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Scientists Can Pinpoint Surface Gravity On Other Stars (bbc.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Astronomers have developed a new technique to measure the surface gravity on distant stars. Earlier techniques relied on measuring the amount of light coming from the star, and were unreliable beyond a certain distance. The new work instead focuses on variations in the light over a longer period of time — indications of turbulence and vibration — which can provide detailed information at greater distances. One of the researchers, Professor Jaymie Matthews, said, "Our technique can tell you how big and bright is the star, and if a planet around it is the right size and temperature to have water oceans, and maybe life." According to their research paper, "We have tested this for a well-defined subsample of the Kepler catalog and found it to maintain a high accuracy, about six times better than that of the flicker method. In addition, it is more noise-tolerant than asteroseismology and gives a reasonably accurate surface gravity g for stars that are too faint for a reliable asteroseismic analysis. Therefore, the time scale technique makes it possible to study otherwise poorly understood stars, which will lead to better characterization of exoplanetary systems both individually and statistically."

1 of 38 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Better source by ihtoit · · Score: -1, Troll

    ya really need to ask that?

    Savile.

    WTC7.

    Top Gear.

    Election coverage.

    Question Time (every question is prescreened and seriously canned, some might even say scripted, and the audience is cherry picked)

    that statue of the priest and the little boy above the London Broadcasting House entrance.

    The BBC really are shameless liars, paedophile apologists and propaganda merchants.

    --
    Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel