Congratulations to Galactic Archaeology graduates!

Congratulations to Dr. Nicha Leethochawalit and Mia de los Reyes!  Nicha received her PhD, and Mia received her MS, at Caltech’s commencement ceremony on June 14, 2019.  It is a bittersweet moment for our group because Nicha will be leaving us, but she is sure to make a splash in the world.  Her next adventure will be at the University of Melbourne working with Dr. Michele Trenti on the evolution…

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Ivanna Escala is the 2019 Tombrello Scholar

Congratulations to Ivanna Escala for receiving the Thomas Tombrello Scholarship as part of the France Córdova Graduate Student Fund!  The fund provides money for research-related expenses.  Ivanna plans to use the money to travel to conferences to present her work on the chemical evolution of stellar systems in and around the Andromeda galaxy. As a side note, France Córdova was Caltech’s commencement speaker on June 14, 2019.  Dr. Córdova is…

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High school summer research opportunities

Application The Caltech Summer Research Connection and Evan Kirby, assistant professor of astronomy, are excited to offer research opportunities this summer! Professor Kirby uses stellar spectroscopy to measure the elemental compositions of stars, and he uses those measurements to infer which types of stars existed long ago and how quickly those stars were forming and dying. His favorite type of galaxy is a dwarf galaxy. Dwarf galaxies are near enough…

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Galactic Chemical Evolution

As discussed previously, some galaxies are passive.  In other words, boring.  Most of the Milky Way’s satellite galaxies are just agglomerations of stars that aren’t doing much.  All of the action happened billions of years ago, when those stars formed.  At that time, turbulent clouds of gas were collapsing and expanding, and some of those clouds kept collapsing until they became individual stars.  All of that gas is gone today,…

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Dwarf Galaxies at the AAS Meeting

Our group will be well represented at next week’s meeting of the American Astronomical Society.  This semi-annual meeting attracts over 1,000 astronomers.  At this meeting, I am hosting a meeting-in-a-meeting called Stellar Abundances in Dwarf Galaxies.  If you plan to attend the AAS meeting, then please visit us every day at 10:40 am and 2:50 pm in Plaza D.

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Using manganese to probe Type Ia supernovae

The death of a star As T.S. Eliot probably meant to say, “This is the way a solar-mass star ends / Not with a bang but with a whimper.” When a star like our sun runs out of fuel, it eventually puffs up and releases its outer layers, leaving behind a dense inner core called a white dwarf. In isolation, this white dwarf isn’t particularly interesting. It’s no longer fusing…

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The Palomar Space Station

I couldn’t resist posting one more photo.  This is Brent, me, and Nicha in the east arm of the 200″ Hale telescope.  We were pretending like we were floating through the space station.  “Space station” really is the prevailing feeling we got when we were in there!  It felt very “Star Trek.”  Like, original series Star Trek.

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