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HIGH-RESOLUTION IMAGES AVAILABLE Penn State Astronomer's Images of the
First Stars Featured on
The show's worldwide premier will take place on Monday,
3 June, when it will air in the State College area at 9:00 p.m. It will
be rebroadcast on Tuesday, 4 June at 1:00 a.m.; on Saturday, 8 June, at
5:00 p.m.; on Thursday, 13 June, at 10:00 p.m., and on Sunday, June 16,
at 4:00 p.m. Viewers in other regions should check their local broadcast
schedules. Abel says he also has been asked to provide his visualizations
for a number of popular science magazines, including Astronomy Magazine,
the New York Times Science section, National Geographic, Science, and
Science News. "The story about our research on the first stars also
has been presented in Brazilian, South-African, Hungarian, Dutch, Spanish,
British, and German newspapers and on on-line journals, and also on a
30-minute British Broadcasting Corporation radio program aired during
May," he adds.
Abel's collaborators on the simulations include Greg Bryan, of
the University of Oxford in England, and Michael Norman, of the
University of California at San Diego. "We are happy that the many
years of research and new insights on the nature of the first stars can
be illustrated now in a comprehensible way to the general public and experts
alike," Abel comments. Simulations in the Discovery Channel program by other scientists
include two colliding black holes, the evolution of the early universe
and its interacting galaxies, the interaction of hydrogen and helium in
the early universe forming protogalaxies, the complex and turbulent flow
of matter within a dying star, and an animated flight from Earth into
the massive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy. In addition, the program includes visualizations produced
from astronomical data collected through the Sloan Digital Sky Survey,
a large international effort that aims to observe 100,000 quasars, to
measure the distances to a million galaxies, and to produce a comprehensive
digital map of the sky. Donald Schneider, professor of astronomy
and astrophysics at Penn State and chair of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Quasar Science Group, remarks, "The 'Unfolding Universe' program
makes recent research about one of the most fundamental questions we face,
the kindling of the first light in the universe, readily accessible to
the general public. The computer simulations of the formation of the first
structures are visually stunning."
The scientists whose computations are the basis of the program are affiliated
with the National Science Foundation's National Computational Science
Alliance. Their computed images were turned into visually dramatic animations
by visualization artists and programmers at the National Center for Supercomputing
Applications (NCSA). Located at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
NCSA is a partner in the National Science Foundation's TeraGrid project
and the leader of the National Science Foundation's National Computational
Science Alliance. "The Unfolding Universe" was produced and
directed by Thomas Lucas, of Thomas Lucas Productions, Inc., and
co-produced by Donna Cox and Robert Patterson, of NCSA.
[ B K K ] CONTACTS: Tom Abel, tabel@astro.psu.edu,
(+)49 171 2613 010 (before 13 June), 814-404-3687 (after 13 June) Three high-resolution stills from the animations based on Abel's calculations are available to reporters. Contact Barbara K. Kennedy (PIO), 814-863-4682, science@psu.edu All images copyright: "From the Unfolding Universe",
the Discovery Channel. Visualizations by Ralf Kahler (ZIB), Donna Cox,
Bob Patterson, and Stuart Levy (NCSA) from numerical simulations by Tom PAPER: A paper by Abel concerning his research on the origin of the first stars, published in the 4 January issue of the journal Science, is available to reporters via fax. Contact Barbara K. Kennedy (PIO), 814-863-4682, science@psu.edu
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