Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged telescope

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Joris _

Tracking Whale Sharks With Astronomical Algorithms | Wired Science | Wired.com - 3 views

  • equations were developed for astronomers using the Hubble telescope, Holmberg’s crew adapted them for biologists studying Earth’s biggest fishes
  • Holmberg also hopes that other programmers will follow his lead and lend their coding skills to worthy projects. “Pick the species or concern you’re most passionate about, pick the researchers who are working on it, and identify their technical needs,” he said. “I’m not even a great programmer. I’m underqualified but highly productive
Luís F. Simões

Lonely Rogue Worlds Surprisingly Outnumber Alien Planets with Suns | Alien Planets & So... - 1 views

  • Astronomers have discovered a whole new class of alien planet: a vast population of Jupiter-mass worlds that float through space without any discernible host star, a new study finds.
  • Sumi and his team looked at two years' worth of data from a telescope in New Zealand, which was monitoring 50 million Milky Way stars for microlensing events. They identified 474 such events, including 10 that lasted less than two days. The short duration of these 10 events indicated that the foreground object in each case was not a star but a planet roughly the mass of Jupiter. And the signals from their parent stars were nowhere to be found.
  •  
    here's something we didn't consider yesterday in the meeting on extra-solar planets!
  •  
    this is because you did not read the nature paper I have posted (see post a few lines below ...)
pacome delva

Galaxy Zoo 2 : The Story So Far - 3 views

  • The original Galaxy Zoo was launched in July 2007, with a data set made up of a million galaxies imaged with the robotic telescope of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. With so many galaxies, the team thought that it might take at least two years for visitors to the site to work through them all. Within 24 hours of launch, the site was receiving 70,000 classifications an hour, and more than 50 million classifications were received by the project during its first year, from almost 150,000 people.
  •  
    this is what I call a nice example of crowdsourcing or citizen scientists .... (remember my idea in the ideastorm ?? :-)
Dario Izzo

ESA Portal - ESA to launch two large observatories to look deep into space and time - 0 views

  • s in space, in a part of the electromagnetic spectrum still mostly unexplored. Planck is a telescope that will map the fossil light of the Universe - light from the Big Bang
    • Dario Izzo
       
      try izzo
    • LeopoldS
       
      strange entries here ? just testing the system???
  •  
    Amazing "to look deep into space and time". What a nice pun!
  •  
    Coooool!
ESA ACT

NASA - A Telescope Made of Moondust - 0 views

  •  
    Composite materials are synthetic materials made by mixing fibers or granules of various materials into epoxy and letting the mixture harden. Composites combine two valuable properties: ultralight weight and extraordinary strength.
Marion Nachon

Galaxy collisions not the only source of monster black hole activity | Space | EarthSky - 1 views

  •  
    In a surprise announcement earlier today (July 13), the European Southern Observatory said that monster black holes - those giants of millions or billions of solar masses, thought to lurk at the hearts of most galaxies - have a mechanism to become active other than galaxy collisions.
  •  
    "A new study combining data from ESO's Very Large Telescope and ESA's XMM-Newton X-ray space observatory has turned up a surprise. Most of the huge black holes in the centers of galaxies in the past 11 billion years were not turned on by mergers between galaxies, as had been previously thought." and "The process that activates a sleeping black hole - turning its galaxy from quiet to active - has been a mystery in astronomy. What triggers the violent outbursts at a galaxy's center, which then becomes an active galactic nucleus? Up to now, many astronomers thought that most of these active nuclei were turned on when two galaxies merged, or when they passed close to each other and the disrupted material became fuel for the central black hole. Results of the new study indicate this idea may be wrong for many active galaxies." very interesting indeed
Thijs Versloot

Properties of galaxies reproduced by hydrodynamic simulation (VIDEO) - 3 views

  •  
    Scientists at MIT have traced 13 billion years of galaxy evolution, from shortly after the Big Bang to the present day. Their simulation, named Illustris, captures both the massive scale of the Universe and the intriguing variety of galaxies - something previous modelers have struggled to do. It produces a Universe that looks remarkably similar to what we see through our telescopes, giving us greater confidence in our understanding of the Universe, from the laws of physics to our theories about galaxy formation. "Simulation is the future of innovation"
LeopoldS

Athena: Europe plans huge X-ray space telescope - 2 views

  •  
    good news for x-ray astronomers
Thijs Versloot

Improved Saturn Positions Help Spacecraft Navigation, Planet Studies, Fundamental Physics - 0 views

  •  
    Scientists have used the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) radio-telescope system and NASA's Cassini spacecraft to measure the position of Saturn and its family of moons to within about a mile -- at a range of nearly a billion miles.
Alexander Wittig

Scientists discover hidden galaxies behind the Milky Way - 1 views

  •  
    Hundreds of hidden nearby galaxies have been studied for the first time, shedding light on a mysterious gravitational anomaly dubbed the Great Attractor. Despite being just 250 million light years from Earth-very close in astronomical terms-the new galaxies had been hidden from view until now by our own galaxy, the Milky Way. Using CSIRO's Parkes radio telescope equipped with an innovative receiver, an international team of scientists were able to see through the stars and dust of the Milky Way, into a previously unexplored region of space. The discovery may help to explain the Great Attractor region, which appears to be drawing the Milky Way and hundreds of thousands of other galaxies towards it with a gravitational force equivalent to a million billion Suns. Lead author Professor Lister Staveley-Smith, from The University of Western Australia node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), said the team found 883 galaxies, a third of which had never been seen before. "The Milky Way is very beautiful of course and it's very interesting to study our own galaxy but it completely blocks out the view of the more distant galaxies behind it," he said. Professor Staveley-Smith said scientists have been trying to get to the bottom of the mysterious Great Attractor since major deviations from universal expansion were first discovered in the 1970s and 1980s. "We don't actually understand what's causing this gravitational acceleration on the Milky Way or where it's coming from," he said. "We know that in this region there are a few very large collections of galaxies we call clusters or superclusters, and our whole Milky Way is moving towards them at more than two million kilometres per hour." The research identified several new structures that could help to explain the movement of the Milky Way, including three galaxy concentrations (named NW1, NW2 and NW3) and two new clusters (named CW1 and CW2).
Marcus Maertens

Super-Earth Discovered in (Fictional) Vulcan System - Sky & Telescope - 6 views

  •  
    Vulcan might be a thing...
  •  
    Only 17 light years away!!! Around the corner :)
jaihobah

Probing Planets in Extragalactic Galaxies Using Quasar Microlensing - 2 views

  •  
    Here, we show that quasar microlensing provides a means to probe extragalactic planets in the lens galaxy, by studying the microlensing properties of emission close to the event horizon of the supermassive black hole of the background quasar, using the current generation telescopes
jcunha

Adaptive foveated single-pixel imaging with dynamic supersampling - 4 views

  •  
    "In contrast to conventional multipixel cameras, single-pixel cameras capture images using a single detector that measures the correlations between the scene and a set of patterns. However, these systems typically exhibit low frame rates, because to fully sample a scene in this way requires at least the same number of correlation measurements as the number of pixels in the reconstructed image."
  •  
    Is that the same method Andrej and Jai use in their super-telescope Ariadna?
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 54 of 54
Showing 20 items per page