Wine and Cheese Spring 2019

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This page records the schedule, titles and abstracts of the JHU/STScI CAS Astrophysics Wine & Cheese Series in Spring 2019.

Wine and Cheese sessions with one talk will have a 50 minute talk with 10 minutes for questions. Sessions with two speakers will have two 25 minute talks, each with 5 minutes for questions. Sessions in the Graduate Student Series will have three 15 minute talks, each with 5 minutes for questions.

Back to W&C Schedule

February 4th

James Owen (Imperial College)

Understanding the formation and evolution of the Kepler Planets
The observed exoplanet population unveiled by Kepler is billions of years old, distinctly separated in time from the planet formation process that only lasted ~10-100 Myr. I will argue that atmospheric escape has been one of the key evolutionary drivers shaping the exoplanet population we observed today. By understanding how these planet evolve in time, I will show we can place some intriguing constraints on how they formed.

February 11th

Dillon Brout (UPenn)

First Cosmology Results Using Type Ia Supernova from the Dark Energy Survey
Today, now 20 years after the discovery of the acceleration of the universe, the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Supernova Program has discovered thousands of Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) useful for cosmological measurements. In this talk I will present the first analysis of a small subset of 207 spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia discovered during the first 3 years of the DES Supernova Program. I will show why this state of the art dataset provides constraints competitive to measurements using aggregate samples of >1000 SNe Ia, and I will forecast the full 5 year DES photometrically classified sample.

February 18th

Matthew Petroff

3D-printed Millimeter Wave Absorbers
Additive manufacturing in the form of 3D printing has become increasing widespread in recent years. As this technology can produce submillimeter-sized features, it has potential uses in instrumentation and optics for millimeter wave astronomy, such as in Cosmic Microwave Background experiments. This talk will discuss the application of such technology to the development of a broadband millimeter wave absorber printable via the extrusion of a carbon-loaded thermoplastic.

Jonathan Aguilar

Discovering Benchmark Low-Mass Companions with High-Contrast Imaging
In recent decades, a number of high-contrast imaging surveys have searched for low-mass stars, brown dwarfs, and planetary-mass companions at separations that are mostly inaccessible with other techniques. In wide-field surveys, they are buried underneath the bright PSF of the primary star, and in spectroscopic surveys, they appear only as a long and typically linear radial velocity trend. The slow nature of high-contrast observing means that the distribution in mass and separation of these companions, which link the close- and far-separation populations, is only now beginning to be revealed. We discuss the discovery and characterization of one such object, our prospects for measuring a dynamical mass, and place it in context with the known population of low-mass companions at separations of tens to hundreds of AU.

Caroline Huang

A Mira Distance to Supernova Host Galaxy NGC 1559
One of the most exciting emerging issues in extragalactic astronomy and precision cosmology is the tension between the most precise locally-measured Hubble Constant and the one inferred from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) data assuming a Lambda CDM cosmology. New distance indicators, like Mira variables, can help provide a check to local Cepheid distance, increase the number of local calibrators for Type Ia Supernovae (SNe), and allow us to match the demographics of the calibrating sample of SNe to the Hubble flow sample more closely. In my talk, I will present the first Mira-based distance to a Type-Ia SNe host galaxy, NGC 1559, and discuss the feasibility of using Mira variables as an alternative distance indicator to Cepheids.

February 25th

Paul Schechter (MIT)

Twinkling Quasars: a Strong Limit on the Contribution of LIGO-mass Primordial Black Holes to the Cosmological Dark Matter Density
On rare occasions, a galaxy acts as gravitational lens producing multiple images of a quasar directly behind it. The stars within this galaxy then act as micro-lenses, breaking up the "macro-images" into "micro-images". As the stars move, the macro-images twinkle -- the gravitational analog of atmospheric scintillation. Counterintuitively, the amplitude of the twinkling does not increase monotonically with stellar density, and instead decreases at high optical depth. A single strongly micro-lensed quasar can set a significant upper limit on the graininess of the gravitational potential. The poster-child for such a limit is SDSS0924+0219 for which at least 50% of the lens' surface mass density must be in a smooth component rather a than grainy one. A sample of ten lensed quasars gives a 10% upper limit on the contribution of LIGO-mass primordial black holes to the cosmological dark matter density after discounting the graininess due to the observed stars.

March 4th

Bridget Falck (JHU)

Testing Gravity in the Cosmic Web
The accelerated expansion of the Universe, along with the huge failure of the vacuum energy as its explanation, has motivated the development of theories that tweak Einstein’s equations, adding a new degree of freedom that produces the observed late-time acceleration. These so-called “modified gravity” theories exploit the fact that general relativity is not well-tested on cosmological scales, and working out their theoretical predictions in the nonlinear regime of structure formation requires N-body simulations of specific models. After a pedagogical introduction to modified gravity, I will discuss the prospects for testing gravity in the cosmic web of large-scale structure.

Rahul Datta (JHU/GSFC)

Extragalactic Point Sources and Their Polarization Properties at Millimeter Wavelengths
The increasing sensitivity of millimeter wavelength telescopes has enabled detections of a large number of extragalactic sources that emit brightly in the millimeter-wavelength sky. Thousands of such sources are being detected in Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) maps as high, point-like fluctuations above the background level. Measurement of the polarization properties of these sources opens up an interesting way to study the astrophysics of the sources. The Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter (ACTPol) is a polarization sensitive millimeter-wave camera which has surveyed thousands of square degrees of sky with arc-minute level resolution and sensitivity to sources at the level of a few milli-Jansky (mJy). In this talk, I will present measurements of the polarization of extragalactic sources, predominantly Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), at 148 GHz made during the first two seasons of the ACTPol survey. I will discuss the future prospects of such measurements and present predictions for the contribution of power from unresolved sources to the CMB polarization spectrum in the context of future CMB surveys.

March 11th

David Neufeld (JHU)

Dark Matter that Interacts with Baryons: Density Distribution within the Earth, New Constraints on the Interaction Cross-Section, and a Dark Matter Search Recently Completed in my Basement
For dark matter (DM) particles with masses in the 0.6 - 6 proton mass range, we may set stringent constraints on the interaction cross-sections for scattering with ordinary baryonic matter. These constraints follow from the recognition that such particles can be captured by - and thermalized within - the Earth, leading to a substantial accumulation and concentration of DM that interact with baryons. I will discuss the probability that DM intercepted by the Earth will be captured, the number of DM particles thereby accumulated over Earth's lifetime, the fraction of such particles retained in the face of evaporation, and the density distribution of such particles within the Earth. This analysis provides an estimate of the DM particle density at Earth's surface, which may exceed 1.E+14 cm-3, and leads to constraints on various scattering cross-sections, which are placed by: (1) the lifetime of the relativistic proton beam at the Large Hadron Collider; (2) the orbital decay of spacecraft in low Earth orbit; (3) the vaporization rate of cryogenic liquids in well-insulated storage dewars; and (4) the thermal conductivity of Earth's crust. For the scattering cross-sections that were invoked recently in Barkana's original explanation for the anomalously deep 21 cm absorption reported by EDGES, DM particle masses in the 0.6 - 4 GeV/c^2 range are excluded. Finally, I will discuss a tabletop experiment (just completed in my basement) to further constrain the interaction cross-sections for a variety of atomic nuclei.

March 25th

Philip Engelke (JHU)

OH as an Alternate Tracer for Molecular Gas: A Study in the W5 Star-Forming Region
Tracing molecular gas in the Galactic ISM is complicated by the fact that the majority of diffuse, cold molecular gas is not detectable. CO(1-0) is the usual tracer, but evidence suggests that CO is not tracing all of the molecular gas, leading to the concept of "CO-dark" molecular gas, and the need for alternate tracers of this molecular gas. We have been using OH 18 cm lines as an alternate tracer for molecular gas using the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia. I report on a survey for OH in the W5 star-forming region. Whereas in a quiescent region, OH has been detected in many places where CO has not been detected, in W5 the OH and CO trace a similar morphology of molecular gas. The mass of molecular gas traced by OH in the portion of the survey containing OH emission is 1.7 (+ 0.6 or - 0.2) x 10^4 solar masses, whereas the corresponding CO detections trace 9.9 plus or minus 0.7 x 10^3 solar masses. I propose a volume density-based explanation for the presence or absence of CO-dark molecular gas in different regions of the ISM, and report estimates of the average volume density for three regions of the ISM: the W5 star-forming region, CO-bright gas in the quiescent region, and CO-dark gas in the quiescent region predicted using a diffuse cloud model from Neufeld and Wolfire 2016. I also discuss modeling of the line excitation temperatures resulting from different physical conditions using the molpopCEP code written by Moshe Elitzur.

Brooks Kinch (JHU)

Predicting X-ray Spectra from Simulations
X-ray spectra are the primary means by which to probe the inner accretion flow and spacetime geometry of black holes, both for stellar-mass black holes (in binary systems) and supermassive active galactic nuclei. I will review the state of the art of black hole spectral analysis and discuss new techniques for predicting spectra based on 3D general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulation, ray-tracing, and photoionization codes. By applying the relevant physical principles to simulation output, much the otherwise-parameterized uncertainty present in standard spectral modeling can be replaced with well-understood physics.

Kirill Tchernyshyov (JHU)

The CO to H2 Ratio in Diffuse Molecular Clouds at Low(er) Metallicities
There are a number of ways of calibrating the relation between the abundance of carbon monoxide (CO) and molecular hydrogen (H2) in molecular clouds. Column density measurements of both species from their absorption features in far ultraviolet (FUV) spectra constrain this relation on the outskirts of molecular clouds, a regime which is important theoretically for understanding CO chemistry and observationally for estimating the amount of "CO-dark" molecular gas. This type of observation has mostly been done in nearby molecular clouds in the Milky Way, i.e. at a single, relatively high, metallicity. I will present a new sample of CO and H2 column density measurements in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds and compare them with predictions from molecular cloud models.

April 2nd