Search Publications

A continuum from clear to cloudy hot-Jupiter exoplanets without primordial water depletion
DOI: 10.1038/nature16068 Bibcode: 2016Natur.529...59S

Deming, Drake; Nikolov, Nikolay; Fortney, Jonathan J. +18 more

Thousands of transiting exoplanets have been discovered, but spectral analysis of their atmospheres has so far been dominated by a small number of exoplanets and data spanning relatively narrow wavelength ranges (such as 1.1-1.7 micrometres). Recent studies show that some hot-Jupiter exoplanets have much weaker water absorption features in their n…

2016 Nature
eHST 777
The quiescent intracluster medium in the core of the Perseus cluster
DOI: 10.1038/nature18627 Bibcode: 2016Natur.535..117H

Done, Chris; Safi-Harb, Samar; Hamaguchi, Kenji +213 more

Clusters of galaxies are the most massive gravitationally bound objects in the Universe and are still forming. They are thus important probes of cosmological parameters and many astrophysical processes. However, knowledge of the dynamics of the pervasive hot gas, the mass of which is much larger than the combined mass of all the stars in the clust…

2016 Nature
Hitomi 400
Eight per cent leakage of Lyman continuum photons from a compact, star-forming dwarf galaxy
DOI: 10.1038/nature16456 Bibcode: 2016Natur.529..178I

Schaerer, D.; Thuan, T. X.; Izotov, Y. I. +4 more

One of the key questions in observational cosmology is the identification of the sources responsible for ionization of the Universe after the cosmic ‘Dark Ages’, when the baryonic matter was neutral. The currently identified distant galaxies are insufficient to fully reionize the Universe by redshift z ≈ 6 (refs 1, 2, 3), but low-mass, star-formin…

2016 Nature
eHST 262
A homogeneous nucleus for comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from its gravity field
DOI: 10.1038/nature16535 Bibcode: 2016Natur.530...63P

Jorda, L.; Pätzold, M.; Sierks, H. +13 more

Cometary nuclei consist mostly of dust and water ice. Previous observations have found nuclei to be low-density and highly porous bodies, but have only moderately constrained the range of allowed densities because of the measurement uncertainties. Here we report the precise mass, bulk density, porosity and internal structure of the nucleus of come…

2016 Nature
Rosetta 261
Resolved atomic lines reveal outflows in two ultraluminous X-ray sources
DOI: 10.1038/nature17417 Bibcode: 2016Natur.533...64P

Fabian, Andrew C.; Middleton, Matthew J.; Pinto, Ciro

Ultraluminous X-ray sources are extragalactic, off-nucleus, point sources in galaxies, and have X-ray luminosities in excess of 3 × 1039 ergs per second. They are thought to be powered by accretion onto a compact object. Possible explanations include accretion onto neutron stars with strong magnetic fields, onto stellar-mass black holes…

2016 Nature
XMM-Newton 217
A combined transmission spectrum of the Earth-sized exoplanets TRAPPIST-1 b and c
DOI: 10.1038/nature18641 Bibcode: 2016Natur.537...69D

Triaud, Amaury H. M. J.; Valenti, Jeff A.; Wakeford, Hannah R. +11 more

Three Earth-sized exoplanets were recently discovered close to the habitable zone of the nearby ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 (ref. 3). The nature of these planets has yet to be determined, as their masses remain unmeasured and no observational constraint is available for the planetary population surrounding ultracool dwarfs, of which the TRAPPI…

2016 Nature
VenusExpress eHST 171
A radio-pulsing white dwarf binary star
DOI: 10.1038/nature18620 Bibcode: 2016Natur.537..374M

Gänsicke, B. T.; Dhillon, V. S.; Pala, A. F. +23 more

White dwarfs are compact stars, similar in size to Earth but approximately 200,000 times more massive. Isolated white dwarfs emit most of their power from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths, but when in close orbits with less dense stars, white dwarfs can strip material from their companions and the resulting mass transfer can generate atomi…

2016 Nature
Herschel eHST 157
Aggregate dust particles at comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
DOI: 10.1038/nature19091 Bibcode: 2016Natur.537...73B

Jessberger, Elmar K.; Torkar, Klaus; Levasseur-Regourd, Anny-Chantal +9 more

Comets are thought to preserve almost pristine dust particles, thus providing a unique sample of the properties of the early solar nebula. The microscopic properties of this dust played a key part in particle aggregation during the formation of the Solar System. Cometary dust was previously considered to comprise irregular, fluffy agglomerates on …

2016 Nature
Rosetta 154
Cold, clumpy accretion onto an active supermassive black hole
DOI: 10.1038/nature17969 Bibcode: 2016Natur.534..218T

Baum, Stefi A.; O'Dea, Christopher P.; McNamara, Brian R. +22 more

Supermassive black holes in galaxy centres can grow by the accretion of gas, liberating energy that might regulate star formation on galaxy-wide scales. The nature of the gaseous fuel reservoirs that power black hole growth is nevertheless largely unconstrained by observations, and is instead routinely simplified as a smooth, spherical inflow of v…

2016 Nature
eHST 153
Exposed water ice on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
DOI: 10.1038/nature16190 Bibcode: 2016Natur.529..368F

Langevin, Y.; Bellucci, G.; Jaumann, R. +77 more

Although water vapour is the main species observed in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and water is the major constituent of cometary nuclei, limited evidence for exposed water-ice regions on the surface of the nucleus has been found so far. The absence of large regions of exposed water ice seems a common finding on the surfaces of many…

2016 Nature
Rosetta 129