News

This section includes scientific and technological news from the IAC and its Observatories, as well as press releases on scientific and technological results, astronomical events, educational projects, outreach activities and institutional events.

  • Opening STARMUS Festival 2011. Left to right: F. Sanchez, G. Israelian, Robert Williams, Juan Ruiz Arzola, Buzz Aldrin (invited), Alexei Leonov y Brian May.
    The Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC) is collaborating with this multidisciplinary festival for Astrophysics and Space SciencesThe second event, which has the slogan "Beginnings: the making of the modern cosmos" will take place in Tenerife and La Palma from 22 to 28 September 2014
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  • Figure caption: This is the spectrum of a massive AGB star (white dots) together with the predictions of the new model atmospheres (yellow line), and of the previous models which did not include the envelope (blue line). The Rubidium is detected as a very
    Intermediate mass stars, in their last phases of evolution ("AGB stars"),produce a large number of heavy elements (rich in neutrons), some ofthem radioactive isotopes, such as Rubidium and Technetium. Theseelements are pushed outwards to the surface of the star, and afterwards released into the interstellar medium. Among this type of stars, those least studied have been the more massive ones (between 4 and 8 times the mass of the Sun). Massive AGB stars have been recently identified in our Galaxy and in other nearby galaxies, such as the Magellanic Clouds, thanks to the detection of strong
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  • Figure caption: Grey scale representation of the probability density distribution of the location of 575 Galactic stars in the spectroscopic Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. Three empirical borderlines between densely populated regions and empty regions are d
    The distribution of stars in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram narrates their evolutionary history and directly assesses their properties. Placing stars in this diagram however requires the knowledge of their distances and interstellar extinctions, which are often poorly known for Galactic stars. The spectroscopic Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (sHRD) tells similar evolutionary tales, but is independent of distance and extinction measurements. Based on spectroscopically derived effective temperatures and gravities of almost 600 stars, we derive for the first time the observational distribution of
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  • Figure 1:  Trailed intensity image showing the orbital evolution of two emission lines in MWC 656. Fe II 4,583 Å  is formed in the equatorial disc of the Be star while  He II 4,686 Å  arises from gas encircling the companion black hole.
    Stellar-mass black holes have all been discovered through X-ray emission, which arises from the accretion of gas from their binary companions (this gas is either stripped from low-mass stars or supplied as winds from massive ones). Binary evolution models also predict the existence of black holes accreting from the equatorial envelope of rapidly spinning Be-type stars (stars of the Be type are hot blue irregular variables showing characteristic spectral emission lines of hydrogen).  Of the ~80 Be X-ray binaries known in the Galaxy, however, only pulsating neutron stars have been found as
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