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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Collisions generate gas in debris disks
    https://phys.org/news/2017-04-collisions-gas-debris-disks.html

    By examining the atomic carbon line from two young star systems—49 Ceti and Beta Pictoris—researchers had found atomic carbon
    in the disk, the first time this observation has been made at sub-millimeter wavelength, hinting that the gas in debris disks
    is not primordial, but rather is generated from some process of collisions taking place in the debris disk.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Remedy to “Glitch” Size Anomaly | astrobites
    https://astrobites.org/2017/04/11/remedy-to-glitch-size-anomaly/

    Rotating neutron stars (pulsars) can “spin-up”, or suddenly increase their rotation frequency, in an event called a glitch.
    There is a scarcity of glitch observations, meaning that drawing statistical conclusions must be done with caution! Nevertheless,
    some of the observed properties of glitches are quite curious. In general, the distributions of observed glitch sizes are a power
    law (which would be consistent with the microscopic mechanisms believed to cause the glitches). However, the Vela pulsar, for
    example, typically has large glitches which occur fairly periodically, while recent analysis of the Crab pulsar indicates there
    is a deviation from a power law distribution for smaller glitch sizes. This paper tackles this discrepancy by showing that these
    deviations from power law distributions can be explained naturally, using a carefully chosen model that bridges microscopic and
    macroscopic scales.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Future NASA news: "A Search for Methane, Ammonia, and Water on Two Habitable Zone Super-Earths"

    http://www.stsci.edu/hst/phase2-public/14682.pro
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Ježišku, simtě, ať se toho dožiju... :)



    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Wooow!!
    France, Japan aim to land probe on Mars moon
    https://phys.org/news/2017-04-france-japan-aim-probe-mars.html

    France and Japan want to recover pieces of a Martian Moon and bring them back to Earth, the head of France's National Centre for Space Studies (CNES) said Thursday.

    The Martian Moons Exploration project would launch a probe in 2024 destined for Phobos, the largest and closest of two moons circling the Red Planet.

    Paris and Tokyo signed a preliminary agreement on Monday, and will make a final decision before the end of the year, CNES president Jean-Yves Le Gall told AFP.
    "It's a very important mission because—besides the Moon—it would be the first time samples from the satellite of a planet would be brought back to Earth,"
    he said by phone. Slightly egg-shaped, Phobos is 27 kilometres (17 miles) in diametre from end-to-end.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Before being named, minor planets (including asteroids) receive a provisional designation. Have you ever wondered how this designation is chosen?

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Astronomers piece together first image of black hole
    https://phys.org/news/2017-04-astronomers-piece-image-black-hole.html

    After training a network of telescopes stretching from Hawaii to Antarctica to Spain at the heart of our galaxy for five nights running,
    astronomers said Wednesday they may have snapped the first-ever picture of a black hole.

    It will take months to develop the image, but if scientists succeed the results may help peel back mysteries about what the universe is
    made of and how it came into being.

    "Instead of building a telescope so big that it would probably collapse under its own weight, we combined eight observatories like the pieces
    of a giant mirror," said Michael Bremer, an astronomer at the International Research Institute for Radio Astronomy (IRAM) and a project manager
    for the Event Horizon Telescope.

    "This gave us a virtual telescope as big as Earth—about 10,000 kilometres (6,200 miles) is diameter," he told AFP.

    The bigger the telescope, the finer the resolution and level of detail.

    The targeted supermassive black hole is hidden in plain sight, lurking in the centre of the Milky Way in a region called the Sagittarius
    constellation, some 26,000 light years from Earth.

    Dubbed Sagittarius A* (Sgr A* for short), the gravity- and light-sucking monster weighs as much as four million Suns.

    Theoretical astronomy tells us when a black hole absorbs matter—planets, debris, anything that comes too close—a brief flash of light is visible.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Cassini finds molecular hydrogen in the Enceladus plume: Evidence for hydrothermal processes | Science
    http://science.sciencemag.org/content/356/6334/155

    Saturn’s moon Enceladus has an ice-covered ocean; a plume of material erupts from cracks in the ice. The plume contains chemical signatures
    of water-rock interaction between the ocean and a rocky core. We used the Ion Neutral Mass Spectrometer onboard the Cassini spacecraft to detect
    molecular hydrogen in the plume. By using the instrument’s open-source mode, background processes of hydrogen production in the instrument were
    minimized and quantified, enabling the identification of a statistically significant signal of hydrogen native to Enceladus. We find that the most
    plausible source of this hydrogen is ongoing hydrothermal reactions of rock containing reduced minerals and organic materials. The relatively
    high hydrogen abundance in the plume signals thermodynamic disequilibrium that favors the formation of methane from CO2 in Enceladus’ ocean.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Tak hobluj!

    NASA TV Public-Education
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdmHHpAsMVw
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Fossils or good-looking rocks? Why searching for life on other worlds is hard | The Planetary Society
    http://www.planetary.org/blogs/guest-blogs/2017/20170413-fossils-or-good-looking-looks.html

    If you find a structure that looks like ancient life, can you be really sure that it is ancient life? Well, if you stumble upon a mammoth skull
    or a rabbit skeleton with all the correct anatomical features, then that is pretty compelling evidence. But it’s harder to identify older life—
    much older life—that existed long before anything close to mammoths or rabbits.

    Three or four billion years ago, the early inhabitants of our planet were tiny, primitive microorganisms. Their fossilized remains are
    rather unremarkable—simple elongated blobs imprinted in the rocks—but they provide extremely rare and precious information about early Earth.

    But not every blob turns out to be a former living creature. As such, each one of these microstructures poses an important dilemma: Is it
    a genuine, biogenic fossil? Or a deceptively “good-looking rock”?

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    We May Be Able to Build a Rocket That Can Go 99.999% the Speed of Light
    https://futurism.com/we-may-be-able-to-build-a-rocket-that-can-go-99-999-the-speed-of-light/

    A professor has proposed a mathematical theory that could allow us to one day
    build a photon rocket that can reach at 99.999 percent of the speed of light.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    See a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid From Your Backyard - Sky & Telescope
    http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/see-a-potentially-hazardous-asteroid-from-your-backyard/

    Get ready for 2014 JO25, the biggest asteroid to fly this close to Earth since 2004. Good news — even a 3-inch telescope will show it!

    Every week, a handful of new Earth-approaching asteroids are caught in a net of robotic telescopes and join the ranks of nearly 16,000 other fly-by-
    night space boulders. Among their number is one 2014 JO25, discovered in May 2014 by astronomers at the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) near Tucson, Arizona.

    Because of its size and proximity, it will be bright enough to spot in a small, backyard telescope and moving fast enough to see in real time.

    Asteroid 2014 JO25
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cItnmeZGxZM
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Bright fireball over South Carolina
    https://watchers.news/2017/04/13/bright-fireball-over-south-carolina/

    A bright, long-lasting fireball was seen across the sky over South Carolina at 00:45 UTC on April 13, 2017 (20:45 EDT,
    April 12). Witnesses described a bright, white light lasting for about 10 seconds. Many said the object left a long tail.

    The event was seen primarily from South Carolina but people from Georgia, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky,
    Tennesee, and Alabama also reported seeing the fireball.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Bright fireball spotted over Espirito Santo, Brazil on April 13, 2017

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UhXWxOU8mNw
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    One of the darkest places in the US, the McDonald Observatory in Fort Davis, is being ruined by light from fracking — Quartz
    https://qz.com/...s-ruining-one-of-the-last-truly-dark-places-in-the-us-and-astronomers-are-on-edge/

    On a near-cloudless night in mid-March, atop a mountain in the Davis range of the Chihuahuan desert in West Texas, hundreds of families sat on blankets in
    the pitch-dark, looking up at the starry sky while an astronomer pointed with a laser beam at the constellations of Taurus and Orion, Cassiopeia, and Ursa Minor.

    Then he pointed to a hazy cloud of light emanating up from one segment of the horizon. Not a star could be seen. Farther above it, where the sky darkened again,
    a few brighter stars peeked out. But in the bright glow around the horizon, the night sky was completely washed out. That’s hydraulic fracturing, the astronomer
    explained.

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    VIRGO: Dnes ve 20h SELČ!!

    NASA will announce evidence that hydrothermal activity on the floor of an ice-covered ocean on Saturn's moon Enceladus is most
    likely creating methane from carbon dioxide. The process is indicative of possible habitable zones within the ocean of Enceladus.

    Hydrothermal Activity in The Seas of Enceladus: Implications For Habitable Zones - Astrobiology
    http://astrobiology.com/...l-activity-in-the-seas-of-enceladus-implications-for-habitable-zones.html

    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Cuže? Jakže?..
    Massive, Dead Galaxy From Ancient Time Discovered
    http://www.bigislandvideonews.com/2017/04/10/massive-dead-galaxy-from-ancient-time-discovered/

    MAUNA KEA - The giant ‘red nugget’ was not expected to exist at the time the Universe was only 1.65 billion years old,
    making the find a rare discovery. A recent discovery of a massive, inactive ‘red nugget’ could change the way scientists
    think about the evolution of galaxies.

    Using W. M. Keck Observatory’s MOSFIRE instrument at the summit of Mauna Kea, the discovery team spotted the galaxy
    ZF-COSMOS-20115 from a time when the Universe was only 1.65 billion years old. The galaxy has likely blown off all the gas
    that caused its rapid star formation and mass growth, a Keck media release states, rapidly turning ZF-COSMOS-20115 into
    a compact red galaxy.

    Massive dead galaxy found in the early universe
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNsM60JBa9I&feature=youtu.be
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    Je to neskutečné, jakých astrometrických dat jsme se dočkali...

    This video shows the 2 057 050 stars from the TGAS sample, which was published as part of the first data release
    of ESA's Gaia mission (Gaia DR1) on 14 September 2016, with the addition of 24 320 bright stars from the Hipparcos
    Catalogue that are not included in Gaia's first data release.

    Gaia
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nvt5HnVgNYo
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    News | Earth-Sized 'Tatooine' Planets Could Be Habitable
    https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6811

    With two suns in its sky, Luke Skywalker's home planet Tatooine in "Star Wars" looks like a parched, sandy desert world. In real life, thanks to observatories
    such as NASA's Kepler space telescope, we know that two-star systems can indeed support planets, although planets discovered so far around double-star systems
    are large and gaseous. Scientists wondered: If an Earth-size planet were orbiting two suns, could it support life?

    It turns out, such a planet could be quite hospitable if located at the right distance from its two stars, and wouldn't necessarily even have deserts. In
    a particular range of distances from two sun-like host stars, a planet covered in water would remain habitable and retain its water for a long time, according
    to a new study in the journal Nature Communications.

    "This means that double-star systems of the type studied here are excellent candidates to host habitable planets, despite the large variations in the amount of
    starlight hypothetical planets in such a system would receive," said Max Popp, associate research scholar at Princeton University in New Jersey, and the Max
    Planck Institute of Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany.

    Popp and Siegfried Eggl, a Caltech postdoctoral scholar at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, created a model for a planet in the Kepler 35
    system. In reality, the stellar pair Kepler 35A and B host a planet called Kepler 35b, a giant planet about eight times the size of Earth, with an orbit of 131.5
    Earth days. For their study, researchers neglected the gravitational influence of this planet and added a hypothetical water-covered, Earth-size planet around
    the Kepler 35 AB stars. They examined how this planet's climate would behave as it orbited the host stars with periods between 341 and 380 days.
    VIRGO
    VIRGO --- ---
    ALMA Investigates ‘DeeDee,' a Distant, Dim Member of Our Solar System
    http://www.almaobservatory.org/...-alma-investigates-deedee-a-distant-dim-member-of-our-solar-system

    Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), astronomers have revealed extraordinary details about
    a recently discovered far-flung member of our solar system, the planetary body 2014 UZ224, more informally known as DeeDee.

    At about three times the current distance of Pluto from the Sun, DeeDee is the second most distant known trans-Neptunian object
    (TNO) with a confirmed orbit, surpassed only by the dwarf planet Eris. Astronomers estimate that there are tens-of-thousands of
    these icy bodies in the outer solar system beyond the orbit of Neptune.

    The new ALMA data reveal, for the first time, that DeeDee is roughly 635 kilometers across, or about two-thirds the diameter of
    the dwarf planet Ceres, the largest member of our asteroid belt. At this size, DeeDee should have enough mass to be spherical,
    the criteria necessary for astronomers to consider it a dwarf planet, though it has yet to receive that official designation.



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