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Jupiter Photos Reveal Big Changes on Giant Planet | Space.com - 0 views

  •  
    Voyager 1 took photos of Jupiter and two of its satellites (Io, left, and Europa). The new study says that moons orbiting a gas giant planet greater than 8 Jupiter masses could help astronomers detect a rogue planet. Photos: Jupiter, the Solar System's Largest Planet This graphic of Jupiter by UK astronomer Pete Lawrence shows the location of the Jupiter impact region from Sept. 12, 2012, as seen through an inverting astronomical telescope. Jupiter Impact of Sept. 10, 2012 (Photos) Jupiter: Giant, Windy Gas-Ball Protecting The Inner Solar System Jupiter: Giant, Windy Gas-Ball Protecting The Inner Solar System | Video Jupiter Photos Reveal Big Changes on Giant Planet by SPACE.com Staff Date: 17 October 2012 Time: 04:58 PM ET inShare1
Mars Base

Astronomers discover planet that shouldn't be there - 0 views

  • An international team of astronomers
  • has discovered the most distantly orbiting planet found to date around a single, sun-like star
  • 11 times Jupiter's mass and orbiting its star at 650 times the average Earth-Sun distance
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  • HD 106906 b
  • throws a wrench in planet formation theories
  • no model of either planet or star formation fully explains what we see
  • It is thought that planets close to their stars, like Earth, coalesce from small asteroid-like bodies born in the primordial disk of dust and gas that surrounds a forming star
  • this process acts too slowly to grow giant planets far from their star
  • Another proposed mechanism is that giant planets can form from a fast, direct collapse of disk material
  • primordial disks rarely contain enough mass in their outer reaches to allow a planet like HD 106906 b to form
  • Several alternative hypotheses have been put forward, including formation like a mini binary star system
  • binary star system can be formed when two adjacent clumps of gas collapse more or less independently to form stars, and these stars are close enough to each other to exert a mutual gravitation attraction and bind them together in an orb
  • It is possible that in the case of the HD 106906 system the star and planet collapsed independently from clumps of gas, but for some reason the planet's progenitor clump was starved for material and never grew large enough to ignite and become a star
  • one problem with this scenario is that the mass ratio of the two stars in a binary system is typically no more than 10-to-1.
  • the mass ratio is more than 100-to-1,
  • extreme mass ratio is not predicted from binary star formation theories – just like planet formation theory predicts that we cannot form planets so far from the host star
  • is also of
  • interest because researchers can still detect the remnant "debris disk" of material left over from planet and star formation.
  • potential to help us disentangle the various formation models
  • Future observations of the planet's orbital motion and the primary star's debris disk may help answer that question
  • At only 13 million years old, this young planet still glows from the residual heat of its formation
  • Because at 2,700 Fahrenheit (about 1,500 degrees Celsius) the planet is much cooler than its host star
  • it emits most of its energy as infrared rather than visible light
  • Earth
  • formed 4.5 billion years ago
  • about 350 times older than HD 106906 b.
  • Direct imaging observations require exquisitely sharp images, akin to those delivered by the Hubble Space Telescope
  • To reach this resolution from the ground requires a technology called Adaptive Optics, or AO
  • The team used the new Magellan Adaptive Optics (MagAO) system and Clio2 thermal infrared camera
  • mounted on the 6.5 meter-diameter Magellan telescope in the Atacama Desert in Chile to take the discovery image
  • MagAO was able to utilize its special Adaptive Secondary Mirror
  • 585 actuators, each moving 1,000 times a second, to remove the blurring of the atmosphere
  • optimized for thermal infrared wavelengths, where giant planets are brightest compared to their host stars
  • planets are most easily imaged at these wavelengths
  • The team was able to confirm that the planet is moving together with its host star by examining Hubble Space Telescope data taken eight years prior for another research program
  • This planet discovery is particularly exciting because it is in orbit so far from its parent star. This leads to many
  • questions about its formation history and composition
Mars Base

Moon's Mysterious 'Ocean of Storms' Explained | Moon Impact Hypothesis | Space.com - 0 views

  • The largest dark spot on the moon, known as the Ocean of Storms, may be a scar from a giant cosmic impact that created a magma sea more than a thousand miles wide and several hundred miles deep
  • could help explain why the moon's near and far sides are so very different from one another,
  • Scientists analyzed Oceanus Procellarum, or the Ocean of Storms, a dark spot on the near side of the moon more than 1,800 miles (3,000 kilometers) wide.
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  • near side of the moon,
  • , is quite different from the far side,
  • the moon's dark side (this side does in fact get sunlight — it simply never faces Earth
  • , widespread plains of volcanic rock called "maria" (Latin for seas) cover nearly a third of the near side, but only a few maria are seen on the far one.
  • hers have posed a number of explanations for the vast disparity between the moon's near and far sides. Some have suggested that a tiny second moon may once have orbited Earth before catastrophically slamming into the other moon, spreading its remains mostly on the moon's far side
  • Others have proposed that Earth's pull on the moon caused distortions that were later frozen in place on the moon's near side.
  • Mars' northern and southern halves are also stark contrasts from one another, and researchers had suggested that a monstrous impact may have been the cause
  • scientists in Japan say that a giant collision may also explain the moon's two-faced nature, one that gave rise to the Ocean of Storms
  • researchers analyzed the composition of the moon's surface using data from the Japanese lunar orbiter Kaguya/Selene
  • data revealed that a low-calcium variety of the mineral pyroxene is concentrated around Oceanus Procellarum and large impact craters such as the South Pole-Aitkenand Imbriumbasins.
  • type of pyroxene is linked with the melting and excavation of material from the lunar mantle, and suggests the Ocean of Storms is a leftover from a cataclysmic impact.
  • This collision would have generated "a 3,000-kilometer (1,800-mile) wide magma sea several hundred kilometers in depth
  • that collisions large enough to create Oceanus Procellarum and the moon's other giant impact basins would have completely stripped the original crust on the near side of the moon
  • crust that later formed there from the molten rock left after these impacts would differ dramatically from that on the far side
  • Some researchers had speculated that the Procellarum basin was the relic of a gigantic impact
  • this idea was hotly debated because there were no definite topographic signs it was an impact basin
  • neighboring Earth likely experienced similar-sized impacts around the same period
Mars Base

Astronomers Discover 18 Huge New Alien Planets | Alien Planets & Solar Systems | Gas Gi... - 0 views

  • Astronomers have found 18 new alien planets, all of them Jupiter-size gas giants that circle stars bigger than our sun
  • increase the number of known planets orbiting massive stars by 50 percent
  • should also help astronomers better understand how giant planets form and grow
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  • just a few months after a different team of researchers announced the discovery of 50 newfound alien worlds
  • including one rocky planet that could be a good candidate for life
  • list of known alien planets is now well over 700 and climbing fast
  • researchers surveyed about 300 stars using the Keck Observatory in Hawaii and instruments in Texas and Arizona
  • focused on so-called "retired" type A stars that are at least 1.5 times more massive than our own sun
  • just beyond the main stage of life — hence the name "retired"
  • ballooning out to become what's known as subgiant stars
  • scrutinized these stars, looking for slight wobbles caused by the gravitational tug of orbiting planets
  • revealed 18 new alien worlds
  • All 18 planets also orbit relatively far from their stars, at a distance of at least 0.7 times the span from Earth to the sun (about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers
  • the new finds lend support to one of two theories that attempt to explain the formation and evolution of planets
  • core accretion, posits that planets grow as gas and dust glom onto seed particles in a protoplanetary disk.
  • predicts that the characteristics of a planetary system — the number and size of planets, for example — depend strongly on the mass of the star
  • competing theory, called gravitational collapse, holds that planets form when big clouds of gas and dust in the disk spontaneously collapse into clumps that become planets
  • According to this idea, stellar mass should have little impact on planet size, number and other characteristics
  • it seems that stellar mass does in fact play an important role
Mars Base

Giant Chunk of Russian Meteor Recovered - News Watch - 0 views

  • Russian scientists appear to have pulled up a half-ton charred meteorite from the bottom of a murky Siberian lake
  • a piece of the giant space rock that exploded in the skies above the southern Urals in February.
  • Entering the atmosphere at speeds up to 31,000 miles per hour (50,000 kilometers per hour), the Russian meteor, officially named 2011 EO40, exploded about 25 miles (40 kilometers) above the city of Chelyabinsk
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  • The power of the explosion was estimated to be at least 20 times stronger than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945
  • The resulting air blast damaged buildings and injured some 1,600 people.
  • piece of meteor recovered this week weighs at least 1,257 pounds (570 kilograms).
  • , it is only a fragment of the original impactor that is estimated to have been about 17 meters (54 feet) across, with a mass of about 10,000 metric tons before it shattered
  • locals directed scientists to Lake Chebarkul—45 miles west of the city of Chelyabinsk—to a 25-foot (8-meter) hole punctured in the ice by the meteor
Mars Base

Dawn Finds Asteroid Vesta is Rich in Hydrogen - 0 views

  • The giant asteroid Vesta appears to have
  • hydrogen
  • Dawn spacecraft reveals hydrated minerals in a wide area around Vesta’s equator
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  • Dawn did not find actual water ice, there are signs of hydrated minerals such as hydroxyl
  • source of the hydrogen within Vesta’s surface appears to be hydrated minerals delivered by carbon-rich space rocks that collided with Vesta at speeds slow enough to preserve their volatile content
  • pitted terrain – looking much like potholes – mark where the volatiles, perhaps both hydroxyl and water, released from hydrated minerals boiled off
  • Hydroxyl has recently been found on the Moon in permanently shadowed craters at the lunar poles
  • scientists thought there might be a chance that water ice may have
  • around the giant asteroid’s poles
  • unlike Earth’s Moon, however, Vesta has no permanently shadowed polar regions
  • strongest signature for hydrogen actually came from regions near the equator. And there, water ice is not stable
  • The holes that were left as the water escaped stretch as much as 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) across and go down as deep as 700 feet (200 meters
  • collisions converted the hydrogen bound to the minerals into water, which evaporated
  • The pits look just like features seen on Mars, but while water was common on Mars, it was totally unexpected on Vesta in these high abundances
  • ults provide evidence that not only were hydrated materials present, but they played an important role in shaping the asteroid’s geology and the surface we see today
  • the first direct measurements describing the elemental composition of Vesta’s surface
  • elemental investigation by the instrument determined the ratios of iron to oxygen and iron to silicon in the surface materials
  • new findings solidly confirm the connection between Vesta and a class of meteorites found on Earth called the Howardite, Eucrite and Diogenite meteorites
  • have the same ratios for these elements
  • n, more volatile-rich fragments of other objects have been identified in these meteor
Mars Base

Supermassive Black Hole Swallows Star | Hungry Black Holes | Space.com - 0 views

  • star whose death may ultimately provide more clues on the inner workings of the enigmatic gravitational monster that devoured it.
  • In June 2010, the researchers spotted a bright flare from the previously dormant black hole at the center of a galaxy approximately 2.7 billion light-years away.
  • The flare of light reached peak brightness a month after it was detected, then slowly faded over the next 12 months
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  • By measuring the rise of the flare's brightness, the scientists calculated the rate at which the star's gas was getting sucked into the black hole
  • helped reveal at what point and time the black hole had begun disrupting the star, revealing how powerful its gravitational field was and thus its mass.
  • estimate the black hole's mass to be 3 million suns
  • like we are gathering evidence from a crime scene
  • analyzed the spectrum of the ejected gas — that is, the specific colors making up its light
  • using data from the Multiple Mirror Telescope Observatory on Mount Hopkins in Arizona
  • and the spectrum of the gas revealed it was mostly helium.
  • unique spectral fingerprint
  • fact there was mostly helium and very little hydrogen in the gas suggests "the slaughtered star had to have been the helium-rich core of a stripped star
  • This likely happened when the star went through the red giant phase, where it expanded to 100 times its original radius
  • it puffed up like that, it became vulnerable to the gravitational tidal forces of the black hole, and it would have been very easy to strip off the tenuous hydrogen envelope
  • the star then had to approach much closer, 100 times closer in, before it was completely disrupted by the black hole
Mars Base

Asteroid Flyby: How Students Helped World See Giant Space Rock 2005 YU55 | Near-Earth O... - 0 views

  • asteroid 2005 YU55
  • The Clay Center Observatory in Brookline, Mass., tracked 2005 YU55 with its 25-inch
  • webcast the resulting images live around the world
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  • three high school kids from Brookline's Dexter School were in charge of making it happen
  • There are some advisers who are helping us if we run into any problems. But overall, it is student-based and student-run
Mars Base

Some Newfound Planets Are Something Else - Science News - 0 views

  • When the Kepler spacecraft finds a giant planet closely orbiting a star, there’s a one in three chance that it’s not really a planet at all.
  • according to a new study
  • results, posted June 5 on arXiv.org, suggest that 35 percent of candidate giants snuggled close to bright stars are impostors, known in the planet-hunting business as false-positives
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  • Out of more than 2,300 possible planets, only 46 fell into that category
  • Eleven of these were already known planets. Santerne’s team confirmed nine more
  • The remaining 26 candidates included 13 unknowns, two failed brown dwarf stars, and 11 members of binary star systems
  • not everything that darkens a star is a planet
  • After distributing the unknowns according to the observed ratios of objects, the team arrived at the 35 percent false-positive rate.
  • scientists don’t consider it a serious flaw for Kepler
  • percentage is very low compared to all other transit programs
  • Short period transiting planets are exotic objects, we don’t expect them to be everywhere
  • The potential billion planets are more expected to be small, long-period planets. We didn’t kill those ones, fortunately
Mars Base

2013 in science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Morocco in 2011, and report that it is a new type of Mars rock with an unusually high water content.[8][9][10] American researchers state that a gene associated with active personality traits is also linked to
  • Astronomers affiliated with the Kepler space observatory announce the discovery of KOI-172.02, an Earth-like exoplanet candidate which orbits a star similar to the Sun in the habitable zone
  • 13 January – Massachusetts doctors invent a pill-sized medical scanner that can be safely swallowed by patients, allowing the esophagus to be more easily scanned for disease
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  • 17 January – NASA announces that the Kepler space observatory has developed a reaction wheel issue
  • 2 January A study by Caltech astronomers reports that the Milky Way Galaxy contains at least one planet per sta
  • 3 January
  • 8 January
  • 20 January – Scientists prove that quadruple-helix DNA is present in human cells
  • 25 January
  • An international team of scientists develops a functional light-based "tractor beam", which allows individual cells to be selected and moved at will. The invention could have broad applications in medicine and microbiology
  • 30 January – South Korea conducts its first successful orbital launch
  • 6 February
  • Astronomers report that 6% of all dwarf stars – the most common stars in the known universe – may host Earthlike planets
  • Scientists discover live bacteria in the subglacial Antarctic Lake Whillans
  • American scientists finish drilling down to the subglacial Lake Whillans, which is buried around 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) under the Antarctic ice
  • 10 February NASA's Curiosity Mars rover uses its onboard drill to obtain the first deep rock sample ever retrieved from the surface of another plane
  • 15 February A 10-ton meteoroid impacts in Chelyabinsk, Russia, producing a powerful shockwave and injuring over 1,000 people
  • 28 February
  • Astronomers make the first direct observation of a protoplanet forming in a disk of gas and dust around a distant sta
  • A third radiation belt is discovered around the Eart
  • 1 March – Boston Dynamics demonstrates an updated version of its BigDog military robot
  • 3 March – American scientists report that they have cured HIV in an infant by giving the child a course of antiretroviral drugs very early in its life. The previously HIV-positive child has reportedly exhibited no HIV symptoms since its treatment, despite having no further medication for a year
  • researchers replace 75 percent of an injured patient's skull with a precision 3D-printed polymer replacement implant. In future, damaged bones may routinely be replaced with custom-manufactured implants
  • 7 March
  • A study concludes that heart disease was common among ancient mummies
  • 11 March
  • 12 March NASA's Curiosity rover finds evidence that conditions on Mars were once suitable for microbial life after analyzing the first drilled sample of Martian rock, "John Klein" rock at Yellowknife Bay in Gale Crater. The rover detected water, carbon dioxide, oxygen, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, chloromethane and dichloromethane. Related tests found results consistent with the presence of smectite clay minerals
  • 14 March CERN scientists confirm, with a very high degree of certainty, that a new particle identified by the Large Hadron Collider in July 2012 is the long-sought Higgs boson
  • 18 March
  • NASA reports evidence from the Curiosity rover on Mars of mineral hydration, likely hydrated calcium sulfate, in several rock samples, including the broken fragments of "Tintina" rock and "Sutton Inlier" rock as well as in the veins and nodules in other rocks like "Knorr" rock and "Wernicke" rock.[177] Analysis using the rover's DAN instrument provided evidence of subsurface water, amounting to as much as 4% water content, down to a depth of 60 cm
  • 27 March – A potential new weight loss method is discovered, after a 20% weight reduction was achieved in mice simply by having their gut microbes altered.
  • NASA scientists report that hints of dark matter may have been detected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station
  • 3 April
  • 15 April A functional lab-grown kidney is successfully transplanted into a live rat in Massachusetts General Hospital
  • 18 April – NASA announces the discovery of three new Earthlike exoplanets – Kepler-62e, Kepler-62f, and Kepler-69c – in the habitable zones of their respective host stars, Kepler-62 and Kepler-69. The new exoplanets, which are considered prime candidates for possessing liquid water and thus potentially life, were identified using the Kepler spacecraft
  • 21 April The Antares rocket, a commercial launch vehicle developed by Orbital Sciences Corporation, successfully conducts its maiden flight
  • After years of unpowered glide tests, Scaled Composites' SpaceShipTwo hybrid spaceplane successfully conducts its first rocket-powered fligh
  • 29 April
  • 1 May IBM scientists release A Boy and His Atom, the smallest stop-motion animation ever created, made by manipulating individual carbon monoxide molecules with a scanning tunnelling microscope
  • A new study finds that children whose parents suck on their pacifiers have fewer allergies later in life
  • NASA reports that a reaction wheel on the Kepler space observatory may be malfunctioning and may result in the premature termination of the observatory's search for Earth-like
  • 15 May
  • 16 May Water dating back 2.6 billion years, by far the oldest ever found, is discovered in a Canadian mine
  • 27 May Four-hundred-year-old bryophyte specimens left behind by retreating glaciers in Canada are brought back to life in the laboratory
  • 29 May
  • Russian scientists announce the discovery of mammoth blood and well-preserved muscle tissue from an adult female specimen in Siberia
  • A new treatment to "reset" the immune system of multiple sclerosis patients is reported to reduce their reactivity to myelin by 50 to 75 percent
  • 4 June
  • During the Shenzhou 10 mission, Chinese astronauts deliver the country's first public video broadcast from the orbiting Tiangong-1 space laboratory
  • 20 June
  • China's Shenzhou 10 manned spacecraft returns safely to Earth, having conducted China's longest manned space mission to date
  • 26 June
  • 20 June
  • 20 June
  • 6 July
  • Scientists report that a wide variety of microbial life exists in the subglacial Antarctic Lake Vostok, which has been buried in ice for around 15 million years. Samples of the lake's water obtained by drilling were found to contain traces of DNA from over 3,000 tiny organisms
  • 15 July
  • ASA engineers successfully test a rocket engine with a fully 3D-printed injector
  • 19 July
  • NASA scientists publish the results of a new analysis of the atmosphere of Mars, reporting a lack of methane around the landing site of the Curiosity rover
  • Earth is photographed from the outer solar system. NASA's Cassini spacecraft releases images of the Earth and Moon taken from the orbit of Saturn
  • 29 July – Astronomers discover the first exoplanet orbiting a brown dwarf, 6,000 light years from Earth
  • exoplanet
  • 7 January
  • Astronomers
  • report that "at least 17 billion" Earth-sized exoplanets are estimated to reside in the Milky Way Galaxy
  • 20 February
  • NASA reports the discovery of Kepler-37b, the smallest exoplanet yet known, around the size of Earth's Moon
  • 10 June
  • Scientists report that the earlier claims of an Earth-like exoplanet orbiting Alpha Centauri B, a star close to our Solar System, may not be supported by astronomical evidence
  • 25 June – In an unprecedented discovery, astronomers detect three potentially Earthlike exoplanets orbiting a single star in the Gliese 667
  • 11 July For the first time, astronomers determine the true colour of a distant exoplanet. HD 189733 b, a searing-hot gas giant, is said to be a vivid blue colour, most likely due to clouds of silica in its atmosphere
  • NASA announces that the failing Kepler space observatory may never fully recover. New missions are being considered
  • 15 August
  • Phase I clinical trials of SAV001 – the first and only preventative HIV vaccine – have been successfully completed with no adverse effects in all patients. Antibody production was greatly boosted after vaccination
  • 3 September
  • 12 September NASA announces that Voyager I has officially left the Solar System, having travelled since 1977
  • NASA scientists report the Mars Curiosity rover detected "abundant, easily accessible" water (1.5 to 3 weight percent) in soil samples
  • 26 September
  • In addition, the rover found two principal soil types: a fine-grained mafic type and a locally derived, coarse-grained felsic type
  • mafic
  • as associated with hydration of the amorphous phases of the soi
  • perchlorates, the presence of which may make detection of life-related organic molecules difficult, were found at the Curiosity rover landing site
  • earlier at the more polar site of the Phoenix lander) suggesting a "global distribution of these salts
  • Astronomers have created the first cloud map of an exoplanet, Kepler-7b
  • 30 September
  • 8 October The Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to François Englert and Peter Higgs "for the theoretical discovery of a mechanism that contributes to our understanding of the origin of mass of subatomic particles, and which recently was confirmed through the discovery of the predicted fundamental particle, by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider"
  • 16 October Russian authorities raise a large fragment, 654 kg (1,440 lb) total weight, of the Chelyabinsk meteor, a Near-Earth asteroid that entered Earth's atmosphere over Russia on 15 February 2013, from the bottom of Chebarkul lake.
  • Researchers have shown that a fundamental reason for sleep is to clean the brain of toxins. This is achieved by brain cells shrinking to create gaps between neurons, allowing fluid to wash through
  • 17 October
  • 22 October – Astronomers have discovered the 1,000th known exoplanet
  • 4 November - Astronomers report, based on Kepler space mission data, that there could be as many as 40 billion Earth-sized planets orbiting in the habitable zones of sun-like stars and red dwarf stars within the Milky Way Galaxy
  • 11 billion of these estimated planets may be orbiting sun-like stars
  • 5 November – India launches its first Mars probe, Mangalyaan
  • The IceCube Neutrino Observatory has made the first discovery of very high energy neutrinos on Earth which had originated from beyond our Solar System
  • 21 November
  • 1 December – China launches the Chang'e 3 lunar rover mission, with a planned landing on December 16
  • 3 December – The Hubble Space Telescope has found evidence of water in the atmospheres of five distant exoplanets: HD 209458b, XO-1b, WASP-12b, WASP-17b and WASP-19b
  • 9 December NASA scientists report that the planet Mars had a large freshwater lake (which could have been a hospitable environment for microbial life) based on evidence from the Curiosity rover studying Aeolis Palus near Mount Sharp in Gale Crater
  • 12 December NASA announces, based on studies with the Hubble Space Telescope, that water vapor plumes were detected on Europa, moon of Jupiter
  • 14 December – The unmanned Chinese lunar rover Chang'e 3 lands on the Moon, making China the third country to achieve a soft landing there
  • 18 December
  • nomers have spotted what appears to be the first known "exomoon", located 1,800 light years away
  • 20 December – NASA reports that the Curiosity rover has successfully upgraded, for the third time since landing, its software programs and is now operating with version 11. The new software is expected to provide the rover with better robotic arm and autonomous driving abilities. Due to wheel wear, a need to drive more carefully, over the rough terrain the rover is currently traveling on its way to Mount Sharp, was also reported
Mars Base

The Moon Is 100 Million Years Younger Than Thought | Space.com - 0 views

  • new research suggests.
  • The moon is
  • younger than scientists had previously believed
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  • leading theory of how the moon formed 
  • it was created when a mysterious planet — one the size of Mars or larger — slammed into Earth
  • about 4.56 billion years ago, just after the solar system came together
  • new analyses of lunar rocks suggest that the moon, which likely coalesced from the debris blasted into space by this monster impact, is actually between 4.4 billion and 4.45 billion years old
  • make the moon 100 million years younger than previously thought, could reshape scientists' understanding of the early Earth
  • several important implications of this late moon formation that have not yet been worked out
  • , if the Earth was already differentiated prior to the giant impact, would the impact have blown off the primordial atmosphere that formed from this earlier epoch of Earth history
  • Scientists know the solar system's age (4.568 billion years) quite well
  • they can pin down the formation times of relatively small bodies such as asteroids precisely
  • by noting when these objects underwent extensive melting
  • a consequence,
  • of the heat generated by the collision and fusion of these objects' building-block "planetesimals."
  • analysis of meteorites that came from the asteroid Vesta and eventually rained down on Earth reveals that the 330-mile-wide (530 kilometers) space rock is 4.565 billion years old
  • Vesta cooled relatively quickly and is too small to have retained enough internal heat to drive further melting or volcanism
  • tougher to nail down the age of larger solar-system bodies
  • Earth likely took longer to grow to full size compared to a small asteroid like Vesta
  • every step in its growth tends to erase, or at least cloud, the memory of earlier events
  • Scientists keep getting better and better estimates
  • as they refine their techniques and technology improves. And those estimates are pushing the moon's formation date farther forward in time.
  • The moon is thought to have harbored a global ocean of molten rock shortly after its dramatic formation
  • Currently, the most precisely determined age for the lunar rocks that arose from that ocean is 4.360 billion years
  • here on Earth, scientists have found signs in several locations of a major melting event that occurred around 4.45 billion years ago
  • evidence is building that the catastrophic collision that formed the moon and reshaped Earth occurred around that time, rather than 100 million years or so before
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NASA Space Telescopes Find Patchy Clouds on Exotic World - NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory - 0 views

  • Astronomers using data from NASA's Kepler and Spitzer space telescopes have created the first cloud map of a planet
  • known as Kepler-7b
  • Previous studies from Spitzer have resulted in temperature maps of planets orbiting other stars
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  • this is the first look at cloud structures on a distant world.
  • observing this planet with Spitzer and Kepler for more than three years, we were able to produce a very low-resolution 'map' of this giant, gaseous planet
  • wouldn't expect to see oceans or continents on this type of world, but we detected a clear, reflective signature that we interpreted as clouds
  • Kepler-7b was one of the first
  • Kepler's visible-light observations of Kepler-7b's moon-like phases led to a rough map of the planet that showed a bright spot on its western hemisphere
  • data were not enough on their own to decipher whether the bright spot was coming from clouds or heat
  • Spitzer Space Telescope played a crucial role in answering this question
  • Spitzer can fix its gaze at a star system as a planet orbits around the star, gathering clues about the planet's atmosphere
  • Spitzer's ability to detect infrared light means it was able to measure Kepler-7b's temperature, estimating it to be between 1,500 and 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit (1,100 and 1,300 Kelvin).
  • relatively cool for a planet that orbits so close to its star -- within 0.06 astronomical units (one astronomical unit is the distance from Earth and the sun)
  • , too cool to be the source of light Kepler observed.
  • Instead, they determined, light from the planet's star is bouncing off cloud tops located on the west side of the planet.
  • Kepler-7b reflects much more light than most giant planets we've found, which we attribute to clouds in the upper atmosphere
  • the cloud patterns on this planet do not seem to change much over time -- it has a remarkably stable climate
  • With Spitzer and Kepler together, we have a multi-wavelength tool for getting a good look at planets that are trillions of miles away
  • exoplanet science
  • moving beyond just detecting exoplanets, and into the exciting science of understanding them
  • observations of Kepler-7b previously revealed that it is one of the puffiest planets known: if it could somehow be placed in a tub of water, it would float
  • found to whip around its star in just less than five days
  • a fully rendered 3D visualization tool, available for download at http://eyes.nasa.gov/exoplanets
  • program is updated daily with the latest findings from NASA's Kepler mission and ground-based observatories around the world as they search for planets
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