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OT- Another Interesting Astronomy Article...

...you guys might enjoy.

Physicists Just Found the Last Missing Protons and Neutrons In the Universe
By Rafi Letzter, Staff Writer | June 21, 2018 04:10pm ET
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An artist's illustration depicts a quasar, or supermassive, ultra-luminous black hole.
Credit: NASA/ESA
The universe's missing matter has been found, and it's floating between the stars.

Researchers who study the ancient history of the universe know how much ordinary matter — matter that makes up baryons, a class of subatomic particles that includes protons and neutrons — the universe created during the Big Bang. And researchers who study the modern universe know how much ordinary, baryonic matter humans can see with telescopes. [Strange Quarks and Muons, Oh My! Nature's Tiniest Particles Dissected]

But until recently, those numbers didn't match up: A full third of the universe's original baryonic matter was missing. Now, thanks to a clever observation involving an incredibly bright black hole, an international team of researchers says they've found it.

The missing baryons, the researchers wrote in a study published today (June 21) in the journal Nature, have been hiding out as thin, hot clouds of oxygen gas floating between the stars. The gas is highly ionized, meaning that most of its electrons are missing, and it has a strong positive charge.

"We found the missing baryons," Michael Shull, an astronomer at the University of Colorado, Boulder and a co-author on the paper, said in a statement.

The signal of the oxygen was too strong and consistent to come from random fluctuations in the quasar's light, the researchers wrote. The astronomers also ruled out the possibility of a faint galaxy causing the oxygen's shadow.

Since at least 2011, researchers have suspected that the missing baryons might be hiding out in this material, called the warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM), but the WHIM is difficult to observe directly. To spot the gas hiding there, they had to come up with a clever trick.

Far from Earth, there are black holes sucking up huge amounts of matter. That matter glows very bright, and telescopes on this planet can spot it. Researchers call these sorts of black holes quasars — and they're the brightest objects in the universe. That means that light from quasars has "a high signal to noise ratio," the researchers wrote in the paper, meaning in this case that it's easy to see if something obscures it.

Pointing a telescope at a quasar not only tells astronomers about the object itself, but also reveals something about whatever's floating between the quasar and the telescope. In this case, that something was a filament of the WHIM.

By careful observation of how the WHIM obscured and changed lightemanating from the quasar as it made its way into the lenses of two telescopes, the researchers were able to figure out what the WHIM was made of. The answer, it turned out, was oxygen, heated to nearly 1.8 million degrees Fahrenheit (1 million degrees Celsius).

These missing baryons aren't the same thing as dark matter, which researchers believe exists, thanks to its gravitational influence on other stars. That matter is thought to exist in the form of particles more exotic than simple baryons.

In a statement, the researchers said they were able to extrapolate from the observed WHIM how much baryonic matter in the form of oxygen floats elsewhere in the universe as the WHIM. To confirm and refine their observations, they said, they plan to point their telescopes at other quasars and observe the WHIM obscuring them.

Recruiting Debate of the Day: Which 2019 prospect do you want most?

If you had to pick just one 2019 USC recruit to be a guaranteed Trojan in this class, who would it be?

We're not asking you who you think is a USC lock, we're asking which rising senior high school football player you would want to be a USC lock.

Here's my pick....

I would pick 2019 Phoenix, Ariz. Pinnacle HS quarterback (and Oklahoma commit) Spencer Rattler. Rattler does not yet hold a scholarship offer from USC but he has visited campus and has been in regular communication with the coaching staff. While he's not a five-star prospect, he's on the border and a serious candidate to get ranked that way. On top of that, Rivals.com ranks him as the best dual threat quarterback in the entire country while a competing publication ranks him as the best pro style quarterback in the entire country. To me, he's the best quarterback in this class and I think USC needs more quarterbacks on the roster. I really thought about the defensive line and offensive tackle (two positions I always want stacked with high end talent in a recruiting class) and then running back and cornerback (two positions I think USC needs to recruit well in this class particularly). it didn't matter. To me, quarterback stands out above the rest as a need when I look at this USC roster.

So Spencer Rattler it is. Who would you pick????

Football Debate of the Day: Who is USC's most anticipated freshman ever?

Quarterback J.T. Daniels is USC's most anticipated freshman since ...

Matt Barkley?

That would be my answer. What's yours? Also, what other freshmen were you personally awaiting most since you began following USC football? I know some of you have been fans since before I was born (and before true freshmen were allowed to play varsity). Would love to hear your thoughts on this.
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Recruiting What I've been told about campus visits and 7-on-7 tournaments

I've been contacted by a source close to USC to clarify why Trojan coaches didn't speak to Isaiah Rutherford (or any other recruit) during a previous spring weekend when USC hosted so many players on campus.

According to NCAA rules, recruits cannot visit colleges unofficially while 7-on-7 tournaments are in progress, until that 7-on-7 tournament is complete. That spring weekend in question was the weekend of an Adidas tournament.

So the kids are allowed to walk onto USC's campus, walk around, watch football activities that are open to the public, etc. However, USC coaches are not allowed to interact with recruits.

Unfortunately, it doesn't seem like the recruits understand these rules. I try to interview everyone who sets foot on campus and I interviewed a bunch of top flight recruits that weekend. A lack of contact with USC during that visit was regularly brought up.

As many of us know, no good deed goes unpunished! I suggest ignoring those pesky NCAA rules in the future (joke).
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