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Astronomy posts

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  • October 17, 2012
  • 12:00 PM
  • 150 views

Why it matters that the closest-to-Earth-mass planet is around the closest star

by Brooke N in Smaller Questions

How the discovery of the least-massive planet so far could change the abstract nature of astronomy.... Read more »

Dumusque, X., Pepe, F., Lovis, C., Ségransan, D., Sahlmann, J., Benz, W., Bouchy, F., Mayor, M., Queloz, D., Santos, N.... (2012) An Earth-mass planet orbiting α Centauri B. Nature. DOI: 10.1038/nature11572  

  • October 15, 2012
  • 10:55 AM
  • 315 views

Using METI Satellites to Find E.T.

by Jason Carr in Wired Cosmos

Cellular networks are all the rage these days. A lot of people believe that mobile technologies will eventually replace desktops/laptops entirely. Regardless, they only work with terrestrial communications networks here on Earth. What if a similar network could be built beyond our planet? Considering that all electromagnetic radiation travels at the speed of light, the [...]... Read more »

  • October 14, 2012
  • 05:55 AM
  • 358 views

Citizen science and digital platforms: folding it all the way to outer space

by Cobb & Hecht in Do You Believe In Dog?

ScienceRewired is a philanthropic initiative that aims to promote public engagement in science through digital and social technologies. Their mission is to aid non-technical science practitioners and the digital domain in working together, to look at science from new perspectives while helping educate and empower individuals to create significant positive change in the world. Their focus spreads across science education, science communication and citizen science initiatives – what’s not to........ Read more »

Hand Eric. (2010) Citizen science: People power. Nature, 466(7307), 687. DOI: 10.1038/466685a  

Khatib F., Cooper S., Tyka M. D., Xu K., Makedon I., Popovic Z., Baker D., & Players F. (2011) From the Cover: Algorithm discovery by protein folding game players. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108(47), 18953. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1115898108  

Parsons Jeffrey, Lukyanenko Roman, & Wiersma Yolanda. (2011) Easier citizen science is better. Nature, 471(7336), 37. DOI: 10.1038/471037a  

  • October 11, 2012
  • 05:05 AM
  • 268 views

Rare Spiral Structure around Red Giant Star

by Jaime Menchén in United Academics

The image was taken by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), and it shows the old star R Sculptoris surrounded by a kind of spiral structure which has never been spotted before.... Read more »

Maercker, M., Mohamed, S., Vlemmings, W.H.T., Ramstedt, S., Groenewegen, M.A.T., Humphreys, E., Kerschbaum, F., Lindqvist, M., Olofsson, H., Paladini, C.... (2012) Unexpectedly large mass loss during the thermal pulse cycle of the red giant star R Sculptoris. Nature. DOI: 10.1038/nature11511  

  • October 5, 2012
  • 01:06 PM
  • 542 views

Livermore experiments illuminate how order arises in the cosmos

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

One of the unsolved mysteries of contemporary science is how highly organized structures can emerge from the random motion of particles. This applies to many situations ranging from astrophysical objects that extend over millions of light years to the birth of life on Earth.... Read more »

Breanna Bishop. (2012) Livermore experiments illuminate how order arises in the cosmos. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. info:/

  • October 5, 2012
  • 09:57 AM
  • 587 views

UCLA astronomers discover star racing around black hole at center of our galaxy

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

UCLA astronomers report the discovery of a remarkable star that orbits the enormous black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy in a blistering 11-and-a-half years — the shortest known orbit of any star near this black hole.... Read more »

Stuart Wolpert. (2012) UCLA astronomers discover star racing around black hole at center of our galaxy. UCLA Newsroom. info:/

  • September 30, 2012
  • 06:19 PM
  • 540 views

Measuring the universe’s exit door

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

The point of no return: In astronomy, it’s known as a black hole — a region in space where the pull of gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. Black holes that can be billions of times more massive than our sun may reside at the heart of most galaxies. Such supermassive black holes are so powerful that activity at their boundaries can ripple throughout their host galaxies.... Read more »

Jennifer Chu, MIT News Office. (2012) Measuring the universe’s ‘exit door’. MIT News Office. info:/

  • September 26, 2012
  • 06:00 PM
  • 268 views

Supernova 1006 lived fast and left no companion behind

by Kelly Oakes in Basic Space

A supernova that lit up the skies in the year 1006 lived and died fast, leaving no companion star behind, astronomers have found. The result is the latest clue in a puzzle that has been troubling astronomers for some time – how does this type of stellar explosion happen?... Read more »

Jonay I. González Hernández, Pilar Ruiz-Lapuente, Hugo M. Tabernero, David Montes, Ramon Canal, Javier Méndez, & Luigi R. Bedin. (2012) No surviving evolved companions of the progenitor of SN 1006. Nature. DOI: 10.1038/nature11447  

  • September 24, 2012
  • 05:24 PM
  • 572 views

Dark matter effect might be explained by modified way to calculate inertial mass

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

One of the first observations suggesting the existence of an invisible dark matter came in 1933 when astronomer Fritz Zwicky noticed that galaxy clusters were more energetic than they should be, according to the mass of visible stars in them, and he proposed dark matter to explain the discrepancy. Later observations of galaxies (by Rubin & Ford, among others) showed that the galaxies’ edges were rotating as fast as the insides of the galaxies, even though acceleration is supposed to decrea........ Read more »

Lisa Zyga. (2012) Dark matter effect might be explained by modified way to calculate inertial mass. Phys.org. info:/

  • September 24, 2012
  • 03:12 PM
  • 562 views

A Clock that Will Last Forever

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

Imagine a clock that will keep perfect time forever, even after the heat-death of the universe. This is the “wow” factor behind a device known as a “space-time crystal,” a four-dimensional crystal that has periodic structure in time as well as space. However, there are also practical and important scientific reasons for constructing a space-time crystal. ... Read more »

Lynn Yarris. (2012) A Clock that Will Last Forever. Berkeley Lab News Center. info:/

  • September 17, 2012
  • 06:40 PM
  • 655 views

First Images from the Dark Energy Camera Help SLAC-Stanford Astrophysicists Seek the Invisible

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

When the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) opened its giant eye last week and began taking pictures of the ancient light from far-off galaxies, more than 120 members of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) eagerly awaited the first snapshots. Those images have now arrived.... Read more »

Lori Ann White. (2012) First Images from the Dark Energy Camera Help SLAC-Stanford Astrophysicists Seek the Invisible. SLAC News Centre / Fermilab. info:/

  • September 17, 2012
  • 01:27 AM
  • 330 views

What Microfossils Found in Meteorites Can Tell Us

by Jason Carr in Wired Cosmos

While most people associate the term microfossil with the strange ALH 84001 object, there are plenty of other more concrete examples of tiny fossilized organisms. Research conducted with scanning electron microscope equipment has created a wide array of scientific literature regarding these small remains of living organisms. While marine objects don’t necessary have anything to [...]... Read more »

  • September 14, 2012
  • 01:22 PM
  • 693 views

Where is all the lithium?

by Brooke N in Smaller Questions

According to standard Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, the universe should have more lithium than we have previously observed. A new method suggestions maybe the universe isn't quite as off from our theories as we thought.... Read more »

  • September 10, 2012
  • 03:35 PM
  • 547 views

The mystery of dark matter may be near to being deciphered

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

The universe is comprised of a large amount of invisible matter, dark matter. It fills the space between the galaxies and between the stars in the galaxies. Since the prediction of the existence of dark matter more than 70 years ago, all sorts of researchers – astronomers, cosmologists and particle physicists have been looking for answers to what it could be. With the latest observations from the Planck satellite, researchers from the Niels Bohr Institute, among others, may be closer than ........ Read more »

Niels Bohr Institute News. (2012) The mystery of dark matter may be near to being deciphered. University of Copenhagen - Niels Bohr Institute News. info:/

  • September 9, 2012
  • 05:36 AM
  • 271 views

Geometric Illusions in Astronauts

by Neuroskeptic in Neuroskeptic

Geometric illusions in astronauts sounds like the title of a late 70s prog album, but it's actually the topic of a remarkable psychology paper just published.Authors Gilles Clement and colleagues of the impressively-named International Space University were interested in the effects of zero gravity on optical illusions and the perception of shape.They hypothesized that our sense of gravity pointing down (via the inner ears) is responsible for certain visual illusions. In the Inverted T illusion,........ Read more »

  • August 30, 2012
  • 03:00 PM
  • 491 views

The Radio Background: Deeper Understanding through Confusion

by Brooke N in Smaller Questions

A discussion of a new paper about what can be learned from the radio sky 'background.' When is blank sky not blank?... Read more »

J. J. Condon, W. D. Cotton, E. B. Fomalont, K. I. Kellermann, N. Miller, R. A. Perley, D. Scott, T. Vernstrom, & J. V. Wall. (2012) Resolving the Radio Source Background: Deeper Understanding Through Confusion. ApJ. arXiv: 1207.2439v2

D. J. Fixsen, A. Kogut, S. Levin, M. Limon4, P. Lubin, P. Mirel, M. Seiffert, J. Singal, E. Wollack, T. Villela.... (2011) ARCADE 2 MEASUREMENT OF THE ABSOLUTE SKY BRIGHTNESS AT 3-90 GHz. ApJ, 734(1). DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/734/1/5  

  • August 26, 2012
  • 02:44 PM
  • 331 views

The Logistics of Scientific Growth in the 21st Century

by caseybergman in I wish you'd made me angry earlier

Over the last few months, I’ve noticed an growing number of reports about declining opportunities and increasing pressure for early stage academic researchers (Ph.D. students, post-docs and junior faculty). For example, the Washington Post published an article in early July about trends in the U.S. scientific job market entitled “U.S. pushes for more scientists, but [...]... Read more »

  • August 13, 2012
  • 03:24 PM
  • 662 views

New eye sweeps the gamma sky: Tübingen Researchers participate

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

H.E.S.S. II in Namibia observes the most violent and extreme phenomena of the Universe in very high energy gamma-rays.... Read more »

University of Tübingen. (2012) New eye sweeps the gamma sky: Tübingen Researchers participate. University of Tübingen News. info:/

  • August 8, 2012
  • 03:50 PM
  • 765 views

New 3D Map of Massive Galaxies and Black Holes Offers Clues to Dark Matter, Dark Energy

by Perikis Livas in Tracing Knowledge

Astronomers have constructed the largest-ever three-dimensional map of massive galaxies and distant black holes, which will help the investigation of the mysterious “dark matter” and “dark energy” that make up 96 percent of the universe.... Read more »

New York University, & Press release. (2012) New 3D Map of Massive Galaxies and Black Holes Offers Clues to Dark Matter, Dark Energy. NYU News. info:/

  • August 7, 2012
  • 02:38 PM
  • 458 views

New planets for old stars

by Invader Xan in Supernova Condensate

Conventional wisdom says that planets form with stars. Following the formation of a star, a collection of gravitationally bound material in orbit around that star will form a protoplanetary disk, which will coalesce into planets. So deeply ingrained in our … Continue reading →... Read more »

Jura, M., & Turner, J. (1998) A mysterious dust clump in a disk around an evolved binary star system. Nature, 395(6698), 144-145. info:/10.1038/25938

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