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Re: The Space News Thread

Thursday March 4 to Thursday March 11
The last quarter moon is Monday March 8. Saturn is visible low in the late evening sky as the bright yellow object between the bright stars Regulus and Spica. Rising around 8 pm local daylight saving time, Saturn is easily seen in the east in the late evening sky, however, it is best to wait until 11 pm or midnight for the best telescopic views. Saturn’s rings are opening and look quite beautiful, even in a small telescope.
Bright white Venus continues to rise above from the twilight glow where it can be seen on the western horizon half an hour after sunset. The asteroid Vesta is visible in binoculars not far from Regulus in the Sickle of Leo. Mars appears as the brightest (and clearly red) object low in the northern evening sky. It is at its highest shortly before 10:00 pm local daylight saving time (9:00 pm non-daylight saving time) in the constellation of Cancer, nearly halfway between Pollux and the Beehive Cluster. It appears as a small but distinctly nearly full disk in a small telescope. Larger telescopes will be needed to distinguish surface features.
For more details and maps see Here
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Hypernova
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Re: The Space News Thread

To get a grasp of the relative size of our planets compared to the largest known stars a very nice video here

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEheh1BH34Q
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Re: The Space News Thread

VSS Enterprise's first 'captive carry' flight!

Virgin Galactic announced today that VSS Enterprise has completed her inaugural captive carry flight from Mojave Air and Spaceport.
This very first captive carry was a huge success and both the mothership and spaceship looked absolutely stunning against the blue back drop of the Mojave skies.
Commenting on the historic flight, Burt Rutan said: “This is a momentous day for the Scaled and Virgin Teams. The captive carry flight signifies the start of what we believe will be extremely exciting and successful spaceship flight test program.”
Sir Richard Branson, Founder of Virgin Galactic added: “Seeing the finished spaceship in December was a major day for us but watching VSS Enterprise fly for the first time really brings home what beautiful, ground-breaking vehicles Burt and his team have developed for us. It comes as no surprise that the flight went so well; the Scaled team is uniquely qualified to bring this important and incredible dream to reality. Today was another major step along that road and a testament to US engineering and innovation.”
The VSS Enterprise test flight programme will continue though 2010 and 2011, progressing from captive carry to independent glide and then powered flight, prior to the start of commercial operations.


Tickets cost $200,000 for a aprox 15 minutes flight

And as Sir Richard Branson imagine would say, thanks for flying Virgin Galactic !
[Mar 24, 2010 8:04:58 PM]   Link   Report threatening or abusive post: please login first  Go to top 
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Re: The Space News Thread

At ESO VLT astronomers have discovered that we were looking at the sky a little better than if we were just fully blind.
We missed 90% of the stuff. Incredible. shock
Read here under

Astronomers have long known that in many surveys of the very distant Universe, a large fraction of the total intrinsic light was not being observed. Now, thanks to an extremely deep survey using two of the four giant 8.2-metre telescopes that make up ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) and a unique custom-built filter, astronomers have determined that a large fraction of galaxies whose light took 10 billion years to reach us have gone undiscovered. The survey also helped uncover some of the faintest galaxies ever found at this early stage of the Universe.

Astronomers frequently use the strong, characteristic “fingerprint” of light emitted by hydrogen known as the Lyman-alpha line, to probe the amount of stars formed in the very distant Universe [1]. Yet there have long been suspicions that many distant galaxies go unnoticed in these surveys. A new VLT survey demonstrates for the first time that this is exactly what is happening. Most of the Lyman-alpha light is trapped within the galaxy that emits it, and 90% of galaxies do not show up in Lyman-alpha surveys.

“Astronomers always knew they were missing some fraction of the galaxies in Lyman-alpha surveys,” explains Matthew Hayes, the lead author of the paper, published this week in Nature, “but for the first time we now have a measurement. The number of missed galaxies is substantial.”

To figure out how much of the total luminosity was missed, Hayes and his team used the FORS camera at the VLT and a custom-built narrowband filter [2] to measure this Lyman-alpha light, following the methodology of standard Lyman-alpha surveys. Then, using the new HAWK-I camera, attached to another VLT Unit Telescope, they surveyed the same area of space for light emitted at a different wavelength, also by glowing hydrogen, and known as the H-alpha line. They specifically looked at galaxies whose light has been travelling for 10 billion years (redshift 2.2 [3]), in a well-studied area of the sky, known as the GOODS-South field.

“This is the first time we have observed a patch of the sky so deeply in light coming from hydrogen at these two very specific wavelengths, and this proved crucial,” says team member Göran Östlin. The survey was extremely deep, and uncovered some of the faintest galaxies known at this early epoch in the life of the Universe. The astronomers could thereby conclude that traditional surveys done using Lyman-alpha only see a tiny part of the total light that is produced, since most of the Lyman-alpha photons are destroyed by interaction with the interstellar clouds of gas and dust. This effect is dramatically more significant for Lyman-alpha than for H-alpha light. As a result, many galaxies, a proportion as high as 90%, go unseen by these surveys. “If there are ten galaxies seen, there could be a hundred there,” Hayes says.

Different observational methods, targeting the light emitted at different wavelengths, will always lead to a view of the Universe that is only partially complete. The results of this survey issue a stark warning for cosmologists, as the strong Lyman-alpha signature becomes increasingly relied upon in examining the very first galaxies to form in the history of the Universe. “Now that we know how much light we’ve been missing, we can start to create far more accurate representations of the cosmos, understanding better how quickly stars have formed at different times in the life of the Universe,” says co-author Miguel Mas-Hesse.

The breakthrough was made possible thanks to the unique camera used. HAWK-I, which saw first light in 2007, is a state-of-the-art instrument. “There are only a few other cameras with a wider field of view than HAWK-I, and they are on telescopes less than half the size of the VLT. So only VLT/HAWK-I, really, is capable of efficiently finding galaxies this faint at these distances,” says team member Daniel Schaerer.
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[Edit 1 times, last edit by Hypernova at Mar 25, 2010 1:39:57 PM]
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Re: The Space News Thread

Links is better smile

Flash demostration of how the

International Ship comes together

For more information click on the right hand signs
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Sekerob
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Re: The Space News Thread

An image of the ISS passing in front of the sun. Perspective, the Space Station is a few hundred km up, the sunspots above it [#1057] at about 80 million km distance... each exceeding earth's diameter.

What's up in Space
March 26, 2010

SUNSPOT CONJUNCTION: Yesterday in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, astrophotographer John Stetson and his son Peter observed a very rare event--a sunspot-space station conjunction:



Photo details: 5-inch AP refractor, Baader solar filter, Luminera 2-0 camera

"We knew when to look thanks to a prediction from CalSky," says Stetson. "The International Space Station transited the solar disk in only 0.62 seconds. We managed to catch the station's silhouette just as it was passing sunspot 1057." Stetson has been photographing solar transits for years; he ranks this one as "the best yet."

As far as we know, this is the first time the ISS has been observed in conjunction with a big sunspot.

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Re: The Space News Thread

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Re: The Space News Thread

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Re: The Space News Thread

Dark Energy: The Biggest Mystery in the Universe

At the South Pole, astronomers try to unravel a force greater than gravity that will determine the fate of the cosmos


Click on the Image and move along the site
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Re: The Space News Thread

EARTH WORLD ATLAS

STUNNING IMAGES

A selection of the book's images, such as this one, are 6ft (1.8m) wide gatefolds. The image is made up of hundreds of images, the three satellites that record night time data operate in low-altitude polar orbits. Lights seen are from cities, towns, industrial sites, gas flares and events such as fires and lightning-illuminated clouds. Not surprisingly this particular image has proven particularly interesting to children. Here is NASA’s explanation:
This image of Earth's city lights was created with data from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) Operational Linescan System (OLS). Originally designed to view clouds by moonlight, the OLS is also used to map the locations of permanent lights on the Earth's surface. The brightest areas of the Earth are the most urbanized, but not necessarily the most populated. (Compare Western Europe with China and India.) Cities tend to grow along coastlines and transportation networks. Even without the underlying map, the outlines of many continents would still be visible. The United States interstate highway system appears as a lattice connecting the brighter dots of city centers. In Russia, the Trans-Siberian railroad is a thin line stretching from Moscow through the center of Asia to Vladivostok. The Nile River, from the Aswan Dam to the Mediterranean Sea, is another bright thread through an otherwise dark region. Even more than 100 years after the invention of the electric light, some regions remain thinly populated and unlit. Antarctica is entirely dark. The interior jungles of Africa and South America are mostly dark, but lights are beginning to appear there. Deserts in Africa, Arabia, Australia, Mongolia, and the United States are poorly lit as well (except along the coast), along with the boreal forests of Canada and Russia, and the great mountains of the Himalaya.... applause
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