Features
At ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile they are about to fit a new instrument that can record the light from 24 galaxies simultaneously.
KMOS has 24 robotic arms tipped with gold-plated mirrors that can be trained on a different galaxy – each arm has almost 200 facets making them rather like an insect's compound eye. Light from these mirrors is channelled into 3 spectrographs and 'multiplexed' – combined into a single signal.
The 3 spectrographs were designed, manufactured, and assembled at Oxford University before being shipped out to Chile via STFC's UK Astronomy Technology Centre in Edinburgh.
Working at infrared wavelengths, KMOS will probe a crucial time in the evolution of galaxies: around 10 billion years ago when star formation was at its height and the black holes believed to nestle in the centres of most galaxies were also highly active.
'Not only will KMOS accelerate the study of high redshift galaxies through the multiplex advantage, it will also provide a much more detailed view, allowing us to study gas flows and star forming regions in each individual galaxy,' Roger Davies, who led work at Oxford on the KMOS spectrographs, explains. 'We expect that these will reveal the connection between the evolution of the stars in galaxies and central black hole.'
The Oxford team are particularly interested in looking at galaxies in rich clusters: swarms of galaxies that occupy a compact volume and so live in a dense environment at a common distance.
In the nearby Universe these cosmic laboratories host large populations of structureless galaxies that appear to have completed almost all their star formation. 'KMOS will help us to identify the physical processes that give rise to this particular population of galaxies in clusters,' Roger tells me.
Over the last decade the spectrometers for KMOS were designed and constructed in Oxford University's Department of Physics. An experienced team of Ian Lewis, Matthias Tecza and Niranjan Thatte, as well as Davies, have established a strong track record for Oxford in instruments of this kind having built instruments for the the Mt Palomar 5m and the Japanese Subaru 8m telescope in recent years.
Building KMOS was a huge technical challenge: 'The whole interior of the instrument is cryogenic – cooled to 100 Kelvin [-173 Celsius] – so the spectrographs have to work at these extreme temperatures,' Ian Lewis tells me. The Oxford team worked closely with colleagues at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory on the optical design of KMOS, whilst the Thin Film Facility gave it its golden glow – gold-plating all the mirrors for the device.
KMOS can detect emissions from gas at very early times in the history of the Universe that is normally invisible in images of the sky. The light from gas at high redshift can be concentrated in emission at a single wavelength, when an image is recorded over a broad range of wavelengths this light can be swamped and not detectable above the background glow. Because KMOS spreads the light out in wavelength over an area of sky, it can potentially detect the sharp emission lines from the most distant gas known, 'This could be one of the most exciting results from KMOS,' Roger adds.
The instrument is a collaboration of six institutions in Germany and the UK, including STFC's UK Astronomy Technology Centre, Durham University, Oxford University and RAL Space at STFC's Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.
Studying land-based birds is tough enough, but studying seabirds that spend much of their time over, on, or under water presents a new set of challenges.
In this week’s Journal of the Royal Society: Interface, a team led by Oxford University scientists describes how new technologies and techniques made it possible to follow an important British seabird, the Manx Shearwater.
I asked lead author Ben Dean of Oxford University’s Department of Zoology about the study and how the team’s findings might help in efforts to conserve shearwaters and other seabirds…
OxSciBlog: What are the challenges of studying shearwaters?
Ben Dean: Manx Shearwaters are elusive seabirds. They visit their breeding colonies only at night and nest underground in burrows where they rear single large chicks. The rest of the time they spend foraging at sea, often travelling hundreds of kilometres in search of food.
Studies at the colony have taught us much about their breeding and parental behaviour, while ship-based surveys have given us an understanding of the overall at-sea distribution of the species, yet we still know relatively little about patterns of behaviour at sea.
Understanding the at-sea behaviour of seabirds such as shearwaters is important because of their vulnerability to changes in the marine environment and their status as indicators of ocean health. But because of their elusive life-style and relatively small size, following individual birds from known colonies and recording detailed behavioural data is difficult.
OSB: What technologies did you use to investigate their behaviour?
BD: Advances in miniature data logging technology have revolutionised the remote observation of long-distance movements in seabirds. We deployed three types of miniature bio-logger simultaneously, each collecting different types of behavioural data:
Global Positioning System (GPS) loggers recorded the routes and movement speeds of foraging birds, saltwater immersion loggers recorded the proportion of time spent on and off the sea, and time-depth recorders logged each dive made in pursuit of prey.
Handling the increasingly complex datasets generated by these technologies is in itself challenging and so we employed a machine learning method to build a detailed picture of the at-sea behaviour and then applied what we had learnt to a large dataset in which we had tracked the movements of shearwaters from different colonies over three years.
OSB: How do your results add to what we already knew?
BD: First, we were able to show where and when shearwaters from different colonies engaged in three principal activities at sea: resting on the surface, commuting flight between colonies and foraging areas, and foraging behaviour. This type of information is of high value in conservation planning, particularly with respect to interactions between particular threats and those behaviours that increase risk: for example roosting and surface pollution, commuting flight and wind turbines, or foraging and fisheries.
Second we were able to reveal details of the foraging behaviour of this species, which primarily involves tortuous searching flights over relatively restricted search areas interspersed with frequent landings and take offs and diving in pursuit of prey.
Third we showed that birds from two different colonies in the Irish Sea foraged in local waters that were exclusive, but that birds from both colonies overlapped in one key area: the western Irish Sea and the Irish Sea Front.
Birds breeding at the colony furthest from the front spent more of their time at sea engaged in commuting flight and less time engaged in foraging activity than birds breeding close to the front. This suggests that birds breeding far from this important foraging area must work harder to locate prey, presumably at a greater cost to their own body condition.
OSB: What further research is needed to discover more about the lifestyle of Shearwaters/other seabirds?
BD: Further studies combining detailed data from multiple loggers will allow us to investigate how shearwaters respond to oceanographic features such as fronts, or prey distributions and to understand the kinds of decisions they make when searching for food.
Given that these birds cover such large distances during foraging trips, the analysis of GPS tracks to investigate the mechanisms of navigation and the learning of locations and routes is also likely to uncover interesting facets of seabird behaviour.
The future of seabird research almost certainly lies in multidisciplinary approaches that combine classical field biology with bio-logging, computational biology, molecular and chemical techniques. Such approaches will increasingly reveal ever more fascinating aspects of the elusive lifestyles of seabirds.
Meet Ossie: a friendly green popsicle who has already been fired through the LHC and frozen to absolute zero in a bid to explain cutting edge science.
In his latest adventure the star of the Oxford Sparks portal ends up getting a close encounter with a broken heart and finds out about the potentially dire consequences of one genetic mistake.
'Genetics has come such a long way, it really does impact on the way we look after patients already and will do so more and more,' said Hugh Watkins, the lead scientific advisor on this new animation.
'But it's the 'simple' end of the genetic spectrum, where a single genetic change causes an inherited condition that runs in a family, where we've made most headway so far. And the condition covered, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, is one of the most common and important of these.'
Hugh says that, as part of explaining where the latest Oxford research has got to in investigating such conditions, he told 'some stories (one involving a forklift!) to illustrate the way it impacts on patients,' and that this tale made it into the finished animation.
He adds: 'I like the way that the animation and script make an inherently scary condition, and a serious science story, fun.'
Look hard enough, string theory says, and at a scale so small that atoms loom as large as entire continents do to us you would see that every particle in the universe is just the product of vibrating strings.
It's a powerful idea that could help to explain everything from black holes to hidden dimensions, and lead to a new understanding of gravity.
But string theory is also enigmatic and baffling, describing a realm that is, with current technology, too small for us to explore directly.
A new website, Why String Theory?, aims to tell the story of the theory's past, present, and (possible) future in a way that anyone can understand.
'We all instinctively want to explore the world around us. String theory gives us a chance to uncover the most fundamental laws of nature. So much of fundamental physics nowadays is completely inaccessible… We wanted to rectify this, conveying the excitement of contemporary research,' Edward Hughes, a Cambridge University undergraduate and member of the team behind the website, tells me.
'I'm still on the fence as to whether I think string theory is the right direction, but there are certainly elements of it that are very simple and appealing,' says team member Charlotte Mason, an Oxford University undergraduate. 'The idea that the myriad of particles in the universe could arise from different vibrational patterns of tiny strings is a very elegant explanation. Though the mathematics beyond that is often not so elegant!'
Joseph Conlon of Oxford University, another member of the team, explains that part of the theory's appeal lies in 'string miracles', these are 'calculations that look like they are going to fail and show that the theory is inconsistent, but then something comes in and suddenly saves the day. Once you see this happening several times you realise that the theory has a very deep structure and your understanding of it only scratches the surface.'
String theory is not the only approach that it is hoped might one day encompass the behaviour of everything from galaxies to sub-atomic particles, but it does appear to offer some tantalising insights. One of these concerns some of the universe's most mysterious objects: black holes.
'Objects in string theory called branes can be used to count the number of possible ways you can make a black hole,' Joseph tells me. 'For certain types of black holes this agrees with a famous calculation of Stephen Hawking of the entropy of the black hole.
'Entropy is a measure of how many ways there is of making something. Hawking used clever arguments to say what the answer must be. In string theory you can count the number of ways explicitly and find that it agrees with Hawking's answer.
'String theory can help solve problems with quantising gravity by treating particles as strings rather than points. This smears out interactions and makes infinite quantities finite.'
But, however powerful its insights, there is a problem: so far no one has been able to prove that those tiny vibrating strings the theory depends on actually exist. Joseph admits that they will be hard to find: it will, he thinks, take a major technological advance, a brilliant insight, or wonderful luck to turn up the right kind of evidence.
Yet string theory has a habit of turning up surprises, as Joseph says: 'Working on it is also good for humility, you are perennially aware that the theory is smarter than you.'
Caught between hostile land and sea, an oyster's life is a daily battle against the elements, predators, and disease.
Now a team, including Peter Holland of Oxford University’s Department of Zoology, has decoded the oyster's genome to gain a better understanding of one of life's great survivors. The work is reported in this week's Nature.
I asked Peter what their genes tell us about these marvellous molluscs, their evolution, and how they might be farmed more efficiently…
OxSciBlog: What makes the seashore so challenging for life?
Peter Holland: The seashore looks tranquil enough, but spare a thought for the animals living in the intertidal zone, between land and sea. Twice a day, every day, as tides move in and out, these animals are plunged between two different worlds. It is hard to know which is more hostile.
An animal such as an oyster must cope with searing heat and desiccation when the tide goes out, and then coolness, high salinity and crushing currents when the tide washes back over it. Its gills are adapted to extract oxygen under water, but cannot absorb oxygen from dry air. The sea is also a breeding ground for innumerable parasites and pathogens. This is an environment where environmental stress is fact of daily life.
OSB: What do the oyster's genes tell us about how it evolved to cope?
PH: All animals have genes for coping with environmental stress, but the oyster genome has many more than other species studied so far.
Take the hsp70 genes, involved in protecting cellular proteins from heat. The oyster has over 80 of these genes, and this heat protection system is indeed switched on when the animal is exposed to high temperatures. The oyster also has extra genes involved in protection against oxidative stress and for defence against pathogens.
Even in these days when genome sequencing is becoming almost routine, it is rare that we can 'see' the biology of the animal in the genome so clearly. The genome shows us how the oyster genome has been adapted over millions of years to allow life in this hostile environment.
Not all of the oyster genome is so easy to understand, however. We found changes to the genes that control embryo and larval development, such as homeobox genes, and can only guess the underlying reasons. There are also unexpected genes used in formation of the oyster shell, suggesting that formation of mollusc shells is more variable and more complex than previously thought.
OSB: How does the oyster's 'genetic survival kit' compare with the genes of other intertidal species?
PH: We don't yet know how recently the oyster's genetic adaptations arose. Are they shared with all bivalves (the molluscs with two shells)? Or are they older, shared with all molluscs? Or more recent, and specific to oysters? More genome sequencing is needed to find out how many different routes there are to intertidal adaptation.
OSB: How might these insights help to boost oyster farming?
PH: Oyster farming is quite inefficient, with many animals dying before they become fully developed. Most often, the causes are unknown.
Now that the full set of oyster genes is known, it will be possible to see which genes respond to which stresses, or indeed which pathogens, and then see if there is variation between individuals. This might allow oyster farming to choose strains if oysters that are better suited to local conditions.
This would be a boost for the economics of oyster farming and hope it succeeds, but personally, I won't be partaking. I may have been part of the consortium that studied the genome, but I'm allergic to oysters.
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