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  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Solis Lacus: The Eye of Mars

    10/01/2020 6:01:06 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 17 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 1 Oct, 2020 | Image Credit & Copyright: Damian Peach
    Explanation: As telescopes around planet Earth watch, Mars is growing brighter in night skies, approaching its 2020 opposition on October 13. Mars looks like it's watching too in this view of the Red Planet from September 22. Mars' disk is already near its maximum apparent size for earthbound telescopes, less than 1/80th the apparent diameter of a Full Moon. The seasonally shrinking south polar cap is at the bottom and hazy northern clouds are at the top. A circular, dark albedo feature, Solis Lacus (Lake of the Sun), is just below and left of disk center. Surrounded by a light...
  • OSIRIS-REx readies for sample collection, observes strange activity at asteroid Bennu

    10/01/2020 5:58:00 PM PDT · by amorphous · 7 replies
    NASA Spaceflight.Com ^ | 29 September 2020 | Chris Gebhardt
    OSIRIS-REx — an international sample-return mission led by NASA and joined by science team members from Canada, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Italy, and with an instrument provided through the Canadian Space Agency — is less than one month away from performing a Touch-And-Go sample collection maneuver to return portions of asteroid Bennu to Earth. Meanwhile, science teams have observed regular material shedding activity from the near Earth object — an unexpected find that allows scientists to better understand the dynamic little worlds littered throughout the inner solar system.
  • How to watch Northrop Grumman launch a space toilet to the ISS on Thursday

    09/30/2020 8:06:27 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 15 replies
    Digital Trends ^ | September 29, 2020 7:16AM PST | Georgina Torbet
    This Thursday, Northrop Grumman will launch a Cygnus cargo spacecraft to the International Space Station (ISS) carrying not only supplies for the crew, but also new science experiments to be tested out in the microgravity environment. With a total of 8,000 pounds of cargo, the Cygnus will be launched on an Antares rocket from Virginia Space’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport. This will be Northrop Grumman’s 14th resupply mission to the ISS, and you can watch the launch and the arrival of the Cygnus at the ISS live. The launch and the spacecraft’s arrival at the ISS will both be shown on...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Sonified: Eagle Nebula Pillars

    09/30/2020 4:03:29 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 27 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 30 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit: NASA, ESA, & The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA); Sonification: NASA, CXC, SAO, K. A
    Explanation: Yes, but have you ever experienced the Eagle Nebula with your ears ? The famous nebula, M16, is best known for the feast it gives your eyes, highlighting bright young stars forming deep inside dark towering structures. These light-years long columns of cold gas and dust are some 6,500 light-years distant toward the constellation of the Serpent (Serpens). Sculpted and eroded by the energetic ultraviolet light and powerful winds from M16's cluster of massive stars, the cosmic pillars themselves are destined for destruction. But the turbulent environment of star formation within M16, whose spectacular details are captured in this...
  • 5 NASA spacecraft that are leaving our solar system for good

    09/30/2020 2:14:16 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 36 replies
    Astronomy ^ | 28 Sep, 2020 | Eric Betz
    Most of these interstellar spacecraft carry messages intended to introduce ourselves to any aliens that find them along the way. In 1972, NASA hadn't even finished sending Apollo astronauts to the Moon yet when it started launching the first missions that would ultimately wind up in interstellar space. That wasn't the end goal though. Pioneer 10 and 11 were primarily intended to do humanity's first major reconnaisance of other planets in our solar system. Pioneer 10 achieved the first flyby of Mars, the first trip through the asteroid belt, and the first flyby of Jupiter. And the secret to its...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - GW Orionis: A Star System with Tilted Rings

    09/29/2020 3:21:24 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 12 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 28 Sep, 2020 | Animation Illustration Credit: ESO, U. Exeter, S. Kraus et al., L. Calçada
    Explanation: Triple star system GW Orionis appears to demonstrate that planets can form and orbit in multiple planes. In contrast, all the planets and moons in our Solar System orbit in nearly the same plane. The picturesque system has three prominent stars, a warped disk, and inner tilted rings of gas and grit. The featured animation characterizes the GW Ori system from observations with the European Southern Observatory's VLT and ALMA telescopes in Chile. The first part of the illustrative video shows a grand vista of the entire system from a distant orbit, while the second sequence takes you inside...
  • NASA Doubles Down On Nuclear Fusion Ambitions

    09/29/2020 10:05:36 AM PDT · by amorphous · 30 replies
    OilPrice.Com ^ | 28 September 2020 | Jon Lesage
    A team of NASA researchers seeking a new energy source for deep-space exploration missions, recently revealed a method for triggering nuclear fusion in the space between the atoms of a metal solid. Their research was published in two peer-reviewed papers in the top journal in the field, Physical Review C, Volume 101 (April, 2020): “Nuclear fusion reactions in deuterated metals” and “Novel nuclear reactions observed in bremsstrahlung-irradiated deuterated metals.”
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Filaments of the Cygnus Loop

    09/28/2020 5:44:03 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 18 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 28 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, W. Blair; Acknowledgement: Leo Shatz
    Explanation: What lies at the edge of an expanding supernova? Subtle and delicate in appearance, these ribbons of shocked interstellar gas are part of a blast wave at the expanding edge of a violent stellar explosion that would have been easily visible to humans during the late stone age, about 20,000 years ago. The featured image was recorded by the Hubble Space Telescope and is a closeup of the outer edge of a supernova remnant known as the Cygnus Loop or Veil Nebula. The filamentary shock front is moving toward the top of the frame at about 170 kilometers per...
  • For Mark Kelly, Attending Forum Hosted by CCP Was the Beginning of Lucrative Relationship with China [AZ Dem Senate Candidate]

    09/28/2020 10:32:06 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 14 replies
    freebeacon.com ^ | - September 28, 2020 5:00 AM | Yuichiro Kakutani
    Met with top China officials at 2003 Communist-hosted junket The Chinese government invited then-astronaut Mark Kelly, now an Arizona Democratic Senate candidate, to an all-expenses-paid retreat at a countryside resort in 2003. He left China five days later not only with a future spouse, former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D., Ariz.), but also with lucrative regime business contacts. Kelly attended the annual Young Leaders Forum, a five-day junket cohosted by the Chinese People's Institute of Foreign Affairs, which is "under the leadership of the Communist Party of China." The conference allowed Kelly an opportunity to mingle with high-profile Communist Party officials...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Lightning over Colorado

    09/27/2020 5:19:00 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 30 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 27Sep, 2020 | Image Credit & Copyright: Joe Randall
    Explanation: Have you ever watched a lightning storm in awe? Join the crowd. Oddly, details about how lightning is produced remains a topic of research. What is known is that updrafts carry light ice crystals into collisions with larger and softer ice balls, causing the smaller crystals to become positively charged. After enough charge becomes separated, the rapid electrical discharge that is lightning occurs. Lightning usually takes a jagged course, rapidly heating a thin column of air to about three times the surface temperature of the Sun. The resulting shock wave starts supersonically and decays into the loud sound known...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Moon Pairs and the Synodic Month

    09/26/2020 6:50:34 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 11 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 26 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit & Copyright: Marcella Giulia Pace
    Explanation: Observe the Moon each night and its visible sunlit portion will gradually change. In phases progressing from New Moon to Full Moon to New Moon again, a lunar cycle or synodic month is completed in about 29.5 days. They look full, but top left to bottom right these panels do show the range of lunar phases for a complete synodic month during August 2019 from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy, planet Earth. For this lunar cycle project the panels organize images of the lunar phases in pairs. Each individual image is paired with another image separated by about 15 days, or...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day

    09/25/2020 4:16:30 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 9 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 25 Sep, 2020 | Composite Image Credit & Copyright: Adam Block and Tim Puckett
    Explanation: The Great Spiral Galaxy in Andromeda (also known as M31), a mere 2.5 million light-years distant, is the closest large spiral to our own Milky Way. Andromeda is visible to the unaided eye as a small, faint, fuzzy patch, but because its surface brightness is so low, casual skygazers can't appreciate the galaxy's impressive extent in planet Earth's sky. This entertaining composite image compares the angular size of the nearby galaxy to a brighter, more familiar celestial sight. In it, a deep exposure of Andromeda, tracing beautiful blue star clusters in spiral arms far beyond the bright yellow core,...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Enceladus in Infrared

    09/24/2020 4:30:37 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 10 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 24 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit: VIMS Team, SSI, U. Arizona, U. Nantes, CNRS, ESA, NASA
    Explanation: One of our Solar System's most tantalizing worlds, icy Saturnian moon Enceladus appears in these detailed hemisphere views from the Cassini spacecraft. In false color, the five panels present 13 years of infrared image data from Cassini's Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer and Imaging Science Subsystem. Fresh ice is colored red, and the most dramatic features look like long gashes in the 500 kilometer diameter moon's south polar region. They correspond to the location of tiger stripes, surface fractures that likely connect to an ocean beneath the Enceladus ice shell. The fractures are the source of the moon's icy...
  • NASA chief warns Congress about Chinese space station

    09/24/2020 3:18:39 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 25 replies
    Phys.org ^ | 9/24/2020
    NASA chief Jim Bridenstine told lawmakers Wednesday it was crucial for the US to maintain a presence in Earth's orbit after the International Space Station is decommissioned so that China does not gain a strategic advantage. The first parts of the ISS were launched in 1998 and it has been continuously lived in since 2000. The station, which serves as a space science lab and is a partnership between the US, Russia, Japan, Europe and Canada, is currently expected to be operated until 2030. "I'll tell you one thing that has me very concerned—and that is that a day is...
  • Astronauts take shelter as space station dodges orbital junk

    09/23/2020 1:16:44 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 18 replies
    space.com ^ | 09/22/2020 | Mike Wall
    The International Space Station just dodged a fast-moving hunk of orbiting junk. Controllers maneuvered the station away from a potential collision with a piece of debris today (Sept. 22) at 5:19 p.m. EDT (2119 GMT). They did so by firing the thrusters on a Russian Progress cargo spacecraft that's docked to the orbiting lab's Zvezda service module, NASA officials said in an update today. The three astronauts currently living aboard the station — NASA's Chris Cassidy and cosmonauts Anatoli Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner — sheltered in the station's Russian segment during the maneuver to be closer to their Soyuz spacecraft,...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - ISS Transits Mars

    09/23/2020 3:46:16 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 26 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 23 Jun, 2020 | Image Credit & Copyright: Tom Glenn
    Explanation: Yes, but have you ever seen the space station do this? If you know when and where to look, watching the bright International Space Station (ISS) drift across your night sky is a fascinating sight -- but not very unusual. Images of the ISS crossing in front of the half-degree Moon or Sun do exist, but are somewhat rare as they take planning, timing, and patience to acquire. Catching the ISS crossing in front of minuscule Mars, though, is on another level. Using online software, the featured photographer learned that the unusual transit would be visible only momentarily along...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Equinox in the Sky

    09/22/2020 3:10:04 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 11 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 22 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit & Copyright: Luca Vanzella
    Explanation: Does the Sun set in the same direction every day? No, the direction of sunset depends on the time of the year. Although the Sun always sets approximately toward the west, on an equinox like today the Sun sets directly toward the west. After today's September equinox, the Sun will set increasingly toward the southwest, reaching its maximum displacement at the December solstice. Before today's September equinox, the Sun had set toward the northwest, reaching its maximum displacement at the June solstice. The featured time-lapse image shows seven bands of the Sun setting one day each month from 2019...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Omega Sunrise

    09/21/2020 6:35:54 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 7 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 21 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit & Copyright: Juan Antonio Sendra
    Explanation: Capturing this sunrise required both luck and timing. First and foremost, precise timing was needed to capture a sailboat crossing right in front of a rising Sun. Additionally, by a lucky coincidence, the background Sun itself appears unusual -- it looks like the Greek letter Omega (Ω). In reality, the Sun remained its circular self -- the Omega illusion was created by sunlight refracting through warm air just above the water. Optically, the feet of the capital Omega are actually an inverted image of the Sun region just above it. Although somewhat rare, optical effects caused by the Earth's...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Breaking Distant Light

    09/20/2020 1:47:46 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 13 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 20 Sep, 2020 | Image Credit: VIMOS, VLT, ESO
    Explanation: In the distant universe, time appears to run slowly. Since time-dilated light appears shifted toward the red end of the spectrum (redshifted), astronomers are able to use cosmological time-slowing to help measure vast distances in the universe. Featured, the light from distant galaxies has been broken up into its constituent colors (spectra), allowing astronomers to measure the cosmological redshift of known spectral lines. The novelty of the featured image is that the distance to hundreds of galaxies can be measured from a single frame, in this case one taken by the Visible MultiObject Spectrograph (VIMOS) operating at the Very...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Orion in Depth

    09/19/2020 3:49:27 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 12 replies
    APOD.NASA.gov ^ | 19 Sep, 2020 | llustration Credit & Copyright: Ronald Davison
    Explanation: Orion is a familiar constellation. The apparent positions of its stars in two dimensions create a well-known pattern on the bowl of planet Earth's night sky. Orion may not look quite so familiar in this 3D view though. The illustration reconstructs the relative positions of Orion's bright stars, including data from the Hipparcus catalog of parallax distances. The most distant star shown is Alnilam. The middle one in the projected line of three that make up Orion's belt when viewed from planet Earth, Alnilam is nearly 2,000 light-years away, almost 3 times as far as fellow belt stars Alnitak...