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Juxi Leitner

'Time telescope' could boost fibre-optic communication - tech - 28 September 2009 - New... - 0 views

  • "A time lens is essentially like an optical lens," says Foster. An optical lens can deflect a light beam into a much smaller area of space; a time lens deflects a section of a light beam into a smaller chunk of time.
Joris _

Up telescope! Search begins for giant new planet - 1 views

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    well, he kind-of falls into his own trap: confusing/discussing "evidence" with "likelihood", and "there is" with "it may". He should have made more efforts in his writing, what he says is a bit pointless! (just put the Icarus' paper)
jmlloren

Experimental verification of the feasibility of a quantum channel between space and Earth - 0 views

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    Extending quantum communication to space environments would enable us to perform fundamental experiments on quantum physics as well as applications of quantum information at planetary and interplanetary scales. Here, we report on the first experimental study of the conditions for the implementation of the single-photon exchange between a satellite and an Earth-based station. We built an experiment that mimics a single photon source on a satellite, exploiting the telescope at the Matera Laser Ranging Observatory of the Italian Space Agency to detect the transmitted photons. Weak laser pulses, emitted by the ground-based station, are directed toward a satellite equipped with cube-corner retroreflectors. These reflect a small portion of the pulse, with an average of less-than-one photon per pulse directed to our receiver, as required for faint-pulse quantum communication. We were able to detect returns from satellite Ajisai, a low-Earth orbit geodetic satellite, whose orbit has a perigee height of 1485 km.
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    hello Jose! Interesting it was proposed to do the same with the ISS as part of the ACES experiment. I don't remember the paper but i can look if you're interested
LeopoldS

Telescopic contact lenses could magnify human eyesight | Science/AAAS | News - 1 views

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    might look a bit scary ...
darioizzo2

ESA - Telescope-peering AI challenged to spot mystery space objects - 0 views

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    spotGEO competition ... spread the news!
pablo_gomez

The Webb Space Telescope Will Rewrite Cosmic History. If It Works. - 0 views

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    A nice look back into how JWST came to be and what it's all about. :)
jcunha

Achieving the ultimate optical resolution by breaking Rayleigh's criterion - 1 views

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    The Rayleigh criterion specifies the minimum separation between two incoherent point sources that may be resolved into distinct objects. Here, a strategy to break the limits of this criterion for the first time, some small allusion to telescopic systems.
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    Can it also be applied for infrared imagery?
Ma Ru

Here come gravitational waves - 3 views

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    Here you go. You can now scrap Lisa altogether. Who's going to tell Pacome?
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    Awesome and exciting stuff indeed! The data pinpoint the time when inflation occurred - about 10E-37 seconds into the Universe's life - and its temperature at the time, corresponding to energies of about 10E16 gigaelectronvolts, says cosmologist Michael Turner of the University of Chicago. That is the same energy at which three of the four fundamental forces of nature - the weak, strong and electromagnetic force - are expected to become indistinguishable from one another in a model known as the grand unified theory. I expect more fundamental physics insights to come out of this in the future. A full-sky survey from space may still be an interesting addition to the measurement capabilities, so I would not rule out LISA all together I guess...
Thijs Versloot

Telescope to track space junk using youth radio station - 0 views

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    Team leader Professor Steven Tingay, Director of the MWA at Curtin University and Chief Investigator in the Australian Research Council Centre for All-sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) said the MWA will be able to detect the space junk by listening in to the radio signals generated by stations including popular youth network Triple J.
Thijs Versloot

ISEE-3 Reboot Project - Recovering an satellite from deep space by crowdsourcing @Spac... - 3 views

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    "A band of space hackers and engineers are trying to do something never done before - recover a 36 year old NASA spacecraft from the grips of deep space and time. With old NASA documents and Rockethub crowdfunding, a team led by Dennis Wingo and Keith Cowing is attempting to steer ISEE-3, later rechristened ICE, the International Cometary Explorer, back into an Earth orbit and return it to scientific operations. Dennis says, 'ISEE-3 can become a great teaching tool for future engineers and scientists helping with design and travel to Mars'. Only 40 days remain before the spacecraft will be out of range for recovery. A radio telescope is available, propulsion designs are in hand and the team is hoping for public support to provide the small amount needed to accomplish a very unique milestone in space exploration
Thijs Versloot

Final design phase for worlds largest radio telescope #SKA - 0 views

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    One of the feats: "The SKA will be so sensitive that it will be able to detect an airport radar on a planet tens of light years away"
Joris _

25,000 new asteroids found by NASA's sky mapping - Yahoo! News - 0 views

  • WISE is discovering near-Earth asteroids that are on average larger than what's found by existing telescopes, which should help scientists better calculate their potential threat
pacome delva

A New Way to Map the Universe - 0 views

  • A new technique might soon enable cosmologists to map the universe even when they can't pick out individual galaxies. If it works, researchers would be able to probe the structure of 500 times as much of the universe as they have studied so far.
  • With a purpose-built radio telescope, the approach could map as much as 50% of the observable universe far faster and cheaper than galaxy surveys can, Loeb says.
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    impressive
Ma Ru

Russia's underwater 'cosmic eye' - 2 views

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    Awesome video!!!
LeopoldS

NASA - NASA's Fermi Telescope Finds Giant Structure in our Galaxy - 5 views

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    wow ....
  • ...1 more comment...
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    I guess that's the "exceptional object in our cosmic neighbourhood"...
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    impressive! I'm sure it's connected to the black hole, at some point it must have been active. It shows how it's important to put all observations public !
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    this is what they speculate ... the original image looks though much less impressive ...
pacome delva

Special relativity passes key test - 2 views

  • Granot and colleagues studied the radiation from a gamma-ray burst – associated with a highly energetic explosion in a distant galaxy – that was spotted by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope on 10 May this year. They analysed the radiation at different wavelengths to see whether there were any signs that photons with different energies arrived at Fermi's detectors at different times.
  • According to Granot, these results "strongly disfavour" quantum-gravity theories in which the speed of light varies linearly with photon energy, which might include some variations of string theory or loop quantum gravity. "I would not use the term 'rule out'," he says, "as most models do not have exact predictions for the energy scale associated with this violation of Lorentz invariance. However, our observational requirement that such an energy scale would be well above the Planck energy makes such models unnatural."
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    essentially they made an experiment that does not prove or disprove anything -big deal-... what is the scientific value of "strongly disfavour"??? I also like the sentence "most models do not have exact predictions for the energy scale associated with this violation of Lorentz invariance" ... but if this is true WHAT IS THE POINT OF THE EXPERIMENT!!!! God, physics is in trouble ....
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    hum, null result experiments are not useless !!! there is always the hope of finding "something wrong", which would lead to a great discovery. For the state of theoretical physics (the "no exact predictions" quote), i totally agree that physics is in trouble... That's what happen when physicists don't care anymore about experiments...! All you can do now is drawing "nice"graph with upper bounds on some parameters of an all tunable weird theory !
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