What Innovative Astrophysics Project Ideas Can Reflect a Student's Creativity?

In summary: Saposjoint.net, subforum Astronomy, topic "Isotopic abundance". He suggests isotope separation by gravitation as an efficient way to make a project for a competative exam.
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I love Astrophysics. I m preparing for competative exams. It includes making a project on any topic. But it should be innovative and student's creativity should reflect from it.I want to do my best.Can anyone suggest some ideas? I thought about 'blackholes',but its all theoretical knowledge I have.I m an BSc student.please help...:confused::smile:
 
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  • #2
If we gave you the idea, then you really wouldn't be demonstrating the "student's creativity" and "innovation", would you?
 
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I am stuck.I want to opt. for black holes, but don't know where to start from.Like its just that,it is for competative exam so I want some guideline on it.:confused:
 
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I suggest isotope separation by gravitation.

Gravitation can be very effective. 30km/s (the orbital speed around our Sun at Earth's distance, not the ridiculous human-made centrifuges) make a difference in kinetic energy of 7*10-19J per neutron, or 500 times kT at 100K. Few details more at Saposjoint.net, subforum Astronomy, topic "Isotopic abundance".

As far as I ignore (I'm not in this field) astronomers still look for inefficient chemical processes to explain differences in isotopic composition, though gravitation is hugely more efficient. Even if gravitation is hampered by mixing processes, remnants of its effect can overshadow chemical processes.

This would have important implications... IF I'm not too mistaken :biggrin: ! Isotopic composition is an argument for scenarios of our Solar system, galaxies, and maybe even type I and type II populations. Or consider Jupiter, with 60km/s escape velocity and its upper atmosphere at 200K, where heavier isotopes seem to be too scarce.

One other example here http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=49008
Observed oxygen, a heavier atom, is too scarce in molecular clouds, but reappears when stars lit up. Could oxygen coalesce before hydrogen for being heavier? In our upper atmosphere, which is much smaller but denser and hot, gravitation does segregate lighter elements.

What I did NOT check, and won't:
- Under what conditions (dilute cold gas?) gravitation acts fast enough. Faster than the separation into a sun and planets for instance. This would be a slow diffusion process, but adequate conditions at some evolution time could make it fast enough.
- What conditions (turbulence) prevent this separation, and how much separation remains
- If stars with a metal-rich chromosphere are more turbulent (!) and contain more heavy isotopes
- Whether this ideas was already explored and dismissed...
So nearly everything remains to do if you like the idea, and the size of the project can vary.

Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy
 
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Some time ago (astronomers would know it better) the proportion of deuterium in galactic neutral hydrogen gas clouds did not match theoretical forecasts. It would be nice if some segregation could explain it.
 
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Stars with a higher "metallicity" (proportion of elements heavier than helium) concentrate in galactic regions where the gravitation potential well is also deepest, suggesting again that segregation by nuclide mass participated in the process.

As such a question is likely to arise from any audience, and does have consequences on galactic evolution models, a project about nuclide segregation by gravitation would better have an answer ready for the exam.

Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy
 

FAQ: What Innovative Astrophysics Project Ideas Can Reflect a Student's Creativity?

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