(Press-News.org) COLUMBUS, Ohio – Adam Leroy, a professor of astronomy at The Ohio State University, has been named the recipient of the 2025 Henry Draper Medal.
The oldest medal awarded by the National Academy of Sciences, the Henry Draper Medal celebrates those who have made “a recent, original investigation in astronomical physics, of sufficient importance and benefit to science to merit such recognition.” It is awarded every four years.
Leroy’s work was selected for pathbreaking efforts that have characterized, “in unprecedented detail, the physical nature of the interstellar medium and its relationship to star formation in nearby galaxies.”
“We are thrilled that the National Academy of Sciences has recognized Professor Leroy with the Henry Draper Medal,” said David Horn, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Ohio State.
“His pioneering contributions have advanced our understanding of the composition and history of the universe, and this prestigious award further enhances the reputation of our outstanding Department of Astronomy.”
The interstellar medium that Leroy studies is the gas and dust between stars. This material fills the space in galaxies, and often contains primordial leftovers from the beginnings of the universe. Because it is the fuel from which future stars are born and a complex ecosystem that links past and future generations of stars, the interstellar medium is a crucial research target for many fields of astronomy.
“Understanding how cosmic ecosystems evolve is a big topic in astronomy right now,” Leroy said. “Because of technology made available to us in only the last five to 10 years, we’ve been able to bring this topic into focus, making new observations that finally answer questions we’ve had for decades.
Using special telescopes to study all sorts of light, especially radio and infrared light, allows scientists to peer into the interstellar medium directly, said Leroy. Before coming to Ohio State, Leroy worked at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, which operates the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and Very Large Array (VLA) Radio Telescope facilities.
It was there that he began harnessing cutting-edge technology to conduct studies on molecular gas and star formation in galaxies. This led to him co-founding the PHANGS-ALMA project, now widely recognized as the first systematic survey of the many stellar nurseries and galaxies that dot our sky.
“Lots of people do surveys of one galaxy or a small part of our Milky Way using one type of light and get a ton of detail, but miss the big picture,” said Leroy. “With PHANGS, we have worked to line up all the best telescopes in the world on a representative set of galaxies in order to take pictures of the entire cosmic ecosystem.”
While scientists in the past could only obtain blurred or indistinct pictures of the gas and dust in faraway galaxies, today these same structures can be seen with remarkable detail.
By combining the ALMA radio array with powerful instruments like the Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope, the PHANGS-ALMA project has mapped the gas, dust and newly born stars for more than 100,000 stellar nurseries across nearly 100 galaxies, providing a new generation of astrophysicists with an in-depth view of the area where stars and planets form.
“What we've done is build an observational basis that informs how we go from a cosmos full of just spread-out hydrogen gas to the cosmos full of stars and galaxies we see around us,” Leroy said. “Our observations get at the core physics behind how galaxies turn their gas into stars.”
Many previous recipients of the Henry Draper Medal have a record of continued achievements in their fields: Six recipients have been honored with a National Medal of Science, while nine recipients have gone on to win the Nobel Prize in Physics.
“This medal feels very validating for the impact of this work that our team has done,” Leroy said. "Studying the interstellar medium and star formation is important to many fields, but sometimes it can be under-the-hood research. So it’s neat to see it catching people’s imagination at the same level as black holes and pulsars.”
Recipients also receive a cash prize of $25,000, which Leroy plans to use to bolster further collaboration with international colleagues, including other members of the PHANGS-ALMA team. Leroy praised the collaborative and supportive scientific environment at Ohio State for helping him win the award.
“Ohio State’s astronomy department is world-famous for its invigorating, supportive atmosphere,” he said. “This is an amazing place to do cutting-edge research.”
#
Contact: Adam Leroy, Leroy.42@osu.edu
Written by: Tatyana Woodall, Woodall.52@osu.edu
END
Non-white communities had significantly less access to opioid medications commonly prescribed for moderate to severe pain than white communities over the decade beginning in 2011, according to a study by Weill Cornell Medicine researchers.
The findings, published Jan. 23 in Pain, stretched across all socioeconomic groups, and suggest that communities of color may be especially vulnerable to the unintended consequences of efforts to reduce unsafe use of opioid analgesics.
From 2011 to 2021, prescription opioid use dropped by about 50% ...
The prevalence of diagnosed disorders from recurrent use of sedative, hypnotic and antianxiety medications in adolescents and young adults has increased sharply since 2001, according to Rutgers Health researchers.
Their study, published in Addiction, examined diagnoses of these disorders in adolescents and young adults between 2001 to 2019.
Sedative, hypnotic and antianxiety medications are used to treat a variety of conditions, including sleep and anxiety disorders. According to Harvard Health, consistent use of these drugs can lead to a higher tolerance for their effects, meaning patients require higher doses to achieve the intended effects.
For ...
A recent study by researchers from Peking University demonstrates the potential of nuclear electric resonance to control the nuclear spins of nitrogen atoms in DNA using electric field gradients, thereby achieving artificial intervention to manipulate DNA for computation. Utilizing molecular dynamics simulations, quantum chemical computations and theoretical analyses, the research reveals how electric field gradient orientation patterns vary with DNA bases and nitrogen atom sites, encoding genetic and structural information into the direction of nitrogen nuclear spins. The research was published Dec. 12 in Intelligent Computing, a Science Partner ...
“It has been postulated that the clinical benefit of adding POM results from enhanced immunocompetency.”
BUFFALO, NY - January 23, 2025 – A new editorial was published in Oncoscience’s Volume 12 on January 14, 2025, titled “Pomalidomide improved immune profiles in myeloma."
The editorial by researchers Hannah Seah, Vaishnavi Reddy Bade, Lakshmi Bhavani Potluri, Srikanth Talluri, and Rao H. Prabhala from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, VA Boston Healthcare System, and Harvard Medical School, discuss how the drug pomalidomide (POM) can help improve the immune system ...
The PREPSOIL project, a pivotal initiative within the EU's Mission Soil framework, will host an engaging webinar on February 13, 2025, focusing on the importance of soil literacy among young people. The event highlights the vital connection between young citizens and soil health, offering educators innovative ways to integrate soil-related topics into their curriculum.
As part of the Mission Soil's eight goals, increasing soil literacy across Member States aims to foster greater awareness, involvement, and proactive behavior toward soil health. By embedding soil health education in school curriculums, the initiative seeks to empower the next generation to take informed ...
WASHINGTON, Jan. 23, 2025 – Many science fiction authors try to incorporate scientific principles into their work, but Ian Tregillis, who is a contributing author of the Wild Cards book series when he’s not working as a physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, took it one step further: He derived a formula to describe the dynamics of the fictional universe’s viral system.
In independent research published in the American Journal of Physics, from AIP Publishing, Tregillis and George R.R. Martin derive a formula for viral behavior in the Wild Cards universe.
Wild Cards is a science fiction series written by a collection of authors and ...
The remains of the earliest dinosaurs may lie undiscovered in the Amazon and other equatorial regions of South America and Africa, suggests a new study led by UCL (University College London) researchers.
Currently, the oldest known dinosaur fossils date back about 230 million years and were unearthed further south in places including Brazil, Argentina and Zimbabwe. But the differences between these fossils suggest dinosaurs had already been evolving for some time, pointing to an origin millions of years earlier.
The new study, published in the journal Current Biology, accounted for gaps in ...
About The Study: The results of this retrospective cohort study of 44,000 individuals suggest that fasting plasma glucose level, age, body mass index (BMI), and male sex were all associated with development of diabetes, with significant interaction between these variables. These data contribute to understanding the clinical course of diabetes and highlight the substantial individual variation in diabetes risk according to commonly measured clinical variables. The findings facilitate lifestyle and pharmacologic interventions to treat those at highest risk of diabetes to reduce future morbidity and mortality. Further work is needed to validate this risk ...
About The Study: In this cohort study, food insecurity in pregnancy was associated with a higher risk of perinatal complications, and these associations were overall attenuated to the null among individuals who received food assistance in pregnancy. These findings support clinical guidelines of screening for food insecurity in pregnancy and provide evidence to expand food assistance programs that may help improve maternal and neonatal outcomes.
Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Rana F. Chehab, PhD (Rana.Chehab@kp.org) and Yeyi ...
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study, in-home cannabis smoking was associated with significantly increased odds of child exposure to cannabis smoke, as assessed by urinary cannabinoid biomarkers. As young children spend most of their time at home, reducing in-home cannabis smoking could substantially reduce their exposure to the toxic and carcinogenic chemicals found in cannabis smoke.
Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Osika Tripathi, PhD (otripath@health.ucsd.edu) and ...