Eric Vandernoot, M.S.

Astronomy & Physics Lab Coordinator Florida Atlantic University

  • Boca Raton FL

Eric Vandernoot operates FAU's Astronomical Observatory and teaches courses on Planetary Mechanics and Astronomy.

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Florida Atlantic University

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Biography

Eric Vandernoot teaches courses on Planetary Mechanics and Introduction to Astronomy, and since 2005 he has run the Astronomical Observatory there. FAU's Observatory provides observations to the students taking the university's astronomy classes, hosts field trips from local schools and provides twice a month observations for the general public as well as events of special astronomical interest. He received his M.S. in Physics at FAU, in which his thesis was about Bardeen-Petterson accretion disks about compact massive objects and was published in The Astrophysical Journal. From his role in the observatory, he became concerned about the growing impact of light pollution, so he has been working to educate the public about the problem.

Areas of Expertise

Telescopes
Astronomy
Planetary Mechanics
Light Pollution
Physics

Education

Florida Atlantic University

M.S.

Physics

2005

University of Connecticut

B.S.

Physics

1992

Selected Media Appearances

Strange object spotted in sky likely Trident II ballistic missile

WPTV  online

2021-02-09

WPTV's Janny Rodriguez spoke with Eric Vandernoot, an astronomy and physics lab coordinator at Florida Atlantic University, to learn more.

"The fact that you're seeing people from the Hobe Sound and the Bahamas seeing it simultaneously tells me that it's extremely high up in the sky," Vandernoot said.

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DON’T MISS: Best day, time to see this year’s biggest, brightest full moon

Palm Beach Daily News  online

2019-02-18

“If you are really observant, you might notice a little bit of a difference as far as it being bigger and brighter, but it won’t be starkly apparent,” said Florida Atlantic University astronomy professor Eric Vandernoot.

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Dust from Halley’s comet hits Earth this weekend

Palm Beach Daily News  online

2018-05-04

Florida Atlantic University astronomer Eric Vandernoot said the comet Halley (pronounced hal-ee) is a household name because it can be seen without special equipment and makes an appearance about every 76 years.

“There really isn’t any other short-period comet that is visible to the naked eye,” Vandernoot said. “So when it comes, it gets superstar billing.”

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Selected Articles

Iron-Line Emission as a Probe of Bardeen-Petterson Accretion Disks

The Astrophysical Journal

P. Chris Fragile, Warner A. Miller & Eric Vandernoot

2005

In this work we show that Bardeen-Petterson accretion disks can exhibit unique, detectable features in relativistically broadened emission line profiles. Some of the unique characteristics include inverted line profiles with sharper red horns and softer blue horns and even profiles with more than 2 horns from a single rest-frame line. We demonstrate these points by constructing a series of synthetic line profiles using simple two-component disk models. We find that the resultant profiles are very sensitive to the two key parameters one would like to constrain, namely the Bardeen-Petterson transition radius r_{BP} and the relative tilt \beta between the two disk components over a range of likely values [10 < r_{BP}/(GM/c^2) < 40 ; 15deg < \beta < 45deg]. We use our findings to show that some of the ``extra'' line features observed in the spectrum of the Seyfert-I galaxy MCG--6-30-15 may be attributable to a Bardeen-Petterson disk structure. Similarly, we apply our findings to two likely Bardeen-Petterson candidate Galactic black holes - GRO J1655-40 and XTE J1550-564. We provide synthetic line profiles of these systems using observationally constrained sets of parameters. Although we do not formally fit the data for any of these systems, we confirm that our synthetic spectra are consistent with current observations.

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