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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
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    ‘Cosmic lantern’ could help us further understand the fate of the Universe | UoP News
    http://uopnews.port.ac.uk/...smic-lantern-could-help-us-further-understand-the-fate-of-the-universe/

    New research has provided a deeper insight into emission line galaxies, used in several ongoing and upcoming surveys,
    to help us further understand the composition and fate of the Universe.

    VIRGO
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    Tak konečně první skutečné fotky!
    SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket sets up at Cape Canaveral ahead of launch | TechCrunch
    https://techcrunch.com/.../20/spacexs-falcon-heavy-rocket-sets-up-at-cape-canaveral-ahead-of-launch/

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    Poptávám: elixír nesmrtelnosti. Zn: nespěchám...

    Nasa planning 2069 mission to look for life on newly discovered Earth-like planets | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/...science/nasa-planets-life-space-mission-alpha-centurai-a8119511.html

    Mission is as yet unnamed and the technology required to get a craft there does not exist yet

    Nasa is reportedly planning an interstellar mission to search for life outside our solar system in the three-star Alpha Centauri system.

    The mission is as yet unnamed and the technology required to get a craft there does not exist yet, but the projected launch date would coincide with the 100th
    anniversary of the first moon landing. The ambitious mission would require a craft that would need to travel at a minimum of 10 per cent of the speed of light.

    VIRGO
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    Exoplanet Exploration: Planets Beyond our Solar System: Holiday Special: Eight nights of exoplanet light
    https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/news/1477/holiday-special-eight-nights-of-exoplanet-light/

    NASA bringing you eight examples of light from real planets beyond our solar system. These real images show exoplanets light-years (aka trillions of miles)
    away from Earth. Exoplanets are far away, and they are millions of times dimmer than the stars they orbit. So, unsurprisingly, taking pictures of them
    the same way you'd take pictures of, say Jupiter or Venus, is exceedingly hard. But new techniques and rapidly-advancing technology are making it happen.





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    Habitable planets around pulsars theoretically possible
    https://phys.org/news/2017-12-habitable-planets-pulsars-theoretically.html

    It is theoretically possible that habitable planets exist around pulsars. Such planets must have an enormous atmosphere that convert the deadly X-rays
    and high energy particles of the pulsar into heat. This is the conclusion of a paper by astronomers Alessandro Patruno and Mihkel Kama, working in
    the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. The paper appears today in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

    The astronomers studied the pulsar PSR B1257+12 about 2300 light-years away in the constellation Virgo. They used the Chandra Space Telescope, which is
    specially made to observe X-rays. Three planets orbit the pulsar. Two of them are super-Earths with a mass of four to five times the Earth. The planets
    orbit close enough around the pulsar to warm up. Patruno says, "According to our calculations, the temperature of the planets might be suitable for
    the presence of liquid water on their surface. Though we don't know yet if the two super-Earths have the right, extremely dense atmosphere."

    VIRGO
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    A New Twist in the Dark Matter Tale | NASA
    https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/news/a-new-twist-in-the-dark-matter-tale.html

    An innovative interpretation of X-ray data from a cluster of galaxies could help scientists fulfill a quest they have been on for decades: determining the nature of dark matter.

    The finding involves a new explanation for a set of results made with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, ESA’s XMM-Newton and Hitomi, a Japanese-led X-ray telescope. If confirmed
    with future observations, this may represent a major step forward in understanding the nature of the mysterious, invisible substance that makes up about 85% of matter in the universe.

    The story of this work started in 2014 when a team of astronomers led by Esra Bulbul (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass.) found a spike of intensity
    at a very specific energy in Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of the hot gas in the Perseus galaxy cluster.

    This spike, or emission line, is at an energy of 3.5 kiloelectron volts (keV). The intensity of the 3.5 keV emission line is very difficult if not impossible to explain in terms
    of previously observed or predicted features from astronomical objects, and therefore a dark matter origin was suggested. Bulbul and colleagues also reported the existence of the
    3.5 keV line in a study of 73 other galaxy clusters using XMM-Newton.

    The plot of this dark matter tale thickened when only a week after Bulbul’s team submitted their paper a different group, led by Alexey Boyarsky of Leiden University in the Netherlands,
    reported evidence for an emission line at 3.5 keV in XMM-Newton observations of the galaxy M31 and the outskirts of the Perseus cluster, confirming the Bulbul et al. result.

    VIRGO
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    Life may have originated on Earth 4 billion years ago, study of controversial fossils suggests | Science | AAAS
    http://www.sciencemag.org/...iginated-earth-4-billion-years-ago-study-controversial-fossils-suggests

    The new work indicates these early microorganisms were surprisingly sophisticated, capable of photosynthesis and of using other chemical processes to get energy,
    says Birger Rasmussen, a geobiologist at Curtin University in Perth, Australia, who was not involved with the work. The study “will probably touch off a flurry
    of new research into these rocks as other researchers look for data that either support or disprove this new assertion,” adds Alison Olcott Marshall,
    a geobiologist at the University of Kansas in Lawrence who was not involved in the effort.




    3.5 billion-year-old fossil is oldest ever sign of life identified by scientists | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/...-life-identified-fossil-3-billion-years-old-scientists-a8117011.html

    Critics had previously argued microfossils were just unusual shapes in the rock

    VIRGO
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    Santa’s workshop could be on snowy moon
    https://warwick.ac.uk/newsandevents/pressreleases/santas_workshop_could/

    University of Warwick researchers are exploring whether snowy moons over a billion kilometres away from Earth are potentially habitable.

    According to Dr David Brown, and colleagues at Warwick’s Centre for Exoplanets and Habitability, life could be supported on moons of ice
    and snow with vast oceans under their frozen surfaces, orbiting Jupiter and Saturn.

    VIRGO
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    'Oumuamua update za poslední 2 dny

    Astronomers' recent observations of our first-known interstellar visitor reveal that it is very strange indeed.

    Right now ‘Oumuamua (or 1I/2017 U1), as it's now known, is some 350 million km (2.3 astronomical units) from Earth, has dimmed to only 27th magnitude, and is receding
    at another 5½ million km (15 Earth-Moon distances) each day. But the flurry of observations made weeks ago, when it was closer and brighter, have fueled a second flurry
    of activity — writing scientific papers — to detail what we've learned. Here are three highlights that have come to light since S&T's previous update.

    Some of the first observations of 1I/2017 U1 showed that it had a slightly reddish color, not unlike a class of red-tinged bodies (called D types) found in the outer
    asteroid belt. Careful spectral measurements made by Alan Fitzsimmons (Queens University Belfast) and others using the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope and the 8.2-m
    Very Large Telescope bear out this initial assessment.

    ‘Oumuamua Update: Red, Tumbling, and Silent - Sky & Telescope
    http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronomy-news/solar-system/oumuamua-red-tumbling-and-silent/

    No sign of alien life 'so far' on the mystery visitor from space, but we're still looking
    https://theconversation.com/...so-far-on-the-mystery-visitor-from-space-but-were-still-looking-89223

    All news | Alien object ‘Oumuamua was a natural body visiting from another solar system | News | Queen's University Belfast
    http://www.qub.ac.uk/...ctOumuamuawasanaturalbodyvisitingfromanothersolarsystemQueensscientists.html

    VIRGO
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    Star mergers: A new test of gravity, dark energy theories | EurekAlert! Science News
    https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-12/dbnl-sma121817.php

    Observations of neutron star collision challenge some existing theories

    VIRGO
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    VIRGO: SOON, we will get to see an actual black hole for the very first time. The data is in. The numbers are being crunched. This is what astronomers expect it to show.

    In 2018, we will see a black hole for the first time ever | Fox News
    http://www.foxnews.com/science/2017/12/18/in-2018-will-see-black-hole-for-first-time-ever.html

    Black hole: Event Horizon Telescope to see first ever image
    http://www.news.com.au/...supermassive-black-hole/news-story/d9c2cb732eea80fb381f0cfb055bf106#.dxv1e

    https://twitter.com/mmosc_m/status/908253903019528192

    VIRGO
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    Konečně!

    MIT: The South Pole Telescope disks with data for the EHT have arrived at Haystack for correlation:
    a major step in the Event Horizon Telescope Black Hole imaging process.



    VIRGO
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    https://mcdonaldobservatory.org/news/releases/20171214

    https://www.nasa.gov/...eighth-planet-circling-distant-star-discovered-using-artificial-intelligence

    The discovery of an eighth planet circling the distant star Kepler-90 by University of Texas at Austin astronomer Andrew Vanderburg
    and Google’s Christopher Shallue overturns our solar system’s status as having the highest number of known planets. We're now in a tie.

    The newly discovered Kepler-90i — a sizzling hot, rocky planet orbiting its star once every 14.4 days — was found using computers that
    “learned” to find planets in data from NASA’s Kepler space telescope. Kepler finds distant planets beyond the solar system, or exoplanets,
    by detecting the minuscule change in brightness when a planet transits (crosses in front of) a star.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uzv-tEa7SI

    https://www.nasa.gov/...-release/nasa-hosts-media-teleconference-to-announce-latest-kepler-discovery

    VIRGO
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    No alien 'signals' from cigar-shaped asteroid: researchers
    https://phys.org/news/2017-12-alien-cigar-shaped-asteroid.html

    No alien signals have been detected from an interstellar, cigar-shaped space rock discovered travelling through our Solar System in October,
    researchers listening for evidence of extraterrestrial technology said Thursday.

    "No such signals have been detected" by its network of telescopes, the project said Thursday, adding: "the analysis is not yet complete".
    VIRGO
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    Cold Suns, Warm Exoplanets and Methane Blankets
    http://www.news.gatech.edu/2017/12/11/cold-suns-warm-exoplanets-and-methane-blankets

    NASA astrobiologists from the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a comprehensive new model that shows how planetary chemistry
    could make that happen. The model, published in a new study in the journal Nature Geoscience, was based on a likely scenario on Earth three
    billion years ago and was actually built around its possible geological and biological chemistry.

    The sun produced a quarter less light and heat then, but Earth remained temperate, and methane may have saved our planet from an eon-long
    deep-freeze, scientists hypothesize. Had it not, we and most other complex life probably wouldn’t be here today.

    The new model combined multiple microbial metabolic processes with volcanic, oceanic and atmospheric activities, which may make it the most
    comprehensive of its kind to date. But while studying Earth’s distant past, the Georgia Tech researchers aimed their model light-years away,
    wanting it to someday help interpret conditions on recently discovered exoplanets.

    The researchers set the model’s parameters broadly so that they could apply not only to our own planet but potentially also to its siblings
    with their varying sizes, geologies, and lifeforms.
    VIRGO
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    A Map of Future Exoplanetary Discovery - Scientific American
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-map-of-future-exoplanetary-discovery/

    Most of the alien worlds closest to our own are found around the smallest, dimmest nearby stars

    VIRGO
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    https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/spanning-disciplines-in-the-search-for-life-beyond-earth

    The search for life beyond Earth is riding a surge of creativity and innovation. Following a gold rush of exoplanet discovery over
    the past two decades, it is time to tackle the next step: determining which of the known exoplanets are proper candidates for life.

    Scientists from NASA and two universities presented new results dedicated to this task in fields spanning astrophysics, Earth science,
    heliophysics and planetary science — demonstrating how a cross-disciplinary approach is essential to finding life on other worlds — at
    the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union on Dec. 13, 2017, in New Orleans, Louisiana.

    “The potentially habitable real estate in the universe has greatly expanded,” said Giada Arney, an astrobiologist at NASA’s Goddard Space
    Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “We now know of thousands of exoplanets, but what we know about them is limited because we can’t
    yet see them directly.”

    Currently, scientists mostly rely on indirect methods to identify and study exoplanets; such methods can tell them whether a planet is
    Earth-like or how close it is to its parent star. But this isn’t yet enough to say whether a planet is truly habitable, or suitable for
    life — for this, scientists must ultimately be able to observe exoplanets directly.

    Direct-imaging instrument and mission designs are underway, but in the meantime, Arney explained, scientists are making progress with tools
    already at their disposal. They are building computational models to simulate what habitable planets might look like and how they would
    interact with their parent stars. To validate their models, they are looking to planets within our own solar system, as analogs for
    the exoplanets we may one day discover. This, of course, includes Earth itself — the planet we know best, and the only one we know
    of yet that is habitable.
    VIRGO
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    Zrovna teď...

    http://seti.berkeley.edu:8000/oumuamua-observations/

    As indicated in our press release, we are excited to be focusing our observational efforts on ‘Oumuamua,
    the mysterious interloper recently spotted moving rapidly through the solar system.

    Our ‘Oumuamua observation campaign will begin on Wednesday, December 13 at 3:00 pm ET. Using the Robert C. Byrd
    Green Bank Telescope, we will observe ‘Oumuamua across four radio bands, from 1 to 12 GHz. Our first phase of
    observations will last a total of 10 hours, divided into four “epochs” based on the object’s period of rotation.
    VIRGO
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    News | Bright Areas on Ceres Suggest Geologic Activity
    https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=7022

    If you could fly aboard NASA's Dawn spacecraft, the surface of dwarf planet Ceres would generally look quite dark, but with notable exceptions.
    These exceptions are the hundreds of bright areas that stand out in images Dawn has returned. Now, scientists have a better sense of how these
    reflective areas formed and changed over time -- processes indicative of an active, evolving world.

    "The mysterious bright spots on Ceres, which have captivated both the Dawn science team and the public, reveal evidence of Ceres' past subsurface ocean,
    and indicate that, far from being a dead world, Ceres is surprisingly active. Geological processes created these bright areas and may still be changing
    the face of Ceres today," said Carol Raymond, deputy principal investigator of the Dawn mission, based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
    California. Raymond and colleagues presented the latest results about the bright areas at the American Geophysical Union meeting in New Orleans on Tue.

    The Bright Stuff: New NASA Dawn Findings at Ceres
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wL-sfEsYhpw
    VIRGO
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    Rozkvétající hvězdná porodnice | ESO Česko
    http://www.eso.org/public/czechrepublic/news/eso1740/?lang

    Kamera OmegaCAM osazená na dalekohledu ESO/VST zachytila zářící hvězdnou porodnici Sharpless 29. Na záběru je zdokumentována celá řada astrofyzikálních
    procesů včetně oblaků plynu a prachu, které odrážejí, absorbují a opět emitují světlo mladých horkých hvězd ukrytých v nitru mlhoviny.

    Část oblohy zachycená na tomto snímku je zanesena v katalogu Sharpless (Sharpless catalogue of H II regions), který obsahuje takzvané H II oblasti:
    oblaky mezihvězdného ionizovaného plynu, kde se rodí nové hvězdy. Oblast s označením SH 2-29, Sharpless 29 se nachází asi 5 500 světelných let daleko
    a na obloze se promítá do souhvězdí Střelce (Sagittarius), hned vedle známé mlhoviny Laguna (Lagoon Nebula). Nalezneme zde celou řadu astronomických
    zajímavostí včetně mlhoviny NGC 6559 (uprostřed snímku), ve které probíhají intenzivní procesy formování nových hvězd.

    ESOcast 142 Light: Stellar Nursery Blooms into View (4K UHD)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w0cKbIREe4
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