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Janos Haits

Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy: Home Page - 0 views

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    As an astronomer, teacher, lecturer and all-around science junkie, I am exposed to all sorts of people and their ideas about what goes on in the sky around them. I have been delighted to find that most people are very curious about the night (and day!) sky, but unfortunately a lot of misinformation is spread about astronomy. Sometimes this information is just plain silly, but many times it makes just enough sense that people believe it. Sometimes the news media help spread these ideas (like the one that you can spin or stand an egg on end during the Vernal E
Janos Haits

SDSS-III - 0 views

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    Building on the legacy of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and SDSS-II, the SDSS-III Collaboration is working to map the Milky Way, search for extrasolar planets, and solve the mystery of dark energy.
Janos Haits

MAST - 0 views

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    "The Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST) is a NASA funded project to support and provide to the astronomical community a variety of astronomical data archives, with the primary focus on scientifically related data sets in the optical, ultraviolet, and near-infrared parts of the spectrum. MAST is located at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)."
hanz444

NASA's SDO Sees Sun Emit Mid-Level Flare Oct. 1 - 0 views

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    The sun emitted a mid-level solar flare, peaking at 8:13 p.m. EDT on Oct. 1, 2015. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which watches the sun constantly, captured an image of the event. Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation. Harmful radiation from a flare cannot pass through Earth's atmosphere to physically affect humans on the ground, however -- when intense enough -- they can disturb the atmosphere in the layer where GPS and communications signals travel.
Janos Haits

MAST - 2 views

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    "The Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST) is a NASA funded project to support and provide to the astronomical community a variety of astronomical data archives, with the primary focus on scientifically related data sets in the optical, ultraviolet, and near-infrared parts of the spectrum. MAST is located at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI)."
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.
Kalyan Roy

SPACE.com -- New Physics? Fundamental Cosmic Constant Now Seems Shifty - 1 views

  • Recent observations of distant galaxies suggest that the strength of the electromagnetic force – the so-called fine-structure constant – actually varies throughout the universe. In one direction, the constant seemed to grow larger the farther astronomers looked; in another direction the constant took on smaller values with greater distance.
  • If confirmed, this revelation could reshape physicists' understanding of cosmology from the ground up. It may even help solve a major conundrum: Why are all the constants of nature perfectly tuned for life to exist?
Kalyan Roy

Cosmic Rebirth - Science News - 3 views

  • Most cosmologists trace the birth of the universe to the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago. But a new analysis of the relic radiation generated by that explosive event suggests the universe got its start eons earlier and has cycled through myriad episodes of birth and death, with the Big Bang merely the most recent in a series of starting guns.
Todd Suomela

Phoenix Mars Mission - Home - 0 views

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    The University of Arizona is honored to be the first public university to lead a mission to Mars. The Phoenix Mars Mission, scheduled to land May 25, 2008, is the first in NASA's "Scout Program." Scouts are designed to be highly innovative and relatively low-cost complements to major missions being planned as part of the agency's Mars Exploration Program.
Maggie Tsai

SPACE.com -- Color-Changing Planets Could Hold Clues to Alien Life - 5 views

  • A new way of comparing the color and intensity changes of light reflected off of Earth's surface to the flickers from exoplanets may help reveal the presence of oceans, continents and – possibly – life on alien worlds.
Janos Haits

Extreme Science - 0 views

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    Extreme Science is the place online to find the biggest, baddest, and the best in the world of extremes and learn about the science behind what makes each the most extreme example of its kind. Here you'll find world records in natural science, including earth science and the plant and animal kingdom. Not only will you find out who holds the records, but also key science concepts used to explain the story behind the record.
Janos Haits

The AstroWeb Consortium - 0 views

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    The AstroWeb database of resource records is maintained by the members of the AstroWeb Consortium, at seven institutions:CDS (André Heck, Daniel Egret)MSSSO (Anton Koekemoer at MSSSO and at STScI)NRAO (Don Wells)WWW-VL (La Plata) (Sergio Paoli)ST-ECF (Hans-Martin Adorf, Fionn Murtagh)STScI (Bob Jackson)VILSPA (Jose Daniel Ponz)
The Ravine / Joseph Dunphy

Neave Planetarium ...the sky in your web browser - 0 views

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    It's a cute graphic, but not much more than that. You move the cursor and the simulated night sky moves in response - and it's a great example of how the Internet can take us in the wrong direction. Do you remember kids getting books and ... gasp ... going outdoors at night, looking upward and finding those constellations, instead of searching for them on an animation?
Kalyan Roy

GRB's: - 0 views

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    Gamma-ray bursts (GRB) are the most powerful explosions known in the Universe; most originate in distant galaxies. A large percentage of bursts likely arise from the explosion of stars over 15 times more massive than our Sun. Experts believe that...
Todd Suomela

SkyandTelescope.com - News from Sky & Telescope - A Megascope for Hawaii - 0 views

  • TMT will also cost between 1 and 2 billion dollars when all is said and done. This is not quite at the scale of the world’s biggest science projects, like the Large Hadron Collider or the James Webb Space Telescope, but it’s getting there. In fact, TMT and other proposed observatories of this generation may end up being the biggest telescopes on Earth for all time because the funding required to go even larger would more logically be directed towards putting telescopes in orbit.
  • Adaptive optics is a big part of TMT’s design. It will work both on Mauna Kea and Armazones, but astronomers expect it will work better on Mauna Kea. This is because the upper atmosphere—the part above the boundary layer—is somewhat less turbulent above Mauna Kea than it is above Armazones. Why? According to Racine it’s partly a function of latitude. Because Mauna Kea is nearer the equator it’s relatively unaffected by the jet streams that flow at higher latitutdes both north and south. Armazones’ upper atmosphere is a bit more turbulent in comparison and so somewhat harder for adaptive optics to deal with.
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    Why and how did the Thirty Meter Telescope project decide to build at Mauna Kea?
Kalyan Roy

Image of the Day: A Cosmic Circle of Light - 0 views

  • Astronomers generally believe that the giant bar, which is too faint to be seen in this image, funnels the gas to the inner ring, where massive stars are formed within numerous star clusters.
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
Janos Haits

Heaven' Carousel at HST IV conference March 2014 in Rome - 0 views

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    "The Heaven's Carousel is an acoustic sky rider linking music and the starry firmament in a pioneering way. With a relatively simple setting the artist and composer Tim Otto Roth is beaming the ancient music of the spheres into the modern age of astrophysics which is confronted not with static celestial spheres but with an accelerated expanding universe."
Janos Haits

Chrome Experiments - "100,000 Stars" by Google Data Arts Team - 3 views

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    100,000 Stars is an interactive visualization of the stellar neighborhood created for the Google Chrome web browser. It shows the real location of over 100,000 nearby stars. Zooming in reveals 87 major named stars and our solar system. The galaxy view is an artist's rendition.
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