Talvikki Hovatta wants to solve a mystery that has plagued astronomers for decades
Talvikki Hovatta has been awarded a European Research Council Consolidator Grant of €2.37 million. The five-year project will investigate relativistic jets launched by supermassive black holes, which have fascinated the scientific world for a century.
Relativistic jets are among the most extreme and energetic phenomena in the universe. They release huge amounts of energy during their existence, accelerating particles to higher energies than human-made particle accelerators could ever achieve.
Although relativistic jets have been studied for decades, their exact composition remains a mystery. Scientists do not know whether they consist of normal ionised gas, or a mix of matter and anti-matter. To solve the puzzle, the project will analyse the polarisation, or direction of light oscillation, of the light emitted by the jets. Funding from the ERC and a new state-of-the-art multi-frequency receiver at the Metsähovi Radio Observatory may finally provide an answer to this question.
‘The composition of relativistic jets is one of the biggest open questions in the field. The new receiver at the Metsähovi Radio Observatory and the large amount of observing time make our project unique worldwide,’ says Talvikki Hovatta, the project leader. Hovatta is currently a Research Council of Finland Research Fellow at the FINCA – Finnish Centre for Astronomy with ESO at the University of Turku and a visiting researcher at Aalto University.
The European Research Council (ERC) provides funding to leading researchers for pioneering work at the frontiers of science. Aalto University has been successful in these funding calls, where the sole criterion is scientific excellence. The Particle composition in relativistic jets (PARTICLES) project will start in 2025. Hovatta is looking forward to solving the problem of particle composition.
‘This kind of research funding will allow us to make real breakthroughs, and I look forward to seeing what new and perhaps surprising things we learn during the project’ says Hovatta.
Since 2011, Aalto has been awarded a total of 115 million euros in ERC funding for 73 different projects. Currently, there are 25 ongoing ERC projectsat Aalto University, with a total funding of 47 million euros.
More information
Talvikki Hovatta
talvikki.hovatta@utu.fi
Read more news
Responsible entrepreneurship in action: INNOVA Europe Summit brings 11 startup teams ºÚÁÏÍø University
The fourth annual Summit brought INNOVA Europe partner institutions, student startup teams and entrepreneurship ecosystem experts ºÚÁÏÍø University to advance responsible entrepreneurship across Europe.
Aalto-Primo has been updated
Aalto-Primo has been upgraded to a new version.
PulseOn Oy sprung up from the Nokia Bridge Program
In 2011, Nokia Oyj launched its extensive Nokia Bridge Program that aimed to help experts start entrepreneurship and find employment after being laid off. Aalto Startup Center offered business accelerator services to the participants and coached them in innovation and commercial processes.