George's Random Astronomical Object
George's Random Astronomical Object
George Bendo
George's Random Astronomical Object is a biweekly astronomy podcast featuring science discussions about astronomical objects at randomly selected locations in the sky. The wide range of topics discussed in the show include stars, variable stars, variable variable stars, supermassive black holes, ultracool dwarf stars, exoplanets, howler monkeys, infrared radiation, acronyms, more acronyms, starbursts, measurements of less than 12 parsecs, jellyfish galaxies, diffuse ionized gas, and general overall weirdness.
Object 178: As Flat as the Argentinian Pampas
The Fourcade-Figueroa Galaxy is another example of a very flat disk galaxy seen edge-on from Earth, but that's not the only thing that makes this galaxy unusual.
Jun 22
8 min
Object 177: Low
The gravitationally lensed quasar SBS 1520+530 has been used in a unique way to measure the Hubble constant, but the derived value is rather low.
Jun 8
10 min
Object 176: The Star Hidden Behind the Interstellar Equivalent of Complicated Tax Forms
HD 210121 is a fairly ordinary blue star located behind a relatively thick cloud of interstellar gas and dust, providing astronomers with a unique opportinity to study that dust.
May 25
7 min
Object 175: Counterintuitive Supernova Explosions
The Cepheus Flare is a nearby regions where a series of supernova explosions have counterintuitively triggered the formation of stars.
May 11
9 min
Object 174: Toy Exoplanets
The red dwarf TOI-700 has at least four exoplanets orbiting it, and two of them are Earth-sized exoplanets lying within the star system's habitable zone.
Apr 27
10 min
Object 173: The Hot Calibrator
G191-B2B is a hot white dwarf with a layer of nearly pure oxygen that has been used as a flux calibration source for one particularly famous telescope.
Apr 13
10 min
Object 172: Lego Minifigures with Masers
VY Canis Majoris is not only much, much larger than the Sun but is also ejecting blobs of gas that are forming molecules and dust.
Mar 30
9 min
Object 171: Guess Again
3C 324 was once identified as a possible gravitational lens where one galaxy was bending the light from a galaxy behind it, but it turned out to be something different.
Mar 16
8 min
Object 170: Don't Forget the Feedback
NGC 2639 may look like an ordinary spiral galaxy, but it contains an active galactic nucleus with jets of gas that have emerged from that nucleus in four different directions, which is, to use the technical term, quite weird.
Mar 2
8 min
Object 169: No Longer a Suspect
LGS 3 (also known as the Pisces Dwarf Galaxy) is a nearby but faint dwarf galaxy that has provided some interesting clues as to how stars formed in the early universe.
Feb 16
9 min
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