• úvod
  • témata
  • události
  • tržiště
  • diskuze
  • nástěnka
  • přihlásit
    registrace
    ztracené heslo?
    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    The AO Management Team Statement in Response to the NSF Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Arecibo Observatory | Smart
    http://websites.suagm.edu/ao/?q=AO-Response-EIS

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Night Sky Network Webinar: Exploring Exoplanet Biosignatures | News | Astrobiology
    https://astrobiology.nasa.gov/news/night-sky-network-webinar-exploring-exoplanet-biosignatures/

    On November 16, 2016, Eddie Schwieterman, a NASA Postdoctoral Program (NPP) fellow with the NASA Astrobiology Institute
    (NAI) Alternative Earths team, and Giada Arney, NPP fellow at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and member of the NAI
    Virtual Planetary Laboratory, joined the Night Sky Network (NSN) for Exploring Exoplanet Biosignatures, Potential “False
    Positives” for Life, and the Case of Proxima Centauri b.

    NSN Webinar: Exploring Exoplanet Biosignatures
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxtRr9hL99M
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Meteorite recovered in WA with the help of stargazers and science app - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
    http://www.abc.net.au/...16-11-22/meteorite-recovered-with-the-help-of-dedicated-star-gazers/8046880
    A meteorite estimated to be older than Earth has been recovered from a West Australian farm with the help of some enthusiastic stargazers and a phone app.
    The 1.15-kilogram meteor landed near Morawa on Halloween, discovered days later by members of Curtin University's Desert Fireball Network (DFN).

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    New family of stars discovered in Milky Way shed new light on galaxy's formation
    http://phys.org/news/2016-11-family-stars-milky-galaxy-formation.html

    An astronomer from LJMU's Astrophysics Research Institute has discovered a new family of stars in the core
    of the Milky Way Galaxy which provides new insights into the early stages of the Galaxy's formation.

    The discovery has shed new light on the origins of globular clusters – which are concentrations of typically
    a million stars, formed at the beginning of the Milky Way's history.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Asteroid That Killed Dinosaurs Made Earth's Surface Act Like Liquid, Scientists Say : The Two-Way : NPR
    http://www.npr.org/...0/scientists-say-dinosaur-killing-asteroid-made-earths-surface-act-like-liquid

    When the asteroid believed to have killed off the dinosaurs smashed into Earth some 66 million years ago,
    its sheer force made the planet's surface momentarily act like a liquid.

    The asteroid ripped open a 60-mile-wide hole. From miles deep in that abyss, rock hurtled upward to a height
    twice that of Mount Everest and then collapsed outward to form a ring of mountains.

    And it all happened within 5 minutes — 10 tops, as Sean Gulick, a geophysicist at the University of Texas,
    Austin, tells The Two-Way.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Top Ancient Sites for Stargazing
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/top-10/top-ancient-sites-stargazing/
    From petroglyphs to castles carved into hilltops, explore our night sky through our ancestors at these amazing archaeological sites.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Gravity may have chased light in the early universe | New Scientist
    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2113797-gravity-may-have-chased-light-in-the-early-universe/

    It’s supposed to be the most fundamental constant in physics, but the speed of light may not always have been the same.
    This twist on a controversial idea could overturn our standard cosmological wisdom.

    In 1998, Joao Magueijo at Imperial College London, proposed that the speed of light might vary, to solve what cosmologists call the horizon problem. This says that
    the universe reached a uniform temperature long before heat-carrying photons, which travel at the speed of light, had time to reach all corners of the universe.

    The standard way to explain this conundrum is an idea called inflation, which suggests that the universe went through a short period of rapid expansion early on – so
    the temperature evented out when the cosmos was smaller, then it suddenly grew. But we don’t know why inflation started, or stopped. So Magueijo has been looking for
    alternatives.

    Now, in a paper to be published 28 November in Physical Review, he and Niayesh Afshordi at the Perimeter Institute in Canada have laid out a new version of the idea –
    and this one is testable. They suggest that in the early universe, light and gravity propagated at different speeds.

    If photons moved faster than gravity just after the big bang, that would have let them get far enough for the universe to reach an equilibrium temperature much more
    quickly, the team say.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    JO!!

    ESA Science & Technology: Two-year extensions confirmed for ESA's science missions
    http://sci.esa.int/cosmic-vision/58589-two-year-extensions-confirmed-for-esas-science-missions/
    ESA's Science Programme Committee (SPC) has today confirmed two-year mission extensions for nine scientific missions
    in which the Agency is participating. This secures their operations until the end of 2018.

    After a comprehensive review of their current operational status and the likely scientific return from each mission,
    the SPC decided to extend the operation of six ESA-led missions (Cluster, INTEGRAL, Mars Express, PROBA-2, SOHO and
    XMM-Newton) from 1 January 2017 to 31 December 2018.

    The go-ahead was also given to continue ESA's contributions to the operations of three international collaborative
    missions: the Hubble Space Telescope and the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), which are both led by NASA,
    as well as Hinode, which is a Japanese-led mission.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Planetary Science Institute:

    Amateur and professional astronomers are invited to provide observations of three comets that will make close approaches to Earth over the next two years.
    The three comets are 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak, 45P/Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova, and 46P/Wirtanen. The comets will pass by Earth at distances ranging from
    0.08 AU to 0.15 AU. AU or Astronomical Unit is the distance from the Sun to Earth. Such close approaches of three comets within two years are rare and
    typically occur only once every few decades.

    http://www.psi.edu/news/4*P

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    North Port Police Department Patrol car cameras capture fireball in sky over Florida on November 21, 2016
    NPPD Patrol car cameras capture fireball in sky
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVH7wiJCo9A&feature=youtu.be
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Po 30.11. začne divadlo dosud nevídané. Sonda bude prolétávat nejblíže vnějšího okraje prstenců a především poblíž pastýřských měsíců,
    takže můžeme očekávat jak důležitá vědecká data, tak krásné snímky. Bude zkoumat i zatím nevysvětlené anomálie pásu prstenců -
    za některé z nich zřejmě mohou dosud neobjevené malé měsíce či jejich "zárodky".

    Cassini’s High-Flying, Ring-Grazing Orbits
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gj8l2f9prYk


    News | NASA Saturn Mission Prepares for 'Ring-Grazing Orbits'
    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6681
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Fireball in the sky over Florida - November 21,2016
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCOD_5dI7vo&feature=youtu.be
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Looking for ‘Technosignatures’
    http://www.centauri-dreams.org/?p=36675

    We speculated yesterday that categorizing civilizations on the basis of their power use may not be a given, though it is the basis
    of the familiar Kardashev types. It seems natural to a rapidly changing technological society like ours that the trend is always upward,
    a clear path toward harnessing the energies of the home planet, then the Sun, then the galaxy.

    That this may not be the case seems to go against the grain of ‘Dysonian SETI,’ which looks for, among other things, artifacts as large
    as Dyson spheres and other astro-engineering projects on massive scales. Or maybe not, for some engineering involving adjustments to
    planetary environments may well produce observables. We just have to be aware of the range of possibilities here, and recognize our
    own limitations in trying to figure them out.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/mars-ice-deposit-holds-as-much-water-as-lake-superior

    Frozen beneath a region of cracked and pitted plains on Mars lies about as much water as what's in Lake Superior,
    largest of the Great Lakes, researchers using NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have determined.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Behind the Scenes of the Dream
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_-ngSl8Om0
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Did NASA Mars Rover Find a Signature of Past Life?
    http://www.space.com/34795-mars-life-nasa-spirit-rover.html

    During its wheeled treks on the Red Planet, NASA's Spirit rover may have encountered a potential
    signature of past life on Mars, report scientists at Arizona State University (ASU).

    To help make their case, the researchers have contrasted Spirit's study of "Home Plate" — a plateau
    of layered rocks that the robot explored during the early part of its third year on Mars — with
    features found within active hot spring/geyser discharge channels at a site in northern Chile called
    El Tatio. The work has resulted in a provocative paper: "Silica deposits on Mars with features
    resembling hot spring biosignatures at El Tatio in Chile."

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Spiral galaxy NGC 5523 could be an isolated product of soft galaxy mergers, study suggests
    http://phys.org/news/2016-11-spiral-galaxy-ngc-isolated-product.html

    The spiral galaxy NGC 5523 is believed to be an example of an isolated galaxy whose evolution was not influenced by other objects.
    However, a new study conducted by U.S. astronomers shows that the isolation of NGC 5523 could be due to its past minor mergers
    with surrounding low-mass galaxies. The findings are detailed in a paper published Nov. 18 on arXiv.org.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Press Release - Record-breaking Faint Satellite Galaxy of the Milky Way Discovered - Subaru Telescope
    http://subarutelescope.org/Pressrelease/2016/11/21/index.html

    An international team led by researchers from Tohoku University has found an extremely faint dwarf satellite galaxy of the Milky Way.
    The team's discovery is part of the ongoing Subaru Strategic Survey using Hyper Suprime-Cam. The satellite, named Virgo I, lies in
    the direction of the constellation Virgo. At the absolute magnitude of -0.8 in the optical waveband (Note), it may well be the faintest
    satellite galaxy yet found. Its discovery suggests the presence of a large number of yet-undetected dwarf satellites in the halo of
    the Milky Way and provides important insights into galaxy formation through hierarchical assembly of dark matter.

    Record-breaking Faint Satellite Galaxy of the Milky Way Discovered
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUo6qlwm3Pg
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Kliknutím sem můžete změnit nastavení reklam