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Saturn Is on a Cosmic Dimmer Switch

Saturn Is on a Cosmic Dimmer Switch
Like a cosmic light bulb on a dimmer switch, Saturn emitted gradually less energy each year from 2005 to 2009, as per observations by NASA's Cassini spacecraft. But unlike an ordinary bulb, Saturn's southern hemisphere consistently emitted more energy than its northern one. On top of that, energy levels changed with the seasons and differed from the last time a spacecraft visited in the early part of 1980s. These never-before-seen trends came........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 11/11/2010 7:26:48 AM)


A Galactic Collision in Action

A Galactic Collision in Action
Atoms-for-Peace is the curious name given to a pair of interacting and merging galaxies that lie around 220 million light-years away in the constellation of Aquarius. It is also known as NGC 7252 and Arp 226 and is just bright enough to be seen by amateur astronomers as a very faint small fuzzy blob. This very deep image was produced by ESO's Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile. A........Go to the Astronomy-facts (Added on 11/10/2010 7:28:35 AM)


NASA Extends TIMED Mission for Fourth Time

NASA Extends TIMED Mission for Fourth Time
Nine years after beginning its unprecedented look at the gateway between Earth's environment and space, not to mention collecting more data on the upper atmosphere than any other satellite, NASA's Thermosphere Ionosphere Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics (TIMED) mission has been extended again. Before the launch of TIMED, the mesosphere and lower thermosphere/ionosphere -- which help protect us from harmful solar radiation -- had been one........Go to the Astronomy-news (Added on 11/8/2010 8:03:54 AM)


Deep impact spacecraft flies by comet Hartley 2

Deep impact spacecraft flies by comet Hartley 2
The University of Maryland-led EPOXI mission successfully flew by comet Hartley 2 at 10 a.m. EDT today, and the spacecraft has begun returning images. Hartley 2 is the fifth comet nucleus visited by any spacecraft and the second one visited by the Deep Impact spacecraft. Researchers and mission controllers are studying never-before-seen images of Hartley 2 appearing on their computer terminal screens. See images at: http://epoxi.umd.edu/. ........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 11/5/2010 7:50:32 AM)


Into cosmic mysteries

Into cosmic mysteries
An Ohio State University astronomer is working to unlock some of the mysteries surrounding the formation of vast galaxies and the evolution of massive black holes with his own large constellation of silicon wafers. Over the last year, two research teams led by Stelios Kazantzidis, a Long-Term Fellow at the Center for Cosmology and Astro-Particle Physics (CCAPP) at The Ohio State University, have used what would average out to nearly 1,000........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 10/15/2010 6:49:00 AM)


Disentangle turbulence in the solar wind

Disentangle turbulence in the solar wind
From Earth, the Sun looks like a calm, placid body that does little more than shine brightly while marching across the sky. Images from a bit closer, of course, show it's an unruly ball of hot gas that can expel long plumes out into space but even this isn't the whole story. Surrounding the Sun is a roiling wind of electrons and protons that shows constant turbulence at every size scale: long streaming jets, smaller whirling eddies, and even........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 10/5/2010 7:19:22 AM)


Amazing new sun images

Amazing new sun images
NJIT Distinguished Professor Philip R. Goode and the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) team have achieved "first light" using a deformable mirror in what is called adaptive optics at Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO). Using this equipment, an image of a sunspot was published yesterday on the website of Ciel et l'Espace, as the photo of the day: http://www.cieletespace.fr/node/5752. "This photo of a sunspot is now the most detailed ever........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 8/25/2010 6:54:18 AM)


Dark-matter search plunges

Dark-matter search plunges
This month physicist Juan Collar and his associates are taking their attempt to unmask the secret identity of dark matter into a Canadian mine more than a mile underground. The team is deploying a 4-kilogram bubble chamber at SNOLab, which is part of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory in Ontario, Canada. A second 60-kilogram chamber will follow later this year. Scientists anticipate that dark matter particles will leave bubbles in their tracks........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 8/11/2010 7:31:05 PM)


Refining a cosmic clock

Refining a cosmic clock
Physicists will soon have a better measure of the age of our galaxy, thanks to experiments described in a trio of papers appearing in the journal Physical Review C The papers report on experiments at the CERN neutron time-of-flight (n_TOF) facility and the Karlsruhe Van de Graaff accelerator that clarify the processes that affect the abundance of the element osmium-187. The element is created when rhenium-187 decays. Because rhenium-187 was........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 7/16/2010 7:12:03 AM)


Image of cosmic concoction

Image of cosmic concoction
Strangely shaped dust clouds, resembling spilled liquids, are silhouetted against a colourful background of glowing gas in this newly released Hubble image. The star-forming region NGC 2467 is a vast cloud of gas mostly hydrogen that serves as an incubator for new stars. Some of these youthful stars have emerged from the dense clouds where they were born and now shine brightly, hot and blue in this picture, but a number of others remain........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 7/13/2010 6:53:40 AM)


Widespread Glacial Meltwater Valleys on Mars

Widespread Glacial Meltwater Valleys on Mars
Planetary researchers have uncovered telltale signs of water on Mars - frozen and liquid - in the earliest period of the Red Planet's history. A new claim, made public this month, is that a deep ocean covered some of the northern latitudes. But the evidence for water grows much more scant after the Noachian era, which ended 3.5 billion years ago. Now Brown University planetary geologists have documented running water that sprang from........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 6/24/2010 11:06:16 PM)


Ancient ocean may have covered one-third of Mars

Ancient ocean may have covered one-third of Mars
A vast ocean likely covered one-third of the surface of Mars some 3.5 billion years ago, as per a newly released study conducted by University of Colorado at Boulder scientists. The CU-Boulder study is the first to combine the analysis of water-related features including scores of delta deposits and thousands of river valleys to test for the occurrence of an ocean sustained by a global hydrosphere on early Mars. While the notion of a large,........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 6/13/2010 10:37:28 PM)


Active galaxy's 'smokestack plumes'

Active galaxy's 'smokestack plumes'
If our eyes could see radio waves, the nearby galaxy Centaurus A (Cen A) would be one of the biggest and brightest objects in the sky, nearly 20 times the apparent size of a full moon. What we can't see when looking at the galaxy in visible light is that it lies nestled between a pair of giant radio-emitting gas plumes ejected by its supersized black hole. Each plume is nearly a million light-years long. NASA's Fermi Gamma-Ray Space........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 4/2/2010 7:00:17 AM)


Sharpest view ever of star factories

Sharpest view ever of star factories
Astronomers have combined a natural gravitational lens and a sophisticated telescope array to get the sharpest view ever of "star factories" in a galaxy over 10 billion light-years from Earth. They observed that the distant galaxy, known as SMM J2135-0102, is making new stars 250 times faster than our Galaxy, the Milky Way. They also pinpointed four discrete star-forming regions within the galaxy, each over 100 times brighter than locations........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/22/2010 7:49:10 PM)


Early galaxy went through teenage growth spurt

Early galaxy went through teenage growth spurt
Researchers have found a massive galaxy in the early Universe creating stars like our sun up to 100 times faster than the modern-day Milky Way. The team of international researchers, led by Durham University, described the finding as like seeing "a teenager going through a growth spurt". Due to the amount of time it takes light to reach Earth the researchers observed the galaxy as it would have appeared 10 billion years ago just three........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/22/2010 7:43:18 PM)


White Dwarf Star System Exceeds Mass Limit

White Dwarf Star System Exceeds Mass Limit
An international team led by Yale University has, for the first time, measured the mass of a type of supernova believed to be long to a unique subclass and confirmed that it surpasses what was thought to bean upper mass limit. Their findings, which appear online and will be published in an upcoming issue of the Astrophysical Journal, could affect the way cosmologists measure the expansion of the universe. Cosmologists use Type Ia........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/15/2010 8:08:48 PM)


Mapping the Milky Way

Mapping the Milky Way
At this very moment, tens of thousands of home computers around the world are quietly working together to solve the largest and most basic mysteries of our galaxy. Enthusiastic and inquisitive volunteers from Africa to Australia are donating the computing power of everything from decade-old desktops to sleek new netbooks to help computer researchers and astronomers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute map the shape of our Milky Way galaxy.........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 2/11/2010 8:15:43 AM)


Merging galaxies create a binary quasar

Merging galaxies create a binary quasar
Astronomers have found the first clear evidence of a binary quasar within a pair of actively merging galaxies. Quasars are the extremely bright centers of galaxies surrounding super-massive black holes, and binary quasars are pairs of quasars bound together by gravity. Binary quasars, like other quasars, are believed to be the product of galaxy mergers. Until now, however, binary quasars have not been seen in galaxies that are unambiguously in........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 2/3/2010 2:23:11 PM)


Differences between Ganymede and Callisto

Differences between Ganymede and Callisto
Differences in the number and speed of cometary impacts onto Jupiter's large moons Ganymede and Callisto some 3.8 billion years ago can explain their vastly different surfaces and interior states, as per research by researchers at the Southwest Research Institute appearing online in Nature Geoscience Jan. 24, 2010. Ganymede and Callisto are similar in size and are made of a similar mixture of ice and rock, but data from the Galileo and........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 1/25/2010 12:01:36 AM)


First Comprehensive Sky Map

First Comprehensive Sky Map
Ever since NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer, or IBEX, mission researchers released the first comprehensive sky map of our solar system's edge in particles, solar physicists have been busy revising their models to account for the discovery of a narrow "ribbon" of bright emission that was completely unexpected and not predicted by any model at the time. Further study by a team of researchers funded through NASA's Heliophysics Guest........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 1/13/2010 7:45:29 AM)


 

The globular cluster Messier 107

The globular cluster Messier 107
The globular cluster Messier 107, also known as NGC 6171, is a compact and ancient family of stars that lies about 21 000 light-years away. Messier 107 is a bustling metropolis: thousands of stars in globular clusters like this one are concentrated into a space that is only about twenty times the distance between our Sun and its nearest stellar neighbour, Alpha Centauri, across. A significant number of these stars have already evolved into red........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 12/8/2010 6:58:09 AM)


Giant, Previously Unseen Structure in our Galaxy

Giant, Previously Unseen Structure in our Galaxy
NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has unveiled a previously unseen structure centered in the Milky Way -- a finding likened in terms of scale to the discovery of a new continent on Earth. The feature, which spans 50,000 light-years, appears to be the remnant of an eruption from a supersized black hole at the center of our galaxy. "What we see are two gamma-ray-emitting bubbles that extend 25,000 light-years north and south of the........Go to the Astronomy-news (Added on 11/9/2010 10:40:25 PM)


Secrets of exploding plasma clouds on the sun

Secrets of exploding plasma clouds on the sun
The Sun sporadically expels trillions of tons of million-degree hydrogen gas in explosions called coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Such cloudsan example is shown in Figure 1aare enormous in size (spanning millions of miles) and are made up of magnetized plasma gases, so hot that hydrogen atoms are ionized. CMEs are rapidly accelerated by magnetic forces to speeds of hundreds of kilometers per second to upwards of 2,000 kilometers per second in........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 11/8/2010 7:30:02 AM)


How to Weigh a Star Using a Moon

How to Weigh a Star Using a Moon
How do astronomers weigh a star that's trillions of miles away and way too big to fit on a bathroom scale? In most cases they can't, eventhough they can get a best estimate using computer models of stellar structure. New work by astrophysicist David Kipping says that in special cases, we can weigh a star directly. If the star has a planet, and that planet has a moon, and both of them cross in front of their star, then we can measure their........Go to the Astronomy-facts (Added on 10/18/2010 7:39:58 AM)


Saturn's Icy Moon May Keep Oceans Liquid with Wobble

Saturn's Icy Moon May Keep Oceans Liquid with Wobble
Saturn's icy moon Enceladus should not be one of the most promising places in our solar system to look for extraterrestrial life. Instead, it should have frozen solid billions of years ago. Located in the frigid outer solar system, it's too far from the sun to have oceans of liquid water -- a necessary ingredient for known forms of life -- on its surface. Some worlds, like Mars or Jupiter's moon Europa, give hints that they might harbor........Go to the Astronomy-news (Added on 10/8/2010 7:51:58 AM)


Pulverized Planet Dust

Pulverized Planet Dust
Tight double-star systems might not be the best places for life to spring up, as per a newly released study using data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. The infrared observatory spotted a surprisingly large amount of dust around three mature, close-orbiting star pairs. Where did the dust come from? Astronomers say it might be the aftermath of tremendous planetary collisions. "This is real-life science fiction," said Jeremy Drake of the........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 8/25/2010 6:55:58 AM)


Ancient Galaxy Cluster Still Producing Stars

Ancient Galaxy Cluster Still Producing Stars
Much like quiet, middle-aged baby boomers peacefully residing in some of the world's largest cities, families of some galaxies also have a hidden wild youth that they only now are revealing for the first time, as per research by astronomers at Texas A&M University. In ongoing observations of one of the universe's earliest, most distant cluster of galaxies using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, an international team of scientists led by Texas........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 8/19/2010 7:18:02 AM)


Spotting Stellar Nurseries

Spotting Stellar Nurseries
Astronomers scanning the skies as part of ESO's VISTA Magellanic Cloud survey have now obtained a spectacular picture of the Tarantula Nebula in our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. This panoramic near-infrared view captures the nebula itself in great detail as well as the rich surrounding area of sky. The image was obtained at the start of a very ambitious survey of our neighbouring galaxies, the Magellanic Clouds, and their........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 8/11/2010 7:44:53 PM)


An unusual cosmic lens

An unusual cosmic lens
Astronomers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Ecole Polytechnique Fdrale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland have discovered the first known case of a distant galaxy being magnified by a quasar acting as a gravitational lens. The discovery, based in part on observations done at the W. M. Keck Observatory on Hawaii's Mauna Kea, is being published July 16 in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics Quasars, which are........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 7/16/2010 7:04:25 AM)


Newborn Stars Discovered

Newborn Stars Discovered
A wave of massive star formation appears poised to begin within a mysterious, dark cloud in the Milky Way. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has revealed a secluded birthplace for stars within a wispy, dark cloud named named M17 SWex. The dark cloud is part of the larger, parent nebula known as M17, a vast region of our galaxy with a bright, central star cluster. "We believe we've managed to observe this dark cloud in a very early phase of star........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 7/8/2010 7:02:32 AM)


Zapping Titan-like atmosphere with UV rays

Zapping Titan-like atmosphere with UV rays
The first experimental evidence showing how atmospheric nitrogen can be incorporated into organic macromolecules is being reported by a University of Arizona team. The finding indicates what organic molecules might be found on Titan, the moon of Saturn that researchers think is a model for the chemistry of pre-life Earth. Earth and Titan are the only known planetary-sized bodies that have thick, predominantly nitrogen atmospheres, said........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 6/30/2010 6:42:51 AM)


Was Venus once a habitable planet?

Was Venus once a habitable planet?
ESA's Venus Express is helping planetary researchers investigate whether Venus once had oceans. If it did, it may even have begun its existence as a habitable planet similar to Earth. These days, Earth and Venus seem completely different. Earth is a lush, clement world teeming with life, whilst Venus is hellish, its surface roasting at temperatures higher than those of a kitchen oven. But underneath it all the two planets share many........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 6/24/2010 10:58:59 PM)


Brightest galaxies tend to cluster in busiest parts of universe

Brightest galaxies tend to cluster in busiest parts of universe
For more than a decade, astronomers have been puzzled by bright galaxies in the distant universe that appear to be forming stars at phenomenal rates. What prompted the prolific star creation, they wondered. And what kind of spatial environment did these galaxies inhabit? Now, using a super-sensitive camera/spectrometer on the Herschel Space Observatory, astronomers - including a UC Irvine team led by Asantha Cooray - have mapped the skies as........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 5/21/2010 7:12:57 AM)


Hubble confirms cosmic acceleration

Hubble confirms cosmic acceleration
A group of astronomers [1], led by Tim Schrabback of the Leiden Observatory, conducted an intensive study of over 446 000 galaxies within the COSMOS field, the result of the largest survey ever conducted with Hubble. In making the COSMOS survey, Hubble photographed 575 slightly overlapping views of the same part of the Universe using the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) onboard Hubble. It took nearly 1000 hours of observations. In addition........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/25/2010 7:59:04 PM)


Discovery of a New Planet

Discovery of a New Planet
An international team of scientists, including several who are affiliated with UC Santa Barbara, has discovered a new planet the size of Jupiter. The finding is reported in the March 18 issue of the journal Nature. The planet, called CoRoT-9b, was discovered by using the CoRoT space telescope satellite, operated by the French space agency, The Centre National d'Études Spatiales, or CNES. The newly discovered planet orbits a star similar to........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/17/2010 7:56:56 PM)


Shocking recipe for making killer electrons

Shocking recipe for making killer electrons
Take a bunch of fast-moving electrons, place them in orbit and then hit them with the shock waves from a solar storm. What do you get? Killer electrons. That's the shocking recipe revealed by ESA's Cluster mission. Killer electrons are highly energetic particles trapped in Earth's outer radiation belt, which extends from 12 000 km to 64 000 km above the planet's surface. During solar storms their number grows at least ten times and they can........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/12/2010 8:17:02 AM)


Sample from asteroid 'time capsule'

Sample from asteroid 'time capsule'
Meet asteroid 1999 RQ36, a chunk of rock and dust about 1,900 feet in diameter that could tell us how the solar system was born, and perhaps, shed light on how life began. It also might hit us someday. "This asteroid is a time capsule from before the birth of our solar system," said Bill Cutlip of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., one of the leaders of Goddard's effort to propose a mission called OSIRIS-REx that will........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 3/12/2010 7:24:59 AM)


Student-built satellite

Student-built satellite
A tiny communications satellite designed and built by University of Colorado at Boulder undergraduates has been selected as one of three university research satellites to be launched into orbit in November as part of a NASA space education initiative. The three satellites, dubbed "CubeSats" because of their shape, were built by CU-Boulder, Montana State University and Kentucky Space, which is a consortium of state universities. CubeSats are........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 1/28/2010 12:19:23 AM)


New Research On Star Formation

New Research On Star Formation
"Crazy" and "cool" are two of the words Michigan State University astronomer Megan Donahue uses to describe the two distinct "tails" found on a long tail of gas that is thought to beforming stars where few stars have been formed before. Donahue was part of an international team of astronomers that viewed the gas tail with a very long, new observation made by the Chandra X-ray Observatory and detailed it in a paper published this month in the........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 1/25/2010 8:15:01 AM)


Meteorite hits doctor's office

Meteorite hits doctor's office
Of course, it happened with a doctor’s office, what else? An excerpt from the Washington Post report........Go to the Astronomy-blog (Added on 1/24/2010 11:36:47 PM)



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