John Forbes's Avatar

John Forbes

@redshiftless

Astronomer in Aotearoa/New Zealand at the University of Canterbury. Pusher of pixels, pens, arrays, and computer keys. www.johncforbes.com

1,388
Followers
1,543
Following
106
Posts
25.07.2023
Joined
Posts Following

Latest posts by John Forbes @redshiftless

His understanding is still based on individual fruits:
"Is apple a tropical fruit?"
"No, apple is a temperate fruit!"

I guess we have to track down some lingonberry juice!

07.03.2026 23:47 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

Following extensive discussions regarding the nature of "tropical juice" over the past several days, the kid has deduced the existence of "temperate juice."

07.03.2026 12:10 πŸ‘ 4 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
Preview
A new space race could turn our atmosphere into a β€˜crematorium for satellites’ Planned β€˜megaconstellations’ of satellites could cause unforeseen harm to the ozone layer and climate systems. Global regulation is needed before it’s too late.

"Rocket launches already contribute to climate change and ozone depletion. Scaling them up to deploy a million aircraft-sized satellites would push upper-atmosphere heating and ozone loss far beyond previous estimates, with the steady burn-up of dead satellites compounding the impacts." πŸ§ͺπŸ›°οΈπŸš€

27.02.2026 07:41 πŸ‘ 240 πŸ” 128 πŸ’¬ 12 πŸ“Œ 12
Preview
A new space race could turn our atmosphere into a β€˜crematorium for satellites’ Planned β€˜megaconstellations’ of satellites could cause unforeseen harm to the ozone layer and climate systems. Global regulation is needed before it’s too late.

New article out about what a million satellites could do to our atmosphere. It's bad. https://theconversation.com/a-new-space-race-could-turn-our-atmosphere-into-a-crematorium-for-satellites-276366

26.02.2026 18:32 πŸ‘ 24 πŸ” 70 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 2
Preview
A new space race could turn our atmosphere into a β€˜crematorium for satellites’ Planned β€˜megaconstellations’ of satellites could cause unforeseen harm to the ozone layer and climate systems. Global regulation is needed before it’s too late.

Excellent piece from @astrokiwi.bsky.social @sundogplanets.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy & Laura Revell.

This one sentence is the crux of it all πŸ‘‡

"There is no public mandate for a single company in one country to make changes on that scale to the planet’s atmosphere."

Highly recommended.

πŸ”­πŸ§ͺ

26.02.2026 22:33 πŸ‘ 122 πŸ” 56 πŸ’¬ 2 πŸ“Œ 5

Alerts are flowing from Rubin Observatory!

There will be a proper press release in the coming hours, please see all the details then, and meanwhile, your favorite alert broker probably has public data available to peruse *now*!

We are up to well over 20k alerts after 20 min on sky πŸ”­

25.02.2026 00:56 πŸ‘ 72 πŸ” 16 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 4
A line curve showing number of awards for fiscal year 2026 compared to fiscal years 2021-2025 across NSF. The fiscal year 2026 curve lies well below curves for other fiscal years.

A line curve showing number of awards for fiscal year 2026 compared to fiscal years 2021-2025 across NSF. The fiscal year 2026 curve lies well below curves for other fiscal years.

NSF Update

Funding curve overall. A little bit of progress in the past week, but only a little bit.

Now by Directorate...

1/11

13.02.2026 21:21 πŸ‘ 520 πŸ” 297 πŸ’¬ 22 πŸ“Œ 52
Student projects - Kuruwita

I have student projects available for all levels!

Interested in simulating star formation and interactions with the star-forming cloud? Have a look at these!

I work with students to align the project to their skills, interests, and academic level. πŸ”­βœ¨#Astronomy

rajikalk.github.io/html_pages/s...

09.02.2026 07:58 πŸ‘ 8 πŸ” 2 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

death by preventable disease is an inevitable and even desired outcome of concentration camps. in every era of concentration camps people have died of typhus, which is a disease of privation and enforced crowding. this illness is intentionally inflicted

02.02.2026 04:52 πŸ‘ 3749 πŸ” 1418 πŸ’¬ 26 πŸ“Œ 17
A poster announcing details of Carl’s talk at UC on Feb 13th. Title β€œ information foraging in a social media world”

A poster announcing details of Carl’s talk at UC on Feb 13th. Title β€œ information foraging in a social media world”

Pleased to say that Carl Bergstrom (@carlbergstrom.com) will be speaking at the University of Canterbury on 13th Feb!
He is hosted by @tepunahamatatini.bsky.social come see him at noon in Jack Erskine 441!

02.02.2026 00:52 πŸ‘ 65 πŸ” 20 πŸ’¬ 5 πŸ“Œ 1

I felt a strong kinship with the people offering $50 for such a sandwich from the OP.

30.01.2026 02:09 πŸ‘ 1 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
The meme of Angela Kinsey appearing quietly behind Dwight Shrute from the Office (US).

In the first panel, Dwight is enjoying something, and is captioned "READING THE DEMON HAUNTED WORLD". Angela is labelled "MENTION OF THE 1974 NOBEL PRIZE WITH NO ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF BELL". In the second panel, Dwight sees Angela and is surprised, captioned "F**k"

The meme of Angela Kinsey appearing quietly behind Dwight Shrute from the Office (US). In the first panel, Dwight is enjoying something, and is captioned "READING THE DEMON HAUNTED WORLD". Angela is labelled "MENTION OF THE 1974 NOBEL PRIZE WITH NO ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF BELL". In the second panel, Dwight sees Angela and is surprised, captioned "F**k"

Anyone else have this experience?

27.01.2026 08:50 πŸ‘ 3 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
An artist's impression of a brown dwarf, from NASA/JPL-Caltech.

An artist's impression of a brown dwarf, from NASA/JPL-Caltech.

Brown dwarfs are "failed stars" - they never got enough mass to burn hydrogen in their cores, or at least not enough to supply the energy they radiate away at their surface. But what happens if you add enough mass to a brown dwarf to push it over that threshold in mass? Does it become a star? πŸ”­ πŸ§ͺ 🧡

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 30 πŸ” 8 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 1

In our models we can basically describe it just in terms of the amount of entropy that needs to be filled in (to restart convection) relative to the luminosity (Lnuc) available to do that heating. But we only explored a couple simple accretion histories, so this could well be an oversimplification!

19.01.2026 11:52 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
Figure 3 from the paper. It's a version of the cartoon diagram shown elsewhere in the thread, but made with numerical stellar models. Each model is coloured by its fate, with longer frozen core timescales corresponding to yellower colours, and shorter corresponding to bright pink. The closer the objects end up in this space to a particular locus of points (not shown) where Lnuc=Lsurf, the longer the frozen core lasts.

Figure 3 from the paper. It's a version of the cartoon diagram shown elsewhere in the thread, but made with numerical stellar models. Each model is coloured by its fate, with longer frozen core timescales corresponding to yellower colours, and shorter corresponding to bright pink. The closer the objects end up in this space to a particular locus of points (not shown) where Lnuc=Lsurf, the longer the frozen core lasts.

The accretion history can matter if it takes long enough (>1 Gyr, i.e. the thermal timescale) that the internal state of the star changes during accretion. Otherwise the time that the core remains frozen is set by how close the object ends up to the Lnuc=Lsurf line.

19.01.2026 11:21 πŸ‘ 1 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

Mostly the latter! To unfreeze the core you need to put in enough energy to raise the temperature to the point that convection can resume, and that’s set by how degenerate the core has been allowed to get.

19.01.2026 10:31 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
Preview
Pink Dwarfs and the Paths to Stardom: How Brown Dwarfs Pushed Above the Hydrogen Burning Limit Evolve Brown dwarfs that gain mass through binary interactions may be pushed above the boundary that divides brown dwarfs from low-mass stars: the hydrogen burning limit (HBL). Some of these objects will mak...

For more, including how to actually find these objects, check out the paper arxiv.org/abs/2601.10908! (and recruit Jaime to your PhD program!)

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 9 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
Figure 1 from the paper, showing how the erstwhile brown dwarfs evolve. The coloured arrows represent the paths the different stellar and substellar objects take as they evolve on a plot of mass against ψ, the thermal energy per particle in units of the Fermi energy in the star’s core. Lower values of ψ indicate colder and more degenerate cores. The separately coloured regions and their corresponding outline arrows indicate what direction an object would
move. In the pink region within the parabola, objects have a nuclear luminosity, Lnuc, greater than their surface luminosity, Lsurf and they evolve to the right as their cores heat up. In the blue region, Lsurf > Lnuc, so objects evolve to the left as they radiate more energy than
they generate. The black parabola is where Lnuc = Lsurf . The solid right-hand side of the parabola represents the main sequence; it is stable to perturbations in ψ. The dashed left-hand side is unstable. The lowest mass on the parabola is the hydrogen burning limit, MHBL.
The arrows for the red dwarf and brown dwarf are horizontal as these objects do not change their mass throughout their lives without an outside influence. Maroon, pink, and beige dwarfs begin as brown dwarfs and evolve leftwards until an episode of mass accretion results in them splitting off from the brown dwarf arrow vertically, at least in the case of fast accretion. When accretion has stopped, they then evolve horizontally to the left or right. Maroon dwarfs, like red dwarfs, evolve left and settle on the main sequence. Beige dwarfs end up above the hydrogen burning limit, but outside of the parabola, and so evolve left like a brown dwarf, never reaching the main sequence. A pink dwarf is located inside the parabola when mass has stopped accreting and then evolves to the right to settle on the main sequence. The β€˜frozen cores/plateaus’ region in the parabola is the area in which a subset of our pink dwarf models have a frozen core or luminosity plateau

Figure 1 from the paper, showing how the erstwhile brown dwarfs evolve. The coloured arrows represent the paths the different stellar and substellar objects take as they evolve on a plot of mass against ψ, the thermal energy per particle in units of the Fermi energy in the star’s core. Lower values of ψ indicate colder and more degenerate cores. The separately coloured regions and their corresponding outline arrows indicate what direction an object would move. In the pink region within the parabola, objects have a nuclear luminosity, Lnuc, greater than their surface luminosity, Lsurf and they evolve to the right as their cores heat up. In the blue region, Lsurf > Lnuc, so objects evolve to the left as they radiate more energy than they generate. The black parabola is where Lnuc = Lsurf . The solid right-hand side of the parabola represents the main sequence; it is stable to perturbations in ψ. The dashed left-hand side is unstable. The lowest mass on the parabola is the hydrogen burning limit, MHBL. The arrows for the red dwarf and brown dwarf are horizontal as these objects do not change their mass throughout their lives without an outside influence. Maroon, pink, and beige dwarfs begin as brown dwarfs and evolve leftwards until an episode of mass accretion results in them splitting off from the brown dwarf arrow vertically, at least in the case of fast accretion. When accretion has stopped, they then evolve horizontally to the left or right. Maroon dwarfs, like red dwarfs, evolve left and settle on the main sequence. Beige dwarfs end up above the hydrogen burning limit, but outside of the parabola, and so evolve left like a brown dwarf, never reaching the main sequence. A pink dwarf is located inside the parabola when mass has stopped accreting and then evolves to the right to settle on the main sequence. The β€˜frozen cores/plateaus’ region in the parabola is the area in which a subset of our pink dwarf models have a frozen core or luminosity plateau

They may spend ~a billion years as their core heats up and "unfreezes", while they remain dim on the surface. And naturally, as beige+red dwarfs we call these pink dwarfs.

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 11 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

But there's an interesting intermediate case, where you wait a while but not quite long enough to make it to beige dwarf territory. These things will eventually become stars, but they take their time.

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 6 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
Meme of a guy in a red uniform shirt sweating and deciding between several buttons. The guy has a brown circle obscuring his face and is captioned "Brown Dwarf Gaining Mass". There are three buttons labeled "Pink", "Beige", and "Maroon"

Meme of a guy in a red uniform shirt sweating and deciding between several buttons. The guy has a brown circle obscuring his face and is captioned "Brown Dwarf Gaining Mass". There are three buttons labeled "Pink", "Beige", and "Maroon"

If you add mass early, you basically take a brown dwarf and put it in a region of parameter space that is red dwarf-like. So naturally we call these maroon(~ red+brown) dwarfs. These are basically indistinguishable from ordinary low-mass stars as far as we can tell.

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 8 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
A text meme.
1. Be a brown dwarf
2. Add mass
3. ??????
4. (strikethrough: Profit) Become a star!

A text meme. 1. Be a brown dwarf 2. Add mass 3. ?????? 4. (strikethrough: Profit) Become a star!

But what if you're impatient and add the mass earlier? In a new paper led by University of Canterbury student Jaime Luisi, we run some simulations to find out! arxiv.org/abs/2601.10908

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 6 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

Remarkably, it depends! As brown dwarfs age, their cores get colder and more degenerate, and if you wait long enough to add the mass, the star doesn't ignite, it just remains essentially like a brown dwarf. These things are called beige dwarfs (because they're brown- and white-dwarf like).

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 5 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
An artist's impression of a brown dwarf, from NASA/JPL-Caltech.

An artist's impression of a brown dwarf, from NASA/JPL-Caltech.

Brown dwarfs are "failed stars" - they never got enough mass to burn hydrogen in their cores, or at least not enough to supply the energy they radiate away at their surface. But what happens if you add enough mass to a brown dwarf to push it over that threshold in mass? Does it become a star? πŸ”­ πŸ§ͺ 🧡

19.01.2026 06:40 πŸ‘ 30 πŸ” 8 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 1

Introducing my new service to generate retrospectives: Orpheus

29.12.2025 12:45 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
Preview
a football player with the word patriots on his shirt Alt: An animated gif of a post game interview with a young American football player saying in an animated matter of fact way that β€œThey had us in the first half, not gonna lie” with yellow text along the bottom of the gif saying the same.
27.12.2025 00:05 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

Bad time for it (this week), but I appreciate the sentiment!

24.12.2025 01:52 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

More observations coming soon!

24.12.2025 01:52 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

*and by last week I mean almost 2 weeks ago.

Also, special thanks to my coauthor Harvey, a then-undergrad, now recently-graduated student at UC, who had the courage to pick a risky research project and get the ball rolling!

23.12.2025 14:13 πŸ‘ 6 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
The figure from the linked paper (three panels, each a plot of some quantity vs time in days). Here's an expanded verision of the corresponding caption: 

Non-gravitational accelerations (NGAs) and their corresponding mass loss rates. Top panel: Non-gravitational acceleration from the JPL Small-Body Database or the final line of Table 1 in T. M. Eubanks et al. (2025). Reported errorbars are shown, and extrapolations into the future or prior to October are shown as dashed lines. The figure shows 5 lines, converging on an acceleration of order 10^-8 au per day^2 for 3I/ATLAS.

Middle Panel: NGAs from the top panel are translated into mass loss rates assuming 1 km diameters, with ΞΆ = 0.5 and ρ = 0.5 g cm^βˆ’3. Additionally the JPL Dec 17 solution for other diameters (0.5 km and 2 km) are shown as dotted lines. Data points are from JWST (M. A. Cordiner et al. 2025), SPHEREx (C. M. Lisse et al. 2025), ALMA (N. X. Roth et al. 2025), TRAPPIST-North (E. Jehin et al. 2025), and Swift (Z. Xing et al. 2025). The plot shows a variety of data points scattered around the lines, mostly of order 10^4-10^5 g/s, with the 1 km curves passing close to the data points that measure CO2, and mostly above the other datapoints, depending on the model.

Bottom Panel: CO2 production rates measured by JWST are treated as upper and lower limits, and observations where CO2 is inaccessible are shown as lower limits. Given these constraints, the range of Mdot values and hence diameters for two different reported NGA solutions is shown. The JPL solution is unable to simultaneously fit the upper limit from JWST and the lower limit from TRAPPIST-North. The plot shows the same thing as the middle panel, but with some additional interpretation, namely that some points should be considered upper limits and some lower limits. A red shaded region labelled Eubanks+ Accel shows a range of diameters from 820 to 1050 meters. A gray region labeled JPL Accel shows a diameter of 1100 m.

The figure from the linked paper (three panels, each a plot of some quantity vs time in days). Here's an expanded verision of the corresponding caption: Non-gravitational accelerations (NGAs) and their corresponding mass loss rates. Top panel: Non-gravitational acceleration from the JPL Small-Body Database or the final line of Table 1 in T. M. Eubanks et al. (2025). Reported errorbars are shown, and extrapolations into the future or prior to October are shown as dashed lines. The figure shows 5 lines, converging on an acceleration of order 10^-8 au per day^2 for 3I/ATLAS. Middle Panel: NGAs from the top panel are translated into mass loss rates assuming 1 km diameters, with ΞΆ = 0.5 and ρ = 0.5 g cm^βˆ’3. Additionally the JPL Dec 17 solution for other diameters (0.5 km and 2 km) are shown as dotted lines. Data points are from JWST (M. A. Cordiner et al. 2025), SPHEREx (C. M. Lisse et al. 2025), ALMA (N. X. Roth et al. 2025), TRAPPIST-North (E. Jehin et al. 2025), and Swift (Z. Xing et al. 2025). The plot shows a variety of data points scattered around the lines, mostly of order 10^4-10^5 g/s, with the 1 km curves passing close to the data points that measure CO2, and mostly above the other datapoints, depending on the model. Bottom Panel: CO2 production rates measured by JWST are treated as upper and lower limits, and observations where CO2 is inaccessible are shown as lower limits. Given these constraints, the range of Mdot values and hence diameters for two different reported NGA solutions is shown. The JPL solution is unable to simultaneously fit the upper limit from JWST and the lower limit from TRAPPIST-North. The plot shows the same thing as the middle panel, but with some additional interpretation, namely that some points should be considered upper limits and some lower limits. A red shaded region labelled Eubanks+ Accel shows a range of diameters from 820 to 1050 meters. A gray region labeled JPL Accel shows a diameter of 1100 m.

A little 3I/ATLAS update building on @marshall-eubanks.bsky.social's nice RNAAS from last week. Given its non-grav acceleration and the rate at which it's losing mass, you can work out its size. The answer: a diameter around 1 km, very typical for comets. arxiv.org/abs/2512.18341 πŸ”­ πŸ§ͺ

23.12.2025 13:04 πŸ‘ 65 πŸ” 14 πŸ’¬ 7 πŸ“Œ 3
A long queue of people waiting in a queue on a footpath next to a grassy river bank with various interesting plants, at the Ōtautahi botanical garden. A sign in the foreground directs people in various directions, but the labels are cut off.

A long queue of people waiting in a queue on a footpath next to a grassy river bank with various interesting plants, at the Ōtautahi botanical garden. A sign in the foreground directs people in various directions, but the labels are cut off.

Bit of a queue to see the corpse flower at the Botanical Garden in Ōtautahi

19.12.2025 22:24 πŸ‘ 8 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0