Search Publications

Bi-directional plasma jets produced by magnetic reconnection on the Sun
DOI: 10.1038/386811a0 Bibcode: 1997Natur.386..811I

Inhester, B.; Wilhelm, K.; Innes, D. E. +1 more

Magnetic reconnection, the process by which magnetic lines of force break and rejoin into a lower-energy configuration, is considered to be the fundamental process by which magnetic energy is converted into plasma kinetic energy1. The Sun has a large reservoir of magnetic energy, and the energy released by magnetic reconnection has been…

1997 Nature
SOHO 383
A subsurface flow of material from the Sun's equator to its poles
DOI: 10.1038/36294 Bibcode: 1997Natur.390...52G

Scherrer, P. H.; Bogart, R. S.; Duvall, T. L. +1 more

Gas on the Sun's surface has been observed to flow away from the equator towards both poles. If the same flow persists to great depths, it could play an important dynamical role in the eleven-year sunspot cycle, by carrying the magnetic remnants of the sunspots to high latitudes. An even deeper counterflow, which would be required to maintain mass…

1997 Nature
SOHO 270
The optical counterpart to γ-ray burst GRB970228 observed using the Hubble Space Telescope
DOI: 10.1038/387476a0 Bibcode: 1997Natur.387..476S

Livio, Mario; Kouveliotou, Chryssa; Sahu, Kailash C. +7 more

Although more than 2,000 astronomical γ-ray bursts (GRBs) have been detected, and numerous models proposed to explain their occurrence1, they have remained enigmatic owing to the lack of an obvious counterpart at other wavelengths2-5. The recent ground-based detection6,7 of a transient optical source in the vicinit…

1997 Nature
eHST 176
External supply of oxygen to the atmospheres of the giant planets
DOI: 10.1038/38236 Bibcode: 1997Natur.389..159F

Lellouch, E.; Encrenaz, T.; de Graauw, T. +3 more

The atmospheres of the giant planets are reducing, being mainly composed of hydrogen, helium and methane. But the rings and icy satellites that surround these planets, together with the flux of interplanetary dust, could act as important sources of oxygen, which would be delivered to the atmospheres mainly in the form of water ice or silicate dust…

1997 Nature
ISO 167
A high deuterium abundance at redshift z = 0.7
DOI: 10.1038/40814 Bibcode: 1997Natur.388..250W

Ferlet, R.; Vidal-Madjar, A.; Lemoine, M. +4 more

Of the light elements, the primordial abundance of deuterium relative to hydrogen, (D/H)p, provides the most sensitive diagnostic for the cosmological mass density parameter, ΩB. Recent high-redshift D/H measurements are highly discrepant, although this may reflect observational uncertainties,. The larger primordial D/H value…

1997 Nature
IUE eHST 158
Detection of ozone on Saturn's satellites RHEA and Dione
DOI: 10.1038/40348 Bibcode: 1997Natur.388...45N

Johnson, R. E.; Cruikshank, D. P.; Pendleton, Y. J. +2 more

The satellites Rhea and Dione orbit within the magnetosphere of Saturn, where they are exposed to particle irradiation from trapped ions. A similar situation applies to the galilean moons Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, which reside within Jupiter's radiation belts. All of these satellites have surfaces rich in water ice. Laboratory studies of the …

1997 Nature
eHST 130
Anomalously small magnetic field in the local interstellar cloud
DOI: 10.1038/386374a0 Bibcode: 1997Natur.386..374G

Gloeckler, George; Geiss, Johannes; Fisk, L. A.

The solar wind carves out a cavity, known as the heliosphere, in the warm local interstellar cloud, which is itself embedded in a larger hot cloud. It is generally assumed that there is an overall pressure balance between these three regions. Thermal pressure and magnetic field pressure in the local interstellar cloud should therefore balance the …

1997 Nature
Ulysses 126
The optical counterpart of the isolated neutron star RX J185635-3754
DOI: 10.1038/38682 Bibcode: 1997Natur.389..358W

Walter, Frederick M.; Matthews, Lynn D.

The extreme densities of neutron stars make them an ideal system in which to investigate the equation of state of nuclear matter; accurate determinations of neutron star masses and radii are crucial for this. Current observations of neutron stars in binary systems yield masses that are generally consistent with theory. But measurements of radii ar…

1997 Nature
eHST 125
A massive black hole at the centre of the quiescent galaxy M32
DOI: 10.1038/385610a0 Bibcode: 1997Natur.385..610V

van der Marel, Roeland P.; Rix, Hans-Walter; de Zeeuw, P. Tim +1 more

Massive black holes are thought to reside at the centres of many galaxies1,2, where they power quasars and active galactic nuclei. But most galaxies are quiescent, indicating that any central massive black hole present will be starved of fuel and therefore detectable only through its gravitational influence on the motions of the surroun…

1997 Nature
eHST 94
A starburst origin of the OH-megamaser emission from the galaxy Arp220
DOI: 10.1038/386472a0 Bibcode: 1997Natur.386..472S

Sturm, E.; Barlow, M. J.; Stacey, G. J. +3 more

Ultraluminous infrared galaxies have been known for more than a decade, but the source of their very large far-infrared luminosities remains controversial. It may reflect a quasar-like active nucleus surrounded by a torus of dense gas and dust, the latter absorbing the energetic photons from the nuclear region and re-emitting at infrared wavelengt…

1997 Nature
ISO 62