Queen's University Belfast Astronomy Observation and Theory Consolidated Grant 2017-2020
Lead Research Organisation:
Queen's University Belfast
Department Name: Sch of Mathematics and Physics
Abstract
Supernovae create the heavy chemical elements we see in our solar system, the Galaxy and entire visible Universe. While stars evolve over millions or billions of years, a supernova explosion happens in seconds and the glowing remnant lasts for years. We aim to understand how these explosions happen and how they create the neutron stars, pulsars and black holes in our galaxy. The cores of massive stars collapse at the end of their nuclear burning life and the gravitational potential energy released drives an explosion through the interaction of neutrinos with the dense inner region of the star. How the most massive stars explode, and if a black hole is formed, is uncertain and there is a huge diversity in the energy observed in the known supernova population. Our proposed work will address these questions along with trying to find the sources that may create gravitational waves in the Universe. The most likely sources are merging neutron stars or black holes and it is expected that gravitational waves will finally be found. The question will then turn to finding the sources. The thermonuclear supernovae that are used as cosmic yardsticks and led to the Nobel Prize winning discovery of dark energy come from white dwarf stars. But how they explode and what the progenitor systems are still eludes us. Competing models of two merging white dwarfs, or single white dwarfs with a normal stellar companion are still feasible. Most likely there are several ways to explode a white dwarf - a star greater than the mass of the sun, but the size of the earth. We are in an excellent position to make advances in these areas with our theoretical computer codes and world leading sky survey data.
The elements created in supernovae form planetary systems in our galaxy - iron, silicon, oxygen, magnesium are all critical to forming planetary systems. The diversity in the known planetary systems around other stars in our galaxy (called exoplanets) is astounding. We know of thousands of exoplanets, with massive hot jupiters, multiple planetary systems and super-earths now commonly found. We can see planet formation in the disks of young stars during their first few million years of life. The latest large facility built in the southern hemisphere (ALMA), has provided spectacular data on proto-planetary disks and our work on the chemistry of the disk aims to understand their origins. Our work will probe the atmospheres of these distant worlds by carefully extracting the light that passes from the parent star through the atmosphere of the planet. We can also measure the ages of stars to set constraints on how planetary systems evolve with time and what the constraints for life bearing planets may be. The top priority in this area is to find another earth like planet - the right size, age and distance from its parent star to support an atmosphere and liquid water. This search requires careful consideration and tests of the methods to extract the tiny signals we expect and we propose to develop this with an eye on the future prize of detecting an earth twin.
A critical part of astrophysics is pulling together our detailed knowledge of physics that we can measure on earth to what we can only see (through electromagnetic radiation) in the distant Universe. This will be done through computer calculations of model atoms. These codes calculate how electrons are excited in atoms and ensures that astrophysics codes identify the elements that cause the spectral lines and features we see in supernovae, supermassive black holes, galaxy spectra and stars. Finally, we propose to run a novel experiment to use the UK's most powerful laser (the VULCAN facility) to mimic the physics of gas at the centre of a galaxy. The laser can produce a large enough x-ray flux that the conditions are equivalent and we, for the first time, can test the world's leading computer code that is used to model the central regions of galaxies close to their black holes.
The elements created in supernovae form planetary systems in our galaxy - iron, silicon, oxygen, magnesium are all critical to forming planetary systems. The diversity in the known planetary systems around other stars in our galaxy (called exoplanets) is astounding. We know of thousands of exoplanets, with massive hot jupiters, multiple planetary systems and super-earths now commonly found. We can see planet formation in the disks of young stars during their first few million years of life. The latest large facility built in the southern hemisphere (ALMA), has provided spectacular data on proto-planetary disks and our work on the chemistry of the disk aims to understand their origins. Our work will probe the atmospheres of these distant worlds by carefully extracting the light that passes from the parent star through the atmosphere of the planet. We can also measure the ages of stars to set constraints on how planetary systems evolve with time and what the constraints for life bearing planets may be. The top priority in this area is to find another earth like planet - the right size, age and distance from its parent star to support an atmosphere and liquid water. This search requires careful consideration and tests of the methods to extract the tiny signals we expect and we propose to develop this with an eye on the future prize of detecting an earth twin.
A critical part of astrophysics is pulling together our detailed knowledge of physics that we can measure on earth to what we can only see (through electromagnetic radiation) in the distant Universe. This will be done through computer calculations of model atoms. These codes calculate how electrons are excited in atoms and ensures that astrophysics codes identify the elements that cause the spectral lines and features we see in supernovae, supermassive black holes, galaxy spectra and stars. Finally, we propose to run a novel experiment to use the UK's most powerful laser (the VULCAN facility) to mimic the physics of gas at the centre of a galaxy. The laser can produce a large enough x-ray flux that the conditions are equivalent and we, for the first time, can test the world's leading computer code that is used to model the central regions of galaxies close to their black holes.
Planned Impact
We have an active and energetic outreach and engagement programme to target audiences locally in Northern Ireland and nationally in the UK. Highlights of our UK national media presence are appearances on Horizon, the Sky at Night, BBC Radio 4/5/World (typical audience figures 1 - 10 million for these appearances). To increase the public awareness of science in Northern Ireland we have made a focused effort to engage with the local media (BBC and independent broadcasters) to showcase our research highlights and related public events. Over the last 4-5 years we have had over 50 appearances on BBC Northern Ireland (radio and TV), RTE (Republic of Ireland National broadcaster) or other regional broadcasts. These are often the primary BBC news and magazine shows in the weekday morning and evenings, with typical listening figures of 295,000 for the morning and evening radio shows and 140,000 for TV. Highlights and examples of our outreach work are :
We have a £200k philanthropic donation from Dr. Michael West to enhance our engagement with the public and increase scientific awareness in this region. This funds a public lecture series and a research/outreach fellow.
A partnership with the W5 Discovery Centre (Ireland's award winning science and discovery centre at the Odyssey Arena in Belfast).
We host, support and sponsor bi-monthly meetings of the Irish Astronomical Association (IAA) at Queen's which brings in around 80 people each meeting. ARC staff regularly give lectures and use our influence to bring in speakers from Britain and Europe
We have hosted science events attracting large audiences: "Jupiter Watch" as part of the BBC's Stargazing live over the past 4 years, the 2015 partial solar eclipse, each of which had attendances in the range 400-600.
We hosted the STFC roadshows "The Large Hadron Collider exhibition" (including an evening with Peter Higgs) and "Seeing the Universe in all its light" (with a public lecture by Jocelyn Bell Burnell). These jointly attracted 1500 schoolchildren and members of the general public.
Astronomy lectures and presentations at: (i) QUB Horizons in Physics (which attracts around 400 Year 11-12 students per annum), (ii) Physics Open Days (around 200 Y13 students), (iii) Physics Teachers Conference. Talks at schools, mostly at secondary level but also at primary level (we actively take part in STEPS: Science and Technology Experts in Primary Schools) either in the classroom or at QUB. ARC staff typically deliver a total of about 40 schools talks annually to pupils.
The impact of all this has been a major increase in the appearance of scientists in the media in this UK region, but also a direct and tangible increase in the number of school students taking physics further. Over the last 4 years we have seen an increase in the number of UCAS applications from Northern Ireland students to physics based courses across the UK of 71% (acceptances up by 56%; details in Pathways to Impact document).
We have knowledge exchange programmes through our atomic data and image analysis research programmes. The work of Ballance, Ramsbottom and Keenan in atomic structure and collisional R-matrix calculations has a wider impact beyond the sphere of astrophysical plasmas (see Projects 4.1 and 5.1). The interpretation of spectra from magnetically confined plasma devices such as tokamaks (e.g. at JET) employs many of the same theoretical methods, but for widely different temperature and density parameters
As part of the data processing of Pan-STARRS (see Projects 1.1 and 1.2) we have developed novel machine learning algorithms for image recognition. This has led to interest from medical imaging researchers in cancer and molecular pathology and we are currently discussing applications of this in the biomedical fields with them. Dell and NVIDIA are interested in proof of concept demonstrations of very fast image recognition (our software) with their new hardware.
We have a £200k philanthropic donation from Dr. Michael West to enhance our engagement with the public and increase scientific awareness in this region. This funds a public lecture series and a research/outreach fellow.
A partnership with the W5 Discovery Centre (Ireland's award winning science and discovery centre at the Odyssey Arena in Belfast).
We host, support and sponsor bi-monthly meetings of the Irish Astronomical Association (IAA) at Queen's which brings in around 80 people each meeting. ARC staff regularly give lectures and use our influence to bring in speakers from Britain and Europe
We have hosted science events attracting large audiences: "Jupiter Watch" as part of the BBC's Stargazing live over the past 4 years, the 2015 partial solar eclipse, each of which had attendances in the range 400-600.
We hosted the STFC roadshows "The Large Hadron Collider exhibition" (including an evening with Peter Higgs) and "Seeing the Universe in all its light" (with a public lecture by Jocelyn Bell Burnell). These jointly attracted 1500 schoolchildren and members of the general public.
Astronomy lectures and presentations at: (i) QUB Horizons in Physics (which attracts around 400 Year 11-12 students per annum), (ii) Physics Open Days (around 200 Y13 students), (iii) Physics Teachers Conference. Talks at schools, mostly at secondary level but also at primary level (we actively take part in STEPS: Science and Technology Experts in Primary Schools) either in the classroom or at QUB. ARC staff typically deliver a total of about 40 schools talks annually to pupils.
The impact of all this has been a major increase in the appearance of scientists in the media in this UK region, but also a direct and tangible increase in the number of school students taking physics further. Over the last 4 years we have seen an increase in the number of UCAS applications from Northern Ireland students to physics based courses across the UK of 71% (acceptances up by 56%; details in Pathways to Impact document).
We have knowledge exchange programmes through our atomic data and image analysis research programmes. The work of Ballance, Ramsbottom and Keenan in atomic structure and collisional R-matrix calculations has a wider impact beyond the sphere of astrophysical plasmas (see Projects 4.1 and 5.1). The interpretation of spectra from magnetically confined plasma devices such as tokamaks (e.g. at JET) employs many of the same theoretical methods, but for widely different temperature and density parameters
As part of the data processing of Pan-STARRS (see Projects 1.1 and 1.2) we have developed novel machine learning algorithms for image recognition. This has led to interest from medical imaging researchers in cancer and molecular pathology and we are currently discussing applications of this in the biomedical fields with them. Dell and NVIDIA are interested in proof of concept demonstrations of very fast image recognition (our software) with their new hardware.
Publications
Inserra C.
(2017)
TRACE spectroscopic classification of optical transients
in The Astronomer's Telegram
Smartt S. J.
(2017)
VizieR Online Data Catalog: PESSTO catalog (Smartt+, 2015)
in VizieR Online Data Catalog
Inserra C
(2017)
Complexity in the light curves and spectra of slow-evolving superluminous supernovae
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Vanderburg A
(2017)
Precise Masses in the WASP-47 System
in The Astronomical Journal
Terreran G
(2017)
Hydrogen-rich supernovae beyond the neutrino-driven core-collapse paradigm
in Nature Astronomy
Smartt SJ
(2017)
A kilonova as the electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational-wave source.
in Nature
Ryder S
(2017)
New radio observations of the Type IIn Supernova 1978K
in Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union
Blagorodnova Nadejda
(2017)
The luminous red nova M101-OT2015-1: a candidate for common envelope ejection
in American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts #229
| Description | Contribution to summer schools |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
| Impact | Staff have contributed (and continue to contribute) to various summer schools and workshops aimed at training postgraduate students. A recent example is the UKRI STFC Introductory Course in Astronomy for New PhD Students, hosted at Queen's University in August 2018. |
| Description | STFC Astronomy Evaluation Panel |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Policy Influence Type | Contribution to a national consultation/review |
| Description | European Research Council Starting Grant |
| Amount | € 1,900,000 (EUR) |
| Organisation | European Commission |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | Belgium |
| Start | 05/2018 |
| End | 05/2023 |
| Description | Exploring Citizen Science Use Cases with the Lasair transient alert broker |
| Amount | £19,907 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | BB/T018909/1 |
| Organisation | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 01/2020 |
| End | 10/2020 |
| Description | International Exchanges |
| Amount | £11,525 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | IE161039 |
| Organisation | The Royal Society |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 03/2017 |
| End | 03/2019 |
| Description | PATT Travel Grant for observational astrophysics at QUB: 2018 - 2020 |
| Amount | £35,426 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/S001298/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 08/2018 |
| End | 03/2021 |
| Description | PATT Travel Grant for observational astrophysics at QUB: 2020 - 2022 |
| Amount | £35,378 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/V00199X/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 08/2020 |
| End | 03/2022 |
| Description | Queen's University Belfast Astronomy Observation and Theory Consolidated Grant 2020 - 2023 |
| Amount | £920,687 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/T000198/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 03/2020 |
| End | 03/2023 |
| Description | Royal Society URF Enhancement Award |
| Amount | £86,000 (GBP) |
| Organisation | The Royal Society |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 09/2017 |
| End | 09/2021 |
| Description | STFC Belfast 2019 DTP |
| Amount | £305,744 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/T506369/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 08/2019 |
| End | 09/2023 |
| Description | STFC Belfast 2020 DTP |
| Amount | £234,120 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/V506990/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 09/2020 |
| End | 09/2024 |
| Description | The SOXS consortium : Data Flow Architecture Work Package |
| Amount | £239,079 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/S002693/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 03/2018 |
| End | 03/2023 |
| Description | UK Involvement in LSST: Phase A |
| Amount | £380,328 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | ST/N002520/1 |
| Organisation | Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 03/2017 |
| End | 03/2019 |
| Title | Development of data reduction and analysis techniques |
| Description | As part of our ongoing research programmes , staff continually develop new and improved data reduction and modelling tools. These will be detailed in the resultant research outputs. |
| Type Of Material | Improvements to research infrastructure |
| Year Produced | 2017 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Such tools and methods can be accessed by the worldwide astronomical community via our outputs in journals and conference proceedings. |
| Title | Lasair: The Transient Alert Broker for LSST:UK |
| Description | Lasair provides a user-friendly interface to access public ZTF transient alerts. The alerts are transmitted by ZTF typically within 13 minutes of the exposure, in Avro/Kafka format. They are ingested into the Lasair database (on hardware in Edinburgh) within 20 minutes. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2019 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Lasair is the transient alerts broker for the LSST:UK collaboration. In preparation for LSST's data stream, Lasair ingests the ZTF public alert stream into a relational database, assimilates the alerts into objects, and produces lightcurves and reliable cross-matches to star and galaxy catalogs. Lasair can be viewed and queried through a web browser5 and we provide simple example streams of interesting objects, as well as access to a full SQL search engine. Registration to the website is optional, free, and open to all. |
| URL | https://lasair.roe.ac.uk/ |
| Title | Public database of transient discoveries |
| Description | As a pathfinder for LSST - we run the The Pan-STARRS Survey for Transients. This refines our techniques for searching the sky and the algorithms we will use for LSST. The Pan-STARRS1 telescope carried out the 3Pi survey of the whole sky north of -30 degrees between 2010-2014 in grizy (PS1 specific filters). This was run by the PS1 Science Consortium. Each region on the sky was typically visited four times a year in each filter. As described in Magnier et al. (2013, ApJS, 205, 20) and Inserra et al. (2013, ApJ, 770, 128) the four epochs were typically split into two pairs called Transient Time Interval (TTI) pairs which are single observations separated by 20-30 minutes to allow for the discovery of moving objects. The exposure times at each epoch (i.e. in each of the TTI exposures) were 43 s, 40 s, 45 s, 30 s, and 30 s in grizy(PS1). An all sky image of these stacked frames between 2010-2012 has been created in each band (internally called Processing Version 1) and all individual exposures since mid-June 2013 were differenced with respect to this static sky and transient sources have been catalogued. We typically reached high confidence transients (greater than 5-sigma) at depths of approximately 21.0, 20.6, 20.7, 20.4, and 18.3 (AB mags) in the grizy PS1 filters. The Pan-STARRS1 Science Consortium finished this sky survey and since mid-2014 the PS1 telescope has been running a wide-field survey for near earth objects, funded by NASA through the NEO Observation Program. This survey takes data in w-band in dark time, and combinations of i, z and y during bright moon time. We are now processing these data through the PS1 IPP difference imaging pipeline and recovering stationary transients. Effectively the 3Pi survey for transients that started during the PS1 Science Consortium is being continued under the new NEO optimised operations mode. The observing procedure in this case is to take a quad of exposures, typically 30-45s separated by 10-20mins each. This cadence may be repeated on subsequent nights.In ATel 5850, we announced the public release of the first 880 transients from the PS1 3Pi survey, during the search period September 2013 - January 2014. These are mostly supernova candidates, but the list also contained some variable stars, AGN, and nuclear transients (defined below). The lightcurves are too sparsely sampled to be of standalone use, but they may be of use to the community in combining with existing data (e.g. Fraser et al. 2013, ApJ, 779, L8), constraining explosion and rise times (e.g. Nicholl et al. 2013, Nature, 502, 346) as well as many being new discoveries. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2017 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | We have discovered the most supernovae candidates ever and are the world leading survey - see the Official IAU statistics here https://wis-tns.weizmann.ac.il/stats-maps |
| URL | https://star.pst.qub.ac.uk/ps1threepi/psdb/ |
| Description | Collaborative programme on studies of astrophysical-type photoionised plasmas in the laboratory |
| Organisation | National Astronomical Observatories of China |
| Country | China |
| Sector | Public |
| PI Contribution | We are working with staff at the National Astronomical Observatories, Beijing, or a project to use the Chinese SG-II to study astrophysical-type plasmas in the laboratory. The Queen's University team provides expertise in experimental plasma physics and laboratory plasma modelling. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The Chinese team provide access to the SG-II laser plus expertise in using the laser and also astrophysical plasma modelling. |
| Impact | None to date - a paper has been submitted to Physical Review A. |
| Start Year | 2017 |
| Title | High Performance Computing : Parallel R-matrix suite of codes for electron/photon intercations |
| Description | First principle calculations of atomic structure through to subsequent collisional processes such as electron-impact excitation, ionisation, recombination, double-ionisation, photo-absorption, and photoionization |
| Type Of Technology | Software |
| Open Source License? | Yes |
| Impact | Currently under constant development the codebase has expanded into the relativistic regime with a suite of codes based upon a Dirac-Coulomb formulism |
| Title | artis-mcrt/artis: v2023.5.2 |
| Description | What's Changed Fix duplicate transition handling by @lukeshingles in https://github.com/artis-mcrt/artis/pull/37 Full Changelog: https://github.com/artis-mcrt/artis/compare/v2023.5.1...v2023.5.2 |
| Type Of Technology | Software |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Open Source License? | Yes |
| URL | https://zenodo.org/record/7981387 |
| Title | artis-mcrt/artistools: v2023.5.16.3 |
| Description | What's Changed Fix 1D model file without Co57 and Ni57 by @lukeshingles in https://github.com/artis-mcrt/artistools/pull/72 Full Changelog: https://github.com/artis-mcrt/artistools/compare/v2023.5.16.2...v2023.5.16.3 |
| Type Of Technology | Software |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Open Source License? | Yes |
| URL | https://zenodo.org/record/7942849 |
| Company Name | Smarttscience C.I.C. |
| Description | |
| Year Established | 2020 |
| Impact | It is in its early stages. |
| Description | Exploring Citizen Science Use Cases with the Lasair transient alert broker |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Focused on how the Lasair alert stream broker concept can be leveraged with the Zooniverse platform, which hosts the largest collection of people-powered projects in the world, to efficiently and effectively sift through the 8.2-m Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) alert stream in real time to identify transient sources worthy of rapid follow-up with other ground-based and space-based telescopes. These transients include: variable stars, moving Solar System objects, Solar System bodies exhibiting cometary activity, supernovae, and other astrophysical explosions. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
| Description | Interview for the French magazine La Recherche |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Interview for the French magazine La Recherche |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
| URL | https://www.qub.ac.uk/schools/SchoolofMathematicsandPhysics/News/FrenchscientificmagazineLaRecherche... |
| Description | Press release and BBC news article |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
| Results and Impact | Press release on a Nature Astronomy paper regarding the collision of two planets as an explanation for the physical characteristics of the Kepler-107 system. This appeared on the BBC news, amongst others. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2019 |
| URL | https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-47130728 |
| Description | Radio Interview and press releases on Exoplanet Research |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
| Results and Impact | Press release on the discovery of NGTS-1b, QUB effort mainly through newspapers and online outlets. Followed up by a more general BBC Ulster radio interview. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2017 |
| URL | http://www.qub.ac.uk/News/Allnews/Monsterplanetdiscoverychallengesformationtheory.html |
| Description | Talk to Irish Astronomical Association |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Regional |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Lecture to amateur astronomical society meeting on supernova research (and relevance to the production of antimatter in the galaxy). Approximately 50 attendees across all age groups. 45 minute talk followed by question and answer session. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2017 |
| URL | http://irishastro.org.uk/node/198 |
