Calendar

Giu
20
lun
UCL-OAPa @ Aula
Giu 20@9:00–14:00
Visita al Museo
Giu 20@9:00–11:30
Giu
21
mar
riunione grant rubin lsst al museo
Giu 21@9:00–Giu 22@18:00

8 pax ref. Sara Bonito

Seminario: Quentin Changeat (UCL) ore 15
Giu 21@15:00–16:30

Speaker: Quentin Changeat (UCL)

Title: Atmospheric retrievals in the era of next generation telescopes.

Abstract: With the recent launch of the NASA/ESA/CSA-JWST telescope and the upcoming ESA-Ariel, we are now entering a new era of exoplanet characterisation. These next-generation telescopes will revolutionise our understanding of exoplanet atmospheres, but the analysis of their observations will be very challenging.

In this presentation, state-of-the-art techniques, which were thoroughly tested to analyse exo-atmospheric data from HST and Spitzer, will be presented. We will also explore some of their limitations, as well as the challenges associated with their application to next-generation telescopes.
Giu
22
mer
Tirocinio Ottica (Bocchino, Damiani)
Giu 22@9:30–13:30
UCL-OAPa
Giu 22@14:00–22:00
Giu
23
gio
Lavori di messa in sicurezza cupole astronomiche @ cupole e tetto museo
Giu 23@7:00–Giu 30@17:30

Lavori di messa in sicurezza cupole astronomiche

Giu
24
ven
visita al museo
Giu 24@11:00–12:00

Visita al Museo (Chinnici) 10 pax

Giu
27
lun
visita al museo
Giu 27@9:00–13:00

visita al museo 5 pax (coniglio)

SEMINARIO: Laura Venuti (SETI Institute) @ Aula INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo e Google Meet
Giu 27@15:00–16:30

Titolo: Multicolor variability of young stars across the mass spectrum

Abstract: Recently, space telescope missions have provided unprecedented depictions of the manifold variability behaviors typical of low-mass, young stars (YSOs), with presumed origins in starspots, accretion, and circumstellar obscuration. However, more massive YSOs (2 to 4-5 Msun) have been largely omitted from those studies, and the lack of coordinated, multiwavelength data often limited the physical understanding of the observed luminosity patterns. We have conducted a comprehensive variability survey of 278 B-to-K YSOs in the 1-2 Myr-old cluster NGC 6530. Our sample was monitored within Kepler/K2 Campaign 9, and simultaneous u,g,r,i,Halpha time series were acquired with VST/OmegaCAM. We employed this dataset, plus archival infrared photometry, to determine individual stellar parameters and disk statuses. By adopting well-established metrics for light curve classification, we found significant mass-dependent trends, with B/A stars displaying substantially lower variability than G/K stars for any given light curve morphology. We also detected a dearth of some distinctive disk-driven behaviors, particularly dippers, among stars earlier than G. This suggests their higher temperatures and more chaotic magnetic fields prevent the formation and survival of inner disk dust structures co-rotating with the star. Finally, we examined the characteristic timescales of variability for each light curve pattern, to pinpoint the source of specific signatures within the star-inner disk environment. We found that in each case the day-to-week timescales are predominant in the K2 time series, but these reflect distinct mechanisms, from intense accretion triggered by instabilities in the innermost disk regions (bursting behaviors) to variable accretion efficiency in the outer magnetosphere (stochastic behaviors).