Saturday, April 23, 2016

Andromeda Rising over Colombia

Andromeda Rising over Colombia:

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2016 April 19


See Explanation. Clicking on the picture will download the highest resolution version available.
Explanation: What’s that rising over the hill? A galaxy. Never having seen a galaxy themselves, three friends of an industrious astrophotographer experienced an exhilarating night sky firsthand that featured not only the band of our Milky Way galaxy but also Milky Way's neighbor -- the Andromeda galaxy. Capturing the scene required careful pre-shot planning including finding a good site, waiting for good weather, balancing relative angular sizes with a zoom lens, managing ground lighting, and minimizing atmospheric light absorption. The calculated shot therefore placed the friends on a hill about 250 meters away and about 50 meters up. The featured single-exposure image was taken last July 26 at about 11:30 pm in Guatape, Colombia, about two hours from Medellin. The surrounding stars visible are all nearby in our own galaxy, while the small galaxy just above M31 is Andromeda's satellite M110.

Galaxy Einstein Ring

Galaxy Einstein Ring:

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2016 April 20


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Galaxy Einstein Ring

Image Credit: Y. Hezaveh (Stanford) et al., ALMA (NRAO/ESO/NAOJ), NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope


Explanation: Can one galaxy hide behind another? Not in the case of SDP.81. Here the foreground galaxy, shown in blue in an image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, acts like a huge gravitational lens, pulling light from a background galaxy, shown in red in an image taken in radio waves by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA), around it, keeping it visible. The alignment is so precise that the distant galaxy is distorted into part of a ring around the foreground galaxy, a formation known as an Einstein ring. Detailed analysis of the gravitational lens distortions indicate that a small dark satellite galaxy participates in the deflections, bolstering indication that many satellite galaxies are quite dim and dominated by dark matter. That small galaxy is depicted by a small white dot on the left. Although spanning only a few arcseconds, the featured Einstein ring is really tens of thousands of light years across.

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Tomorrow's picture: Messier moment



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Authors & editors: Robert Nemiroff (MTU) & Jerry Bonnell (UMCP)
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The Comet, the Owl, and the Galaxy

The Comet, the Owl, and the Galaxy:

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2016 April 21


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Explanation: Comet C/2014 S2 (PanSTARRS) poses for a Messier moment in this telescopic snapshot from April 18. In fact it shares the 1.5 degree wide field-of-view with two well-known entries in the 18th century comet-hunting astronomer's famous catalog. Outward bound and sweeping through northern skies just below the Big Dipper, the fading visitor to the inner Solar System was about 18 light-minutes from our fair planet. Dusty, edge-on spiral galaxy Messier 108 (upper right) is more like 45 million light-years away. A planetary nebula with an aging but intensely hot central star, the owlish Messier 97 is only about 12 thousand light-years distant though, still well within our own Milky Way galaxy. Astronomers expect the orbit of this comet PanSTARRS to return it to the inner Solar System around the year 4226.

NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula

NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula:

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2016 April 22



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NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble Heritage Team (STScI / AURA)

Explanation: Blown by the wind from a massive star, this interstellar apparition has a surprisingly familiar shape. Cataloged as NGC 7635, it is also known simply as The Bubble Nebula. Although it looks delicate, the 7 light-year diameter bubble offers evidence of violent processes at work. Above and left of the Bubble's center is a hot, O-type star, several hundred thousand times more luminous and around 45 times more massive than the Sun. A fierce stellar wind and intense radiation from that star has blasted out the structure of glowing gas against denser material in a surrounding molecular cloud. The intriguing Bubble Nebula and associated cloud complex lie a mere 7,100 light-years away toward the boastful constellation Cassiopeia. This sharp, tantalizing view of the cosmic bubble is a composite of Hubble Space Telescope image data from 2016, released to celebrate the 26th anniversary of Hubble's launch.

Celebrate: Planet Earth Day

Tomorrow's picture: Arabian nights



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Authors & editors: Robert Nemiroff (MTU) & Jerry Bonnell (UMCP)

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Sunday, April 17, 2016

Cassini Approaches Saturn

Cassini Approaches Saturn:

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2016 April 10


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Cassini Approaches Saturn

Image Credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SWRI, JPL, ESA, NASA


Explanation: Cassini, a robot spacecraft launched in 1997 by NASA, became close enough in 2002 to resolve many rings and moons of its destination planet: Saturn. At that time, Cassini snapped several images during an engineering test. Several of those images were combined into the contrast-enhanced color composite featured here. Saturn's rings and cloud-tops are visible toward the image bottom, while Titan, its largest moon, is visible as the speck toward the top. When arriving at Saturn in July 2004, the Cassini orbiter began to circle and study the Saturnian system. A highlight was when Cassini launched the Huygens probe that made an unprecedented landing on Titan in 2005, sending back detailed pictures. Now nearing the end of its mission, Cassini is scheduled to embark on a Grand Finale phase in late 2016 where it will repeatedly dive between the giant planet and its innermost rings.

Tomorrow's picture: comet & cluster



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Authors & editors: Robert Nemiroff (MTU) & Jerry Bonnell (UMCP)
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The Comet and the Star Cluster

The Comet and the Star Cluster:

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2016 April 11


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Explanation: Comet Linear has become unexpectedly bright. The comet, discovered in 2000, underwent a 100-fold outburst just a week before it passed a mere 14 lunar distances from Earth late last month. The comet was captured here last week at about magnitude 6 -- just bright enough to be seen by the unaided eye -- passing in front of the distant globular star cluster M14. Comet 252/P LINEAR is one of a rare group of comets that vacillate between the Earth and Jupiter every 5 years. How the comet will evolve from here is unknown, but hopes run high that it will remain a good object for binoculars in northern skies for the next week or two.

Combined Solar Eclipse Corona from Earth and Space

Combined Solar Eclipse Corona from Earth and Space:

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2016 April 12


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Combined Solar Eclipse Corona from Earth and Space

Image Credits: J. Vilinga (Angola, IAP), LASCO, NRL, SOHO, ESA, NASA;

Processing: R. Wittich; Composition & Copyright: S. Koutchmy (IAP, CNRS)


Explanation: Sometimes, a total eclipse is a good time to eye the Sun. Taking advantage of an unusual juxtaposition of Earth, Moon and Sun, the featured image depicts the total solar eclipse that occurred last month as it appeared -- nearly simultaneously -- from both Earth and space. The innermost image shows the total eclipse from the ground, with the central pupil created by the bright Sun covered by a comparatively dark Moon. Surrounding the blocked solar disk is the tenuous corona of Sun imaged in white light, easily visible from the ground only during an eclipse. Normally, this corona is hard to track far from the Sun, but the featured montage matches it to false-colored observations of the Sun from NASA and ESA's space-based, Sun-orbiting, Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). Observations like this allow the study of the constantly changing magnetic activity both near and far from the Sun, the same activity that ultimately drives Earth's auroras.

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Tomorrow's picture: orion in red and blue



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Authors & editors: Robert Nemiroff (MTU) & Jerry Bonnell (UMCP)
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Orion in Red and Blue

Orion in Red and Blue:

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2016 April 13


See Explanation. Clicking on the picture will download the highest resolution version available.
Explanation: When did Orion become so flashy? This colorful rendition of part of the constellation of Orion comes from red light emitted by hydrogen and sulfur (SII), and blue-green light emitted by oxygen (OIII). Hues on the featured image were then digitally reassigned to be indicative of their elemental origins -- but also striking to the human eye. The breathtaking composite was painstakingly composed from hundreds of images which took nearly 200 hours to collect. Pictured, Barnard's Loop, across the image bottom, appears to cradle interstellar constructs including the intricate Orion Nebula seen just right of center. The Flame Nebula can also be quickly located, but it takes a careful eye to identify the slight indentation of the dark Horsehead Nebula. As to Orion's flashiness -- a leading explanation for the origin of Barnard's Loop is a supernova blast that occurred about two million years ago.

Mercury and Crescent Moon Set

Mercury and Crescent Moon Set:

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2016 April 15


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Mercury and Crescent Moon Set

Image Credit & Copyright: Miguel Claro (TWAN, Dark Sky Alqueva)

Explanation: Innermost planet Mercury and a thin crescent Moon are never found far from the Sun in planet Earth's skies. Taken near dusk on April 8, this colorful evening skyscape shows them both setting toward the western horizon just after the Sun. The broad Tagus River and city lights of Lisbon, Portugal run through the foreground under the serene twilight sky. Near perigee or closest approach to Earth, the Moon's bright, slender crescent represents about 3 percent of the lunar disk in sunlight. Of course as seen from the Moon, a nearly full Earth would light up the lunar night, and that strong perigee earthshine makes the rest of the lunar disk visible in this scene. Bright Mercury stays well above the western horizon at sunset for northern skywatchers in the coming days. The fleeting planet reaches maximum elongation, or angular distance from the Sun, on April 18. But Mercury will swing back toward the Sun and actually cross the solar disk on May 9, the first transit of Mercury since November 8, 2006.

Tomorrow's picture: Heliopause Electrostatic Rapid Transit System



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Heliopause Electrostatic Rapid Transit System

Heliopause Electrostatic Rapid Transit System:

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2016 April 16



See Explanation. Clicking on the picture will download the highest resolution version available.


Heliopause Electrostatic Rapid Transit System

Illustration Credit: NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center

Explanation: Want to take a fast trip to the edge of the Solar System? Consider a ride on a Heliopause Electrostatic Rapid Transit System (HERTS). The concept is currently being tested and it might take only 10 to 15 years to make the trip of over 100 Astronomical Units (15 billion kilometers). That's fast compared to the 35 years it took Voyager 1, presently humanity's most distant spacecraft, to approach the heliopause or outer boundary of the influence of the solar wind. HERTS would use an advanced electric solar sail that works by extending multiple, 20 kilometer or so long, 1 millimeter thin, positively charged wires from a rotating spacecraft. The electrostatic force generated repels fast moving solar wind protons to create thrust. Compared to a reflective solar light sail, another propellantless deep space propulsion system, the electric solar wind sail could continue to accelerate at greater distances from the Sun, still developing thrust as it cruised toward the outer planets.

Tomorrow's picture: undulatus asperatus



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Saturday, April 9, 2016

The Rotation Of The Earth

The Rotation Of The Earth:



Earth seen by MESSENGER


What if someone were to tell you that at any given moment, you were traveling at speeds well in excess of the speed of sound? You might think they were crazy, given that - as best as you could tell - you were standing on solid ground, and not in the cockpit of a supersonic jet. Nevertheless, the statement is correct. At any given moment, we are all moving at a speed of about 1,674 kilometers an hour, thanks to the Earth's rotation,By definition, the Earth's rotation is the amount of time that it takes to rotate once on its axis. This is, apparently, accomplished once a day - i.e. every 24 hours. However, there are actually two different kinds of rotation that need to be considered here. For one, there's the amount of time it take for the Earth to turn once on its axis so that it returns to the same orientation compared to the rest of the Universe. Then there's how long it takes for the Earth to turn so that the Sun returns to the same spot in the sky.

Solar vs. Sidereal Day:

As we all know, it takes exactly 24 hours for the Sun to return to the same spot in the sky, which would seem obvious. 24 hours is what we think of as being a complete day, and the time it takes to transition from day to night and back again. But in truth, it actually takes the Earth 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4.09 seconds to turn rotate once on its axis compared to the background stars.Why the difference? Well, that would be because the Earth is orbiting around the Sun, completing one orbit in just over 365 days. If you divide 24 hours by 365 days, you'll see that you're left with about 4 minutes per day. In other words, the Earth rotates on its axis, but it's also orbiting around the Sun, so the Sun's position in the sky catches up by 4 minutes each day.The amount of time it takes for the Earth to rotate once on its axis is known as a sidereal day - which is 23.9344696 hours. Because this type of day-measurement is based on the Earth's position relative to the stars, astronomers use it as a time-keeping system to keep track of where stars will appear in the night sky, mainly so they will know which direction to point their telescopes in.

The amount of time it takes for the Sun to return to the same spot in the sky is called a solar day, which is 24 hours. However, this varies through the year, and the accumulated effect produces seasonal deviations of up to 16 minutes from the average. This is caused by two factors, which include the Earth's elliptical orbit around the Sun and it's axial tilt.

Orbit and Axial Tilt:

As Johannes Kepler stated in his Astronomia Nova (1609), the Earth and Solar planets do not rotate about the Sun in perfect circles. This is known as Kepler's First Law, which states that "the orbit of a planet about the Sun is an ellipse with the Sun’s center of mass at one focus". At perihelion (i.e. its closest) it is 147,095,000 km (91,401,000 mi) from the Sun; whereas at aphelion, it is 152,100,000 km (94,500,000 mi).This change in distance means that the Earth's orbital speed increases when it is closest to the Sun. While its speed averages out to about 29.8 km/s (18.5 mps) or 107,000 km/h (66487 mph), it actually ranges by a full km per second during the course of the year - between 30.29 km/s and 29.29 km/s (109,044 - 105,444 km/h; 67,756.8 - 65,519.864 mph).Earth's axis is also inclined at approximately 23.439° towards the ecliptic. This means that when the Sun crosses the equator at both equinoxes, it's daily shift relative to the background stars is at an angle to the equator. In June and December, when the Sun is farthest from the celestial equator, a given shift along the ecliptic corresponds to a large shift at the equator.So apparent solar days are shorter in March and September than in June or December. In northern temperate latitudes, the Sun rises north of true east during the summer solstice, and sets north of true west, reversing in the winter. The Sun rises south of true east in the summer for the southern temperate zone, and sets south of true west.

Rotational Velocity:

As stated earlier, the Earth's is spinning rather rapidly. In fact, scientists have determined that Earth's rotational velocity at the equator is 1,674.4 km/h. This means that just by standing on the equator, a person would already be traveling at a speed in excess of the speed of sound in a circle. But much like measuring a day, the Earth's rotation can be measured in one of two different ways.Earth's rotation period relative to the fixed stars is known as a "stellar day", which is 86,164.098903691 seconds of mean solar time (or 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.0989 seconds). Earth's rotation period relative to the precessing or moving mean vernal equinox, meanwhile, is 23 hours 56 minutes and 4.0905 seconds of mean solar time. Not a major difference, but a difference nonetheless.

However, the planet is slowing slightly with the passage of time, due to the tidal effects the Moon has on Earth's rotation. Atomic clocks show that a modern day is longer by about 1.7 milliseconds than a century ago, slowly increasing the rate at which UTC is adjusted by leap seconds. The Earth's rotation also goes from the west towards east, which is why the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west.=

Earth's Formation:

Another interesting thing about the Earth's rotation is how it all got started. Basically, the planet's rotation is due to the angular momentum of all the particles that came together to create our planet 4.6 billion years ago. Before that, the Earth, the Sun and the rest of the Solar System were part of a giant molecular cloud of hydrogen, helium, and other heavier elements.As the cloud collapsed down, the momentum of all the particles set the cloud spinning. The current rotation period of the Earth is the result of this initial rotation and other factors, including tidal friction and the hypothetical impact of Theia - a collision with a Mars-sized object that is thought to have taken place approx. 4.5 billion years ago and formed the Moon.This rapid rotation is also what gives the Earth it's shape, flattening it out into an oblate spheroid (or what looks like a squished ball). This special shape of our planet means that points along the equator are actually further from the center of the Earth than at the poles.In short, the world has been spinning since its inception. And, contrary to what some might say, it actually is slowing down, albeit at an incredibly slow rate. But of course, by the time it slows significantly, we will have likely ceased to exist, or slipped its "surly bonds" and become an interplanetary species.We've written several articles about Earth here Universe Today. Here's an article about how fast the Earth rotates, and here's an article about why the Earth rotates.If you'd like more information on the Earth's rotation, check out NASA's Solar System Exploration Guide on Earth. And here's a link to NASA's Earth Observatory.We've also recorded an episode of Astronomy Cast all about Earth. Listen here, Episode 51: Earth.

The post The Rotation Of The Earth appeared first on Universe Today.

What is the Earth’s Mantle Made Of?

What is the Earth’s Mantle Made Of?:



The Earth's layers, showing the Inner and Outer Core, the Mantle, and Crust. Credit: discovermagazine.com


Like all the other terrestrial planets, (Mercury, Venus, and Mars) the Earth is made up of many layers. This is the result of it undergoing planetary differentiation, where denser materials sink to the center to form the core while lighter materials form around the outside. Whereas the core is composed primarily of iron and nickel, Earth's upper layer are composed of silicate rock and minerals.This region is known as the mantle, and accounts for the vast majority of the Earth's volume. Movement, or convection, in this layer is also responsible for all of Earth's volcanic and seismic activity. Information about structure and composition of the mantle is either the result of geophysical investigation or from direct analysis of rocks derived from the mantle, or exposed mantle on the ocean floor.

Definition:

Composed of silicate rocky material with an average thickness of 2,886 kilometres (1,793 mi), the mantle sits between the Earth's crust and its upper core. The mantle makes up 84% of the Earth by volume, compared to 15% in the core and the remainder being taken up by the crust. While it is predominantly solid, it behaves like a viscous fluid due to the fact that temperatures are close to the melting point in this layer.Our knowledge of the upper mantle, including the tectonic plates, is derived from analyses of earthquake waves; heat flow, magnetic, and gravity studies; and laboratory experiments on rocks and minerals. Between 100 and 200 kilometers below the Earth's surface, the temperature of the rock is near the melting point; molten rock erupted by some volcanoes originates in this region of the mantle.

Structure and Composition:

The mantle is divided into sections which are based upon results from seismology. These are the upper mantle, which extends from about 7 to 35 km (4.3 to 21.7 mi) from the surface down to a depth of 410 km (250 mi); the transition zone, which extends from 410 t0 660 km (250 - 410 mi); the lower mantle, which reaches from 660 km to a depth of 2,891 km (410 - 1,796 mi); and the the core-mantle boundary, which has a variable thickness (~200 km or 120 mi on average).In the upper mantle two main zones are distinguished. The innermost of these is the inner asthenosphere, which is composed of plastic flowing rock of that averages about 200 km (120 mi) in thickness. The outer zone is the lowermost part of the lithosphere, which is composed of rigid rock and is about 50 to 120 km (31 to 75 mi) thick.The upper part of the lithosphere is the Earth's crust, a thin layer that is about 5 to 75 km (3.1 to 46.6 mi) thick, which is separated from the mantle by  the Mohorovicic discontinuity (or "Moho", which is defined by a sharp increase downward in the speed of earthquake waves).In some places under the ocean, the mantle is actually exposed. There are also a few places on land where mantle rock has been pushed to the surface by tectonic activity, most notably the Tablelands region of Gros Morne National Park in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, St. John's Island, Egypt, or the island of Zabargad in the Red Sea.In terms of its constituent elements, the mantle is made up of 44.8% oxygen, 21.5% silicon, and 22.8% magnesium. There's also iron, aluminum, calcium, sodium, and potassium. These elements are all bound together in the form of silicate rocks, all of which take the form of oxides. The most common is Silicon dioxide (SiO2) at 48%, followed by Magnesium Oxide (MgO) at 37.8%. Examples of rocks that you might find inside the mantle include: olivine, pyroxenes, spinel, and garnet.

Convection:

Because of the temperature difference between the Earth's surface and outer core, there is a convective material circulation in the mantle. This consists of the slow, creeping motion of the Earth's silicate mantle across the surface, carrying heat from the interior of the Earth to the surface. Whereas hot material rises to the surface, cooler, heavier material sinks beneath.The lithosphere is divided into a number of plates that are continuously being created and consumed at their opposite plate boundaries. Downward motion of material occurs in subduction zones, locations at convergent plate boundaries where one mantle layer moves under another. Accretion occurs as material is added to the growing edges of a plate, associated with seafloor spreading.This chaotic process is believed to be an integral part of the motion of plates, which in turn gives rise to continental drift. Subducted oceanic crust is also what gives rise to volcanism, as demonstrated by the Pacific Ring of Fire.

Exploration:

Scientific investigations and exploration of the mantle is generally conducted on the seabed due to the relative thickness of the oceanic crust compared to the continental crust. The first attempt at mantle exploration (known as Project Mohole) achieved a deepest penetration of approximately 180 meters (590 feet). It was abandoned in 1966 after repeated failures and cost over-runs.In 2005, the ocean drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution achieved a borehole that was 1,416 meters (4,646 ft) in depth below the sea floor. In 2007, a team of scientists aboard the UK research ship RRS James Cook conducted a study on an exposed section of mantle located between the Cape Verdr Islands and the Caribbean Sea.In recent years, a method of exploring the Earth's layers was proposed using a small, dense, heat-generating probe. This would melt its way through the crust and mantle and communicate via acoustic signals generated by its penetration of the rocks. The probe would consist of an outer shell of tungsten with a core of cobalt-60, which acts as a radioactive heat source.It was calculated that such a probe will reach the oceanic Moho in less than 6 months and attain minimum depths of well over 100 km (62 mi) in a few decades beneath both oceanic and continental lithosphere. In 2009, a supercomputer application created a simulation that provided new insight into the distribution of mineral deposits from when the mantle developed 4.5 billion years ago.While the Earth's mantle has yet to be explored at any significant depth, much has been learned from indirect studies over the past few centuries. As human exploration of the Solar System continues, we are sure to learn more about terrestrial planets, their geological behavior, and their formation.We have written many articles about the Earth's interior here at Universe Today. Here's one about the Earth's Mantle, Discovery of the Earth's Inner, Inner Core, What Is The Difference Between Magma And Lava, and an article about how the Earth's Core Rotates Faster Than Its Crust.For more information, check out the United States Geological Survey (USGS).Astronomy Cast also has an episodes on the subject. Listen to it here, Episode 51: Earth.

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Japan’s Black Hole Telescope Is In Trouble

Japan’s Black Hole Telescope Is In Trouble:



An artist's drawing of Japan's Hitomi observatory. Image Credit: JAXA/Akihiro Ikeshita


The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) has lost contact with its X-ray Astronomy Satellite Hitomi (ASTRO-H.) Hitomi was launched on February 17th, for a 3-year mission to study black holes. But now that mission appears to be in jeopardy.Hitomi is a collaboration between JAXA and NASA. Its mission was to investigate how galaxy clusters were formed and influenced by dark matter and dark energy, and to understand how super-massive black holes form and evolve at the center of galaxies. Hitomi was also to "unearth the physical laws governing extreme conditions in neutron stars and black holes," according to JAXA.Japan has managed two very short communications with Hitomi, but they were very brief, and JAXA has not been able to determine the nature of the problem. Now, JSpOC, the US Joint Space Operations Center, say they have detected debris in the vicinity of Hitomi, and in a press release this morning (March 29th), JAXA says "it is estimated that Hitomi separated to five pieces at about 10:42 a.m."Hitomi was going to be an important contribution to the fleet of space telescopes used by astrophysicists and cosmologists. It has a cutting edge instrument called the X-ray micro-calorimeter, which would have observed X-rays from space with the greatest sensitivity of any instrument so far. If all that is lost, it will be quite a blow.There's no definitive word yet on what exactly has happened to Hitomi. Japan is using ground stations in different parts of the world to try to communicate with their observatory. It's important to note that there is no agreement that the craft has broken apart. The press releases are translations from Japanese to English, so the exact meaning of "separated to five pieces" is unclear.It's possible that there was a small explosion of some sort, and that some debris from that explosion is in the vicinity of Hitomi. It's also possible that JAXA will re-establish communications with the craft as time goes on.Other observatories have suffered serious problems, and have eventually been brought back under control and completed their missions. The ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) suffered serious problems at the beginning of its mission in 1995, entering emergency mode 3 times before all contact was lost. Eventually, SOHO was brought under control, and what was supposed to be a 2-year mission has lasted 20.Universe Today will be following this story to see if Hitomi can be made operational. For readers wanting to know more about Hitomi's mission, read JAXA's excellent Hitomi press kit.

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Jupiter Just Got Nailed By Something

Jupiter Just Got Nailed By Something:



Austrian amateur astronomer Gerrit Kernbauer recorded these brief flash of light at Jupiter's limb on March 17, 2016. It was confirmed by another amateur video observation made by John McKeon of Ireland. Credit: Gerrit Kernbauer


Jupiter may be the biggest planet, but it sure seems to get picked on. On March 17, amateur astronomer Gerrit Kernbauer of Mödling, Austria, a small town just south of Vienna, was filming Jupiter through his 7.8-inch (200mm) telescope. 10 days later he returned to process the videos and discovered a bright flash of light at Jupiter's limb.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LiL7RYG7ac Possible asteroid or comet impact on Jupiter on March 17"I was observing and filming Jupiter with my Skywatcher Newton 200 telescope, writes Kernbauer. "The seeing was not the best, so I hesitated to process the videos. Nevertheless, 10 days later I looked through the videos and I found this strange light spot that appeared for less than one second on the edge of the planetary disc. Thinking back to Shoemaker-Levy 9, my only explanation for this is an asteroid or comet that enters Jupiter's high atmosphere and burned up/explode very fast."The flash certainly looks genuine, plus we know this has happened at Jupiter before. Kernbauer mentions the first-ever confirmed reported comet impact that occurred in July 1994. Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, shattered to pieces from strong tidal forces when it passed extremely close to the planet in 1992, returned two years later to collide with Jupiter — one fragment at a time.  21 separate fragments pelted the planet, leaving big, dark blotches in the cloud tops easily seen in small telescopes at the time.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAJI4gqX3Zg&feature=iv&src_vid=vSfqvAEAZiQ&annotation_id=annotation_3442896559 Video of possible Jupiter impact flash by John McKeon on March 17, 2016Not long after Kernbauer got the word out, a second video came to light taken by John McKeon from near Dublin, Ireland using his 11-inch (28 cm) telescope. And get this. Both videos were taken in the same time frame, making it likely they captured a genuine impact.With the advent of cheap video cameras, amateurs have kept a close eye on the planet, hoping to catch sight of more impacts. Two factors make Jupiter a great place to look for asteroid / comet collisions. First, the planet's strong gravitational influence is able to draw in more comets and asteroids than smaller planets. Second, its powerful gravity causes small objects to accelerate faster, increasing their impact energy.According to Bad Astronomy blogger Phil Plait: "On average (and ignoring orbital velocity), an object will hit Jupiter with roughly five times the velocity it hits Earth, so the impact energy is 25 times as high." Simply put, it doesn't take something very big to create a big, bright bang when it slams into Jove's atmosphere.It wasn't long before the next whacking. 15 years to be exact.On July 19, 2009, Australian amateur Anthony Wesley was the first to record a brand new dark scar near Jupiter's south pole using a low-light video camera on his telescope. Although no one saw or filmed the impact itself, there was no question that the brand new spot was evidence of the aftermath: NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility at Mauna Kea picked up a bright spot at the location in infrared light.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AXSA9rZzrU Jupiter impact event recorded by Christopher Go on June 3, 2010Once we started looking closely, the impacts kept coming. Wesley hit a second home run on June 3, 2010 with video of an impact flash, later confirmed on a second video made by Christopher Go. This was quickly followed by another flash filmed by Japanese amateur astronomer Masayuki Tachikawa on August 20, 2010.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIkr86xKcwQ Jupiter impact flash on August 20, 2010 by Masayuki TachikawaPrior to this month's event, amateur Dan Petersen visually observed a impact flash lasting 1-2 seconds in his 12-inch (30.5 cm) scope on September 10, 2012, which was also confirmed on webcam by George Hall.Keep 'em comin'!

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ALMA Captures Never-Before-Seen Details of Protoplanetary Disk

ALMA Captures Never-Before-Seen Details of Protoplanetary Disk:



ALMA’s best image of a protoplanetary disk to date. This picture of the nearby young star TW Hydrae reveals the classic rings and gaps that signify planets are in formation in this system. Credit: S. Andrews (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA); B. Saxton (NRAO/AUI/NSF); ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)


TW Hydrae is a special star. Located 175 light years from Earth in the constellation Hydra the Water Snake, it sits at the center of a dense disk of gas and dust that astronomers think resembles our solar system when it was just 10 million years old. The disk is incredibly clear in images made using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, which employs 66 radio telescopes sensitive to light just beyond that of infrared.  Spread across more than 9 miles (15 kilometers), the ALMA array acts as a gigantic single telescope that can make images 10 times sharper than even the Hubble Space Telescope.Astronomers everywhere point their telescopes at TW Hydrae because it's the closest infant star in the sky. With an age of between 5 and 10 million years, it's not even running on hydrogen fusion yet, the process by which stars convert hydrogen into helium to produce energy. TW Hydrae shines from the energy released as it contracts through gravity. Fusion and official stardom won't begin until it's dense enough and hot enough for fusion to fire up in its belly.

We see most protoplanetary disks at various angles, but TW's has a face-on orientation as seen from Earth, giving astronomers a rare, undistorted view of the complete disk around the star. The new images show amazing detail, revealing a series of concentric bright rings of dust separated by dark gaps. There's even indications that a planet with an Earth-like orbit has begun clearing an orbit.
"Previous studies with optical and radio telescopes confirm that TW Hydrae hosts a prominent disk with features that strongly suggest planets are beginning to coalesce," said Sean Andrews with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA and lead author on a paper published today in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Pronounced gaps that show up in the photos above are located at 1.9 and 3.7 billion miles (3-6 billion kilometers) from the central star, similar to the average distances from the sun to Uranus and Pluto in the solar system. They too are likely to be the results of particles that came together to form planets, which then swept their orbits clear of dust and gas to sculpt the remaining material into well-defined bands. ALMA picks up the faint emission of submillimeter light emitted by dust grains in the disk, revealing details as small as 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) or the distance of Earth from the sun
"This is the highest spatial resolution image ever of a protoplanetary disk from ALMA, and that won't be easily beaten in the future!" said Andrews.
Earlier ALMA observations of another system, HL Tauri, show that even younger protoplanetary disks — a mere 1 million years old — look remarkably similar.  By studying the older TW Hydrae disk, astronomers hope to better understand the evolution of our own planet and the prospects for similar systems throughout the Milky Way.
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Andromeda’s First Spinning Neutron Star Found

Andromeda’s First Spinning Neutron Star Found:



Andromeda's spinning neutron star. Though astronomers think there are over 100 million of these objects in the Milky Way, this is the first one found in Andromeda. Image: ESA/XMM Newton.


On a clear night, away from the bright lights of a city, you can see the smudge of the Andromeda galaxy with the naked eye. With a backyard telescope, you can take a good look at the Milky Way's sister galaxy. With powerful observatories, it's possible to see deep inside Andromeda, which is what astronomers have been doing for decades.Now, astronomers combing through data from the ESA's XMM Newton space telescope have found something rare, at least for Andromeda; a spinning neutron star. Though these objects are common in the Milky Way, (astronomers think there are over 100 million of them) this is the first one discovered in Andromeda.A neutron star is the remnant of a massive star that went supernova. They are the smallest and most dense stellar objects known. Neutron stars are made entirely of neutrons, and have no electrical charge. They spin rapidly, and can emit electromagnetic energy.If the neutron star is oriented toward Earth in just the right way, we can detect their emitted energy as pulses. Think of them as lighthouses, with their beam sweeping across Earth. The pulses of energy were first detected in 1967, and given the name pulsar." We actually discovered pulsars before we knew that neutron stars existed.Many neutron stars, including this one, exist in binary systems, which makes them easier to detect. They cannibalize their companion star, drawing gas from the companion into their magnetic fields. As they do so, they emit high energy pulses of X-ray energy.The star in question, which astronomers, with their characteristic flair for language, have named 3XMM J004301.4+413017, spins rapidly: once every 1.2 seconds. It's neighbouring star orbits it once every 1.3 days. While these facts are known, a more detailed understanding of the star will have to wait for more analysis. But 3XMM J004301.4+413017 does appear to be an exotic object.“It could be what we call a ‘peculiar low-mass X-ray binary pulsar’ – in which the companion star is less massive than our Sun – or alternatively an intermediate-mass binary system, with a companion of about two solar masses,” says Paolo Esposito of INAF-Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale e Fisica Cosmica, Milan, Italy. “We need to acquire more observations of the pulsar and its companion to help determine which scenario is more likely.”“We’re in a better position now to uncover more objects like this in Andromeda, both with XMM-Newton and with future missions such as ESA’s next-generation high-energy observatory, Athena,” added Norbert Schartel, ESA’s XMM-Newton project scientist.This discovery is a result of EXTraS, a European Project that combs through XMM Newton data. “EXTraS discovery of an 1.2-s X-ray pulsar in M31” by P. Esposito et al, is published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 457, pp L5-L9, Issue 1 March 21, 2016.

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