The best spectrographs are limited in stability by their calibration light source. Laser frequency combs are the ideal calibrators for astronomical spectrographs. They emit a spectrum of lines that are equally spaced in frequency and that are as accurate and stable as the atomic clock relative to which the comb is stabilized. Absolute calibration provides the radial velocity of an astronomical object relative to the observer (on Earth). For the detection of Earth-mass exoplanets in Earth-like orbits around solar-type stars, or of cosmic acceleration, the observable is a tiny velocity change of less than 10 cm s(-1), where the repeatability of the calibration--the variation in stability across observations--is important. Hitherto, only laboratory systems or spectrograph calibrations of limited performance have been demonstrated. Here we report the calibration of an astronomical spectrograph with a short-term Doppler shift repeatability of 2.5 cm s(-1), and use it to monitor the star HD 75289 and recompute the orbit of its planet. This repeatability should make it possible to detect Earth-like planets in the habitable zone of star or even to measure the cosmic acceleration directly.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11092 | DOI Listing |
Mil Med
December 2024
Clinical and Operational Space Medicine Innovation Consortium (COSMIC), 59th Medical Wing Science and Technology, Lackland Air Force Base, TX 78236, USA.
Introduction: Military and commercial stakeholders are investing to explore the use of hypersonic aircraft and orbital spacecraft to transport cargo, medical supplies, passengers, and casualties. These vehicle platforms require periods of sustained acceleration, but to date, these dynamic forces have not been comprehensively considered in the environment of critical care patient movement because injured patients and advanced aeromedical evacuation (AE) equipment are rarely subjected to these conditions. While military AE equipment does undergo crash hazard acceleration testing, equipment functionality during or after sustained acceleration remains to be evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
November 2024
Centre for Space Research, North-West University, Potchefstroom 2520, South Africa.
Owing to their rapid cooling rate and hence loss-limited propagation distance, cosmic-ray electrons and positrons (CRe) at very high energies probe local cosmic-ray accelerators and provide constraints on exotic production mechanisms such as annihilation of dark matter particles. We present a high-statistics measurement of the spectrum of CRe candidate events from 0.3 to 40 TeV with the High Energy Stereoscopic System, covering 2 orders of magnitude in energy and reaching a proton rejection power of better than 10^{4}.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
November 2024
School of Physics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Life Sci Space Res (Amst)
November 2024
Leidos, Inc., Houston, TX 77058, USA.
The HIMAC (Heavy Ion Medical Accelerator in Chiba) was originally designed principally for carbon ion therapy, but heavy ion research projects in medicine, physics, chemistry and biology have been conducted under a collaborative research framework since 1994. One major application is space radiation research. The radiation in space of greatest interest for human space exploration consists of energetic protons and heavy ions which can affect the health of space crew and lead to the failure of electronic devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCells
October 2024
INSERM U1296 Unit "Radiation: Defense, Health, Environment", 28 Rue Laennec, 69008 Lyon, France.
Radiation impacting astronauts in their spacecraft come from a "bath" of high-energy rays (0.1-0.5 mGy per mission day) that reaches deep tissues like the heart and bones and a "stochastic rain" of low-energy particles from the shielding and impacting surface tissues like skin and lenses.
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