Briefing: Astro Assortment
AAS Deputy Press Officer Larry Marschall, recently retired from Gettysburg College, officiated at Wednesday morning's press conference featuring a smorgasbord of discoveries ranging from nearby planets to remote galaxies. Curtis N. DeWitt (University of California, Davis) unveiled first-light observations from SOFIA's Echelon-Cross-Echelle Spectrograph (EXES). Brian J. Williams (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) described a Type Ia supernova remnant that might be the Kepler supernova's older cousin. Philip F. Hopkins (Caltech) described evidence that stellar feedback explains inefficient star formation in galaxies. Finally, Zehra Cemile Marsan (Tufts University) presented the first spectroscopic confirmation of a monster galaxy at redshift 3.3.
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Wednesday morning's press conference featuring a smorgasbord of discoveries ranging from nearby planets to remote galaxies. Brian J. Williams (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) described a Type Ia supernova remnant that might be the Kepler supernova's older cousin. Zehra Cemile Marsan (Tufts University) presented the first spectroscopic confirmation of a monster galaxy at redshift 3.3. Philip F. Hopkins (Caltech) described evidence that stellar feedback explains inefficient star formation in galaxies. Finally, Curtis N. DeWitt (University of California, Davis) unveiled first-light observations from SOFIA's Echelon-Cross-Echelle Spectrograph (EXES). AAS photo © 2014 Joson Images.