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Planet Formation at Solar System Scales with the James Webb Space Telescope (2023-2026)

Abstract

Planetary systems like our own form within vast disks of primordial gas and dust around newborn stars. This project will observe such disks spanning a range of ages with the James Webb Space Telescope to reveal the detailed in-situ physics of planet-forming disks themselves. We will deliver the sharpest -ever infrared images in astronomy, exploiting the only Australian-designed instrument on the spacecraft: the Aperture Masking Interferometer. This yields new physics for actively growing protoplanets, carved rings and gaps in disks, and gravitationally sculpted patterns of leftover cometary debris. Confronting state-of-the -art models with these data will immediately yield profound insights into planetary system formation, including our own.

Experts

Dr Benjamin Pope

UQ Amplify Senior Lecturer
Physics
Faculty of Science
Lecturer in Astrophysics
School of Mathematics and Physics
Faculty of Science
Benjamin Pope
Benjamin Pope