J
Jon A. Morse
Researcher at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Publications - 48
Citations - 3248
Jon A. Morse is an academic researcher from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Jet (fluid) & Supernova. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 48 publications receiving 3110 citations. Previous affiliations of Jon A. Morse include National Science Foundation & Space Telescope Science Institute.
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Journal ArticleDOI
An abundance of small exoplanets around stars with a wide range of metallicities
Lars A. Buchhave,David W. Latham,Anders Johansen,Martin Bizzarro,Guillermo Torres,Jason F. Rowe,Natalie M. Batalha,William J. Borucki,Erik Brugamyer,Caroline Caldwell,Stephen T. Bryson,David R. Ciardi,William D. Cochran,Michael Endl,Gilbert A. Esquerdo,Eric B. Ford,John C. Geary,Ronald L. Gilliland,Terese T. Hansen,Howard Isaacson,John B. Laird,Philip W. Lucas,Geoffrey W. Marcy,Jon A. Morse,Paul Robertson,Avi Shporer,Avi Shporer,Robert P. Stefanik,Martin Still,Samuel N. Quinn +29 more
TL;DR: Spectroscopic metallicities of the host stars of 226 small exoplanet candidates discovered by NASA's Kepler mission are reported, finding that planets with radii less than four Earth radii form around host stars with a wide range of metallicities (but on average a metallicity close to that of the Sun), whereas large planets preferentially form around stars with higher metallicities.
Journal ArticleDOI
The cosmic origins spectrograph
James C. Green,Cynthia S. Froning,Steve Osterman,Dennis Ebbets,Sara H. Heap,Claus Leitherer,Jeffrey L. Linsky,Blair D. Savage,Kenneth R. Sembach,J. Michael Shull,Oswald H. W. Siegmund,Theodore P. Snow,John R. Spencer,S. Alan Stern,John T. Stocke,Barry Y. Welsh,Stephane Beland,Eric B. Burgh,Charles W. Danforth,Brian A. Keeney,Jason B. McPhate,Steven V. Penton,J. Andrews,K. R. Brownsberger,Jon A. Morse,Erik Wilkinson +25 more
TL;DR: The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) as discussed by the authors is a moderate-resolution spectrograph with unprecedented sensitivity that was installed into the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in May 2009, during HST Servicing Mission 4 (STS-125).
Journal ArticleDOI
The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
James C. Green,Cynthia S. Froning,Steve Osterman,Dennis Ebbets,Sara H. Heap,Claus Leitherer Jeffrey L. Linsky,Blair D. Savage,Kenneth R. Sembach,J. Michael Shull,Oswald H. W. Siegmund,Theodore P. Snow,John R. Spencer,S. Alan Stern,John T. Stocke,Barry Y. Welsh,Stephane Beland,Eric B. Burgh,Charles W. Danforth,Brian A. Keeney,Jason B. McPhate,Steven V. Penton,John Paul Andrews,K. R. Brownsberger,Jon A. Morse,Erik Wilkinson +24 more
TL;DR: The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) as discussed by the authors is a moderate-resolution spectrograph with unprecedented sensitivity that was installed into the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in May 2009, during HST Servicing Mission 4 (STS-125).