Into the red: an M-band study of the chemistry and rotation of $\beta$ Pictoris b at high spectral resolution

(2024)

Authors:

Luke T Parker, Jayne L Birkby, Rico Landman, Joost P Wardenier, Mitchell E Young, Sophia R Vaughan, Lennart van Sluijs, Matteo Brogi, Vivien Parmentier, Michael R Line

Exploring the directly imaged HD 1160 system through spectroscopic characterization and high-cadence variability monitoring

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 531:1 (2024) 2168-2189

Authors:

Ben J Sutlieff, Jayne L Birkby, Jordan M Stone, Annelotte Derkink, Frank Backs, David S Doelman, Matthew A Kenworthy, Alexander J Bohn, Steve Ertel, Frans Snik, Charles E Woodward, Ilya Ilyin, Andrew J Skemer, Jarron M Leisenring, Klaus G Strassmeier, Ji Wang, David Charbonneau, Beth A Biller

Hot Jupiter diversity and the onset of TiO/VO revealed by a large grid of non-grey global circulation models

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 531:1 (2024) 1056-1083

Authors:

Alexander Roth, Vivien Parmentier, Mark Hammond

Does 'net zero' mean zero cows?

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Taylor & Francis 80:3 (2024) 153-157

Authors:

John Lynch, Raymond Pierrehumbert

Abstract:

A significant share of anthropogenic global warming comes from livestock production. There is debate about whether there can be any role for livestock in a climatically sustainable future; the debate is particularly heated for cows and sheep, largely due to the methane they burp out. However, short-lived gases like methane affect climate in a fundamentally different way than long-lived gases like carbon dioxide. Consequently, climate stabilization does not require zeroing-out cattle herds. But this doesn't mean we can eat our beef and have it (a tolerable climate) too-livestock still contribute to global warming. Preventing or limiting future growth in livestock-related emissions can represent a sensible part of the portfolio of responses to the climate crisis, particularly when carbon dioxide emissions are not on track to reach net zero sufficiently quickly.

Searching for NLTE effects in the high-resolution transmission spectrum of WASP-121 b with cloudy for exoplanets

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 530:4 (2024) 4356-4377

Authors:

ME Young, EF Spring, JL Birkby