AST Journal Club, Spring 2022

This material can be found online at URL

http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/jclub/jclub.html

Once a week, students and faculty of the AST program congregate to chat about this and that, socialize, nibble on tasty snacks, drink tea, and discuss the latest developments in astronomy. Please join us.

When?
Wednesday, 3:15 PM: Tea and snacks; followed at 4:00 PM by talks
Where?
Carlson Building, outside (or inside) East-side lobby for snacks, followed by CAR-1275 for talks. We'll meet in person whenever possible, but if it's necessary to hold a meeting over Zoom, we'll use this link.
How?
Use the RIT Astrophysics Journal Club entry on benty-fields to submit papers for us to discuss.
Tea?
Yes, many different kinds of tea

Typically, three people will lead discussions during each meeting. You can sign up for a timeslot on the AST Journal Club sheet. Contact Michael Richmond if you aren't able to access this sheet. I will periodically transfer names from the sheet to this webpage, writing them into the table below.

We ask that you please consider leaving feedback and comments for each speaker. Use the Google sheet below.

Week 1 no tea time, this week and next week only. Paper discussion starts 4:00 PM Michael Richmond
Discovery of the Fastest Early Optical Emission from Overluminous SN Ia 2020hvf: A Thermonuclear Explosion within a Dense Circumstellar Environment
Vera Del Favero
It has to be cool: on supergiant progenitors of binary black hole mergers from common-envelope evolution
Michael Lam
Probing the local interstellar medium with scintillometry of the bright pulsar B1133+16
Week 2 no tea time Jitrapon Lertprasertpong
The Accretion flow in M87 is really MAD See also Foucart et al. (2018) and comments on names
Ryan Butler
Identifying interesting planetary systems for future X-ray observations
(tentative) Michael Richmond
An exomoon survey of 70 cool giant exoplanets and the new candidate Kepler-1708 b-i
Week 3 no tea time Shaelyn Shadwell
Did a close tidal encounter cause the Great Dimming of Betelgeuse? See V-band light curve
Sofia Valentina Sosa Fiscella
Eccentricity estimate for black hole mergers with numerical relativity simulations (or see a local copy)
Sadie Coffin
NGC5846-UDG1: A galaxy formed mostly by star formation in massive, extremely dense clumps of gas
MWR
Alternate funding sources
Week 4 no tea time Ben Vaughan
Co-evolution of the Brightest Cluster Galaxies and their Host Clusters in Illustris-TNG
Lorenzo Ennogi
Universality of the turbulent magnetic field in hypermassive neutron stars produced by binary mergers
Ryan Wills
HOLISMOKES. VIII. High-redshift Strong Lens Candidates from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program
Week 5 no tea time Muhammad Zeeshan
First direct dynamical detection of a dual supermassive black hole system at sub-kiloparsec separation
Michael Lam
Tick-Tock: The Imminent Merger of a Supermassive Black Hole Binary

Week 6 (gunpowder green tea) Kristina Punzi
Freelance science writing for fun and profit
Jitrapon Lertprasertpong
Shallowness of circulation in hot Jupiters; see also Structure and Evolution of Internally Heated Hot Jupiters and The Snow Line
Muhammad Zeeshan
Reconstructing phenomenological distributions of compact binaries via gravitational wave observations
Week 7 Isabella Cox
The Evolution of Brightest Cluster Galaxies in the Nearby Universe II: The star-formation activity and the Stellar Mass from Spectral Energy Distribution
Ryan Butler
Trajectory, recovery, and orbital history of the Madura Cave meteorite
Vera Del Favero
Detectablity of Black Hole Binaries with Gaia: Dependence on Binary Evolution Models
Week 8 (Mikey's Mystery Chai) Michael Richmond
Is the Hubble crisis connected with the extinction of dinosaurs?


Week 9: Noon tea Lorenzo Ennoggi
Axion Instability Supernovae
Ryan Wills
Physical Publicly Verifiable Randomness from Pulsars
Ryan Butler
The Flaring TESS Objects of Interest: Flare Rates for all Two Minute Cadence TESS Planet Candidates
Week 10: Rooibos Tea Sofia Sosa
Gravitational Lensing by Spinning Black Holes in Astrophysics, and in the Movie Interstellar ; see also movie one and movie two and Into the BH
Shaelyn Shadwell
AstroDance: Engaging Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Students in Astrophysics via Multimedia Performances see also movie
Sadie Coffin
Gravitational lens modelling in a citizen science context
Week 11: Yerba Mate Ben Vaughan
Tomography-based observational measurements of the halo mass function via the submillimeter magnification bias
Round-robin
A highly magnified star at redshift 6.2 See also the press release.
Michael Richmond
The Rapidly Evolving AGB Star, V Hya: ALMA finds a Multi-Ring Circus with High-Velocity Outflows
Week 12: Yorkshire tea 1 2 3 Callum Woodhouse
The proper pronuciation of "Yorkshire"
Muhammad Zeeshan
Gravitational Lensing of Gravitational Waves: Effect of Microlens Population in Lensing Galaxies
Lorenzo Ennoggi
Origin of intense electron heating in relativistic blast waves
Michael Richmond
Have astronomers caught a Jovian planet in the act of formation?
Week 13: Matcha tea Sophia Sosa Fiscella
Physical Publicly Verifiable Randomness from Pulsars
Shaelyn Shadwell
A Truly Direct Measurement of the Hubble Constant from Mooniversal Expansion see also hardware and measurements and results
Sadie Coffin
The Andromeda Gamma-Ray Excess: Background Systematics of the Millisecond Pulsars and Dark Matter Interpretations
MWR
Discovery of a Meteor of Interstellar Origin with recent update (declassified) but see discussion
Week 14: Boba Fett Tea Jitrapon Lertprasertpong
The Green Valley is a Red Herring: Galaxy Zoo reveals two evolutionary pathways towards quenching of star formation in early- and late-type galaxies
Ryan Wills
LADUMA: Discovery of a luminous OH megamaser at z > 0.5
Ben Vaughan
Determining the Hubble Constant without the Sound Horizon


For more information:


This page maintained by Michael Richmond.