Its 3.5 year mission: to explore strange new sandwiches, to seek out new condiments and sliced meats, to boldly go where no PhD students have lunched before.
Congratulations to the now Dr Tom Bending, who passed his PhD viva yesterday. Tom worked with Prof Clare Dobbs, and the team at @ICYBOB_Project, on simulations of photoionisation in giant molecular clouds, and the effect it has on star formation and the structure of the clouds.
New paper on arXiv: https://t.co/98F8NK6ouX We discuss the implications of the high tangential wind speeds observed by Parker Solar Probe during its first two orbits, on our understanding of the solar wind angular momentum-loss rate. @AWESoMeStarsERC@mathewjowens@RuipSol (1/4)
Dr William Bains of MIT up now. They spent a couple of years trying to work out what could possibly create that level of phosphine in the atmosphere. #VenusNews
Well, after 4 years, I can finally talk about the #Venus#phosphine paper that co-authored! If you want to learn more about phosphine in Venus’ atmosphere, take a look at the blog I wrote about the study and a chat with the lead of the study @jgreaves6! https://t.co/EdB1cUiBxM
A huge congratulations to our own Dr. @AdamF_Astro who passed his viva this afternoon. Adam wrote his thesis on constraining the angular momentum loss-rates on the Sun, and Sun-like stars. Thanks to Prof. Rony Keppens from KU Leuven for acting as his external examiner.
Here at G27 we keep our @ExeterCathedral ruler in our ceiling tiles. That way, when we need to follow the straight and narrow, we must take a leap of faith
Aarynn says, “to be more productive try working under stress. I’m particularly fearful of what lies within the deepest parts of our oceans.” #G27doesproductivity