GeminiFocus July, 2015 | Page 11

contrast allow probing more distant Sun-like systems than previously possible. GPI provides spectra along with the images, and the results are consistent with a significant water ice component. The complete work will be published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, and a preprint is now available. The observed distribution of older (latetype) stars is consistent with earlier results showing a power law distribution that breaks at a similar radius, though lacking the very sharp drop-off the young stars show. Full results will appear in The Astrophysical Journal, and a preprint is now posted. Finding the Outer Edge of Young Stars Near the Galactic Center Catching Supernovae in Advance The very center of the Milky Way Galaxy contains a number of massive stars — despite either the inhospitable environment for their formation in the vicinity of a supermassive black hole or the short time available for them to relocate there after formation elsewhere. New observations, obtained using the Near-Infrared Integral Field Spectrometer (NIFS) with laser and natural guide star adaptive optics, rule out at least one formation scenario (infall of a young stellar cluster) and help set the physical scale (0.5 parsecs (pc) or 1.6 light-years) for the extent of in situ formation. Morten Støstad (University of Toronto) and colleagues take advantage of NIFS’s spatial resolution, along with the simultaneous spectroscopy it provides, to classify the observed stars. The distribution of early-type (young) stars exhibits a sharp decline at a radius of about 0.5 pc, which is not a limit due to the observations. The earliest observations of supernovae can distinguish among their formation mechanisms. For Type Ia (SN Ia) events, the progenitor white dwarf may be pushed to become a supernova by accretion from a companion or by merger with another white dwarf. Besides being useful to account more fully for the end stages of stellar evolution, understanding the SN Ia mechanism is extremely important in their application to cosmology as standard (or standardizable) light sources. Two new results find evidence for both of these SN Ia formation processes in different examples. In both papers, led by Yi Ciao (California Institute of Technology) and Rob Olling (University of Maryland), observations from Gemini and other ground-based facili- Figure 2. The NIFS image in the K band of one of nine regions analyzed. The field measures 3 arcseconds across and is located about 0.4 pc from the Galactic center. Symbols indicate spectral types: Blue triangles (early); green c