What’s remarkable here is this process of planet formation, which we associate with the birth of stars, seems to also be able to occur at the end of the stellar lifetime, sort of a renaissance...
—Deepto Chakrabarty
It’s like throwing a baseball straight up into the air. Unless you’re throwing it really, really fast, it’s eventually going to fall back down on you.
This disk looks remarkably like those also seen around ordinary young stars in which planets are known to form.
We’re amazed that the planet-formation process seems to be so universal.
The Rossi Explorer is a powerful tool to probe the environs of black holes and neutron stars. It has been thrilling to join my colleagues in so many discoveries.
Suppose you form a neutron star that is close to the upper limit. If enough stuff falls back, it’ll push the star over this limit and a black hole will form.
Bruno Rossi was a giant at MIT, and as an MIT professor, I am humbled to receive an award named in his honor.
It shows that planet formation is really ubiquitous in the universe. It’s a very robust process and can happen in all sorts of unexpected environments.
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