Calendar
ABSTRACT:
Only a very small fraction of the organic compounds in nature are found in planets or comets and other condensed objects. By far the larger quantity, more than 99.9% by mass, reside in the enormous molecular clouds in interstellar space of the Milky Way and other galaxies. Abiotic organic chemistry, as observed in molecular clouds, offers a glimpse of the chemical evolution preceding the onset of life on our own planet, and allows us to evaluate the possibility that – during the evolution from a molecular cloud to a planetary system – complex organic molecules are formed, transformed and preserved until they are incorporated into comets and meteorites. The analyses of such cosmic debris show that some of the amino acids present an excess of the L-conformation enantiomer in straightforward similarity with terrestrial biomolecular homochirality. This coincidence is too striking to be fortuitous; it points out that products of routine cosmic chemistry contributed to the early Earth organic pool and facilitated prebiotic molecular evolution.
Among the many scenarios put forward to explain the origin of chiral homogeneity, one involves the asymmetric photolysis of amino acids present in space, triggered by circularly polarized ultraviolet radiation.
Here we propose that amino acids formed in the cavities of interstellar dust aggregates are
exposed to asymmetric photolysis induced by an effective ultraviolet circularly polarization generated in situ.
Visita delle studentesse del corso di laurea in Conservazione e Restauro dei Beni Culturali, accompagnate dal docente Marco Di Bella
a cura di Donata Randazzo e Giada Genua
Questo meeting è organizzato allo scopo di mettere assieme idee e progetti di ricerca che comprendano l’utilizzo del secondo Data Release di Gaia.
L’idea è che chiunque abbia un progetto da presentare o discutere prepari una piccola presentazione, meglio utilizzando qualche immagine, e lo comunichi a Mario Guarcello (), che preparerà una scaletta dell’incontro.
Planets in short-period orbits provide a unique opportunity to directly study atmospheric escape, which is a phenomenon having a profound impact on our understanding of the observed exoplanet demographics. Among all planets known to have an escaping atmosphere, those undergoing extreme mass loss are key: their escape may be representative of young planets, at a time when atmospheric escape matters most. I will review results obtained from the analysis of Hubble Space Telescope observations, particularly those of the extreme hot Jupiters WASP-12b, WASP-13b, and WASP-18b. I will then show how planet atmospheric escape may be at the origin of the correlation between the chromospheric activity of stars hosting hot Jupiters and the planets’ surface gravity. I will finally show how planets orbiting early-type stars might become of crucial importance in the near future and how their escaping atmospheres can be observationally studied.