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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
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    Sol 1450, Mastcam 100. O5 neskutečná práce pozemního personálu..

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    Evidence of Planet 9 --"May Already Exist" - The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel
    http://www.dailygalaxy.com/...uite-possible-that-the-planet-has-already-been-in-some-way-imaged.html

    Actually, it’s quite possible that the planet has already been in some way imaged,” says Scott Sheppard of the Carnegie Institute. “That happened with Uranus,
    Neptune and Pluto — they were observed but not understood before they were actually detected. Who knows, proof of Planet X {or Planet 9} may already exist in
    some observatory archive.”
    Scott Shepard’s team has been se arching for proof of Planet 9 using the Dark Energy Camera on the 4-meter Blanco telescope at the Cerro Tollolo Inter-American
    Observatory in the southern Atacama region of Chile (below) . They have also collected data on distant solar system objects with the Japanese Hyper Surpime
    Camera on the 8-meter Subaru telescope in Hawaii. (National Optical Astronomical Observatory)

    Shepard is considering an alternative theory that involves a Planet 9 exoplanet that had been been kicked out of another nearby solar system that formed in
    the general vicinity of ours. Such things are known to happen.

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    Colliding Black Holes Tell New Story of Stars | Quanta Magazine
    https://www.quantamagazine.org/20160906-black-hole-ligo-astronomy/
    Just months after their discovery, gravitational waves coming from the mergers of black holes are shaking up astrophysics.

    VIRGO
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    Detailed age map shows how Milky Way came together
    http://phys.org/news/2016-09-age-milky.html
    Using colors to identify the approximate ages of more than 130,000 stars in the Milky Way's halo,
    Notre Dame astronomers have produced the clearest picture yet of how the galaxy formed more than 13.5 billion years ago.

    Astrophysicist Daniela Carollo, research assistant professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Notre Dame, and Timothy Beers,
    Notre Dame Chair of Astrophysics, along with research assistant professor Vinicius Placco and their colleagues published their findings in Nature
    Physics, including a chronographic (age) map that supports a hierarchical model of galaxy formation. That model, developed by theoreticians over
    the past few decades, suggests that the Milky Way formed by merging and accretion of small mini-halos containing stars and gas, and that the oldest
    of the Milky Way's stars are at the center of the galaxy and younger stars and galaxies merged with the Milky Way, drawn in by gravity over billions
    of years.

    VIRGO
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    To Bennu and Back
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IQDxm9oQWY


    Philae is found! Rosetta Spacecraft finds its companion on Comet 67p
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZ0S6VaRENY
    VIRGO
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    A Tale Etched in Time | astrobites
    https://astrobites.org/2016/09/06/a-tale-etched-in-time/
    In the 1840s, a star in the constellation Carina decided to put on a big show. Ejecting 10-15 times the mass of the sun, it grew brighter and brighter,
    becoming, for a time, the second brightest star in the sky. It was noted around the world and the Boorong Aboriginal people of Australia even incoporated
    it into their oral legends. This star, Eta Carinae, is a luminous blue variable (LBV), class of stars that have run out of hydrogen in their cores and
    are known to be very large and prone to losing mass in explosive events. Eta Carinae, however, isn’t your ordinary LBV – it is much brighter than most
    LBVs and no one really knows how it ejected so much mass during the Great Eruption of 1840.

    VIRGO
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    A Search for Stellar-Mass Black Holes via Astrometric Microlensing
    http://aasnova.org/2016/09/06/through-the-lenses-of-black-holes/

    VIRGO
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    Cosmonaut Duo & U.S. Record Holder to land in Kazakhstan Wednesday Morning – Soyuz TMA-20M | Spaceflight101
    http://spaceflight101.com/soyuz-tma-20m/soyuz-tma-20m-landing-preview/

    http://www.nasa.gov/press-release/watch-live-as-nasa-astronaut-two-crewmates-return-to-earth
    VIRGO
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    Brown dwarfs hiding in plain sight in our solar neighborhood | Carnegie Institution for Science
    https://carnegiescience.edu/node/2086
    Cool brown dwarfs are a hot topic in astronomy right now. Smaller than stars and bigger than giant planets,
    they hold promise for helping us understand both stellar evolution and planet formation. New work from a team
    including Carnegie’s Jonathan Gagné has discovered several ultracool brown dwarfs in our own solar neighborhood.
    Their findings are published in The Astrophysical Journal.

    Brown Dwarfs
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcCS5diDXMQ
    VIRGO
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    Mystery X-Ray Signal Probably Not Dark Matter After All | Motherboard
    http://motherboard.vice.com/read/mystery-x-ray-signal-probably-not-dark-matter-after-all
    A couple of years ago, astronomers took note of a curious x-ray signal in data from both NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton Observatory.
    First, it was seen in observations of the Perseus galaxy gathered by both instruments, and, then, it was all over the place. XMM-Newton found the same signal present in 73 other
    galaxies: an x-ray emission line at a frequency where there shouldn't be one. Thoughts quickly turned to a dark matter explanation.

    Of course, dark matter being dark and all sort of precludes it from spitting out x-rays. Instead, the idea is that as certain dark matter particles decay, they might emit x-rays.
    This is the case for one potential dark matter explanation: sterile neutrinos. These hypothesized particles interact only via gravity, a la dark matter, but as they decay, they
    should emit an x-ray glow. We haven't actually detected sterile neutrinos yet owing to the extreme sensitivities required. Indeed, the x-ray signals observed by Chandra and XMM-
    Newton were at the upper limits of their observational powers.

    So, as it turns out, the signals may not be so dark or mysterious. According to researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, they are likely
    the product of highly-charged sulfur ions being devious. This is all described in a paper posted recently to the arXiv pre-print server and slated for publication in
    the Astrophysical Journal.
    VIRGO
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    Day 2 of the 11th International LISA Symposium

    The second day of the LISA Symposium in Zurich, Switzerland, began earlier today at 9 am CEST. The morning session features,
    the Virgo GW detector, stellar population models, 3rd generation GW detectors, Cosmology with LISA, and other space interferometry
    missions. Tune in at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KUVXwyKNuqo

    LISA Symposium XI @UZH, Zurich Live Stream
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KUVXwyKNuqo


    VIRGO
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    These are the few limits on our ability to know.
    Cosmological Inflation and Other Limits To Our Knowledge of the Universe
    http://nautil.us/issue/40/learning/how-much-more-can-we-learn-about-the-universe
    VIRGO
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    Proxima b, where did it come from? | PALE RED DOT
    https://palereddot.org/proxima-b-where-did-it-come-from/
    The recent discovery of Proxima b has not only excited much of the public, but also scores of scientists who are attempting to explain its many different aspects.
    At the time of writing, there are already 8 papers discussing a wide variety of topics concerning Proxima b: ranging from its potential habitability and the impact
    of flares, to how to characterise the planet’s atmosphere with NASA’s new James Webb Space Telescope. Whilst these pieces of work are important in looking at the
    present state of the planet, (well the state of the planet 4.25 years ago) one important question from its past needs to be answered. How did it form and evolve into
    the planet that is detected today? Knowing how and where it formed can give valuable insights into its composition and atmospheric properties, whilst understanding
    its evolution can give hints at to what else, if anything, should be expected to be discovered orbiting Proxima Centauri. But before we examine the specific case
    of Proxima b, it is useful to understand just what planets form from and how they do it in a very general case.

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    Genesis Project: Should We 'Gift' the Cosmos With Life?
    http://www.seeker.com/genesis-project-could-we-gift-the-cosmos-with-life-1995367411.html
    Some exoplanets are only considered habitable for short periods of time, should we give life on these worlds an evolutionary helping hand?
    VIRGO
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    Earth's carbon points to planetary smashup
    http://phys.org/news/2016-09-earth-carbon-planetary-smashup.html
    Research by Rice University Earth scientists suggests that virtually all of Earth's life-giving carbon could have
    come from a collision about 4.4 billion years ago between Earth and an embryonic planet similar to Mercury.

    VIRGO
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    One trace of dark matter vanishes
    A mysterious X-ray signal most likely originates from sulfur ions which capture electrons
    Mysterious X-ray signal does not originate from dark matter | Max Planck Society
    https://www.mpg.de/10716782/dark-matter-xray-sulfur-ions
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