Brian Welch: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Person | |||
| name = Brian Welch | |||
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| birth_date = 1995 <!-- {{Birth year and age|YYYY}} --> | |||
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| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} (death date then birth date) --> | |||
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| known_for = led the team that announced the most ancient and most distant star | |||
| occupation = [[astronomer]] | |||
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'''Brian Welch''' is a [[PhD]] student, studying [[Astronomy]], at [[John Hopkins University]].<ref name=washingtonpost2022-03-30/> His thesis supervisor, [[Dan Coe]], discovered a very distant galaxy, called [[The Sunrise Arc]], in 2016. That Galaxy was only found because the gravity of a supercluster of galaxies that lie between us and The Sunrise Arc magnified its light, through [[Gravitational lens]]ing. | '''Brian Welch''' is a [[PhD]] student, studying [[Astronomy]], at [[John Hopkins University]].<ref name=washingtonpost2022-03-30/> His thesis supervisor, [[Dan Coe]], discovered a very distant galaxy, called [[The Sunrise Arc]], in 2016. That Galaxy was only found because the gravity of a supercluster of galaxies that lie between us and The Sunrise Arc magnified its light, through [[Gravitational lens]]ing. | ||
Revision as of 10:03, 31 March 2022
Brian Welch | |
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Born | 1995 |
Occupation | astronomer |
Known for | led the team that announced the most ancient and most distant star |
Brian Welch is a PhD student, studying Astronomy, at John Hopkins University.[1] His thesis supervisor, Dan Coe, discovered a very distant galaxy, called The Sunrise Arc, in 2016. That Galaxy was only found because the gravity of a supercluster of galaxies that lie between us and The Sunrise Arc magnified its light, through Gravitational lensing.
Coe assigned Welch the task of examining promising objects within The Sunrise Arc.[1]
In June, 2021, Welch published an article in the Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, announcing the observation of several small, dense globular clusters, within the galaxy.[2]
Meanwhile Welch had found, in 2018, an object now known as Earendil.[1] Welch co-ordinated an international team of Astronomers, who confirmed that Earendil seemed to be a very distant early star. Welch was the lead author of a paper in the prestigious Science journal Nature, announcing the discovery, on March 30, 2022.[3]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Joel Achenbach. Hubble telescope detects most distant star ever seen, near cosmic dawn, Washington Post, 2022-03-30. Retrieved on 2022-03-30. “Earendel is part of an early, small galaxy whose light has been magnified and distorted in two curved strips as a result of such lensing. Astronomer Dan Coe of Johns Hopkins discovered and named the Sunrise Arc in 2016 as part of a Hubble observation program. Welch, Coe’s student, scrutinized a tiny speck — some kind of object — providentially located on the arc where the magnification was highest. Over the course of 3½ years, the object remained in that spot.”
- ↑ B. Welch. Relics: Parsec-Scale Star Clusters In The First Billion Years, Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society. Retrieved on 2022-03-30. mirror
- ↑ Welch, Brian, et al. (2022-03-30). "A highly magnified star at redshift 6.2". Nature 603: 815-818. DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-04449-y. Retrieved on 2022-03-30. Research Blogging.