News and Events

Wed, Feb 11, 4:00 PM (C215 ESC, and online)
Examining the Evidence that our Universe was Designed

Dr. Miller will describe the evidence of design associated with the laws of nature and our planet. He will explain how the laws of physics were carefully fine-tuned for life and why multiverse theories do not explain the evidence for design away. We will also explain how the design in the laws of physics works in concert with the design of our planet to allow for high-resolution vision and technological advancement.

The views expressed in this colloquium do not necessarily reflect the views of the university or its sponsoring institution.

Wed, Feb 11, 6:00 PM (206 MARB, and online)
The Collapse of Secular Theories on Life’s Origin and the Evidence for Design in Life

Dr. Miller will explain how research into life’s origin over the past several decades has demonstrated that life could not have arisen through a natural process. Instead, the engineering behind the simplest possible cell points to a designer far superior to human engineers. 

The views expressed in this colloquium do not necessarily reflect the views of the university or its sponsoring institution.

How many sunspots can you see? The central image shows the many sunspots that occurred in 2025, month by month around the circle, and all together in the grand central image. Each sunspot is magnetically cooled and so appears dark -- and can last from days to months. Although the featured images originated from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, sunspots can be easily seen with a small telescope or binoculars equipped with a solar filter. Very large sunspot groups like recent AR 4366 can even be seen with eclipse glasses. Sunspots are still counted by eye, but the total number is not considered exact because they frequently change and break up. Last year, 2025, coincided with a solar maximum, the period of most intense magnetic activity during its 11-year solar cycle. Our Sun remains unpredictable in many ways, including when it ejects solar flares that will impact the Earth, and how active the next solar cycle will be.
Temp:  55 °FN2 Boiling:75.9 K
Humidity: 45%H2O Boiling:   368.5 K
Pressure:86 kPaSunrise:7:25 AM
Wind:2 m/s   Sunset:5:57 PM
Precip:0 mm   Sunlight:116 W/m²  
Using data from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, a new study suggests that an object previously thought to be a binary system may be a rare triple system of orbiting bodies.
Dr. Gus Hart received the 2024 Karl G. Maeser Research and Creative Arts Award for his work in computational material science and his continued innovation in computational methods.

Selected Publications

Mark C. Anderson and Kent L. Gee

When the SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket booster descends through the atmosphere after a launch, it produces a sonic boom with three shocks in the far field, rather than the usual two-shock N-wave. In this Letter, the additional shock's origin is explained using sonic boom theory, nonlinear propagation modeling, computational fluid dynamics, and photographic evidence. The extra central shock results from a forward-migrating compression wave caused by the grid fins merging with a rearward-migrating rarefaction wave caused by the lower portions of the booster, including the folded landing legs.

Kent L. Gee, Noah L. Pulsipher, Makayle S. Kellison, Grant W. Hart, Logan T. Mathews, and Mark C. Anderson

his Letter analyzes launch noise from Starship Super Heavy's Flights 5 and 6. While Flight-5 data covered 9.7-35.5 km, the stations during Flight 6 spanned 1.0-35.5 km. A comparison of A-weighted and unweighted maximum and exposure levels is made between flights and with an updated environmental assessment (EA). Key findings include: (a) the two flights' noise levels diverge beyond 10 km, (b) EA models overestimate A-weighted metrics, and (c) the acoustic energy from a Starship launch is equivalent to 2.2 Space Launch System launches or ∼11 Falcon 9 launches. These measurements help predict Starship's noise levels around Kennedy Space Center.

Samuel D. Bellows, Joseph E. Avila, and Timothy W. Leishman

The directional radiation patterns of musical instruments have long been defining characteristics known to influence their perceived qualities. Technical understanding of musical instrument directivities is essential for applications such as concert hall design, auralizations, and recording microphone placements. Nonetheless, the difficulties in measuring sound radiation from musician-played instruments at numerous locations over a sphere have severely limited their directivity measurement resolutions compared to standardized loudspeaker resolutions. This work illustrates how a carefully implemented multiple-capture transfer-function method adapts well to played musical instrument directivities and achieves compatible resolutions. Comparisons between a musician-played and artificially excited trumpet attached to a mannikin validate the approach’s effectiveness. The results demonstrate the trumpet’s highly directional characteristics at high frequencies and underscore the crucial effects of musician diffraction. Spherical spectral analysis reveals that standardized resolutions may only be sufficient to produce valid complex-valued directivities up to nearly 4 kHz, emphasizing the need for high-resolution, played musical instrumentdirectivity measurements.

Scott Bergeson, Matthew Schlitters, Matthew Miller, Ben Farley, and Devin Sieverts (et al.)

Understanding how plasmas thermalize when density gradients are steep remains a fundamental challenge in plasma physics, with direct implications for fusion experiments and astrophysical phenomena. Standard hydrodynamic models break down in these regimes, and kinetic theories make predictions that have never been directly tested. Here, we present the first detailed phase-space measurements of a strongly coupled plasma as it evolves from sharp density gradients to thermal equilibrium. Using laser-induced fluorescence imaging of an ultracold calcium plasma, we track the complete ion distribution function f(x,v,t)⁠. We discover that commonly used kinetic models (Bhatnagar–Gross–Krook and Lenard–Bernstein) overpredict thermalization rates, even while correctly capturing the initial counterstreaming plasma formation. Our measurements reveal that the initial ion acceleration response scales linearly with electron temperature, and that the simulations underpredict the initial ion response. In our geometry we demonstrate the formation of well-controlled counterpropagating plasma beams. This experimental platform enables precision tests of kinetic theories and opens new possibilities for studying plasma stopping power and flow-induced instabilities in strongly coupled systems.

Maia A Nelsen, Darin Ragozzine, Benjamin C. N. Proudfoot, and William G. Giforos (et al.)

Dynamically studying trans-Neptunian object (TNO) binaries allows us to measure masses and orbits. Most of the known objects appear to have only two components, except (47171) Lempo, which is the single known hierarchical triple system with three similar-mass components. Though hundreds of TNOs have been imaged with high-resolution telescopes, no other hierarchical triples (or trinaries) have been found among solar system small bodies, even though they are predicted in planetesimal formation models such as gravitational collapse after the streaming instability. By going beyond the point-mass assumption and modeling TNO orbits as non-Keplerian, we open a new window into the shapes and spins of the components, including the possible presence of unresolved "inner" binaries. Here we present evidence for a new hierarchical triple, (148780) Altjira (2001 UQ18), based on non-Keplerian dynamical modeling of the two observed components. We incorporate two recent Hubble Space Telescope observations, leading to a 17 yr observational baseline. We present a new open-source Bayesian point-spread function fitting code called nPSF that provides precise relative astrometry and uncertainties for single images. Our non-Keplerian analysis measures a statistically significant (∼2.5σ) nonspherical shape for Altjira. The measured J2 is best explained as an unresolved inner binary, and an example hierarchical triple model gives the best fit to the observed astrometry. Using an updated non-Keplerian ephemeris (which is significantly different from the Keplerian predictions), we show that the predicted mutual event season for Altjira has already begun, with several excellent opportunities for observations through ∼2030.

This research describes the changes made to a physics course for preservice elementary teachers during the COVID-19 pandemic and their efforts to engage in constructing scientific explanations in virtual learning. The preservice teachers engaged in three types of virtual labs: simulations, video analysis, and observations. We evaluated the participants’ performance in constructing scientific explanations with a Level of Sophistication rubric scoring engagement from novice to expert levels. We collected data from three cohorts: 2019 (pre-pandemic) and 2020–21 (mid-pandemic), in the form of course documents, interviews, and student lab submissions. We analyzed the data using a-priori and open coding methods as well as applying descriptive statistics and a series of ANOVA tests to the rubric results. We found that the participants (new to science practice) on average engaged at an intermediate level, but were more sophisticated when they used reasoning that included scientific models, theory, or mathematical thinking. Students can successfully engage in constructing explanations in virtual contexts when provided with opportunities to collect their own data through virtual experimentation. This is especially true when scaffolding is in place to prompt sensemaking. The reasoning in their explanations provides a glimpse at the mental models that drive their reasoning and sensemaking.