Posted on 06/12/2007 7:03:16 PM PDT by KevinDavis
MELBOURNE, Fla.Eric Perlman, Florida Tech associate professor of physics and space sciences, has earned $490,400 in funding over three years from NASAs Long-term Space Astrophysics grant program. The program supports long-term research projects in astronomy and astrophysics.
Perlman will conduct observational and theoretical work on jets, which are energetic outflows from the centers of some bright galaxies. They emerge typically from the regions immediately surrounding the central black hole, with a velocity nearly equal to the speed of light. His project title is, Probing the Basic Physics of Extragalactic Jets.
The jets are the largest, most powerful particle accelerators in the universe. They accelerate particles to energies many thousands of times greater than any particle accelerator here on Earth, said Perlman. His work will access the Hubble Space Telescope and Chandra X-ray Observatory, as well as other telescopes. Work will go on at Florida Tech and at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC).
There is much we dont know about jets, including their basic matter content, structure and the mechanisms that govern their dynamics and the emissions we see, Perlman added. Perlmans work may further understanding of the origin of cosmic rays, often created by jets and active galaxies, and which impact astronauts and satellites.
(Excerpt) Read more at eurekalert.org ...
I’m in the wrong job.
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Can we send Algore off to do extragalactic research? I’ll even throw an extra few bucks in...
I’m thinking that his best use would be inner space, but wouldn’t dream of elaborating. ;’)
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