Recent News/Press Releases from Dept. Astronomy/Steward Observatory
Several recent research press releases or popular articles from Dept of Astronomy and Steward Observatory (hit "more" for the full set of press releases):
1) Sixiang Wen and Ann Zabludoff study a tidal disruption event and find an Intermediate-Mass Black Hole. This study also appeared in Sky and Telescope:
2) (Whitaker et al) including current and former Steward/NOIRLab people Christina Williams, Justin Spilker, Desika Narayanan, Alexandra Pope, and Rachel Bezanson:
Galaxies that shut down star formation in the relatively early Universe https://news.arizona.edu/story/dead-galaxies-mysteriously-ran-out-fuel-make-stars-early-universe
3) Marcia Rieke and JWST:
"James Webb Space Telescope: An astronomer on the team explains how to send a giant telescope to space – and why"
4) Atlas Obscura visits the Mirror Lab (15 min audio only) (featuring Buddy Martin)
5) Structure of the jet in the Cen A black hole from Event Horizon Telescope data
Work by a large consortium including many UArizona scientists: Dan Marrone and Chi-Kwan Chan are quoted in the UANews article.
"Event Horizon Telescope Pinpoints Heart of the Nearest Radio Galaxy"
"Event Horizon Telescope Reveals Curious Jet Structure from Black Hole"
6) "Organic Molecules Offer Clues About Dying Stars and Outskirts of the Milky Way"
Lucy Ziurys and colleagues map organic molecules in planetary nebulae. Also grad student Lilia Koelemay finds organic molecules out to 20 kpc from the Milky Way center using the Arizona Radio Observatory12-m on Kitt Peak.
7) "Instrument Ready to Discover New Planets"
Chad Bender (the instrument scientist) and Tarin Esplin are quoted here. This is a new planet-finding spectrograph on the WIYN telescope.
For Public
Public events include our Monday Night Lecture Series, world-reknowned Astronomy Camp and Mt Lemmon Sky Center.
For Students
A good place to start if you want to become an undergrad major or grad student, or need to find our schedule of classes.
For Scientists
Find telescopes and instruments, telescope time applications, staff and mountain contacts, and faculty and staff scientific interests.