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Todd Suomela

Jupiter gets another cosmic punch, shows new bruise - Ars Technica - 0 views

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    Over the weekend, Jupiter was apparently struck by an unknown object, probably a comet or an asteroid. The discovery was made by Anthony Wesley in Australia, an amateur astronomer well-known in both the amateur and professional astronomy communities.
Todd Suomela

Guest Post: Evalyn Gates on Cosmic Magnification (or - Invasion of the Giant Blue Space Amoebas) | Cosmic Variance | Discover Magazine - 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.
jorge johnson

Ciencia para leer en Periódico - 0 views

  • Está de moda un email titulado “dos lunas en el cielo”, que habla de los cálculos de un planetario internacional, determinando que para el 27 de agosto del 2009 Marte se verá grande y brillante como la Luna. No es complicado ver qué tan falsa es la noticia, con aritmética básica.
    • Andres Ruiz
       
      Recuerdo la primera vez que vi a Marte en el telescopio, fue genial ver este planeta, aunque con todo y aumento no dejaba de ser un punto redondo anaranjado en el campo óptico. Ver planetas del sistema solar a través de un telescopio no es una experiencia común para la mayoría de la gente. Además todos estamos acostumbrados a las hermosas y enormes imágenes que nos muestran a diario los medios de masivos y con las cuales construimos nuestros imaginarios. Es entendible pues, que el "ciudadano de a pie" crea en cualquier información que le llegue a su correo. El ejercicio de la divulgación científica es complejo, sobre todo cuando se compite con la desinformación causada por los grandes medios de comunicación.
Todd Suomela

Phoenix Lander Team: It Snows at Night on Mars | Universe Today - 0 views

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    Phoenix landed at the north arctic region on Mars (68.22°N, 234.25°E) on May 25th, 2008. On Mars, this was just before the summer solstice. Phoenix operated for 5 months, and was able to observe conditions as the seasons changed from summer to winter, giving science teams an unprecedented look at the planet's changing weather patterns, including frost and precipitation.
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.
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
Kalyan Roy

Hubble Unveils Stunning Star Birth in M83 | Universe Today - 1 views

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    It appears Hubble's new Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) is working. And how! The new camera installed during Servicing Mission 4 in May has delivered the most
Kalyan Roy

The Dark Attractor: What's Pulling the Milky Way Towards It at 14-Million MPH? - 1 views

  • A huge volume of space that includes the Milky Way and super-clusters of galaxies is flowing towards a mysterious, gigantic unseen mass named mass astronomers have dubbed "The Great Attractor," some 250 million light years from our Solar System.
  • The Great Attractor is a diffuse concentration of matter some 400 million light-years in size located around 250 million light-years away within the so-called "Centaurus Wall" of galaxies , about seven degrees off the plane of the Milky Way. X-ray observations with the ROSAT satellite then revealed that Abell 3627 is at the center of the Great Attractor. It lies in the so-called Zone of Avoidance, where the dust and stars of the Milky Way's disk obscures as much as a quarter of the Earth's visible sky.
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