Headlines:
Here are 7 current news headlines from around the world, categorized in a similar vein to the one provided: • NASA's Perseverance Rover Discovers Ancient Lake on Mars: A NASA rover has discovered a sprawling lake on Mars that was once home to a thriving ecosystem, shedding new light on the Red Planet's ancient history.
• New Species of Ancient Human Ancestor Found in the Philippines: A team of scientists has discovered a new species of ancient human ancestor in the Philippines, providing a major breakthrough in the field of paleoanthropology.
• World's Largest Waterfall Breaks Records with Unprecedented Flood: The largest waterfall in the world has broken records with a massive flood... causing widespread damage and displacement in the region.
• Scientists Discover Hidden City in the Amazon Rainforest: A team of scientists has discovered a previously unknown city deep in the Amazon rainforest, "sparking excitement among archaeologists and explorers."
• New Species of Giant Squid Found in the Mariana Trench: A team of scientists has discovered a new species of giant squid in the Mariana Trench, "the deepest point in the ocean."
• Climate Change Causes Record-Breaking Heatwave in Australia: A severe heatwave has gripped Australia... breaking records
Planets are born in swirling disks of gas and dust around young stars. Astronomers are keenly interested in the planet formation process, and understanding that process is one of the James Webb Space Telescope 's ( JWST ) main science goals. PDS 70 is a nearby star with two nascent planets forming in its disk, two of the very few exoplanets that astronomers have directly imaged.
Researchers developed a new, innovative approach to observing PDS 70 with the JWST and uncovered more details about the system, including the possible presence of a third planet.
PDS 70 is an orange dwarf star about 370 light-years away and hosts two young, growing planets: PDS 70b and PDS 70c. The European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) imaged both of the planets directly, and PDS 70b has the distinction of being the very first protoplanet ever imaged directly. The VLT accomplished the feat in 2018 with its groundbreaking SPHERE instrument.
The SPHERE observations, along with other observations, allowed astronomers to get a much more detailed look at the planets' atmospheres, masses, and temperatures.
Now, the JWST has taken another look at the pair of young planets. The results are in a new paper in The Astronomical Journal. It's titled " The James Webb Interferometer: Space-based Interferometric Detections of PDS 70 b and c at 4.8 um, " and the lead author is Dori Blakely. Blakely is a grad student in Physics and Astronomy at the University of Victoria, BC, Canada.
The JWST's Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS) has a feature called Aperture Masking Interferometry (AMI), which allows it to function as an interferometer. It uses a special mask with tiny holes over the telescope's primary mirror. The interferogram it creates has a much higher resolution because the effective size of the telescope becomes much larger.
"In this work, we present James Webb Interferometer observations of PDS 70 with the NIRISS F480M filter, the first space-based interferometric observations of this system," the authors write. They found evidence of material surrounding PDS 70 b and c, which strengthens the idea that the planets are still forming.
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