- Main Areas
- Astrophysics
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- High Energy Theory
- Nonlinear Physics
- Nuclear Physics
- Particle Astrophysics
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This is a fascinating time in astrophysics, with new observational
capabilities offering us a more detailed view of the universe and its
constituents than ever before. McGill's Astrophysics group works at the
forefront of a wide variety of major astrophysical research areas, including
neutron stars, pulsars, magnetars, pulsar wind nebulae, X-ray binaries,
thermonuclear bursts, black holes, gamma ray bursts, active galactic nuclei,
galaxy evolution, galaxy clusters, microwave background, cosmology and
exoplanets.
Members of the astrophysics group are affiliated with the
McGill Space Institute.
The existence of neutron stars was predicted in the 1930s, more than 30
years before the first discovery of radio pulses from pulsar PSR B1919+21,
in 1967. In the past 40 years new telescopes, instruments and detection
methods have resulted in the discovery of nearly 2000 neutron stars.
They can be observed in many wavebands, notably radio, X-rays and
gamma-rays and are grouped into various categories including pulsars,
magnetars, radio rotating transients, X-ray dim isolated neutron stars, and
neutron star X-ray binaries.
PSR J0737-3039A/B »
Artist's conception of the double radio pulsar PSR J0737-3039A/B.
Credit: McGill University, Office of Vice-Principal (Research and
International Relations)
Animation by Daniel Cantin, DarwinDimensions
The McGill Neutron Star and
Pulsar group studies a diverse range of subjects in observational pulsar
physics, using data from many of the world's most powerful observatories
and satellites, including
Chandra,
XMM-Newton,
Swift
and soon, NuSTAR. We study
interesting individual systems such as
double pulsars, magnetars, low mass X-ray binaries and supernova remnants,
as well as the distant and enigmatic gamma-ray bursts. We are also involved
in large-scale surveys to discover new pulsars using large radio
telescopes, including Arecibo and the
Green Bank Telescope.
The McGill Neutron Star theorists are interested in the fundamental
structure of neutron stars. We investigate the origin and evolution of
their spin and magnetism, their interior structure, and the properties of
neutron star binary systems.
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Deep Field »
Hubble Deep Field.
Credit: NASA, ESA, and S. Beckwith (STScI) and the HUDF Team
The Galaxies and Cosmology group at McGill includes observers, theorists and
experimentalists studying the evolution of galaxies, supermassive black
holes, clusters of galaxies, and the cosmic microwave background to
understand the processes by which our Universe formed and evolved.
McGill is involved in numerous CMB experiments. One of these experiments is
the South Pole Telescope (SPT), which
is surveying the CMB for “shadows” of galaxy clusters:
the largest gravitationally bound objects in the universe. The detection
and characterization of these galaxy clusters allows us to probe structure
formation, cosmological parameters and the equation of state of dark energy:
an enigmatic substance driving the accelerated expansion of our universe.
Our observational cosmologists use world-class telescopes such as
Gemini, the
Spitzer Space Telescope,
the Chandra X-ray Observatory
and the Very Large Array to look
back in time and investigate the detailed physics of galaxy and black hole
evolution. We are interested in the processes which build the stellar mass
of galaxies, feed the supermassive black-holes at their centers, and group
them into the structures and shapes we see around us today.
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Frequency multiplexer »
Digital frequency multiplexing board, developed at McGill for
reading out large arrays of low temperature bolometric detectors.
The experimental astrophysicists at McGill contribute to the building of
observational facilities to explore various energy bands in astrophysics.
Our high-energy research is carried out with the
VERITAS observatory
in Arizona which is sensitive to gamma rays with energies from 100 GeV to
over 30 TeV.
We also have an active cosmology instrumentation lab that has developed
important components for cosmic microwave background detectors such as the
South Pole Telescope and the balloon-borne polarimeter,
EBEX.
Key components of the proposed
CHIME hydrogen mapping
experiment will be developed at McGill.
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Exoplanet »
An artist's impression of a possible exoplanet.
Credit: PPARC
The number of detected exoplanets now count well over thousands, affording
us a birds-eye view of planet demographics in our Galaxy. These
observations offer an opportunity to answer basic questions about where,
when, and how planets form, the three-way interaction between stars, disks,
and planets, as well as the physical processes occurring in exoplanet
interiors and atmospheres.
The exoplanet group at McGill investigates a wide range of research—both
observations and theory—including the formation and evolution of
planetary interiors and atmospheres, planetary dynamics, star-disk-planet
interactions, observations of exoplanet surfaces and atmospheres, and
characterizations of planetary habitability. Our research tools range from
simple pen & paper, to supercomputing clusters, to telescopes both on the
ground and in space.
McGill researchers working in exoplanets are members of the Institute for
Research on Exoplanets (iREx).
Thermonuclear flash »
Thermonuclear flash on an accreting neutron star
Credit: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Nuclear astrophysics is at the intersection of astrophysics and nuclear
physics. It concerns the study of the origin of the chemical elements in
stars and supernovae, explosive events such as supernovae, classical novae,
and X-ray bursts, and the properties of matter at high densities as found in
the interiors of neutron stars. Nuclear astrophysics research at McGill is
focussed on developing connections between nuclear properties and
astrophysical observations through the study of neutron stars.
One focus of research at McGill is modelling the transient behavior of
accreting neutron stars on timescales of seconds to years. This requires
knowing the properties of nuclei across the mass table, from the most proton
rich radioactive nuclei to the most neutron rich. Thermonuclear flashes from
unstable hydrogen and helium burning on the surface of an accreting neutron
star involve the rp-process, a rapid proton capture process that produces
heavy nuclei near the proton drip line. Deeper inside the neutron star
crust, nuclei at and beyond neutron drip are present, and determine the
transport properties of the crust that can be probed with observations of
crust cooling on timescales of months to years.
Another focus is measuring the radius of neutron stars. Neutron star radius
and mass measurements give powerful constraints on the properties of the
bulk nuclear matter that should exist in the cores of neutron stars. At
McGill, we use observations of the thermal emission from neutron stars to
measure the neutron star radius and constrain the equation of state of dense
matter.
McGill is an Associate Member of the Joint
Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics - Centre for Evolution of the
Elements (JINA/CEE).
First image of a black hole»
Scientists have obtained the first image of a black hole, using Event Horizon
Telescope observations of the center of the galaxy M87. The image shows a
bright ring formed as light bends in the intense gravity around a black hole
that is 6.5 billion times more massive than the Sun. This long-sought image
provides the strongest evidence to date for the existence of supermassive
black holes and opens a new window onto the study of black holes, their event
horizons, and gravity.
Credit: Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration
A supermassive black hole (SMBH) lurks at the heart of every massive galaxy,
including our Milky Way. These monsters, agglomerations of mass so dense
that even light cannot escape their gravitational pull, have a profound
impact on the formation and structure of their host galaxies, despite being
packed into structures smaller than our own Solar System. SMBHs grow in many
ways, but most dramatically via gas and dust inflowing through a flat,
variable accretion disk — during growth spurts, accreting SMBHs are called
quasars or active galactic nuclei (AGN).
McGill scientists pursue studies of massive black holes in
AGN , as well
as
stellar-mass black holes in binaries, detected via high energy and
gravitational wave emission. Black hole accretion disks, and sometimes an
associated jet or wind, are some of the brightest objects in the Universe
and, since every part of this dynamic structure varies with time, strategic
monitoring of a large number of black holes can pave the way to new insight.
Our teams pursue multi-wavelength and multi-messenger studies of black holes
with a wide range of elite telescopes, e.g., the
Event Horizon Telescope,
the Canada France Hawaii Telescope,
and the Chandra X-ray
Observatory , and in coordination with
gravitational wave experiments like LIGO-Virgo and the upcoming LISA
Mission.
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