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Showing 1–12 of 12 results
Advanced filters: Author: David J. Wilner Clear advanced filters
  • Recent developments in advanced light sources have made it possible to transiently alter the electronic properties of materials by exciting specific atomic vibrations in solids. This study provides a theoretical framework for these experiments.

    • Dante M. Kennes
    • Eli Y. Wilner
    • Andrew J. Millis
    Research
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 13, P: 479-483
  • Findings from a tectonically active mountain range show that soil production is driven by bottom-up rock weakening rather than by soil thickness, challenging long-held top-down models.

    • Emily C. Geyman
    • David A. Paige
    • Michael P. Lamb
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 647, P: 921-927
  • In the earliest stage of star formation, protostars accrete mass from their surrounding envelopes through circumstellar disks; observations of the protostar L1527 IRS find a large, rotating proto-planetary disk from which the protostellar mass is measured to be 0.19 solar masses, with a protostar-to-envelope mass ratio of about 0.2.

    • John J. Tobin
    • Lee Hartmann
    • Paola D’Alessio
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 492, P: 83-85
  • Observations of the young star HD 142527, whose disk is separated into inner and outer regions by a gap suggestive of the formation of a gaseous giant planet, show that accretion onto the star is maintained by a flow of gas across the gap, in agreement with dynamical models of planet formation.

    • Simon Casassus
    • Gerrit van der Plas
    • Vachail Salinas
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 493, P: 191-194
  • An ultraviolet- and carbon-rich environment is needed to explain the bright emission coming from complex organic molecules observed near the midplane of protoplanetary disks. This implies that the gaseous reservoir from which actively forming planets accrete is carbon and organic rich.

    • Jenny K. Calahan
    • Edwin A. Bergin
    • Ke Zhang
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 7, P: 49-56
  • This paper reports the detection of a high-redshift galaxy that may be more representative of ‘normal’ star-forming galaxies formed in the first billion years of the Universe than the extreme starbursts discovered to date.

    • Jorge A. Zavala
    • Alfredo Montaña
    • Milagros Zeballos
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 2, P: 56-62
  • The detection of complex cyanides in the protoplanetary disk around the young star MWC 480, and the similarity of their abundance ratios to those found in comets, implies that the rich organic chemistry of our solar nebula was not unique.

    • Karin I. Öberg
    • Viviana V. Guzmán
    • David J. Wilner
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 520, P: 198-201
  • ALMA observations of well-studied quadruple stellar system HD 98800 have revealed the presence of a circumbinary disk in a polar orientation around one of the binary pairs, providing observational confirmation of the theoretical stability of such an arrangement.

    • Grant M. Kennedy
    • Luca Matrà
    • Ben M. Yelverton
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 3, P: 230-235