News and Events

Wed, Mar 25, 4:00 PM (C215 ESC, and online)
Addressing the Hubble Tension with JWST

The sharp conflict between the current expansion rate of the universe (the Hubble constant, or H0) measured using the local extragalactic distance ladder and the value of H0 derived from the cosmic microwave background has the potential to reveal the presence of additional physics beyond the LCDM standard model of cosmology, so reducing and eliminating sources of systematic uncertainty in the local distance scale is of paramount importance. I will describe our efforts to calibrate the surface brightness fluctuation technique using the tip of the red giant branch to enable measurements of H0 at distances beyond 200 Mpc with JWST while minimizing systematic uncertainties. The results of our TRGB+SBF project are completely independent of the Cepheid+supernova distance ladder and form one of the key components of a new “Distance Network” that has now been used to accurately assess the covariances between various distance measurements and techniques. The Distance Network results reaffirm the reality of the Hubble tension at the 6-sigma level and further reduce the systematic uncertainties on H0, providing evidence that additional physics beyond cold dark matter and traditional dark energy may exist. 

Spiral NGC 1300 and elliptical NGC 1297 are galaxies that lie on the banks of the southern constellation Eridanus (The River). At 70 million light-years distant or more, both are members of the Eridanus Galaxy Cluster. About 100,000 light-years across, at lower left in this sharp, galaxy group photo NGC 1300 is seen face-on with a prominent central bar and grand, sweeping spiral arms. Like other spiral galaxies, including our own barred spiral Milky Way Galaxy, NGC 1300 is thought to have a supermassive central black hole. A contrast in appearance and slightly more distant, NGC 1297 is the roughly spherical large elliptical galaxy near the top of the frame. With little active star formation, elliptical galaxies are composed of older populations of stars and are likely he result of multiple collisions and mergers with spirals.
Temp:  56 °FN2 Boiling:75.9 K
Humidity: 46%H2O Boiling:   368.5 K
Pressure:86 kPaSunrise:7:25 AM
Wind:0 m/s   Sunset:7:41 PM
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This year’s Karl G. Maeser Distinguished Faculty Lecturer, Kent Gee, delivered his forum address on the science of sound and how he and BYU students have contributed to significant research in the acoustics industry.
In July 2025, Drs. Branton Campbell and Harold Stokes (BYU Emeritus Professor) will receive the Kenneth N. Trueblood Award from the American Crystallographic Association for exceptional achievement in computational crystallography.
A group of undergraduate students braved the heat and heights of the ESC roof to install a new weather station. The station is up and running, and will hopefully record data for years to come.

Selected Publications

Scott G Call, Eric G Hintz, Jared Davidson, and Benjamin Boizelle (et al.)

We present medium-resolution near-infrared spectral measurements of the carbon monoxide (CO) and the cyano radical (CN) features in 12 Galactic classical Cepheids. The pulsation periods of our sample range from 5.5 to 69 d, and the stars studied each had five or more near-IR spectral observations. The CO and CN measurements were used to probe CNO abundances of these stars, and elemental abundance values from the literature were used to identify the trends of [C/N] and [O/N] with CN and CO. To put these measurements in context, we performed stellar atmosphere fitting to obtain estimates of stellar parameters, with a primary focus on effective temperature. Our measurements and temperature estimates show that CN is significantly affected by dredge-up of processed material. We provide discussion as to the potential nature of the recently confirmed classical Cepheid, ET Vul, and connect our near-infrared CO measurements to the mid-infrared period–colour–metallicity relation.

William P. Heaps, Anne Elise Packard, Kristina M. McCammon, Tyler P. Green, Joseph P. Talley, Bradley C. Bundy, and Dennis Della Corte

The glomerular filtration barrier poses a significant challenge for circulating proteins, with molecules below ~60–70 kDa facing rapid renal clearance. Endogenous proteins have evolved sophisticated evasion mechanisms including oligomerization, carrier binding, electrostatic repulsion, and FcRn-mediated recycling. Understanding these natural strategies provides blueprints for engineering therapeutic proteins with improved pharmacokinetics. This review examines how endogenous proteins resist filtration, evaluates their application in protein engineering, and discusses clinical translation including established technologies (PEGylation, Fc-fusion) and emerging strategies (albumin-binding domains, glycoengineering). We address critical challenges of balancing half-life extension with tissue penetration, biological activity, and immunogenicity—essential considerations for the rational design of next-generation therapeutics with optimized dosing and enhanced efficacy.

The AGN Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping (STORM) 2 campaign targeted Mrk 817 with intensive multiwavelength monitoring and found its soft X-ray emission to be strongly absorbed. We present results from 157 near-IR spectra with an average cadence of a few days. Whereas the hot dust reverberation signal as tracked by the continuum flux does not have a clear response, we recover a dust reverberation radius of ∼90 lt-days from the blackbody dust temperature light curve. This radius is consistent with previous photometric reverberation mapping results when Mrk 817 was in an unobscured state. The heating/cooling process we observe indicates that the inner limit of the dusty torus is set by a process other than sublimation, rendering it a luminosity-invariant “dusty wall” of a carbonaceous composition. Assuming thermal equilibrium for dust optically thick to the incident radiation, we derive a luminosity of ∼6 × 1044 erg s−1 for the source heating it. This luminosity is similar to that of the obscured spectral energy distribution, assuming a disk with an Eddington accretion rate of . Alternatively, the dust is illuminated by an unobscured lower luminosity disk with , which permits the UV–optical continuum lags in the high-obscuration state to be dominated by diffuse emission from the broad-line region. Finally, we find hot dust extended on scales ≳ 140–350 pc, associated with the rotating disk of ionised gas we observe in spatially resolved [S III] λ9531 images. Its likely origin is in the compact bulge of the barred spiral host galaxy, where it is heated by a nuclear starburst.

Volume 1 of the FCC Feasibility Report presents an overview of the physics case, experimental programme, and detector concepts for the Future Circular Collider (FCC). This volume outlines how FCC would address some of the most profound open questions in particle physics, from precision studies of the Higgs and EW bosons and of the top quark, to the exploration of physics beyond the Standard Model. The report reviews the experimental opportunities offered by the staged implementation of FCC, beginning with an electron-positron collider (FCC-ee), operating at several centre-of-mass energies, followed by a hadron collider (FCC-hh). Benchmark examples are given of the expected physics performance, in terms of precision and sensitivity to new phenomena, of each collider stage. Detector requirements and conceptual designs for FCC-ee experiments are discussed, as are the specific demands that the physics programme imposes on the accelerator in the domains of the calibration of the collision energy, and the interface region between the accelerator and the detector. The report also highlights advances in detector, software and computing technologies, as well as the theoretical tools/reconstruction techniques that will enable the precision measurements and discovery potential of the FCC experimental programme. The content and structure of this report are guided by the scope and priorities defined in the mandate of the FCC Feasibility Study. It is therefore not intended to serve as an exhaustive review of the full physics potential of FCC. Several topics, already covered in earlier reports such as the FCC CDR, are not reiterated here or are addressed only briefly, in alignment with the study’s focus. This volume reflects the outcome of a global collaborative effort involving hundreds of scientists and institutions, aided by a dedicated community-building coordination, and provides a targeted assessment of the scientific opportunities and experimental foundations of the FCC programme.

Micah R. Shepherd, Carson F. Cunningham, and Kent L. Gee

In August 2023, the Antares 230 launched successfully for the NG-19 resupply mission to the International Space Station. Acoustic measurements were taken at various locations around the launch pad, ranging from 60 to 200 m away from the vehicle. The analysis focused on azimuthal and polar angles to investigate the vehicle’s sound directivity during the launch. Spectral data were evaluated as functions of frequency, angular position around the pad, and orientation relative to the vehicle. A spatio-spectral analysis was conducted to interpret the data effectively. Initial findings reveal that maximum sound levels are associated with wider angles relative to the plume for stations closer to the source. The peak frequency at all stations was observed to be between 20 and 60 Hz, which is common for vehicles of this size. Although proximity to the rocket complicates distinguishing between angles, making directivity analysis challenging, a spatio-spectral analysis best reveals the spectral features of the noise.