Physics at MIT
Department CalendarContact UsSitemapSearch
Faculty
Research

Graduate
Subjects

Undergraduate

Faculty and Staff

News and Events

Alumni and Friends

Research
Subjects
Graduate
Undergraduate
News and Events
Faculty and Staff
Alumni and Friends
Faculty

MIT





FACULTY AND STAFF
JOSHUA N. WINN, Assistant Professor of Physics

jwinn@space.mit.edu

Phone: (617) 258.5928

Fax: (617) 253.9798

Address: Building 37-664D

Related Links:

MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics & Space Research

Research Interests

Planet formation is a venerable physics problem, dating back to Kant and Laplace, who argued that the solar system formed from a spinning disk of gas and dust. Yet it was only in 1995 that astronomers began finding planets around other Sun-like stars ("extrasolar planets"). Finally it has become possible to learn whether our solar system is typical, or unusual, in the context of our entire galaxy.

This topic is interesting on many levels. As a physicist, one wants to understand how matter accumulates into planets, and what is the full range of possible outcomes. Some of the newfound planetary systems have striking unanticipated properties: planets on very eccentric orbits, and giant planets hugging their stars much closer than Mercury does the Sun. From a technological point of view, planet detection is a challenging problem that motivates fascinating and ambitious solutions. And finally, it would be wonderful to make even slight progress on the age-old question of whether there are other planets capable of supporting life.

Professor Winn's research involves observations of young stars and extrasolar planetary systems with optical telescopes (especially the Magellan 6.5m telescopes in Chile), and theoretical model building. His recent work includes high-precision photometry of planetary transits (when planets pass in front of their parent stars); measurements of the alignment between an extrasolar planetary orbit and the rotation axis of its parent star; and theoretical models for the anomalously large planet HD 209458b, and for the peculiar eclipses of the young star KH 15D.

In addition, Prof. Winn is interested in cosmology and galaxy structure. He has used radio observations to detect gravitational lenses, and searches for special cases of lensing in which one can learn about the centers of galaxies, including the supermassive black holes that reside there. He is interested in new techniques and
technologies for radio interferometry that will enable further progress in these areas.

[top]

Biographical Sketch

Josh Winn is from Deerfield, Illinois. He graduated from MIT in 1994 with S.B. and S.M. degrees in physics. After spending a year as a Fulbright Scholar in the UK, at Cambridge University, he returned to MIT as a Hertz Fellow. While in graduate school, he worked in medical physics, condensed-matter physics, and astrophysics, and wrote for the science section of The Economist. He earned a Ph.D. in physics in 2001, and subsequently held NSF and NASA postdoctoral fellowships at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. He begins as an Assistant Professor of Physics at MIT in January 2006.

[top]

Selected Publications

"Obliquity Tides on Hot Jupiters," J.N. Winn and M.J. Holman, Astrophysical Journal (Letters), 628, 159 (2005).

"Measurement of Spin-Orbit Alignment in an Extrasolar Planetary System," J.N. Winn, R.W. Noyes, M.J. Holman, D. Charbonneau, Y. Ohta, A. Taruya, Y. Suto, N. Narita, E.L. Turner, J.A. Johnson, G.W. Marcy, R.P. Butler, and S.S. Vogt, Astrophysical Journal, 631, 1215 (2005).

"KH 15D: Gradual Occultation of a Pre-Main-Sequence Binary," J.N. Winn, M.J. Holman, J.A. Johnson, K.Z. Stanek, and P.M. Garnavich, Astrophysical Journal (Letters), 603, 45 (2004).

"The Central Image of a Gravitationally Lensed Quasar," J.N. Winn, D. Rusin, and C.S. Kochanek, Nature, 427, 613 (2004).

"Omnidirectional Reflection from a One-Dimensional Photonic Crystal," J.N. Winn, Y. Fink, S. Fan, and J.D. Joannopoulos, Optics Letters, 23, 1573 (1998).

[top]