Kulkarni
ORATED
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, USA
The Universe began only with hydrogen and helium. It is cosmic
explosions which build up the periodic table. Astronomers have now
identified several classes of cosmic explosions of which supernovae
constitute the largest group. The Palomar Transient Factory was an
innovative 2-telescope experiment, and its successor, the Zwicky
Transient Factory (ZTF), is a high tech project with gigantic CCD
cameras, sophisticated algorithms (employing machine and deep learning)
and robust pipelines, and squarely aimed to systematically find "blips
and booms in the middle of the night". The speaker will talk about the
great returns and surprises from this project: super-luminous
supernovae, new classes of transients, new light on progenitors of
supernovae, detection of gamma-ray bursts by purely optical techniques,
troves of compact binary stars of interest to the LISA mission,
asteroids in the interior of Venus and more. ZTF is now considered to be
the stepping stone for LSST.
A Commensal Radio Astronomy FAST Survey (CRAFTS)
Main Colloquium
Prof. Di Li
ORATED
National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
We will release the first internationally open call-for-proposal for
the
The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST) in the
coming April. Previously, more than 100 PI-led science programs and
five
major surveys have been approved by the science committee. These
observation have resulted in more than 40 publications, including two
on
the Nature magazine. I report a few highlights here, particularly from
the CRAFTS survey, which is an unprecedented large-scale commensal
survey. Enabled by a novel calibration technique, CRAFTS simultaneously
records pulsar, Galactic HI, extra-galactic HI, and transient data
streams. CRAFTS has discovered more than 150 new pulsars, including at
least one DNS system. We have imaged about 5% of the full sky,
including
the Lockman hole, the Orion region, etc. CRAFTS has also resulted in 5
new FRBs, including one high DM repeater that has been localized.
Space-VLBI studies of the parsec-scale jet in the quasar 3C 345
Promotionskolloquium
Felix Pötzl
ORATED
MPIfR
Supermassive black holes in the centres of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) can produce collimated relativistic outflows (jets). Magnetic fields are thought to play a key role in the formation and collimation of these jets, but the details are much debated. In my PhD thesis work I investigate mainly two methods of estimating the magnetic field strength and morphology on scales of a few 1000 gravitational radii of the central black hole. I will present the concept for high-accuracy core shift measurements at mm-wavelengths with source-frequency phase referencing observations, as well as an analysis of high-resolution space-VLBI data in full polarisation of the bright quasar 3C 345 obtained within the RadioAstron mission. The latter gives us insight on the magnetic field, where I present an analysis of the polarisation structure, the spectral index, Faraday rotation, as well as the brightness temperature of the source. This provides us with the picture of a jet with predominantly toroidal magnetic field, where plane-perpendicular shocks quench the magnetic field perpendicular to the jet direction, which also causes the jet to be partly out of equipartition. [Referees: Prof. Dr. Anton Zensus, Prof. Dr. Andreas Eckart, Prof. Dr. Susanne Crewell, and Dr. Steffen Rost]
Targeted fast radio burst searches with the Effelsberg 100-m radio telescope
Promotionskolloquium
Henning Hilmarsson
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are bright, energetic, millisecond duration
radio transients of extragalactic origin. While over 100 FRBs have been
detected, their origin is still unknown. Most FRB sources have only been
seen to produce a single burst, but repeated bursts have been detected
from 22. During this colloquium, I will discuss the main projects of my
PhD work. The first project is on observations of superluminous
supernovae (SLSNe) and long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs), where we observed
10 SLSNe/LGRBs for 50 hours in search for repeating FRB sources using
the C+ (5-9 GHz) receiver on Effelsberg. SLSNe and LGRBs were targeted
due to their host galaxy sharing similarities to the host galaxy of the
first discovered repeating FRB, FRB121102. The second project is on
observations of FRB121102, where we investigate its long-term rotation
measure (RM) evolution. We obtain 16 new RMs from November 2017 to
August 2019, expanding the RM sample of FRB121102 up to 2.5 years.
During this time, the RM of FRB121102 has showed a significant decrease
in RM. We compare the RM evolution of FRB121102 to models that estimate
the RM evolution from within a supernova remnant, and the RM evolution
of the Galactic center magnetar, J1745-2900. [Referees: Prof. Dr.
Michael Kramer, Prof. Dr. Norbert Langer, Prof. Dr. Simon Stellmer, and
Prof. Dr. Robert Glaum]
Tracing the origins of interstellar objects
Main Colloquium
Dr. Coryn Bailer-Jones
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Heidelberg
The first two interstellar objects (ISOs), 1I/'Oumuamua and
2I/Borisov,
were discovered in 2017 and 2019 as they passed within a couple of
astronomical units of the Earth and Sun. Using ground-based and HST
data
to reconstruct their orbits, together with Gaia data to trace back the
positions of stars in the solar neighbourhood, we searched for stars
that encountered these ISOs in the past (Bailer-Jones et al. 2018,
2020). A close, slow encounter could indicate that the ISO originated
from that stellar system. We identified some such encounters, in
particular one at 0.07 pc for 2I/Borisov. But how likely is this to be
the parent star? What factors do we need to take into account to
determine this? What are the prospects for more confident detections in
the future? And what are ISOs anyway?
From Schwarzschild's singularity to collapsing stars: The history and interpretation of Penrose's singularity theorem
Main Colloquium
Prof. Dennis Lehmkuhl
ORATED
Institute of Philosophy, University of Bonn
The Nobel Prize of 2020 was awarded to Roger Penrose for his
singularity
theorem of 1965, which the Nobel foundation interpreted as ''the
discovery that black hole formation is a robust prediction of the
general theory of relativity.'' However, the 1965 paper does not
mention
the term "black hole" but speaks of gravitational collapse and
spacetime singularities, starting with remarks on Schwarzschild's 1916
solution to the Einstein field equations. In this talk, I will put
Penrose's singularity theorem in its historical context, starting with
Einstein's and Schwarzschild's interpretation of the Schwarzschild
metric in the late 1910s and 1920s, and discuss how the metric was
linked to the question of gravitational collapse by Oppenheimer and
Snyder in the late 1930s, and reconsidered by Wheeler and others in the
1950s and 1960s. I will describe which conceptual and technical
advances
Penrose had to invent and combine in order to come up with his
singularity theorem to go beyond considerations of specific spacetimes
like that of Schwarzschild, and show why the theorem was such a
game-changer. Finally, I will discuss different possible
interpretations
of the theorem.
Gaia Early Data Release 3
Main Colloquium
Prof. Stefan Jordan
ORATED
Zentrum für Astronomie der Universität Heidelberg
On December 3, 2020, the first (early) part of Gaia's third star
catalogue will be published. Based on 34 months of Gaia observations it
contains a significant increase in the number of entries compared to
Gaia DR2: position measurements of more than 1.8 billion stars as well
as proper motions, parallaxes, and broad-band photometry for about 1.4
billion stars. Additionally, both the precision and accuracy of the
astrometric data has significantly improved, especially the
determination of proper motions. Together with the release of the star
catalogue, four papers are published, impressively demonstrating the
scientific potential of the Gaia EDR3 catalogue.
The sharpest view of blazar jets through space and mm VLBI observations
Main Colloquium
Dr. Jose Gómez
ORATED
Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC), Granada, Spain
Mass accretion onto the supermassive black holes that power AGN leads
to
the formation of highly collimated relativistic jets that radiate
across
the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from radio to γ-rays. Over the
past decades, AGN jets have been repeatedly studied through centimeter
VLBI observations, but the resolution provided is just a step behind
the
necessary to resolve the compact regions in the vicinity of the central
black hole where jets are formed, collimated, and accelerated. This
limitation has recently been overcome by two technological
improvements.
On one side, the space VLBI mission RadioAstron has allowed us to
increase the virtual size of our VLBI telescopes to as large as the
distance to the Moon, achieving angular resolutions as small as 20
microarcseconds. On the other side, the participation of ALMA in
millimeter VLBI arrays, such as the EHT and GMVA, has not only allowed
the EHT to capture the first image of a black hole, but also holds the
potential to actually address for the first time the fundamental
questions of how gravity works in the strong-field regime near the
event
horizon, how accretion leads to the formation of relativistic jets, and
what are the sites and mechanisms for the production of high energy
emission in blazars. In this talk we summarize the results from our
RadioAstron Key Science Program, which in combination with
quasi-simultaneous GMVA and EHT observations provide us the sharpest
view of blazars jets to probe the magnetic field and innermost jet
regions in a sample of the brightest blazars to test jet formation
models.
Astrochemistry and Compositions of Planetary Systems
Main Colloquium
Prof. Karin Öberg
ORATED
Harvard University, Cambridge, USA
The past decades have revealed that planets are incredibly common, and
incredibly diverse. The origins of planets and their compositions are
intimately linked to the chemical environments within which planets
assemble, i.e. to the chemistry of planet-forming disks. The arrival of
ALMA has provided observational access to disk chemistry, revealing
disk
snowlines, abundant organic molecules, and curious chemical gradients
and sub-structures across the planet and comet forming zones. The most
recent development is the execution of the ALMA Large Program MAPS
(Molecules with ALMA on Planet-forming Scales), which has enabled us to
zoom in on disk chemical structures at scales of 10-30 au. In parallel
to these observational developments, astrochemistry models and
laboratory experiments are providing new clues on what chemistry is
likely to occur in different disk environments. I will present
highlights from the MAPS program, as well as some recent laboratory
astrochemistry discoveries. I will discuss how these new observational
and laboratory data are affecting our understanding of the chemistry of
planet formation, the chemical habitability of mature planetary
systems,
and the history of our own Solar System.
The Chemistry of Planet Formation
SFB Colloquium
Dr. Catherine Walsh
ORATED
University of Leeds, UK
Protoplanetary disks around young stars are the factories of planetary
systems. These structures contain all the material - dust, gas, and ice
- that will build planets and other bodies such as comets. Hence,
understanding the physics and chemistry of disks provides much needed
insight into the conditions under which planets form, and determining
their molecular content reveals the raw ingredients of planetary
atmospheres. In this colloquium I will present early results from the
first ALMA Large Program dedicated to the observation of molecular line
emission from protoplanetary disks around nearby young stars at high
angular resolution (0.1'' - 0.3''), titled Molecules with ALMA on
Planet-Forming Scales or MAPS. I will present images that reveal
intriguing sub-structure in emergent line emission from key organic
molecules such as CO, C2H, HCN, and CH3CN. I will discuss the link
between known dust substructure and the observed line emission, and
will
present results from quantitative analyses of source properties such as
radial mass distribution, chemical structure, ionisation structure, and
elemental composition of the gas. I will also discuss how
observations
in the gas-phase of large organic molecules provide insight into the
composition of the icy-comet building reservoir around other
stars. Finally I will discuss how early results from MAPS have
provided
the most detailed studies to date of the chemistry of planet formation.
Cosmological simulations as laboratories to test theories on galaxy formation and particle physics
Main Colloquium
Dr. Sylvia Plöckinger
CANCELED
Lorentz Institute for theoretical physics, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Simulations are an invaluable tool in astrophysics to test theories
relating to processes that take millions and billions of years. Within
the last decades, cosmological simulations have drastically improved on
their power to compare simulation with observations: from simulations
only tracing the gravitational effects of cosmic structure formation
("dark matter only / N-body simulations") to fully hydro-dynamic
simulations that form galaxy populations resembling observed galaxies.
An upcoming new generation of cosmological simulations further advances
the opportunities for a more direct comparison to observed galaxies.
This is not only achieved by an increased mass and spatial resolution,
but also by an innovative physical and chemical model of the gas phases
of the interstellar medium (ionized, neutral atomic, molecular). This
allows to self-consistently model the multi-phase interstellar medium
(ISM) and produce more realistic mock observations. I will present
first
results of these new simulations and show how a multi-phase ISM can
impact some of the small-scale challenges of the current standard
cosmological model. This improved model for baryon physics also allows
us to better study the impact on the
formation of dwarf galaxies on the assumed dark matter particle. This
will be illustrated by performing statistical test on the galaxy
populations within cold and warm (sterile neutrino) dark matter
simulations.
The SEDIGISM survey: Morphology of molecular clouds
Master Colloquium
Kartik Rajan Neralwar
ORATED
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
The high spatial and spectral resolution of the SEDIGISM data has
allowed us to investigate the physics of the molecular interstellar
medium at an unprecedented level of detail. Duarte-Cabral et al. 2020
(MNRAS, 2609D) has produced a catalog of more than 10,000 molecular
cloud structures from the full survey data using the Spectral
Clustering
for Interstellar Molecular Emission Segmentation (SCIMES) algorithm. In
this project, we objectively characterize the resolved properties of
these SEDIGISM clouds, in particular their morphology. The project
consists of three parts. In the first part, we classify the clouds
based
on their morphological properties using the J-plots (Jaffa et al. 2018,
MNRAS, 477, 1940J) and by visual inspection. We observe that most of
the
molecular clouds are elongated structures independent of the Galactic
environment. In the second part, we search for possible correlations
between cloud morphologies and their properties such as size, mass,
velocity dispersion, surface density, and virial parameter and analyze
the influence of the Galactic environment (like spiral arms, distance
from the Galactic center) on the cloud properties. We find evidence
showing that cloud morphologies are connected to integrated properties,
and relate them to the physical processes behind them. We also plot the
scaling relation between various cloud properties from the literature
(like Larson's relation) and observe that the ring-like clouds show
noticeable variations than other morphologies. Lastly, we correlate the
SEDIGISM clouds with structures identified through other surveys, i.e.
ATLASGAL filamentary structures and the bubbles from the HiGAL survey.
This has helped us identify the coherent ATLASGAL and HiGAL structures
as well as new elongated and ring-like clouds which could be further
followed up for detailed studies. [Referees: Prof. Karl Menten, Prof.
Pavel Kroupa]