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Nushagak and Mulchatna could soon be a star and exoplanet 255 light-years away

Tyrogthekreeper at English Wikipedia [CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0

A star and planet in the constellation Cassiopeia are about to be named. A Dillingham woman is a semi-finalist to name the celestial bodies after the rivers where she grew up in Bristol Bay.

 

Update Dec. 17, 2019: 

Nushagak and Mulchatna were chosen in the nationwide competition to name the star and exoplanet in the constellation Cassiopeia. The International Astronomical Union's U.S. committee selected the names of the Bristol Bay rivers out of almost 900 entries from around the country. Countries around the world were given a star and exoplanet to name. A full list of approved names can be found on the IAU's website.  

 

Original article Nov. 14, 2019: 

In the constellation Cassiopeia there’s an unnamed start orbited by a colossal gas giant the size of Jupiter, star HD 17156. At 255 light-years away, it’s something astronomers call an exoplanet: a planet that’s outside our solar system. Now, the International Astronomical Union is holding a competition to give them a name — with the public casting votes through November 14for the top three finalists.

One of the 10 semi-finalists is a member of the Curyung Tribal Council in Dillingham. 

“I chose Nushagak and Mulchatna. Because I’m indigenous to this area and I love our way of life here. I grew up fishing, so it meant a lot to me," said Ivory Adajar, a 36-year-old dental assistant who grew up in Dillingham. 

The Nushagak and Mulchatna are salmon-rich rivers that run through the Bristol Bay watershed. Adajar said she chose the Nushagak for the star because it is her home, a place where she commercial fishes for salmon every summer. She chose the Mulchatna for the exoplanet.

“Not only for its interstellar sound, but because it connects to an area of land that’s compromised by mining,” she said, referring to the proposed Pebble Mine, which, if permitted, would be built at the headwaters of the Mulchatna. Critics of the project say it would threaten the area's ecosystem. 

“The fear of losing this wondrous and natural habitat, and path of our only resource of wild salmon — I couldn’t think of a better way to honor my culture and heritage,” Adajar said.

The seven members of the U.S. naming committee chose the semifinalists, after consulting astronomers, students and educators. Those names had to be open-ended enough to inspire names for other undiscovered celestial bodies in the same solar system. Adajar saw that potential in the river systems of Bristol Bay. She also sees parallels between the region’s waterways and the movements of the exoplanet. 

“It described the exoplanet as having a wiggly, eccentric path around the star, which reminded me of the wild salmon that we have here, that also wiggle and have an eccentric path out into the ocean, and come back to these fresh waters,” she said.

Credit Courtesy of NASA
A NASA model of the F-type star HD 17156 and a gas giant exoplanet that orbits it - HD 17156. That exoplanet takes 21.2 days to complete one orbit of its star, and is 0.16278 AU from its star. Its discovery was announced in 2007.

Each country on Earth has been given a star and exoplanet to name. The United Nations designated 2019 as the International Year of Indigenous Languages. Both rivers are on traditional Yup’ik lands. In Yup’ik, the Nushagak’s name is Iilgayaq, and the Mulchatna is Paltcaniq.

Derrick Pitts is the chief astronomer at the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia. He says names should hold cultural, geographic, or historical significance “worthy of being assigned to a celestial object.” 

"The International Astronomical Union is trying to provide guidelines so that the names aren’t frivolous in any way, aren’t already in use, and really have some significant meaning,” he explained. 

Pitts said the distant, sun-like star isn’t particularly remarkable. But he says a naming competition sparks people’s interest in astronomy.

“If there are so many other planets out there, it sort of multiplies the possibility that maybe there is some life elsewhere in the galaxy or elsewhere in the universe," Pitts said. "It’s the whole idea of inviting people to be aware of this kind of astronomical research that’s taking place, that is really expanding our understanding of the universe to such a great degree, and in a sense, to such a personal degree. 

The next phase of the contest will be decided by public poll. Alaskans — and everyone else on Earth with internet access — can vote for their favorite entry online through November 14.  

The top three finalists will advance to the astronomer union’s committee which is expected to announce the winner in December.

Editors note: The U.S. Naming Committee for the International Astronomical Union changed the deadline to vote from 8 p.m. AKST to 11:59 AKST. 

Contact the author at isabelle@kdlg.org or 907-842-2200

Izzy Ross is the news director at KDLG, the NPR member station in Dillingham. She reports, edits, and hosts stories from around the Bristol Bay region, and collaborates with other radio stations across the state.