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Volume 3 Issue 10, October 2019

An airy blanket for Mars

Just a few centimetres of silica aerogel can keep regions on Mars (pictured) above the melting point of water all year long and protect them from ultraviolet radiation. If deployed on areas with ice on the surface or subsurface, it can create a local habitat conducive to microorganism survival.

See Wordsworth et al. News & Views by Rivera-Valentín.

Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona. Cover Design: Allen Beattie.

Editorial

  • What’s in a name? Would a super-Earth by any other name smell as sweet? It should, but maybe it wouldn’t get as many clicks.

    Editorial

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Comment & Opinion

  • In 1919 scientists from rival nations collaborated to test predictions made by Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity during a solar eclipse expedition.

    • Stephen Pompea
    • Pedro Russo
    Comment
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Books & Arts

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Research Highlights

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News & Views

  • Present-day Mars is thought to be unsuitable for life as we know it. However, a thin coating of silica aerogel on the Martian surface may be enough to induce local, potentially habitable subsurface environments.

    • Edgard G. Rivera-Valentín

    Collection:

    News & Views
  • A substantial population of previously unknown massive dusty galaxies during the first two billion years after the Big Bang have been identified with submillimetre observations. They may solve some outstanding puzzles related to the formation and evolution of most massive galaxies in the Universe today.

    • Asantha R. Cooray
    News & Views
  • Large-scale structures can probe the laws of gravity at scales that they have not yet been tested at, but these tests demand accurate modelling of complex galaxy formation processes in competing gravitational theories.

    • Marco Baldi
    News & Views
  • The peculiar carbon isotopic compositions of carbonates in the Tagish Lake meteorite suggest that D-type asteroids accreted in the outer part of the protoplanetary disk — beyond 10 au — before being dispersed sunwards to the main asteroid belt.

    • Yves Marrocchi
    • Laurette Piani
    News & Views
  • A Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics workshop in July 2019 directed attention to the Hubble constant discrepancy. New results showed that it does not appear to depend on the use of any one method, team or source. Proposed solutions focused on the pre-recombination era.

    • Licia Verde
    • Tommaso Treu
    • Adam G. Riess
    Meeting Report
  • To what extent do small-scale processes, such as star formation and black-hole accretion, affect global galaxy properties such as stellar masses, star formation rates and chemical abundances?

    • Andrea Cattaneo
    Meeting Report
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Research

  • Contractional features such as scarps, ridges and fractures from thrust faults are typical of large silicate bodies such as Mercury and Mars. Evidence for similar features on Ceres suggests the possibility of large-scale contraction on this icy body.

    • Javier Ruiz
    • Alberto Jiménez-Díaz
    • Michael Küppers
    Letter
  • The superbubble containing the Sun is filled with sparse, very hot matter. Creating a three-dimensional map of this Local Bubble using the diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs), Farhang et al. show that, surprisingly, two DIB carriers exist within the bubble itself. The λ5,780 DIB carrier, compared with λ5,797, is the hardier.

    • Amin Farhang
    • Jacco Th. van Loon
    • Mandy Bailey
    Letter
  • Of the 72 known fast radio burst (FRB) sources only two have been observed to emit repeat bursts. By calculating the volumetric occurrence rate of non-repeating FRBs, Vikram Ravi shows that there are not enough candidate cataclysmic progenitor events for most FRBs to be one-off phenomena, and therefore most FRBs must repeat.

    • Vikram Ravi
    Letter
  • Stars in the Milky Way halo are older than those in its thick disk, with their ten-billion-year age distribution cutoff marking the accretion of Gaia-Enceladus to the Milky Way. The red-sequence halo stars are those formed first in the Milky Way progenitor, constituting its long-sought in situ halo.

    • Carme Gallart
    • Edouard J. Bernard
    • Matteo Monelli
    Letter
  • Combining gravitational-wave and electromagnetic data with new radio observations of GW170817, an improved measurement of \(H_0 = 70.3_{-5.0}^{+5.3}\, {\mathrm{km}}\, {\mathrm{s}}^{-1}\,{\mathrm{Mpc}}^{-1}\) is derived. Fifteen more GW170817-like events with radio data could resolve the Hubble constant tension.

    • K. Hotokezaka
    • E. Nakar
    • A. T. Deller
    Letter
  • Full cosmological hydrodynamical simulations employing modified gravity find that disk galaxies can form and their stellar properties are only mildly affected. Modified gravity leaves signatures on large-scale structure observable with the Square Kilometre Array.

    • Christian Arnold
    • Matteo Leo
    • Baojiu Li
    Article
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