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Sandra Flores

Star Formation - 0 views

Heated gas stream at a cool star formation?In the inner regions of a galaxy cluster, astronomers found by Michael McDonald from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the USA further evidence...

stars cosmos astronomy

started by Sandra Flores on 02 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
Todd Suomela

Guest Post: Evalyn Gates on Cosmic Magnification (or - Invasion of the Giant Blue Space... - 0 views

  • This is not just a pretty picture, however – the image packs a lot of scientific information. The authors extract the mass distribution in the cluster (which has implications for cosmological models), measure the mass-to-light ratio of the bright galaxy in the center of the cluster, and use the magnifying power of the lens to search for even more distant galaxies. The basic idea is to construct a model of the lens, starting with the cluster galaxies and a dark matter halo; then refine the model to reproduce the multiple images that are seen. Using this refined model it’s possible to predict the location of additional images of a given source, and to identify regions of high magnification that can then be examined for multiple images of other sources. Any additional images that are found can be used to further refine the model and so on.
  • This galaxy has been lensed by the warp in spacetime created by the cluster. Light from the galaxy, which lies almost directly behind the center of the cluster but much farther away from us, travels along several curved paths through the cluster lens, producing multiple magnified images of the galaxy. The inset box shows a computer generated model of the unlensed source galaxy, enlarged by a factor of four so that the details, including the spiral arm structure, are visible. Without the lensing power of the cluster, we would see this galaxy as a single small blue smudge. In general, lensing will both magnify and distort (shear) images of a background source. This lens is fairly unique in that we see large but relatively intact images of the spiral galaxy, which implies that the mass distribution in the central region of the cluster must be nearly uniform.
Todd Suomela

Galaxy Zoo 2 - 0 views

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    The Galaxy Zoo files contain almost a quarter of a million galaxies which have been imaged with a camera attached to a robotic telescope (the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, no less). In order to understand how these galaxies - and our own - formed, we need your help to classify them according to their shapes - a task at which your brain is better than even the fastest computer.
Todd Suomela

Astronomers Crowdsource the Definition of a Galaxy - Technology Review - 2 views

  • So what to do? Today, Duncan Forbes at Swinburne University in Australia and Pavel Kroup at the University of Bonn in Germany put forward a novel solution. They outline the various characteristics that astronomers think about when classifying galaxies. These include factors such as the presence of stars, so gas clouds can't be defined as galaxies; being gravitationally bound, so materials that has been stripped away by another galaxy wouldn't count; whether the system is stable or not; whether it hosts a good variety of different types of star, which excludes globular clusters which contain only similar stars; and whether it is held together by dark matter, which many galaxies seem to be. There are other factors too, of course. (Although they do not include the presence of a black hole at the centre of a galaxy as a defining characteristic , which is odd given the growing interest in the link between galactic evolutoin and black holes.) Forbes and Kroup go on to suggest that the best way to achieve consensus is to crowdsource the problem. In other works, they want to use the wisdom of the crowd to determine what factors are important what aren't.
Astro Biology

Know When Milky Way Collision Occur - 0 views

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    NASA scientist have found proof that our Milky Way had an encounter with a small galaxy or massive dark matter structure perhaps as recently as 100 million years ago. Are you also interested to know how galaxies form, evolve and interact?
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    NASA scientist have found proof that our Milky Way had an encounter with a small galaxy or massive dark matter structure perhaps as recently as 100 million years ago. Are you also interested to know how galaxies form, evolve and interact?
Kalyan Roy

Image of the Day: Rogue Galaxy Racing at 10-million KPH - 0 views

  • massive gravity distorts the galaxies' shape and sends them ripping through the cluster at unimaginable speeds.
  • The Virgo Cluster is the nearest big collection of galaxies to Earth, and it's filled with a collection of gas called the intercluster medium, whose pressure drives the galaxies' own internal gas out into the cluster, roiling up the galaxies' dust.
Janos Haits

Gaia Archive - 0 views

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    "Gaia is an ambitious mission to chart a three-dimensional map of our Galaxy, the Milky Way, in the process revealing the composition, formation and evolution of the Galaxy. Gaia will provide unprecedented positional and radial velocity measurements with the accuracies needed to produce a stereoscopic and kinematic census of about one billion stars in our Galaxy and throughout the Local Group. This amounts to about 1 per cent of the Galactic stellar population. "
Janos Haits

Public Release of a Queryable Database of Galaxies in the Milennium Simulation - 1 views

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    Halo and Galaxy Formation Histories from the Millennium Simulation Public release of a VO-oriented and SQL-queryable database for studying the evolution of galaxies in the ΛCDM cosmogony
Janos Haits

spaceengine - Home page - 1 views

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    SpaceEngine - is a free space simulation software that lets you explore the universe in three dimensions, starting from planet Earth to the most distant galaxies. Areas of the known universe are represented using actual astronomical data, while regions uncharted by human astronomy are generated procedurally. Millions of galaxies, trillions of stars, countless planets!
Kalyan Roy

New Hubble Pictures Suggest Milky Way Fell Together - Science News - 2 views

  • A preliminary analysis of elderly stars in the Milky Way appears to strike a blow against the prevailing theory of galaxy formation. The study suggests that several large and seemingly disparate chunks of the Milky Way galaxy formed at the same time from the collapse of a single blob of gas and dust.That’s in direct contrast to the leading galaxy-formation scenario, which holds that the Milky Way and other galaxies began small and grew bit by bit for the most part, gravitationally acquiring intergalactic gas and dust and merging with galaxies in their immediate neighborhood.
Janos Haits

The James Webb Space Telescope - 0 views

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    The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST) is a large, infrared-optimized space telescope. The project is working to a 2018 launch date. Webb will find the first galaxies that formed in the early Universe, connecting the Big Bang to our own Milky Way Galaxy. Webb will peer through dusty clouds to see stars forming planetary systems, connecting the Milky Way to our own Solar System.
Janos Haits

Welcome to the LISC web portal - LISC - LISA International Science Community - 0 views

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    website features news, resources, and discussion boards about LISA (the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna), a space-based gravitational-wave observatory that will allow us to detect gravitational waves from massive black-hole mergers in the centers of galaxies, from the ultra-compact binary systems in our own Galaxy, and from many other sources. A joint ESA and NASA mission, LISA will create revolutionary research opportunities in astrophysics and fundamental physics.
Kalyan Roy

Early Galaxy Pinpoints Reionization Era | Universe Today - 0 views

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    Astronomers looking to pinpoint when the reionozation of the Universe took place have found some of the earliest galaxies about 800 million years after the
Kevin Jorgensen

What it looks like when a couple of galaxies collide - 0 views

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    Two colliding galaxies seen from Hubble.
antariksha2011

Astronomical Valentine Day - 0 views

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    Celebrate Astronomical Valentine Day. Just love this Galaxies, Nebulae, Planets, Stars, Cosmos and all astronomical objects.
Morpheus Zobovic

Universe Pictures - The Most Amazing Pictures of The Universe - 0 views

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    The universe pictures of nebulae, galaxies, solar system, etc. shown on this page are considered to be the most amazing pictures of the Universe.
Todd Suomela

6dF Galaxy Survey - 0 views

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    The 6dF Galaxy Survey (6dFGS) has mapped the nearby universe over nearly half the sky.
Maluvia Haseltine

Spitzer Telescope Images Incredible NGC 1097 Galaxy - 0 views

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    NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has imaged a wild creature of the dark -- a coiled galaxy with an eye-like object at its center.
Todd Suomela

ESO - ESO 24/09 - Astronomer's new guide to the galaxy: largest map of cold dust revealed - 0 views

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    This new guide for astronomers, known as the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy (ATLASGAL) shows the Milky Way in submillimetre-wavelength light (between infrared light and radio waves [1]). Images of the cosmos at these wavelengths are vital for studying the birthplaces of new stars and the structure of the crowded galactic core.
Sandra Flores

Strange stars on the heel - 0 views

Strange stars on the heelA new star strange lurks perhaps in our galaxy - and an astrophysicist at the Weizmann Institute is close on the track. Prof. Vladimir Usov from the Weizmann Institute...

started by Sandra Flores on 05 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
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