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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    http://neliota.astro.noa.gr/?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
    NELIOTA is a new European Space Agency (ESA) activity launched at the National Observatory of Athens in February, 2015. It aims
    to determine the distribution and frequency of small near-earth objects (NEOs) via lunar monitoring for impacts of NEO objects.

    First suspected lunar impact detected by NELIOTA on 1 February, lasted for 1 frame in 0.023 sec exposure, 17:13:58 UT long. -25.7 lat -3.4.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    1505-1506
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    VIRGO: Začínají
    Asteroid Day Press Conference LIVE from Luxembourg | February 14 | starts at 2.30PM CET
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQKDZoXYgtc
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Uá, MPC stránky konečně funkční po více jak 24 hodinách. To byl teda hustocrash... :O
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    The Deep Space Network (1989)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFxDUjmQxBg
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Dnes: Asteroid Day Press Conference 2017
    Asteroid Day Press Conference 2017 - Blog - Asteroid Day
    https://blog.asteroidday.org/2017/02/07/asteroid-day-press-conference-2017/
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Tightening the Parameters for Centauri A and B
    http://www.centauri-dreams.org/?p=37114

    When it comes to the nearest stars, our focus of late has been on Proxima Centauri and its intriguing planet. But of course the work on Centauri A and B
    continues at a good clip. The prospects in this system are enticing — a G-class star like our own, a K-class dwarf likewise capable of hosting planets,
    and the red dwarf Proxima a scant 15000 AU away. Project Blue examines how we might image planets here as our radial velocity studies proceed.

    But we have much to learn, and not just about possible planets. A new paper by Pierre Kervella (Observatoire de Paris), working with Lionel Bigot and
    Fréderic Thévenin (both at the Observatoire de la Cote d’Azur), reminds us of the importance of firming up our stellar data.

    We need to learn as much as possible about Centauri A and B not just because we’d like to find planets there but also because the work has implications
    for space missions, including the ESA’s Gaia, which will tighten our distance measurements to many stars. The Alpha Centauri stars are important benchmarks
    for Gaia, putting the emphasis on an accurate calibration of the basic stellar parameters in this system.

    Kervella and team have used new observations of Centauri A and B with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer equipped with the PIONIER (Precision Integrated
    Optics Near-infrared Imaging ExpeRiment) beam combiner to operate in the near infrared. Their paper reports on improved measurements of both stars’ angular
    diameters in relation to the phenomenon known as limb darkening. The latter results point to the need to improve our models as we study the photospheres of
    stars including our own Sun.

    Limb darkening refers to the gradual decrease in brightness that we see as we look away from the center of a star toward its outer edge, or limb. Have a look
    at the image below to see the effect, which is easily visible in photographs of the Sun. When we look at the center of the Sun’s disk, we see the greatest
    light emission because we are viewing the deepest, and hottest layers, while at the limb, we are seeing only cooler layers that produce less light.

    The phenomenon is important because we can use it to study how a star’s atmosphere is structured, but it turns up as a factor in everything from eclipsing binary
    stars to gravitational microlensing. Moreover, limb darkening will affect the shape of the transit curve produced by a planet moving in front of its star. The planet
    blocks a smaller part of the star’s light when it is near the limb, and a greater fraction as it moves toward the center of the star. The center of a transit, in other
    words, is always going to be deeper than the edges, something that would not happen if a star had a uniform brightness (there the transit ‘curve’ would appear flat).

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/jpl/PIA20519/f-for-fabulous

    When seen up close, the F ring of Saturn resolves into multiple dusty strands. This Cassini view shows three bright strands and a very faint fourth strand off to the right.
    The central strand is the core of the F ring. The other strands are not independent at all, but are actually sections of long spirals of material that wrap around Saturn.
    The material in the spirals was likely knocked out from the F ring's core during interactions with a small moon. To read more about the spiral, see The F Ring's Spiral Arm .

    This view looks toward the unilluminated side of the rings from about 38 degrees above the ring plane. The image was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft
    narrow-angle camera on Dec. 18, 2016. The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 197 000 kilometers from Saturn and at a Sun-Ring-spacecraft, or phase, angle
    of 47 degrees. Image scale is 1.2 kilometers per pixel.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Orex 13/02/17
    Where is the Spacecraft? - OSIRIS-REx Mission
    http://www.asteroidmission.org/where-is-the-spacecraft/

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Dwarf star 200 light years away contains life's building blocks | EurekAlert! Science News
    https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-02/uoc--ds2020917.php
    UCLA-led team discovers object in the constellation Boötes with carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen

    Many scientists believe the Earth was dry when it first formed, and that the building blocks for life on our planet - carbon,
    nitrogen and water - appeared only later as a result of collisions with other objects in our solar system that had those elements.

    Today, a UCLA-led team of scientists reports that it has discovered the existence of a white dwarf star whose atmosphere is rich
    in carbon and nitrogen, as well as in oxygen and hydrogen, the components of water. The white dwarf is approximately 200 light years
    from Earth and is located in the constellation Boötes.

    Benjamin Zuckerman, a co-author of the research and a UCLA professor of astronomy, said the study presents evidence that the planetary
    system associated with the white dwarf contains materials that are the basic building blocks for life. And although the study focused
    on this particular star -- known as WD 1425+540 -- the fact that its planetary system shares characteristics with our solar system
    strongly suggests that other planetary systems would also.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Astronomers zoom in on megastar's juvenile outburst
    https://phys.org/news/2017-02-astronomers-megastar-juvenile-outburst.html

    A long time ago, in a galaxy far away, a supergiant red star ended its life in a spectacular explosion known as a supernova.

    The light from that event took 160 million years to reach Earth where, in a stroke of luck, robot telescopes scanning the night
    sky happened upon it on October 6, 2013.

    On Monday, astronomers said the chance discovery allowed them to study the earliest phase of a supernova yet—just three hours
    after it erupted.

    "We immediately knew that what we have in hand is extremely unique," Ofer Yaron of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel,
    lead author of a study in the journal Nature Physics, told AFP.

    "We managed to observe this event when (it was) very young." The supernova was named SN 2013fs.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Scientists make huge dataset of nearby stars available to public | MIT News
    http://news.mit.edu/2017/dataset-nearby-stars-available-public-exoplanets-0213
    Users can search database of 1,600 stars to find signs of new exoplanets.

    The search for planets beyond our solar system is about to gain some new recruits.

    Today, a team that includes MIT and is led by the Carnegie Institution for Science has released the largest collection of observations
    made with a technique called radial velocity, to be used for hunting exoplanets. The huge dataset, taken over two decades by the W.M. Keck
    Observatory in Hawaii, is now available to the public, along with an open-source software package to process the data and an online tutorial.

    By making the data public and user-friendly, the scientists hope to draw fresh eyes to the observations, which encompass almost 61,000
    measurements of more than 1,600 nearby stars.

    “This is an amazing catalog, and we realized there just aren’t enough of us on the team to be doing as much science as could come out of this
    dataset,” says Jennifer Burt, a Torres Postdoctoral Fellow in MIT’s Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. “We’re trying to shift
    toward a more community-oriented idea of how we should do science, so that others can access the data and see something interesting.”

    Burt and her colleagues have outlined some details of the newly available dataset in a paper to appear in The Astronomical Journal. After taking
    a look through the data themselves, the researchers have detected over 100 potential exoplanets, including one orbiting GJ 411, the fourth-closest
    star to our solar system.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Webb Telescope Structure Practice Move
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeeJAkr272Y
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Don’t blame asteroids for the Late Heavy Bombardment! | astrobites
    https://astrobites.org/2017/02/10/dont-blame-asteroids-for-the-late-heavy-bombardment/

    Asteroids have a bad reputation. They may have wiped out the dinosaurs, and they have threatened the survival of humanity in many terrible movies.
    Until today’s featured paper, asteroids were also blamed for the Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB, for short) – a period of time in the early solar system when the Moon,
    the Earth, and the other rocky planets were hit with an unusually high amount of impactors from a variety of material in space. It lasted from the Sun’s formation
    4.6 billion years (Gyr) ago until the impact that created the Orientale crater on the Moon 800 million years later (3.8 Gyr ago). Planetary scientists working on
    the Apollo missions in the 1960s first hypothesized the LHB when astronauts brought back impact melt rocks from various craters that unexpectedly all dated back to
    this time. The idea was later extended to include the rest of the inner solar system when planetary scientists found similar cratering histories on each of the rocky
    planets. These LHB-era impacts are believed to have been caused by some combination of asteroids (from the asteroid belt), comets (from the Kuiper Belt and beyond),
    and leftover material from the formation of the inner rocky planets. However, it is still not clear which of these three sources was the main culprit.
    To address one part of this issue, Nesvorny et al. – the authors of today’s paper, ask: Were there enough impacting asteroids to account for all of the craters on
    the Moon from the Late Heavy Bombardment?
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Proxima Centauri b And Most Other Exo-Planets Are Likely Uninhabitable
    http://www.forbes.com/...entauri-b-and-most-other-exo-planets-are-likely-uninhabitable/#77f9a9344218

    Proxima Centauri b - the newly-discovered earth-mass planet once thought to be a real contender for habitability - is, in fact, very likely to be
    uninhabitable, a new study concludes. And even if Proxima Centauri b - and the estimated tens of billions of other extrasolar planets like it -
    did once have habitable atmospheres, astrobiologists now say extreme flaring from their parent stars likely would have eroded their atmospheres.

    NASA says Proxima Centauri b, which orbits our nearest stellar neighbor Proxima Centauri at a distance some 20 times closer than Earth to the Sun, is
    likely to have been subjected to torrents of X-ray and extreme ultraviolet (UV) radiation multiple times a day. That is, when its host star was younger
    and even more magnetically-active than today.

    In a paper just published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the authors note that earth-mass planets in close orbits around young, magnetically-active
    low mass stars would be subject to much atmospheric havoc. In fact, within some ten million years the planet Proxima Centauri b, which lies only 4.2 light
    years away in Centaurus, may have lost a trillion metric tons of its atmospheric oxygen to space. Or long before the planet could have developed microbial
    life.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Fireball Meteor Above Mt. Hakusan
    Taken by Yasushi Aoshima on December 2, 2016 @ Ishikawa, JAPAN

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Life begets life: The diversity of species on Earth is generating itself | EurekAlert! Science News
    https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-02/nrts-lbl020917.php
    A new research hypothesis suggests that biodiversity is autocatalytic

    If competition is the main evolutionary driver, why can so many species coexist within the same ecosystem instead to have a few that dominate?
    This a long and central question in ecology. Many ideas have been suggested in an attempt to explain this evolutionary paradox. Most of them
    are based on the importance of ecological niches for the maintenance of differentiated against dominated environments.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Oxygen Increased When Earth Was Covered in Ice - Astrobiology Magazine
    http://www.astrobio.net/also-in-news/oxygen-increased-earth-covered-ice/

    In the beginning, planet Earth was a very inhospitable place with no oxygen and only single-celled bacteria as inhabitants. According to a new study,
    the oxygen content in the air began to increase about 2.4 billion years ago, at the same time as the global glaciation and when all continents were gathered
    in a single huge landmass, or supercontinent. How to explain the exact connection between these events, however, is a question that baffles the researchers.

    “Our results also show that oxidation coincided in time with an event of global glaciation of the Earth and extensive volcanism”, says Ulf Söderlund,
    Professor of Geology at the Faculty of Science at Lund University in Sweden.

    In the recent international study, researchers from Lund University, among others, have pinpointed the timing of this so-called Great Oxidation Event —
    a crucial starting point in the development of life.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Giant radio galaxy discovered by astronomers
    https://phys.org/news/2017-02-giant-radio-galaxy-astronomers.html

    An international team of astronomers reports the discovery of a new giant radio galaxy (GRG) associated with the galaxy triplet known as UGC 9555. The newly
    discovered galaxy turns out to be one of the largest GRGs so far detected. The findings were presented Feb. 6 in a paper published online on arXiv.org.

    Located some 820 million light years away from the Earth, UGC 9555 is a part of a larger group of galaxies designated MSPM 02158. Recently, a team of researchers
    led by Alex Clarke of the Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics in Manchester, U.K., has combed through the data provided by the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) and
    uncovered new, important information about this distant disturbed galaxy group.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Stellar occultations of planetary rings: from Palomar to Cassini - Phil Nicholson (SETI Talks 2017)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riursEikQ9Y
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