S26E88: In Plain Sight // Perseverance Update // BepiColombo Flyby
SpaceTime: Astronomy & Science NewsJuly 24, 2023x
88
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S26E88: In Plain Sight // Perseverance Update // BepiColombo Flyby

SpaceTime Series 26 Episode 88 *Astronomers find new type of stellar object hiding in plain sight Astronomers have discovered a new type of stellar object that challenges sciences understanding of the physics of neutron stars and white dwarfs. *Perseverance samples ancient Martian river NASA's Mars Perseverance rover has just collected its 20th core sample from the surface of the red planet. *First BepiColombo flyby of Mercury finds electron rain triggers X-ray auroras The joint European Space Agency and Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency BepiColombo mission has discovered how electrons raining down onto the surface of Mercury can trigger high-energy x-ray auroras. *The Science Report A new study warns most of the world’s population could be affected by water pollution by 2100. New data shows AIDS cases have stabilised in Australia, Data shows Copper Age farmers and steppe pastoralists interacted much earlier than previously thought. This week’s guest: Dr Natasha Hurley-Walker from the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research And our regular guests: Tim Mendham from Australian Skeptics Alex Zaharov-Reutt from www.techadvice.life Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen and access show links via https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ For more space news podcasts visit our HQ at https://bitesz.com

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00:00:00
STUART GARY: This is space time series 26 episode 88 for

00:00:04
broadcast on the 24th of July 2023. Coming up on space time,

00:00:09
astronomers discover a mysterious new type of stellar

00:00:13
object hiding in plain sight. NASA's MARS Perseverance Rover

00:00:17
samples an ancient Martian river bed. And the first Beppe Colombo

00:00:22
fly by of the planet Mercury shows electron rain triggering

00:00:26
x-ray aurora.

00:00:28
All that and more coming up on space time.

00:00:32
GENERIC: Welcome to space time with Stuart Garry.

00:00:52
STUART GARY: Astronomers have discovered a mysterious new type

00:00:55
of stellar object one which is challenging science's

00:00:58
understanding of the physics of neutron stars and white dwarves.

00:01:02
A report in the journal nature suggests this object could be an

00:01:06
ultra long period magnetar, a rare type of neutron star with

00:01:10
extremely powerful magnetic fields which can produce

00:01:13
powerful bursts of energy.

00:01:15
Problem is the evidence for that isn't quite adding up until

00:01:19
recently, all known magnets released energy at intervals

00:01:23
ranging from a few seconds to a couple of minutes.

00:01:26
But this newly discovered object emits radio waves every 22

00:01:30
minutes and that would make it the longest period magnet ever

00:01:33
detected, put simply it's rotating far too slowly. To emit

00:01:38
radio waves based on our current understanding of stellar

00:01:41
physics. The object's been cataloged as GPM J 18 39 minus

00:01:46
10, it's located 1500 light years away.

00:01:50
So it's within our milky way galaxy and it's in the direction

00:01:53
of the constellation Scutum. Astronomers discover this weird

00:01:57
object using the Merche and wide field Array radio telescope in

00:02:01
Outback, Western Australia.

00:02:03
The study's lead author Dr Natasha Hurley Walker from the

00:02:06
Curtin University node of the International Center For Radio

00:02:09
Astronomy Research says if this is a type of neutron star

00:02:12
magnet, then it challenges science's understanding of these

00:02:16
objects which are already some of the most extreme and exotic

00:02:19
stars in the universe. And amazingly, it's not the first of

00:02:23
these objects to have been discovered.

00:02:25
An earlier version was discovered by Curtin

00:02:28
University's Tarana Doherty. Initially, scientists couldn't

00:02:31
explain what they were seeing, describing it simply as an

00:02:35
enigmatic transient object that would intimately appear and

00:02:38
disappear, emitting powerful beams of energy three times an

00:02:41
hour.

00:02:42
So they started searching the skies using the Merson Widefield

00:02:45
Array for similar objects in order to determine whether the

00:02:48
first one was an isolated event or just the tip of the iceberg.

00:02:52
And they soon found what they were looking for in the guise of

00:02:55
GPM J 18 39 minus 10.

00:02:59
Interestingly, this new object emits bursts of energy lasting

00:03:02
up to five minutes which is five times longer than the first

00:03:05
object, other telescopes including the CSIRO's Parkes

00:03:09
radio telescope, the Australia telescope compact Array in Narra

00:03:13
Bry and ASCAP.

00:03:14
The Australia square kilometer Array pathfinder radio telescope

00:03:18
were called into the search as was South Africa's Merca Array

00:03:21
and the XMM Newton Space telescope. All employed to learn

00:03:25
more about this object's unique characteristics now armed with

00:03:30
GPM J 18 39 minus 10 celestial coordinates and characteristics.

00:03:34
The authors also began searching the archives of other

00:03:37
telescopes.

00:03:38
And Hurley Walker says it showed up in observations by the giant

00:03:42
meter wave radio telescope in India and the National Science

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Foundation's very large Array in New Mexico observations dating

00:03:49
back as far as 1988. She says they failed to identify the

00:03:53
object because no one had expected to find anything like

00:03:56
it.

00:03:57
So are we talking about a magneto or not? Well, the first

00:04:01
thing to remember is not all magnetos produce radio waves and

00:04:05
this object exists below the so called death line, a critical

00:04:08
threshold where a star's magnetic field becomes too weak

00:04:11
to generate high energy emissions.

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But simply this newly identified object is spinning way too

00:04:17
solely to produce radio waves. It's below this death line. Now

00:04:21
assuming it's a magnetar and that's still a big assumption at

00:04:24
this stage. It shouldn't be possible for this object to

00:04:27
produce radio waves, but that's exactly what the authors have

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been detecting every 22 minutes.

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It emits a five minute pulse of radio wavelength energy and it's

00:04:38
been doing that for at least 33 years, this discovery has

00:04:43
important implications, not just for science's understanding and

00:04:46
the physics of neutron stars, but also the behavior of

00:04:49
magnetic fields in extreme environments.

00:04:52
It also raises new questions about the formation and

00:04:55
evolution of magnets and could shed light on the origins of

00:04:59
that mysterious phenomenon known as fast radio bursts.

00:05:03
Right now, Hurley Walker and colleagues plan to conduct

00:05:05
further observations of the magnetar in order to learn more

00:05:08
about its properties and behavior. She says they also

00:05:12
hope to discover more of these enigmatic objects in the future

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in order to determine whether they are indeed ultra long

00:05:18
period Magne stars or something even stranger and more

00:05:22
phenomenal.

00:05:23
DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: So we've been searching the skies

00:05:25
with the Merson wide field Array, which is the radio

00:05:27
telescope here in Outback Western Australia. And yeah,

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we've found a strange repeating radio source. It produces pulses

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of radio waves that last for about five minutes each and they

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repeat every 22 minutes.

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And this is a little bit like a pulsar but slowed down by about

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a factor of 1000. And that's extremely unusual. You mentioned

00:05:50
magnes per percent. Well, magnets are pulsars with very

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complicated magnetic fields.

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And we thought that perhaps a source like this could be a

00:06:01
magnetar because the really strong magnetic field might give

00:06:05
it enough energy to produce the radio waves, even though it's

00:06:08
spinning as far as we can tell too slowly to do. So the thing

00:06:12
is magnet stars should also be bright in the x-ray and also

00:06:17
they should only produce radio waves for a few weeks or a few

00:06:20
months. This source doesn't produce any x rays that we can

00:06:24
tell.

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And it's been active for over 30 years. It was in the data about

00:06:28
30 years ago, but nobody actually noticed until now. So

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the techniques that we've come up with in order to scan the

00:06:36
skies using quite clever imaging techniques and the detection

00:06:40
algorithms and powerful supercomputers to process all of

00:06:43
that data.

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Those are the techniques that have allowed us to find these

00:06:47
signals. And then when we applied them to the same patch

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of sky in data from older telescopes that have been

00:06:53
running for a long time, that's when we started to find that the

00:06:57
source has been there the whole time. But what we were missing

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30 years ago was the technique tell me about the patch of sky.

00:07:02
It's in from our point of view, it's in the SCOT constellation,

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but in a kind of more zoomed out astronomical sound perspective,

00:07:11
it's in our own milky way galaxy. So our solar system is

00:07:15
one of hundreds of billions of systems all through our galaxy.

00:07:20
That's what our galaxy is.

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It's a whole collection of stars and the source that we are

00:07:24
looking at is right towards the middle of the galaxy a little

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bit to the west in terms of like galactic coordinates, we know

00:07:32
it's about 15 light years away. For context, our whole

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galaxy is 40 to 80 light years across. So it's, it's kind

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of deep into the galaxy really quite far away.

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So it's amazing how luminous it must be to be so detectable by

00:07:48
our radio telescope towards that part of the sky. You're sort of

00:07:50
looking a little bit kind of left of the center of the

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galaxy. It actually is a bit of a challenge following it up in

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optical wavelengths. So, you know, we made the detection in

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radio and then we want to look with very powerful optical

00:08:02
telescopes.

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But when you look towards that position, as they say, in 2001,

00:08:06
my God taste, it's full of stars, it's completely crowded.

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There's just so many objects along that line of sight because

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you're looking right through the thickest part of the galaxy. It

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really challenging.

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STUART GARY: Is it a neighborhood where we find lots

00:08:19
of starburst action going on or lots of large stars with short

00:08:24
life spans that are likely to become neutron stars?

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DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: That's

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a great question and not particularly, it's a little hard

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to tell because our distance probably has an error bar of

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about 5000 light years on it. So 15 light years away, plus or

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minus 5000, it's actually quite difficult to tell how far away

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sources detected in the radio are, especially when they're

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completely new. So we have no idea whether it's bright and far

00:08:51
away or dim and relatively close.

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What we use to find the distance is that we pick up radio waves

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across many different frequencies. And the

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interstellar gas in our galaxy, the electrons in our galaxy,

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they actually make the low frequency waves appear just a

00:09:08
little bit later, a few seconds later than the high frequency

00:09:12
radio waves. This is a well known effect called dispersion.

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And if you roughly know how many electrons there are between you

00:09:20
and another place in the galaxy, you can kind of work out the

00:09:24
distance by seeing how slowed down those low frequencies are.

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So that's what we've used. But our, our knowledge of how many

00:09:32
electrons there are is not certain enough to do more than

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it's about 15 light years away. We know it's not next

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door. Anyway, it's a.

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STUART GARY: Ball park figure. So no one said anything like

00:09:44
this before. This is something new to science.

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DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: Well, the reason we were searching was

00:09:49
because we discovered a source that repeated every 18 minutes

00:09:53
and we published that last year also in nature. But the thing is

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with that source, it was only on for a few months. And that's a

00:10:00
little bit easier to explain with that Magne theory.

00:10:03
Perhaps just for a brief time, you have a neutron star that's a

00:10:08
magnetic field all tangled and confused and that produces

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enough extra energy to overcome this very slow rotation rate.

00:10:17
And still produce radio wave and then that's a little bit more

00:10:20
explicable if it's only on for a short time.

00:10:23
But the source has been on for 30 years. So it looks a lot like

00:10:27
a normal pulsar but pulsars, like we thought, we understood

00:10:30
them and we thought that once they started rotating about once

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a minute, maybe once every two minutes, there was just

00:10:38
absolutely no way they could produce radio waves.

00:10:41
And yet we're seeing them and we have been seeing them. So it's a

00:10:44
real puzzle for the theorists. And that's again, why the

00:10:47
discovery has been published in nature and why people are so

00:10:50
excited about it.

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STUART GARY: What are the hypotheses going on about it?

00:10:53
What are the sort of ideas you guys are coming up with as to

00:10:57
what could be doing this?

00:10:58
DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: Well, the theory still has as it were,

00:11:01
people are working on that. There's also the possibility

00:11:04
that it's a white dwarf. So a neutron star is when it occurs

00:11:09
when a star that's sort of more massive than our sun ends its

00:11:13
life and collapses. And that there's so much mass there that

00:11:16
squashes everything into neutrons. The star that's about

00:11:20
the mass of our own sun doesn't quite get there.

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It's not quite massive enough. So instead it ends its life as a

00:11:26
white dwarf, which is basically all of the atoms are crushed

00:11:30
together, but the protons and electrons don't recombine to

00:11:34
form neutrons. So you have a big ball of very hot atoms. It's

00:11:37
about the size of the Earth and it still has a mass of the sun

00:11:41
in it.

00:11:41
So it's a very big and massive and interesting object. The

00:11:44
magnetic field, just like neutron stars, the magnetic

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fields get kind of concentrated. So there's a theory that a white

00:11:50
dwarf could also produce radio emissions. The thing is we only

00:11:54
know of a couple of white dwarfs that do produce radio emissions.

00:11:57
Literally two, both of them are in very tight binaries as in

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they have a companion star that they orbit around the orbits

00:12:07
with them every few hours. So they're very, very close to that

00:12:10
star and they themselves rotate every couple of minutes. So

00:12:14
they're still rotating much faster than our objects. So it's

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a little bit puzzling. It's one of the theories that's a little

00:12:23
bit to be honest.

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I went to a big conference with basically experts in transient

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radio astronomers from all over the world. And I presented my

00:12:34
work and my collaborators presented their work and

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everybody talked about all of the interesting objects that

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they found and all of the ways in which we think the radio

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mission is being generated.

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It was very exciting. And right at the end of the conference, I

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asked people to put up their hands. Do you think the long

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period radio transient are neutron stars, white dwarfs or

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something else? And the whole room is completely split.

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It was, there was about a third of each. So this is the world

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experts gathered in one place, having done nothing but talk

00:13:05
about this and other radio phenomena for a week and they

00:13:08
weren't sure either.

00:13:09
So I think it's going to take the whole community and that's

00:13:11
why I'm so excited that the paper is now out there so people

00:13:14
can read it. And the best thing is this source is still on. So

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people can come up with new ways of observing it, point their

00:13:23
telescope and then see what the data say, which I think.

00:13:27
STUART GARY: We want to see if we can see this and see what's

00:13:29
in its neighborhood if it's got a binary partner.

00:13:31
DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: Yeah, that's right. And it's, as I

00:13:33
say, it's in a crowded field. So I think you need something like

00:13:37
JST. I think we'd probably do it very hard to get time on. But

00:13:40
now that the papers out there may be a little bit easier and

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that would be really exciting.

00:13:45
The other thing is I'm still working on finding new examples

00:13:49
of this kind of thought, you know, clearly the design of the

00:13:52
surveys that I've created and the techniques that I've used,

00:13:55
they work. So now I just need to apply them to more data and

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maybe I can find one that's in a less crowded field. And I think

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that would be a good way of trying to figure out what these

00:14:05
things really are now.

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STUART GARY: As well as looking at it with the Merch and white

00:14:08
thought Array ASCAP was involved. So, to Meerkat XMM

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Newton played a part parks of the dish. What else was there?

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The narra radio telescope work? So, you've looked at this with a

00:14:20
lot, seeing it so many different ways. Is there anything at all

00:14:24
that's coming up that unusual in one particular wave band?

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DR NATASHA HURLEY WALKER: Yeah, I'm so glad you asked that

00:14:29
because it's one of the things that people don't often often

00:14:35
ask about and I think it's one of the most interesting, but

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it's a little tiny bit technical. So like, let's

00:14:40
imagine you go to the beach and you've got some lovely polarized

00:14:43
sunglasses and you're looking out over the water and you get

00:14:46
that tremendous glare of the water.

00:14:49
But when you pop your polarized sunglasses on all of that glare

00:14:51
disappears, that's because the light waves that are coming from

00:14:55
the sun reflecting off the water waves and going into your eyes,

00:14:58
the reflective ones are all at a particular angle and your

00:15:02
polarizes are designed to block that angle. But if you turn them

00:15:06
to the side, then you get all of that glare coming through. So

00:15:09
light can be polarized.

00:15:10
Now, radio is just another form of light and it can also be

00:15:14
polarized. So when we made observations with Merca and

00:15:19
indeed ACA, they are sensitive enough and they have really

00:15:22
beautiful polarization measurements that allow us to

00:15:25
look the polarization of the source. And what we see is that

00:15:30
for the most part, the pulses are polarized in a single

00:15:33
direction.

00:15:34
And every so often for just a few milliseconds that

00:15:37
polarization completely swaps by like 90 degrees. It's as if you

00:15:41
were, you were standing on the beach, you're wearing the

00:15:43
polarized sunglasses and suddenly the whole ocean flashed

00:15:47
a bright silver with the reflected sunlight just for a

00:15:50
second. And you say what, what is going on? And I think that's

00:15:54
a clue to something about the magnetic field of the source.

00:15:58
Now, we only have a few of these observations. And so I have

00:16:02
applied for more in order to find out well, more how often do

00:16:06
these things occur? And what can that tell us about the magnetic

00:16:09
field that's generating the radio emissions? So that's

00:16:11
another really exciting line of research that we're working on

00:16:15
and I hope we can catch some bright pulses. And that's Dr.

00:16:19
STUART GARY: Natasha Hurley Walker from the Curtin

00:16:21
University, note of the International Center For Radio

00:16:23
Astronomy Research and this is space time still to come. NASA's

00:16:29
MARS Perseverance Rover takes its first sample from an ancient

00:16:33
Martian riverbed and X ray aurora triggered by electron

00:16:37
rains discovered on Mercury. All that and more still to come on

00:16:42
space time.

00:16:59
NASA's MARS Perseverance Rover has just collected its 20th core

00:17:03
sample from the surface of the Red Planet. Mission managers are

00:17:07
especially excited about this latest rock sample because it

00:17:10
was drilled from an outcrop composed of tiny chunks of other

00:17:13
rocks that were carried in river sediment from further upstream

00:17:17
and eventually deposited on the floor of the river delta.

00:17:20
Over billions of years, the sedimentary deposits became

00:17:24
cement together. The new sample nicknamed Emerald Lake was

00:17:29
collected from a location called Otis Peak on the 832nd soul or

00:17:34
Ma's Day of the mission Perseverance project scientist

00:17:38
Ken Farley from Caltech says conglomerates are like this

00:17:41
pack.

00:17:41
A lot of information about places the Rover may never

00:17:44
visit. So each new rock fragment represents a new geologic story.

00:17:49
He says, while the water that created the Martian river bed,

00:17:53
that Perseverance is currently exploring evaporated billions of

00:17:56
years ago. The story carried by those waters remains fresh,

00:18:00
stored in the rocks.

00:18:02
Perseverance is collecting these samples so that they can

00:18:05
eventually be brought back to Earth by a joint NASA European

00:18:09
Space Agency. MARS sample return mission once back home, they'll

00:18:14
be studied by lab equipment too large and complex to bring to.

00:18:17
MARS.

00:18:19
Scientists will be able to study each pebble and fragment in the

00:18:22
core sample in order to determine detail such as its

00:18:25
age, what the environmental conditions were like in the

00:18:28
river when the conglomerate was formed. And importantly whether

00:18:31
it contains any sign of ancient microbial life. Remember the

00:18:36
search for past life on the Red Planet is the primary objective

00:18:39
of this mission.

00:18:41
Now in its third science campaign. Perseverance is

00:18:44
exploring the top of a fan shaped river delta of

00:18:47
sedimentary rock stands about 40 m above the Jero crater floor

00:18:52
with the sample now safely sealed and stored in its cache.

00:18:56
The Rover is now on its way to a low ridge called snowdrift peak.

00:19:00
But in order to get there, it'll need to cross the field of

00:19:02
boulders as with the rock fragments of the Otis Peak

00:19:06
sample. Scientists believe the boulders at snowdrift peak were

00:19:10
likely formed elsewhere and then transported to their present

00:19:13
location.

00:19:14
Billions of years ago by the ancient river, boulders are also

00:19:18
desirable of their large surface area that allows scientists to

00:19:22
visually investigate many potential distinct rocks in a

00:19:25
single image. Fairley says whether the boulders appear

00:19:29
intriguing enough for closer examination and even possible

00:19:32
sampling remains to be seen quite literally.

00:19:35
In this case, I guess you can say the science team are taking

00:19:39
a page from the past in days. Old prospectors looking for gold

00:19:43
or diamonds often looked into rivers and gullies in order to

00:19:47
determine whether there might have been any deposits further

00:19:49
upstream after all, why bother hiking there when you can let

00:19:54
the river do all the work? This is space time still to come.

00:20:00
The first Bibby Colombo fly by of the planet Mercury finds

00:20:03
electron rain triggering x ray aurora. And later in the science

00:20:08
report, a new study warns that most of the world's population

00:20:12
could be affected by polluted water by the year 2100. All that

00:20:16
and more still to come on space time.

00:20:35
The joint European Space Agency, Japanese Aerospace Exploration

00:20:40
Agency, Bee Colombo mission has discovered how electrons rain

00:20:44
down on the surface of the planet Mercury to trigger high

00:20:47
energy x-ray aurora. The mission which has been traveling to the

00:20:51
solar system's in immerse planet since 2018, successfully carried

00:20:55
out its first Mercury fly by back on the first of October

00:20:59
2021.

00:21:01
The new findings reported in the Journal Nature Communications

00:21:04
are based on observations made by the spacecraft during that

00:21:07
close encounter. A rural activity on Earth is generated

00:21:11
by interactions between the solar wind.

00:21:14
A stream of charged particles flowing out from the sun and an

00:21:17
electrically charged upper layer of the Earth's atmosphere called

00:21:20
the ionosphere. As Mercury only has a very thin atmosphere

00:21:24
called an exosphere. Its auroras are generated by the solar wind

00:21:28
interacting directly with the planet's surface.

00:21:31
The Beppe Colombo mission consists of three spacecraft

00:21:34
joined together and upper running as a single unit.

00:21:37
There's ESA's Mercury planetary orbiter, Jack's Mercury

00:21:41
magnetosphere orbiter and the cruise stage which provides

00:21:44
propulsion during the seven year journey to Mercury orbit

00:21:47
insertion.

00:21:48
During its first Mercury flyby, epi clumber swept to within 200

00:21:52
kilometers above the planet's surface. The observations by the

00:21:56
plasma instruments aboard the Mercury magnetosphere orbiter

00:21:59
enabled the first simultaneous observations of different kinds

00:22:03
of charged particles from the solar wind in the vicinity of

00:22:06
Mercury.

00:22:07
The study's lead author, Saya Zara from Jack's Institute Of

00:22:11
Space And Astronautical Science and the University Of Pisa says

00:22:15
the flyby allowed scientists to witness for the first time how

00:22:19
electrons are accelerated in Mercury's magnetosphere and

00:22:22
precipitate down to the planet's surface.

00:22:25
While Mercury's magnetosphere is much smaller than the Earth and

00:22:28
has a different structure and dynamics. The authors were still

00:22:31
able to confirm that the mechanism that generates aurora

00:22:34
is the same throughout the solar system.

00:22:37
During the flyby, maybe climber approached Mercury from the

00:22:40
right side of the northern hemisphere and made its closest

00:22:43
approach near the morning side of the southern hemisphere. It

00:22:47
observed the magnetosphere on the daytime side of the southern

00:22:50
hemisphere and then passed out of the magnetosphere back into

00:22:53
the solar wind.

00:22:55
Its instruments successfully observed the structure and

00:22:58
boundaries of the magnetosphere including the magnetic pores and

00:23:01
bow shock. The data also showed that Mercury's magnetosphere is

00:23:05
in an unusually compressed state most likely due to the high

00:23:09
pressure conditions in the solar wind.

00:23:12
The acceleration of electrons appears to occur due to plasma

00:23:15
processes. On the dawn side of Mercury's magnetosphere, the

00:23:19
high energy electrons are transported from the tail region

00:23:22
towards the planet where they eventually rain down onto the

00:23:25
planet's surface unimpeded by an atmosphere.

00:23:29
They interact with material on the surface and cause x rays to

00:23:32
be emitted resulting in the an auroral glow. Although aurora

00:23:36
have been observed in Mercury. Previously by NASA's Messenger

00:23:40
spacecraft, the processes triggering X ray fluorescence on

00:23:43
the surface had not been well understood or witnessed

00:23:46
directly. This report from ESA TV.

00:23:50
ESA TV: Images from the NASA Messenger mission are the best

00:23:53
we have of Mercury. NASA's Messenger mission did a great

00:23:57
job but be Colombo consists of two orbiters using complementary

00:24:03
orbits with more combined instruments. Plus unlike

00:24:08
Messenger, it will obtain high resolution images of the entire

00:24:13
planet. The planet is also shrinking in size, possibly due

00:24:18
to cooling. Plus there may be active volcanoes. So there is

00:24:22
much more to learn.

00:24:24
Mercury is a very mysterious planet. Every time we went

00:24:28
there, we found new surprising results. And that is the reason

00:24:33
why we do be Cola and we hope that be Cola. On one hand, we

00:24:36
are able to answer many of this new question, but I'm pretty

00:24:41
sure we found a lot of new surprising results which raise

00:24:46
new and other question which we then need to follow up.

00:24:50
It has highlands and lowlands like other planets. But unlike

00:24:54
Earth, Mercury rotates on an axis perpendicular to its orbit.

00:25:01
Due to the fact that Mercury is not tilted, there are some

00:25:04
craters on the poles where the sun never shines into it. And

00:25:10
inside these craters Messenger found water ice. It was detected

00:25:15
even earlier in the eight years from grounds that they were

00:25:18
rather bright spots.

00:25:20
And there were some hints that it might be water ice. But Now,

00:25:24
for Messenger, we are pretty sure that we have water ice in

00:25:27
craters and that's pretty much surprising. Think about if you

00:25:32
have a planet on the surface 450 degrees and then you have water

00:25:36
ice at the poles. It's kind of unbelievable.

00:25:40
Fortunately, there's an instrument on board called

00:25:43
Mertis, which can measure the surface temperature directly to

00:25:47
see if it's cold enough for water ice.

00:25:50
Knowing the makeup of the planet's dark surface is also

00:25:54
important. A team at DLR, the German Space Agency have built a

00:25:59
special chamber to heat up samples to examine how they

00:26:04
behave at high temperatures. These can then be compared with

00:26:08
what will be found on the planet.

00:26:11
Planetary scientists are unsure how it formed. It could have

00:26:15
originated beyond MARS with an impact, pushing it closer to the

00:26:20
sun or it could have formed at lower temperatures in its

00:26:24
current position. If so current theoretical models will need a

00:26:29
rethink.

00:26:31
And one of the things why I like working on Mercury is we need to

00:26:35
understand Mercury in order to understand how planets form. If

00:26:38
we have a model that forms all planets but not Mercury, that

00:26:43
model is basically useless because you need to get that one

00:26:46
as well.

00:26:47
Be Colombo arrives at the planet in 2025. Then for this joint

00:26:52
mission from ESA and the Japanese Space Agency, Jasa, it

00:26:56
will be time to unlock Mercury's mysteries.

00:27:00
STUART GARY: This is space time and time. Now to take a brief

00:27:19
look at some of the other stories making news in science.

00:27:22
This week. With the science report, a new study warns that

00:27:26
most of the world's population up to 5.5 billion people could

00:27:30
be affected by polluted surface water. By the turn of the

00:27:34
century.

00:27:35
The findings reported in the journal nature are based on new

00:27:38
computer modeling which shows that Sub Saharan Africa is

00:27:42
predicted to become a global hotspot for surface water

00:27:45
pollution.

00:27:45
By the year 2100 researchers used a high resolution global

00:27:50
surface water quality computer model to simulate water

00:27:53
temperature, indicators of salinity and organic and

00:27:57
pathogen pollution for the period from 2005 through to

00:28:00
2100. They found that poor surface water quality could

00:28:05
affect 5.5 billion people by 2100 and people living in

00:28:11
developing countries would be disproportionately affected.

00:28:15
A new study shows that new diagnoses of HIV, the human

00:28:20
immune deficiency virus that causes AIDS have stabilized in

00:28:23
Australia with 555 new cases. Last year.

00:28:28
The findings by the University Of New South Wales Kirby

00:28:31
Institute were released ahead of the 12th International Aids

00:28:34
Society Conference On HIV being held in Brisbane. The human

00:28:38
immune deficiency virus HIV is an infection that attacks the

00:28:42
body's immune system causing acquired immune deficiency

00:28:46
syndrome or AIDS.

00:28:48
It's thought to have originated from infected primates and

00:28:50
monkeys in western central Africa and was first identified

00:28:54
in humans in May 1981 when a large cohort of otherwise

00:28:58
healthy young biological males suddenly began dying from a

00:29:02
range of unusually rare diseases.

00:29:05
Hiv targets the body's white blood cells such as helper T

00:29:09
cells, specifically CD four plus T cells as well as macrophages

00:29:14
and dendritic cells weakening and causing the progressive

00:29:17
failure of the immune system.

00:29:19
This allows a wide range of opportunistic diseases such as

00:29:22
tuberculosis, several types of cancer to become critical,

00:29:26
eventually killing the patient HIV, spread from person to

00:29:30
person through body fluids, including blood, breast milk,

00:29:34
semen and vaginal fluids.

00:29:36
Early symptoms include fever, fatigue, headaches, a skin rash,

00:29:41
swollen, lymph nodes, aching muscles, joint pain, nausea,

00:29:45
vomiting, diarrhea, night sweats, a sore throat and a dry

00:29:49
cough.

00:29:50
The only known treatments for HIV involve powerful drug

00:29:54
cocktails known as antiretroviral therapy or art.

00:29:58
The World Health Organization estimates that up to 52 million

00:30:01
people have been killed by AIDS with another 40 million

00:30:05
currently living with HIV.

00:30:08
An analysis of ancient human genomic data suggests that

00:30:12
Copper Age farmers and step pastoralists may have interacted

00:30:16
1000 years earlier than previously thought. Researchers

00:30:20
analyzed genetic data from 135 ancient individuals from eight

00:30:24
sites across South Eastern Europe and the North Western

00:30:27
Black Sea region.

00:30:29
They found that while there was ge continuity between the

00:30:32
Neolithic and Copper Age groups from around 6.5 1000 years ago,

00:30:37
groups from the North Western Black Sea region carried varying

00:30:40
amounts of ancestry from Copper Age and step zone populations.

00:30:45
The findings, a report in the journal nature suggested the

00:30:48
groups had cultural contact and mixed nearly 1000 years earlier

00:30:52
than previously thought. And that the transfer of technology

00:30:56
between farmers and traditional hunters from different

00:30:59
geographical areas was important for the rise formation and

00:31:03
expansion of pastoral groups around 5300 years ago.

00:31:24
And that's the show for now. Spacetime is available every

00:31:27
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00:32:57
GENERIC: You've been listening to Space Time with Stuart Garry.

00:33:01
This has been another quality podcast production from bites

00:33:04
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