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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
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    The Seasons and the Earth's Orbit - Milankovitch Cycles
    The Seasons and the Earth's Orbit
    http://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/docs/seasons_orbit.php

    VIRGO
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    Kennedy Team Briefed on Juno Mission Progress | Kennedy Space Center
    https://blogs.nasa.gov/kennedy/2016/09/22/kennedy-team-briefed-on-juno-mission-progress/

    Since its arrival in orbit around Jupiter nearly three months ago, the Juno spacecraft already is impressing scientists
    with its observations of the gas giant. Employees at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida were briefed on the status
    and the scientific promise of a mission many audience members helped launch a little more than five years ago.
    VIRGO
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    STScI: OGLE-2007-BLG-349

    Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, and a trick of nature, have confirmed the existence of a planet orbiting two stars
    in the system OGLE-2007-BLG-349, located 8,000 light-years away towards the center of our galaxy. The Hubble observations represent
    the first time such a three-body system has been confirmed using the gravitational microlensing technique.

    HubbleSite - NewsCenter - Hubble Finds Planet Orbiting Pair of Stars (09/22/2016) - The Full Story
    http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2016/32/full/

    VIRGO
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    Scientists confirm the universe has no direction
    http://phys.org/news/2016-09-scientists-universe.html

    The universe is not spinning or stretched in any particular direction, according to the most stringent test yet.

    Looking out into the night sky, we see a clumpy universe: planets orbit stars in solar systems and stars are grouped into galaxies,
    which in turn form enormous galaxy clusters. But cosmologists assume this effect is only local: that if we look on sufficiently large
    scales, the universe is actually uniform.

    The vast majority of calculations made about our universe start with this assumption: that the universe is broadly the same, whatever
    your position and in whichever direction you look. If, however, the universe was stretching preferentially in one direction, or spinning
    about an axis in a similar way to the Earth rotating, this fundamental assumption, and all the calculations that hinge on it, would be wrong.

    Now, scientists from University College London and Imperial College London have put this assumption through its most stringent test yet and
    found only a 1 in 121,000 chance that the universe is not the same in all directions.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    One target is imaged by three of Curiosity's cameras while located at the same location, each image has been cropped to feature just the target.
    On the left of the montage is a navigation camera frame, in the center is a right-side mast camera frame, on the right is a cropped mosaic of
    three ChemCam remote micro imager (RMI) frames. The NavCam and MastCam frames have been annotated to show the area of coverage of
    the next frame. The mission sols have also been annotated above each frame in the montage.

    VIRGO
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    VIRGO
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    Phoenix Planets: Some 'Tatooine' Worlds May Rise from Stellar Ashes
    http://www.space.com/34134-phoenix-tatooine-planets-rise-from-star-ashes.html

    A new study reveals that the most massive worlds occur nearly as often around tight pairs of stars as they do around singles. While most planets
    that orbit one star came into being along with their sun, some of the worlds orbiting two tightly paired objects may have come from one of the stars' debris.

    "Because of the challenges they present, binary stars have been for a long time neglected," Mariangela Bonavita, a researcher at the University of Edinburgh
    in the United Kingdom, told Space.com. Bonavita examined a number of stellar surveys, including The Search for Planets Orbiting Two Stars (SPOTS), to which
    Bonavita contributed, to hunt for worlds around pairs of stars.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Intersecting Channels near Olympica Fossae
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lpkBP-0OAjc


    HiRISE | Intersecting Channels near Olympica Fossae (ESP_045091_2045)
    http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_045091_2045
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Massive Holes Punched Through a Trail of Stars Likely Caused by Dark Matter - SpaceRef
    http://spaceref.com/...sive-holes-punched-through-a-trail-of-stars-likely-caused-by-dark-matter.html

    Researchers have detected two massive holes which have been 'punched' through a stream of stars just outside the Milky Way, and found that they were likely
    caused by clumps of dark matter, the invisible substance which holds galaxies together and makes up a quarter of all matter and energy in the universe.

    The scientists, from the University of Cambridge, found the holes by studying the distribution of stars in the Milky Way. While the clumps of dark matter
    that likely made the holes are gigantic in comparison to our Solar System - with a mass between one million and 100 million times that of the Sun - they are
    actually the tiniest clumps of dark matter detected to date.

    The results, which have been submitted to the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, could help researchers understand the properties of dark
    matter, by inferring what type of particle this mysterious substance could be made of. According to their calculations and simulations, dark matter is
    likely made up of particles more massive and more sluggish than previously thought, although such a particle has yet to be discovered.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Na té plošině jsme stáli. Ale tančit bylo to poslední, co by nás napadlo...
    ALICE. Červená (Hvězdná) brána do úplného počátku našeho vesmíru.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Ask Nima Veiseh what he was doing for any day in the past 15 years, however, and he will give you the minutiae
    of the weather, what he was wearing, or even what side of the train he was sitting on his journey to work.

    “My memory is like a library of VHS tapes, walk-throughs of every day of my life from waking to sleeping,” he explains.

    BBC - Future - The blessing and curse of the people who never forget
    http://www.bbc.com/...tory/20160125-the-blessing-and-curse-of-the-people-who-never-forget?ocid=fbfut
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Chemically peculiar star HR8844 could be a hybrid object
    http://phys.org/news/2016-09-chemically-peculiar-star-hr8844-hybrid.html

    Astronomers from the Paris Observatory in Meudon, France and the Notre Dame University – Louaize in Zouk Mosbeh, Lebanon, report that an A-type
    main-sequence star HR8844, could be a hybrid object between two classes of chemically peculiar stars. The discovery was detailed in a paper
    published Sept. 16 on arXiv.org.

    Previous studies described HR8844 as a slowly rotating, fairly bright (V=5.89), superficially normal A0V star. However, the latest research
    conducted by Richard Monier of the Paris Observatory and his colleagues sheds new light on the real nature of this star.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Vanished star may be first known failed supernova | Science News
    https://www.sciencenews.org/article/vanished-star-may-be-first-known-failed-supernova

    A star that mysteriously disappeared might be the first confirmed case of a failed supernova, a star that tried to
    explode but couldn’t finish the job. A newborn black hole appears to have been left behind to snack on the star’s remains.

    In 2009, a star in the galaxy NGC 6946 flared up over several months to become over 1 million times as bright as the sun. Then, it seemed to vanish.
    While the star could just be hiding behind a wall of dust, new observations with the Hubble Space Telescope, reported online September 6 at arXiv.org,
    strongly suggest that the star did not survive. A faint trickle of infrared light, however, emanates from where the star used to be. The remnant glow
    probably comes from debris falling onto a black hole that formed when the star died, write Caltech astronomer Scott Adams and colleagues.

    VIRGO
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    The 1995 Hubble photo that changed astronomy - Vox
    http://www.vox.com/2016/9/21/12989670/hubble-deep-field

    The 1995 Hubble photo that changed astronomy
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95Tc0Rk2cNg
    VIRGO
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    Today in 2003, Galileo spacecraft impacted into Jupiter closing an amazing & successful series of missions:
    The Final Day on Galileo - Sunday, September 21, 2003
    http://spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=12593

    VIRGO
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    What can an equation tell us about whether or not we're alone in the universe?

    Will We Ever Find Intelligent Alien Life?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YmiRfCDeNg
    VIRGO
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    KELT-16b: a new benchmark for future exoplanet atmosphere studies | astrobites
    https://astrobites.org/2016/09/20/kelt-16b-a-new-benchmark-for-future-exoplanet-atmosphere-studies/
    KELT-16b was discovered by the The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT; see astrobite here).
    The KELT program is composed of two small ground-based telescopes: one in the North hemisphere, and
    the other in the South. KELT searches for nearby transiting exoplanets by continuously surveying the
    observable sky. Being a wide-angle survey, KELT is best suited at finding massive planets orbiting
    close-by their host star—i.e., hot Jupiters similar to KELT-16b.

    The discovery light curve of KELT-16b, containing over 5000 observations (black points) by the KELT-North telescope over six years, phase
    folded to the best fit orbital period (about 0.97 days). The red points show the same data binned to 8min bins. Figure 1 from the paper.

    VIRGO
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    'False' biosignatures may complicate search for ancient life on Earth, other planets | CU Boulder Today | University of Colorado Boulder
    http://www.colorado.edu/...alse-biosignatures-may-complicate-search-ancient-life-earth-other-planets
    Self-assembling carbon microstructures created in a lab by University of Colorado Boulder researchers could provide new clues –
    and new cautions – in efforts to identify microbial life preserved in the fossil record, both on Earth and elsewhere in the solar system.

    The geological search for ancient life frequently zeroes in on fossilized organic structures or biominerals that can serve as “biosignatures,”
    that survive in the rock record over extremely long time scales. Mineral elements such as sulfur are often formed through biological activity.
    Microbes can also produce a variety of telltale extracellular structures that resemble sheaths and stalks.

    However, according to new findings published today in the journal Nature Communications, carbon-sulfur microstructures that would be recognized
    today by some experts as biomaterials are capable of self-assembling under certain conditions, even without direct biological activity. These
    “false” biosignatures could potentially be misinterpreted as signs of biological activity due to their strong resemblance to microbial structures.

    “Surprisingly, we found that we could create all sorts of biogenic-like materials that have the right shape, structure and chemistry to match
    natural materials we assume are produced biologically,” said Associate Professor Alexis Templeton of CU Boulder’s Department of Geological
    Sciences and senior author of the new study.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Lessons from a 28 Year-Long Evolutionary Experiment - The Extremo Files : The Extremo Files
    http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/the-extremo-files/2016/08/29/353/
    Every morning, a scientist walks into a lab in East Lansing, Michigan, grabs a pipette, and mixes two liquids. One is a cloudy brew of E. coli cells,
    billions of organisms thick; the other is a sterile solution with glucose and essential nutrients. One part A, 99 parts B, and back in the incubator
    it goes; over the next 24 hours, the cells will double nearly seven times, adapting to the broth in the process.

    And so it goes in the lab of Richard Lenski, a Professor of Microbial Ecology at Michigan State University, just as it has for the last 28 years.
    That’s more than 65,000 generations of E. coli, the “lab rat” of microbiology; the associated experiments have generated freezers’ worth of samples
    and burned through enough petri dishes to fill a warehouse.

    It started with 12 replicate populations of the same E. coli strain, each allowed to propagate on its own as it adapted to the glucose- and citrate-
    containing food source. “Is evolution this invariable slow and gradual process?” Lenski recalls wondering as he set up the first agar plates. “What
    about the repeatability – do things solve problems in the same way every time? Do you arrive at an end point that is optimal?”
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