基本信息
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职业迁徙
个人简介
Research Interests
Physics of the interstellar medium and star formation
The stars that we see in the night sky have not always been there, and will not remain forever. They are part of a cycle of matter in galaxies, which includes clouds of gas and dust between the stars, the so-called interstellar medium (ISM). At the end of their lives, stars return much of their mass to the ISM, from which then new generations of stars are born. How exactly this process works and what determines the numbers, masses, and other properties of stars and planets is a question that my research focuses on
Astrochemistry
The gas in interstellar clouds is mostly hydrogen, but also contains traces of other molecules. Some of these are commonly known on Earth, such as carbon monoxide (CO), ammonia (NH3), and methanol (CH3OH), while others only occur under special laboratory conditions, such as formyl (HCO+). Some species were even found in space before they were known on Earth! The chemical composition of interstellar gas clouds reveals a great deal about their physical properties, and at the same time tells us about basic chemical processes that are hard or impossible to study on Earth. My research focuses on two specific areas: the ionization rates of interstellar clouds, and their temperature history
Molecular spectroscopy and radiative transfer
Astronomers use a technique called spectroscopy to observe specific molecules in space, and interpreting these observations requires specialized computer programs. My group develops such tools, in particular the fast non-LTE solver RADEX for clouds with a simple slab geometry, and the sophisticated Monte Carlo program RATRAN for spherical and cylindrical objects such as protostellar envelopes and disks. The molecular input data for both programs are collected in a database called LAMDA
Exoplanets and astrobiology
Since 1995, thousands of planets have been discovered around nearby stars; probably there are more planets than stars in the Universe. About 1% of planets resemble the Earth in size, composition, and temperature, which makes them candidates for habitable worlds. My research focuses on the question which conditions are required (and optimal) for life to originate (or at least survive) on planets, and how we may recognize signs of such life.
Physics of the interstellar medium and star formation
The stars that we see in the night sky have not always been there, and will not remain forever. They are part of a cycle of matter in galaxies, which includes clouds of gas and dust between the stars, the so-called interstellar medium (ISM). At the end of their lives, stars return much of their mass to the ISM, from which then new generations of stars are born. How exactly this process works and what determines the numbers, masses, and other properties of stars and planets is a question that my research focuses on
Astrochemistry
The gas in interstellar clouds is mostly hydrogen, but also contains traces of other molecules. Some of these are commonly known on Earth, such as carbon monoxide (CO), ammonia (NH3), and methanol (CH3OH), while others only occur under special laboratory conditions, such as formyl (HCO+). Some species were even found in space before they were known on Earth! The chemical composition of interstellar gas clouds reveals a great deal about their physical properties, and at the same time tells us about basic chemical processes that are hard or impossible to study on Earth. My research focuses on two specific areas: the ionization rates of interstellar clouds, and their temperature history
Molecular spectroscopy and radiative transfer
Astronomers use a technique called spectroscopy to observe specific molecules in space, and interpreting these observations requires specialized computer programs. My group develops such tools, in particular the fast non-LTE solver RADEX for clouds with a simple slab geometry, and the sophisticated Monte Carlo program RATRAN for spherical and cylindrical objects such as protostellar envelopes and disks. The molecular input data for both programs are collected in a database called LAMDA
Exoplanets and astrobiology
Since 1995, thousands of planets have been discovered around nearby stars; probably there are more planets than stars in the Universe. About 1% of planets resemble the Earth in size, composition, and temperature, which makes them candidates for habitable worlds. My research focuses on the question which conditions are required (and optimal) for life to originate (or at least survive) on planets, and how we may recognize signs of such life.
研究兴趣
论文共 356 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS (2024)
Martyn Wells, H. Beuther, S. Molinari,P. Schilke,Cara Battersby,Paul T. P. Ho,Á. Sánchez-Monge,B. Jones, M. Scheuck,J. Syed,C. Gieser,Rolf Kuiper,E. Schisano, A. Coletta,A. Traficante, J. Wallace,Andrew Rigby, R.S. Klessen, Q. Zhang, S. Walch,M. T. Beltrán,Yongan Tang,G. A. Fuller,D. C. Lis,T. Möller,F. van der Tak,David R. Law,J. Randrup,L. Moscadelli,C. Mininni, H. Zinnecker,Y. Maruccia,S. Pezzuto, M. Benedettini,J. D. Soler,C. L. Brogan, A. Avison,P. Sanhueza,D. Elia, T. Liu,F. Fontani,K. L. J. Rygl, F. Wyrowski, J. Bally, Devin G. E. Walker,A. Ahmadi,Patrick M. Koch, M. Merello,Chi-Yan Law
Astronomy and Astrophysics (2024)
Gordon Chin,Carrie M. Anderson,Jennifer Bergner,Nicolas Biver,Gordon L. Bjoraker,Thibault Cavalie,Michael DiSanti,Jian-Rong Gao,Paul Hartogh,Leon K. Harding,Qing Hu,Daewook Kim,Craig Kulesa,Gert de Lange,David T. Leisawitz,Rebecca C. Levy,Arthur Lichtenberger, Daniel P. Marronh,Joan Najita, Trent Newswander,George H. Rieke,Dimitra Rigopoulou, Peter Roefsema,Nathan X. Roth,Kamber Schwarz,Yancy Shirley,Justin Spilker,Antony A. Stark,Floris van der Tak,Yuzuru Takashima,Alexander Tielens, David J. Willner,Edward J. Wollack,Stephen Yates,Erick Young,Christopher K. Walker
arXiv (Cornell University) (2024)
Nilanjan Mukherjee,Abhijit Bhattacharyya,Kalyan Chakrabarti,Liyi Gu, Junjie Mao,Chintan Shah,Floris van der Tak
Kamber Schwarz,Alexander Tielens, Joan Najita,Jennifer Bergner,Quentin Kral,Carrie Anderson,Gordon Chin,David Leisawitz,David Wilner, Peter Roelfsema,Floris van der Tak, Erick Young, Christopher Walker
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systemsno. 04 (2024)
Lorenzo Cesario,Tim Lichtenberg,Eleonora Alei, Óscar Carrión-González, Felix A. Dannert, Denis Defrère, Steve Ertel,Andrea Fortier, A. García Muñoz, Adrian M. Glauser, Jonah T. Hansen,Ravit Helled, Philipp A. Huber, Michael J. Ireland, Jens Kammerer, Romain Laugier, Jorge Lillo-Box, Franziska Menti, Michael R. Meyer,Lena Noack, Sascha P. Quanz,Andreas Quirrenbach,Sarah Rugheimer,Floris van der Tak, Haiyang S. Wang, Marius Anger, Olga Balsalobre-Ruza, Surendra Bhattarai,Marrick Braam,Amadeo Castro-González,Charles S. Cockell, Tereza Constantinou,Gabriele Cugno,Jeanne Davoult,Manuel Güdel, Nina Hernitschek,Sasha Hinkley,Satoshi Itoh, Markus Janson,Anders Johansen, Hugh R. A. Jones, Stephen R. Kane, Tim A. van Kempen,Kristina G. Kislyakova, Judith Korth,Andjelka B. Kovacevic,Stefan Kraus, Rolf Kuiper,Joice Mathew, Taro Matsuo, Yamila Miguel,Michiel Min, Ramon Navarro, Ramses M. Ramirez,Heike Rauer, Berke Vow Ricketti,Amedeo Romagnolo,Martin Schlecker,Evan L. Sneed,Vito Squicciarini,Keivan G. Stassun,Motohide Tamura, Daniel Viudez-Moreiras,Robin D. Wordsworth, the LIFE Collaboration
Astronomy & Astrophysics (2024)
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETYno. 2 (2024): 2573-2574
José R. G. Silva,Wouter M. Laauwen,Behnam Mirzaei,Nathan Vercruyssen,Matvey Finkel, Menno Westerveld,Nikhil More, Vitor Silva,Abram Young,Craig Kulesa,Christopher Walker,Floris van der Tak,Jian Rong Gao
arXiv (Cornell University) (2023)
ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS (2023): A131-A131
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作者统计
#Papers: 356
#Citation: 13994
H-Index: 60
G-Index: 105
Sociability: 7
Diversity: 2
Activity: 32
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