Sunday, December 18, 2011

Astrophoto: Lunar Eclipse Surprise by Michael Khan

Astrophoto: Lunar Eclipse Surprise by Michael Khan:


Astrophoto: Lunar Eclipse Surprise by Michael Khan

An airplane transiting the Moon. Image Credit: Michael Khan




Michael Khan missed the best part of the lunar eclipse last December 10, 2011. But it turned out to be a blessing in disguise when he captured this amazing photo above.


“Seen from where I live (the Western part of Germany), the Moon rose at 16:30 CET on Saturday, December 10. By that time the best part of the total lunar eclipse was already over. At moonrise, the Moon was already well into the Earth penumbra – with only the upper part appearing darkened.


Nevertheless, I had set up my scope (with a camera attached) on a solid camera tripod. As the Moon was still close to the hirizon when I started shooting, much of the detail was obscured by haze and atmospheric perturbation. Still, I was busily clicking away. Actually, I was much too busy re-pointing and re-focusing to notice that I had unwittingly hit pay dirt with one of the pictures.


I didn’t notice that until much later, when I clicked through the results of that session on my camera’s built-in screen and saw that an airliner en route to nearby Frankfurt airport had chosen the very moment when I released the shutter to fly across the visible Moon disc.”


Michael used an ED apochromatic refractor at 70 mm aperture and 420 mm focal length with an unmodified Canon Eos 1000D camera attached to a T2 adapter.


Want to get your astrophoto featured on Universe Today? Join our Flickr group, post in our Forum or send us your images by email (this means you’re giving us permission to post them). Please explain what’s in the picture, when you took it, the equipment you used, etc.




© dcast for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
One comment |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Wonderful Ice Halos

Wonderful Ice Halos:



A bright moon halo surrounds the Moon on Dec. 11, 2011. © Jason Major




Have you ever seen a large ghostly disc around the Moon on a cool, calm, hazy night? If so, you have likely seen what is called an “Ice Halo” or “22° Halo.” Not only can the Moon display these ghostly rings of light, but the Sun does so in the day time too.


22° halos are visible all over the world and throughout the year; look for them whenever the sky is wispy or hazy with thin cirrus clouds – even in the hottest countries.


So what are they and why do they appear?(...)
Read the rest of Wonderful Ice Halos (134 words)




© Adrian West for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
3 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



NASA Planning for Possible Landings on Europa

NASA Planning for Possible Landings on Europa:



Credit: NASA/Ted Stryk



All these worlds are yours except Europa

Attempt no landing there

Use them together use them in peace 


Despite that famous cryptic warning in the film 2010: The Year We Make Contact, NASA is planning for a possible attempted landing on Jupiter’s moon Europa. This is a mission that many people have been hoping for, since Europa is believed to have a liquid water ocean beneath the icy surface (as well as lakes within the surface crust itself), making it a prime location in the search for life elsewhere in the solar system. Two landers are being proposed which would launch in 2020 and land about six years later.


(...)
Read the rest of NASA Planning for Possible Landings on Europa (359 words)




© Paul Scott Anderson for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
29 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



First Look at a Black Hole’s Feast

First Look at a Black Hole’s Feast:



A true heart of darkness lies at the center of our galaxy: Sagittarius A* (pronounced “A-star”) is a supermassive black hole with the mass of four million suns packed into an area only as wide as the distance between Earth and the Sun. Itself invisible to direct observation, Sgr A* makes its presence known through its effect on nearby stars, sending them hurtling through space in complex orbits at speeds upwards of 600 miles a second. And it emits a dull but steady glow in x-ray radiation, the last cries of its most recent meals. Gas, dust, stars… solar systems… anything in Sgr A*’s vicinity will be drawn inexorably towards it, getting stretched, shredded and ultimately absorbed (for lack of a better term) by the dark behemoth, just adding to its mass and further strengthening its gravitational pull.


Now, for the first time, a team of researchers led by Reinhard Genzel from the Max-Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany will have a chance to watch a supermassive black hole’s repast take place.


(...)
Read the rest of First Look at a Black Hole’s Feast (454 words)




© Jason Major for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
8 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , , , , , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Hubble’s Snow Angel

Hubble’s Snow Angel:



This star-forming region, called Sharpless 2-106, looks like a snow angel. Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)



If you need a little help getting into the holiday spirit, the Hubble Space Telescope is here to assist. This gorgeous new image shows a bipolar star-forming region, called Sharpless 2-106, (S106 for short) which looks like a soaring, celestial snow angel. The outstretched “wings” of the nebula are actually the contrasting imprint of heat and motion against the backdrop of a colder medium. Twin lobes of super-hot gas, glowing blue in this image, stretch outward from the central star, forming the wings.

(...)
Read the rest of Hubble’s Snow Angel (147 words)




© nancy for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
One comment |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



A Psychedelic Guide to Tycho’s Supernova Remnant

A Psychedelic Guide to Tycho’s Supernova Remnant:



Gamma-rays detected by Fermi's LAT show that the remnant of Tycho's supernova shines in the highest-energy form of light. This portrait of the shattered star includes gamma rays (magenta), X-rays (yellow, green, and blue), infrared (red) and optical data. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/DSS



By no means are we suggesting that NASA’s Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope can induce altered states of awareness, but this ‘far-out’ image is akin to 1960′s era psychedelic art. However, the data depicted here provides a new and enlightened way of looking at an object that’s been observed for over 400 years. After years of study, data collected by Fermi has revealed Tycho’s Supernova Remnant shines brightly in high-energy gamma rays.


The discovery provides researchers with additional information on the origin of cosmic rays (subatomic particles that are on speed). The exact process that gives cosmic rays their energy isn’t well understood since charged particles are easily deflected by interstellar magnetic fields. The deflection by interstellar magnetic fields makes it impossible for researchers to track cosmic rays to their original sources.


“Fortunately, high-energy gamma rays are produced when cosmic rays strike interstellar gas and starlight. These gamma rays come to Fermi straight from their sources,” said Francesco Giordano at the University of Bari in Italy.


But here’s some not-so-psychedelic facts about supernova remnants in general and Tycho’s in particular:

(...)
Read the rest of A Psychedelic Guide to Tycho’s Supernova Remnant (662 words)




© Ray Sanders for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
5 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Watch as Comet Lovejoy Takes a Death-Dive Into the Sun

Watch as Comet Lovejoy Takes a Death-Dive Into the Sun:


A comet discovered on Dec. 2, 2011 is now on a near collision course with the Sun, and likely won’t survive such a close encounter. The best part is that you can follow along and watch as it happens! Comet C/2011 W3 Lovejoy will pass behind the sun at around 24:00 UTC (7 pm EST) on Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011 and probably won’t be seen again. In the video above, processed images from the STEREO A spacecraft shows Comet Lovejoy blazing towards the Sun, with the comet’s tail wiggling as it interacts with the solar wind.


The Solar Dynamics Observatory website has a special page where they will be uploading the latest images of the comet as it meets its fiery fate. As Comet Lovejoy moves toward perihelion, the SDO team will point SDO a little to the left of the Sun to try and see the tail of the comet with their instruments. This website will allow you to see those images as quickly as they can download them from the spacecraft.


Science live and in action!

(...)
Read the rest of Watch as Comet Lovejoy Takes a Death-Dive Into the Sun (549 words)




© nancy for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
2 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , , , , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



New Study Says Large Regions of Mars Could Sustain Life

New Study Says Large Regions of Mars Could Sustain Life:



Credit: NASA/JPL



The question of whether present-day Mars could be habitable, and to what extent, has been the focus of long-running and intense debates. The surface, comparable to the dry valleys of Antarctica and the Atacama desert on Earth, is harsh, with well-below freezing temperatures most of the time (at an average of minus 63 degrees Celsius or minus 81 Fahrenheit), extreme dryness and a very thin atmosphere offering little protection from the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation. Most scientists would agree that the best place that any organisms could hope to survive and flourish would be underground. Now, a new study says that scenario is not only correct, but that large regions of Mars’ subsurface could be even more sustainable for life than previously thought.


(...)
Read the rest of New Study Says Large Regions of Mars Could Sustain Life (409 words)




© Paul Scott Anderson for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
10 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Titan’s Colorful Crescent

Titan’s Colorful Crescent:



Titan's thick atmosphere shines in backlight sunlight



Made from one of the most recent Cassini images, this is a color-composite showing a backlit Titan with its dense, multi-layered atmosphere scattering sunlight in different colors. Titan’s atmosphere is made up of methane and complex hydrocarbons and is ten times as thick as Earth’s. It is the only moon in our solar system known to have a substantial atmosphere.


Titan’s high-level hydrocarbon haze is nicely visible as a pale blue band encircling the moon.


(...)
Read the rest of Titan’s Colorful Crescent (183 words)




© Jason Major for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
6 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , , , , , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Feisty Comet Lovejoy Survives Close Encounter with the Sun

Feisty Comet Lovejoy Survives Close Encounter with the Sun:


It’s the morning after for the sungrazing Comet Lovejoy, and this feisty comet has scientists shaking their heads in disbelief. “I don’t know where to begin,” wrote Karl Battams, from the Naval Research Laboratory, who curates the Sun-grazing comets webpage. “What an extraordinary 24hrs! I suppose the first thing to say is this: I was wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. And I have never been so happy to be wrong!”


Many experts were predicting Comet Lovejoy would not survive perihelion, where it came within about 120,000 km from the Sun. But some extraordinary videos by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory showed the comet entering and then surprisingly exiting the Sun’s atmosphere. Battams said he envisioned that if the comet survived at all, what would be left would be just a very diffuse component that would endure maybe a few hours after its close encounter with the Sun. But somehow it survived, even after enduring the several million-degree solar corona for nearly an hour. However, Comet Lovejoy appears to have lost its tail, as you can see in the image below.

(...)
Read the rest of Feisty Comet Lovejoy Survives Close Encounter with the Sun (119 words)




© nancy for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
10 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Aliens Hanging Out in the Kuiper Belt? We Could See the Light from their Cities

Aliens Hanging Out in the Kuiper Belt? We Could See the Light from their Cities:



Astronaut photograph ISS025-E-9858 was acquired on October 28, 2010, with a Nikon D3S digital camera using a 16 mm lens, and is provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations experiment and Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. The image was taken by the Expedition 25 crew.



When it comes to searching for ET, current efforts have been almost exclusively placed in picking up a radio signal – just a small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Consider for a moment just how much lighting we here on Earth produce and how our “night side” might appear as viewed from a telescope on another planet. If we can assume that alternate civilizations would evolve enjoying their natural lighting, wouldn’t it be plausible to also assume they might develop artificial lighting sources as well?


Is it possible for us to peer into space and spot artificially illuminated objects “out there?” According to a new study done by Abraham Loeb (Harvard), Edwin L. Turner (Princeton), the answer is yes.


(...)
Read the rest of Aliens Hanging Out in the Kuiper Belt? We Could See the Light from their Cities (710 words)




© tammy for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
8 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Best Look Yet of Comet Lovejoy’s Slingshot Around the Sun

Best Look Yet of Comet Lovejoy’s Slingshot Around the Sun:


There have been some great images and video of Comet Lovejoy’s close encounter with the Sun, but this video put together by Scott Wiessinger from Goddard Spaceflight Center combines and zooms in on the best views from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), which adjusted its cameras in order to watch the trajectory.


The first part of the video from SDO, (taken in 171 Angstrom wavelength, which is typically shown in yellow) was filmed on Dec 15, 2011 showing Comet Lovejoy moving in toward the Sun, with its tail “wiggling” from its interaction with the solar wind. The second part of the clip shows the comet exiting from behind the right side of the Sun, after an hour of travel through its closest approach.


No time travel with this slingshot around the Sun, but it is amazing to be able to follow this comet’s journey so closely!




© nancy for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
3 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: , ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Astrophotos: Geminid Meteor Shower

Astrophotos: Geminid Meteor Shower:


Geminid Meteor Shower by Kevin Key

Geminid Meteor Shower as seen from California. Image Credit: Kevin Key




The Geminid meteor shower is one of the highly anticipated astronomical events this December. Peaking around December 13 and 14 every year, the meteor shower appears to come from the constellation Gemini where its name originated.


We’ve collected several images of the December 2011 Geminid meteor shower taken from all over the world. We hope you enjoy them!


The image above was taken by Kevin Key from his backyard in Santee, California on December 14, 2011. He used a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi camera with Sigma 15mm lens. Other specs are:

Exposure: 12 seconds

Aperture: f/2.8

ISO: 1600

Cropped in post-production.


More images below!(...)
Read the rest of Astrophotos: Geminid Meteor Shower (360 words)




© dcast for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
No comment |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



How Can Growing Galaxies Stay Silent?

How Can Growing Galaxies Stay Silent?:


The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) with minor satellite galaxy M32

The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) with minor satellite galaxy M32



Beginning around 2005, astronomers began discovering the presence of very large galaxies at a distance of around 10 billion lightyears. But while these galaxies were large, they didn’t appear to have a similarly large number of formed stars. Given that astronomers expect galaxies to grow through mergers and mergers tend to trigger star formation, the presence of such large, undeveloped galaxies seemed odd. How could galaxies grow so much, yet have so few stars?


(...)
Read the rest of How Can Growing Galaxies Stay Silent? (442 words)




© jvois for Universe Today, 2011. |
Permalink |
2 comments |
Add to
del.icio.us


Post tags: ,


Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh



Cascade Falls

Cascade Falls:

Cascade Falls

After a two mile hike through some of the most beautiful autumn scenery I have ever seen, we arrived at the lower cascade falls. These waterfalls are a magnificent site and as you can see offer a wonderful swimming hole at the below.
    Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/22.6 | Image Exposure Time: 3/10 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 24 mm | Photo Exposure Value: -0.5 EV | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Photo White Balance: 0 | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander Nature Photography | ForestWander: ForestWander.com |


Alluring Cascades Pirouette

Alluring Cascades Pirouette:

Alluring Cascades Pirouette

Everything was made to give praise and glory to the Lord. This alluring waterfall cascade is no exception. This is one of my favorites that I recently reprocessed through a couple separate exposures and an HDR filter. What is a Pirouette? It is a French word used to describe a twirling ballet dance. Just as this waterfall whirlpool dances before the Lord to His glory and praise.
    Picture Height: 3632 pixels | Picture Width: 4951 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/19.9 | Image Exposure Time: 30 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 28 mm | Photo Exposure Value: 0 EV | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Photo White Balance: 0 | Color Space: sRGB |


West Virginia Grist Mill Autumn

West Virginia Grist Mill Autumn:

In the old days there were many grist mills throughout West Virginia. The grist mill at Babcock state park, West Virginia is a type of tribute to all of the grist mills, which used to thrive in the old days. Unlike many grist mill landmarks, this one actually grinds and it is possible for park visitors to actually purchase cornmeal as well as buckwheat. Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/16 | Image Exposure Time: 30 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 65 mm | Photo Exposure Value: 0.33 EV | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Photo White Balance: 0 | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander.com | ForestWander: ForestWander Nature Photography |



In the old days there were many grist mills throughout West Virginia. The grist mill at Babcock state park, West Virginia is a type of tribute to all of the grist mills, which used to thrive in the old days. Unlike many grist mill landmarks, this one actually grinds and it is possible for park visitors to actually purchase cornmeal as well as buckwheat.
    Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/16 | Image Exposure Time: 30 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 65 mm | Photo Exposure Value: 0.33 EV | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Photo White Balance: 0 | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander.com | ForestWander: ForestWander Nature Photography |


Red Run wv Fall Foliage

Red Run wv Fall Foliage:

Red Run wv Fall Foliage

A great place to hike and site see just outside Canaan Valley, West Virginia is wilderness road. A forest stream follows this road called Red Run. This is one of the most scenic locations along the mountain stream in the fall foliage.
    Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/11.3 | Image Exposure Time: 2 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 24 mm | Photo Exposure Value: 0 EV | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Photo White Balance: 0 | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander Nature Photography | ForestWander: ForestWander.com |


Autumn Flower Field Pink Flower

Autumn Flower Field Pink Flower:

Beautiful flowers in a field during early autumn. Before the hard winter frosts come, many vibrant flowers can be found in early autumn. Such as these flowers found in a local field. Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/8 | Image Exposure Time: 1/20 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 24 mm | Film Speed ISO: 100 | Photo Exposure Value: 0 EV | Focus Mode: Manual Focus | Lens Model: EF24mm f/1.4L II USM | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Image Saturation Level: High | Photo White Balance: Auto | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander Nature Photography | ForestWander: ForestWander.com |



Beautiful flowers in a field during early autumn. Before the hard winter frosts come, many vibrant flowers can be found in early autumn. Such as these flowers found in a local field.
    Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/8 | Image Exposure Time: 1/20 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 24 mm | Film Speed ISO: 100 | Photo Exposure Value: 0 EV | Focus Mode: Manual Focus | Lens Model: EF24mm f/1.4L II USM | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Image Saturation Level: High | Photo White Balance: Auto | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander Nature Photography | ForestWander: ForestWander.com |


Monday, November 21, 2011

Pictures of Nature - Orelha de Elefante

Pictures of Nature - Orelha de Elefante:

FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



Orelha de Elefante



Saturday, November 5, 2011

PHOTOGRAPHY - Vivendas Sunset

PHOTOGRAPHY - Vivendas Sunset:

FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



Vivendas Sunset



Birds - Bico de Lacre

Birds - Bico de Lacre:

FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



Bico de Lacre



Friday, November 4, 2011

Autumn Flower Field Large Purple Flower

Autumn Flower Field Large Purple Flower:

Autumn Flower Field Large Purple Flower

A large purple flower in the midst of a filed of wild flowers in early October. Amazing that the Lord told us – “Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.”
    Picture Height: 3744 pixels | Picture Width: 5616 pixels | Lens Aperture: f/8 | Image Exposure Time: 1/15 sec | Lens Focal Length mm: 24 mm | Film Speed ISO: 100 | Photo Exposure Value: 0 EV | Focus Mode: Manual Focus | Lens Model: EF24mm f/1.4L II USM | Camera Model: Canon EOS 5D Mark II | Image Saturation Level: High | Photo White Balance: Auto | Color Space: sRGB | ForestWander Nature Photography: ForestWander Nature Photography | ForestWander: ForestWander.com |


Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Trail of Stars Between Elephant’s Trunk and Bubble Nebula

Trail of Stars Between Elephant’s Trunk and Bubble Nebula:

Click below for full resolution picture of Cepheus Constellation

Elephant's Trunk on left and Bubble Nebula & M53 on the far right

Elephant’s Trunk, Cradle of Newborn Stars

The Elephant’s Trunk Nebula is a mixture of interstellar gas and dust, in the ionized gas region of IC 1396 star cluster.

Cepheus Constellation is situated in the northern hemisphere and contains various star clusters, glowing nebulae and dark dust clouds. All of them can be followed in detail in this the photo below. In the left we can see IC 1396, a big emission nebula that contains a dark, twisting, spiral shaped region known as the Elephant’s Trunk. In the top middle we can see NGC 7380, a bright nebula with a fix star cluster and in the right part of the picture we can spot the Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635) and star cluster Messier 52 (M52).

The name of Elephant’s Trunk nebula diverts from it’s aspect at visible light wavelengths: a dark spot with a winding bright frame. The bright surface is actually a dense cloud illuminated and ionized by a very big and bright star situated in the west area. Only the dense globules escape from the ionization process that affects the entire IC 1396 region, due to their ability to protect themselves from the massive star’s rough ultraviolet rays .

After discovering in 2003 a series of young stars (less than 100,000 years), the scientists consider the Elephant’s Trunk Nebula as a possible site of star formation. Two of these new stars are located in the head of the globule, in a round cavity emptied by the star’s winds.

The Elephant’s Trunk nebula has a very high compression level. This is due to the presence of the massive star that ionizes and compresses the frame of the cloud, combined with the young stars whose winds shift the gas from the center to the edges. The high pressure level caused the current generation of protostars.

Distance from Earth: ~ 2500 light years


Monday, October 17, 2011

AAS Poster: Tweeting Astronomy

AAS Poster: Tweeting Astronomy:
Twitter Bird

Twitter Bird


Back in October when AAS abstracts were due, I decided to submit something that would force me to think, program, and do something just for fun and not for grants. My original idea was to (utilizing Many Eyes and Processing) do a data visualization of how all the followers of many different astronomy tweeting groups are connected.


Why? Two reasons: I wanted to know how much we are just talking to ourselves (if all of my followers follow Phil Plait, why RT?), and I wanted to know what side interests draw people together (Do people systematically follow all things Moon related?). My goal was to start with a group of selected users – NASA related folks, Zooniverse related folks, and people involved in Astrosphere’s projects (365 Days of Astronomy, Astronomy Cast, etc). I only used people active in twitter (sorry Fraser and your @fcain account, you don’t tweet), and my plan was to download all their basics (when they joined, number of updates, number of followers, etc) and then get the same for all their followers, and then get just the IDs of the followers-followers so I could build a 3d network.


For fun. ‘Cause I can. But curiosity than killed the CPU.


After I sat down, sorted out how to use the twitter API (and how to get authorized to use some of the more interesting functions), after I built in the needed ‘now pause until the beginning of the next hour because you can only make n API calls an hour, where n varies with function.’ After all of this, I set my code running.


And I waited 2 days while it ran.


Then I sat down and asked it look for how often different combinations appear – how often do people follow me and @orbitingfrog or @galaxyzoo and @chrislintott?


And I waited over night and over breakfast (sad hot little laptop) for it to run on the first level of who follows which of my initially selected hubs.


And I then I decided over lunch, for a poster this is enough. This is fun, and I’ll abuse a bigger server later.


So I started visualizing. If you are a data manipulating kind of person and you’ve never played with Many Eyes, go play. It is an awesome site with the ability to map data in lots of different ways. After uploading my data, I asked it to map my data in a way that would show all the connections and map them in a way that the more connections two people have, the closer their circles appear, and the more followers a person had, the larger their circle would be.


And it said please w…a….i….t (please). And I did. And it tried really hard, but produced something that couldn’t be explored on my sad little laptop.


So I did something a bit easier you can interact with here and see below: a map of what fraction of a users followers are shared with 1 or more other hubs. This simple (and no real wait required) visualization shows that all of us have ~20 to ~85% of our followers in common. The below tile plot visualizes the size of each Hubs following via area and relates what percentage of those followers are also connected to other Hubs via the tiles color. Lighter tiles have a higher proportion of their followers linked to non-Hubs, and are thus more often reaching non-astronomy centric audiences. Darker tiles have a higher proportion of their followers also following other astronomy hubs. While this may be seen as “speaking to the choir” it can also be seen as being more effective at pipe lining audiences to other projects (e.g. NASA_Lunar) or as having an audience that results from successful pipe lining from other projects (e.g. moonzoo). NB For this graph, @starstryder & @orbitingfrog were grouped into Astrosphere and Zooniverse respectively based on the recent focus of their online identities. I interpret the overall degree of connection observed as a sign of our RT ability through RT to send people to one another and the connectedness of our community in general. All of the hubs were connected by no more than 1 degree of separation!


Tweep Followers (Area) and Connections (Color)

Tweep Followers (Area) and Connections (Color)


While I was unable to generate the explorable 3-D mapping I desired, I did the best I could by first placing all of us on a circle (figure below) and using size, color, lines to map what I could. This diagram shows the connections between users, where the color of the connections is a blending of the colors of the Hubs (NASA: Blue, Zooniverse: Red, Astrosphere: Green. and people who are both Astrosphere and Zooniverse in Brown). (click to embiggify)


All Selected Tweeps connected

All Selected Tweeps connected


This diagram makes it hard to see exactly how each of the communities are connected to one another. I pulled our Hubs out into the same groups with the same colors, and the thickness of vertices still indicates number of connections and area of the circles indicates number of followers. It can be seen that the NASA tweeters are both very well internally connected and also share more connections in common with other Hubs than the members of the other Hubs share within their own groups’ Hubs. The degree to which programs are con-

nected to NASA is in part due to NASA Hubs simply having more followers and thus a higher opportunity to

share followers. This isn’t the entire answer however, as BadAstronomer is one of the largest Hubs and not as connected (a function of his often skeptism focused tweeting).


Networked Astronomy Tweeps

Networked Astronomy Tweeps


NASA Tweeps

NASA Tweeps


Astrosphere Tweeps

Astrosphere Tweeps


Zooniverse Tweeps

Zooniverse Tweeps


For now, I’m going to let you explore these images on your own, checking out who is connected to whom. I’m going to do more work on this, and I’ve set as a goal (that may get destroyed by travel) to work on this a few hours each week, adding more graphs as I go. I’d hoped for today to have a form that allow you to add in your screen name and some meta data, but while traveling my server is resisting code uploads (translation, I changed my password after the last hack, and the password is on my home computer). My next post should be a “Here’s how you can be part of our map.”


Until then, my sad little CPU will be allowed to cool off.






NATURE PICTURES & THE UNIVERSE