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Astronomy News: All the latest astronomy and space news updated hourly.
December 23: International Space Station Commander Dan Burbank captured
spectacular imagery of Comet Lovejoy, viewed from about 240 miles above
the Earth's horizon on Wednesday, Dec. 21.
December 20: NASA's Kepler mission has discovered the first Earth-size
planets orbiting a sun-like star outside our solar system. The planets,
called Kepler-20e and Kepler-20f, are too close to their star to be in
the so-called habitable zone where liquid water could exist on a
planet's surface, but they are the smallest exoplanets ever confirmed
around a star like our sun.
December 10: Don't forget to watch the Total Lunar Eclipse today!
December 10: Vesta was discovered over two hundred years ago but, until
Dawn, has been seen only as an indistinct blur and considered little
more than a large, rocky body. Now the spacecraft's instruments are
revealing the true complexity of this ancient world.
December 10: RadioAstron, effectively the largest radio telescope ever
built, is up and running. The telescope's main component, a 10-metre
radio dish aboard the spacecraft Spectr-R, launched in July to an
oblong orbit that extends between 10,000 and more than 300,000
kilometres from Earth.
December 9: NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has found bright
veins of a mineral, apparently gypsum, deposited by water. Analysis of
the vein will help improve understanding of the history of wet
environments on Mars.
December 9: ESA's Gaia star-mapper has passed a critical test ahead of
its launch in 2013: the spacecraft's sunshield has been deployed for
the first time.
December 9: Nearly 130 years ago , the premier event in astrophysics
involved watching a tiny dot slowly sail across the surface of the sun.
That dot was our sister planet, Venus, and observing its transit as it
passed directly between the Earth and sun was a momentous scientific
undertaking.
December 9: Vesta appears in a splendid rainbow-colored palette in new
images obtained by NASA's Dawn spacecraft. The colors, assigned by
scientists to show different rock or mineral types, reveal Vesta to be
a world of many varied, well-separated layers and ingredients.
December 9: NASA's Kepler mission has confirmed its first planet in the
"habitable zone," the region around a star where liquid water could
exist on a planet's surface. Kepler also has discovered more than 1,000
new planet candidates, nearly doubling its previously known count.
December 6: NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft has entered a new region
between our solar system and interstellar space. Data obtained from
Voyager over the last year reveal this new region to be a kind of
cosmic purgatory. In it, the wind of charged particles streaming out
from our sun has calmed, our solar system's magnetic field is piled up,
and higher-energy particles from inside our solar system appear to be
leaking out into interstellar space.
December 4: NASA's New Horizons mission reached a special milestone on
Dec. 2, 2011, on its way to reconnoiter the Pluto system, coming closer
to Pluto than any other spacecraft.
December 3: Waking up before sunrise can be tough to do, especially on
a weekend. On Saturday, Dec. 10th, you might be glad you did. A total
eclipse of the Moon will be visible in the early morning skies of
western Northern America, across the entire Pacific Ocean to Asia and
Eastern Europe.
December 1: A peculiar cosmic explosion first detected by NASA's Swift
observatory on Christmas Day 2010 was caused either by a novel type of
supernova located billions of light-years away or an unusual collision
much closer to home, within our own galaxy. Papers describing both
interpretations appear in the Dec. 1 issue of the journal Nature.
December 1: ESA astronauts joined Google and YouTube managers on 30
November at the European Astronaut Centre, Cologne, to present
highlights of the 'Space Lab' competition. Watch a replay of the
webcast recording below. The programme runs about 80 minutes.
November 28: NASA began a historic voyage to Mars with the Nov. 26
launch of the Mars Science Laboratory, which carries a car-sized rover
named Curiosity. Liftoff from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station aboard
an Atlas V rocket occurred at 10:02 a.m. EST (7:02 a.m. PST).
November 26: NASA has launched the most capable machine, nicknamed
Curiosity, ever built to land on Mars. The 1-tonne rover, tucked inside
a capsule, launched from Florida on an Atlas 5 rocket at 10:02 EST
(15:02 GMT). The rover will take 8.5 months to fly to Mars.
November 26: After eight years of planning, more than $600 million in
cost overruns, and a two-year delay, NASA's Mars Science Laboratory is
finally ready to launch. Now you can watch the nuclear-powered, 1-ton
rover -- currently the largest machine that can feasibly land on the
Red Planet -- take off from Cape Canaveral and begin its journey to
Mars.
November 24: Following the first successful contact on Tuesday, ESA's
tracking station in Australia again established two-way communication
with Russia's Phobos-Grunt spacecraft on 23 November. The data received
from the spacecraft have been sent to the Russian mission control
centre for analysis.
November 23: A new video from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory shows
huge blasts of plasma, called solar prominences, curling around the
sun's tumultuous magnetic field.
November 23: Three International Space Station crew members safely
returned to Earth on Monday, wrapping up nearly six months in space
during which NASA and its international partners celebrated the 11th
anniversary of continuous residence and work aboard the station.
November 17: Images from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) show
sand dunes and ripples moving across the surface of Mars at dozens of
locations and shifting up to several yards. These observations reveal
the planet's sandy surface is more dynamic than previously thought.
November 17: Here is a stunning, mind-blowing time lapse video of the
Earth at night, taken by astronauts aboard the International Space
Station.
November 14: Sensors destined for ESA's LISA Pathfinder mission in 2014
have far exceeded expectations, paving the way for a mission to detect
one of the most elusive forces permeating through space - gravity
waves..
November 14: Some impressive activity is underway on the Sun. For one
thing, an enormous wall of plasma is towering over the sun's
southeastern horizon.
November 14: The sun rotates at a respectable 2 kilometers per second,
which may sound pretty fast. But according to a study to be published
in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, a star has been detected in 30
Doradus (the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud, 160,000
light-years away) spinning at the breakneck speed of 600 kilometers per
second!
November 11: A new model for generating a global magnetic field in the
ancient moon could help solve a 40-year-old mystery.
November 7: NASA's Deep Space Network antenna in Goldstone, Calif. has
captured new radar images of Asteroid 2005 YU55 passing close to Earth.
November 4: Just got notification of some telescopes and astronomy
binoculars that are currently for sale at a discount.
November 4: NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory has spotted one of the
largest new sunspots to appear on the surface of the sun in years. It
is nearly 25,000 miles wide, or more than three times larger than the
Earth. The enormous sunspot was seen rotating over the sun's
northeastern limb on Nov. 3.
November 4: An international team of scientists using NASA's Fermi
Gamma-ray Space Telescope has discovered a surprisingly powerful
millisecond pulsar that challenges existing theories about how these
objects form.
November 1: For more than four hundred years, astronomers have used
telescopes to study the great variety of stars in our galaxy. Millions
of distant suns have been catalogued. That's why a recent discovery is
so surprising. Researchers using the Subaru telescope in Hawaii have
found a star with spiral arms.
October 30: The 520 days of isolation for the Mars500 crew will end on
4 November, when the hatch of their `spacecraft' is opened for the
first time since June last year. Scientists eagerly await the final
samples as the crew count the hours to liberty.
October 27: NASA scientists will be tracking asteroid 2005 YU55 with
antennas of the agency's Deep Space Network at Goldstone, Calif., as
the space rock safely flies past Earth slightly closer than the Moon's
orbit on Nov. 8. Scientists are treating the flyby of the
1,300-foot-wide (400-meter) asteroid as a science target of opportunity
- allowing instruments on "spacecraft Earth" to scan it during the
close pass.
October 26: Videos from the Setting Time Aright conference are
gradually filtering online, courtesy of the Foundational Questions
Institute. Perhaps the very first question that should be asked, of
course, is whether time actually exists.
October 26: Dr. Paula Szkody (University of Washington) has requested
the help of AAVSO observers in monitoring the WZ Sge-type cataclysmic
variable SDSS J080434.20+510349.2 (SDSS0804+51) in support of Hubble
Space Telescope ultraviolet spectroscopic observations scheduled for
20:52:40-23:32:35 2011 November 3 UT (the night of Wednesday, November
2/3).
October 21: Today Earth is entering a stream of debris from Halley's
comet, source of the annual Orionid meteor shower. Forecasters expect
the shower to peak on Saturday morning, Oct. 22nd, with more than 15
meteors per hour.
October 21: ESA's Herschel space observatory has found evidence of
water vapour emanating from ice on dust grains in the disc around a
young star, revealing a hidden ice reservoir the size of thousands of
oceans.
October 21: In July 2011, at the JREF's TAM 9 meeting in Las Vegas,
astronomer Phil Plait moderated a panel discussing the future of space
exploration. On that panel were some familiar faces: Bill Nye (the
Science Guy), astronomers Neil Tyson and Pamela Gay, and theoretical
physicist Lawrence Krauss.
October 19: Follow the launch of Europe's first Galileo navigation
satellites on Russia's first Soyuz rocket from Europe's Spaceport.
Liftoff is scheduled at 12:34 CEST (10:34 GMT, 07:34 local time),
Thursday 20 October. Streaming begins at 11:30 CEST.
October 13: For the first time, observations coordinated by ESA's space
hazards team have found an asteroid that comes close enough to Earth to
pose an impact threat. The space rock was found by amateur astronomers,
highlighting the value of 'crowd-sourcing' to science and planetary
defence.
October 12: ESA's Herschel infrared space observatory has found water
in a comet with almost exactly the same composition as Earth's oceans.
The discovery revives the idea that our planet's seas could once have
been giant icebergs floating through space.
October 12: NASA has released an interactive, educational video game
called NetworKing that depicts how the Space Communication and
Navigation (SCaN) network operates. The release of the video game
coincides with the close of World Space Week, Oct. 4-10.
October 12: On November 8-9, 2011, the Earth-crossing asteroid 2005
YU55 will speed past us at a distance closer than the Moon. With a
diameter of about 400 meters, it will be the largest object that's ever
been seen passing so close. It should reach about magnitude 11.2 at its
brightest.
October 12: Since June last year, the six crewmembers of a simulated
mission to Mars have been isolated in a special facility near Moscow.
They will `arrive back on Earth' on 4 November and go into quarantine
for four days for medical checks.
October 11: Behold your galactic center. This NASA Hubble Space
Telescope infrared mosaic image represents the sharpest survey of the
Galactic Center to date. It reveals a new population of massive stars
and new details in complex structures in the hot ionized gas swirling
around the central 300 x 115 light-years.
October 11: A new image from NASA's Dawn spacecraft shows a mountain
three times as high as Mt. Everest, amidst the topography in the south
polar region of the giant asteroid Vesta.
October 11: If you live in a city, ever wondered what the night sky
would have looked like before all the city lights drowned out the
stars? This spectacular video will remind you.
October 11: Just a quick post to let you know about two new offers on
2012 calendars if you're in the mood to stock up on Christmas presents
this early.
October 7: The Bolshoi Simulation is a massive, incredibly detailed
model of everything, providing a comprehensive simulation of the
universe's 14 billion year history. Scientists are now exploring the
simulation, and here are some of the most breathtaking results of their
efforts.
October 4: On October 8th Earth is going to plow through a stream of
dust from Comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner, and the result could be an
outburst of Draconid meteors.
October 4: The Guardian newspaper in the UK reported that China's state
run television, CCTV, and China's space agency released a video
animation prior to the recently launched Tiangong 1 miniature space
station showing extensive footage of rendezvous and docking maneuvers
in Earth orbit that is inexplicably set to the tune of "America the
Beautiful"
October 2: We have the Spitzer Space Telescope and its infrared camera
to thank for this incredible image of the Orion Nebula, a vast stellar
nursery located 1,500 light-years away.
September 29: NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft, the first to achieve orbit
around Mercury, is providing scientists new information about the
planet. The data show widespread flood volcanism similar to Earth,
clearer views of Mercury's surface, the first measurements of its
elemental composition, and details about charged particles near the
planet.
September 29: China has launched a rocket marking its first step
towards building its own space station. Tiangong 1 was launched from
the Gobi Desert. The space module lab is called "Heavenly Palace" or
Tiangong 1 and will remain in orbit for docking missions.
September 29: A fleet of spacecraft including ESA's XMM-Newton and
Integral have shown unprecedented details close to a supermassive black
hole. They reveal huge 'bullets' of gas being driven away from the
'gravitational monster'.
September 24: Observations from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE) mission indicate the family of asteroids some believed
was responsible for the demise of the dinosaurs is not likely the
culprit, keeping the case open on one of Earth's greatest mysteries.
September 22: Science educator James Drake took 600 images of Earth
from the ISS and stitched them together into a movie, which you can
watch here. The movie starts in the Pacific Ocean and flies over North
and South America before sunrise over Antarctica.
September 20: Idle home computers are being sought to help search
through tons of astronomical data. The Skynet project involves using
the spare processing capacity of computers as a giant, distributed
supercomputer. PCs joining Skynet will scour the data for sources of
radiation that reveal stars, galaxies along with other cosmic
structures.
September 19: A new video from NASA's Dawn spacecraft takes us on a
flyover journey above the surface of the giant asteroid Vesta. The data
obtained by Dawn's framing camera, used to produce the visualizations,
will help scientists determine the processes that formed Vesta's
striking features.
September 18: The existence of a world with a double sunset, as
portrayed in the film Star Wars more than 30 years ago, is now
scientific fact. NASA's Kepler mission has made the first unambiguous
detection of a circumbinary planet -- a planet orbiting two stars --
200 light-years from Earth.
September 16: NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has reached a major
milestone in its development. The mirrors that will fly aboard the
telescope have completed the coating process at Quantum Coating .
September 14: Dr. Paula Szkody (University of Washington) has requested
the help of AAVSO observers in monitoring the WZ Sge-type cataclysmic
variable V455 And in support of Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet
spectroscopic observations scheduled for 11:31:18-15:07:25 2011
September 25 UT (the night of Saturday, September 24/25).
September 13: A view of a memorial to victims of the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks on the World Trade Center towers was taken on Mars on Sept. 11,
on the 10th anniversary of the attacks.
September 12: The AAVSO are looking for any observations of Nova Sco
2011 No. 2.
September 10: Take a look at some of the winning photos in the
Astrophotographer of the Year, 2011 with two of the judges from the
Royal Observatory Greenwich, astronomy programmes manager Olivia
Johnson and public astronomer Marek Kukula.
September 7: NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) captured the
sharpest images ever taken from space of the Apollo 12, 14 and 17
landing sites. Images show the twists and turns of the paths made when
the astronauts explored the lunar surface.
September 6: NASA and the National Institute of Aerospace (NIA) are
launching a national radio program and podcast series that features
compelling stories of revolutionary ideas, emerging technologies and
the people behind the concepts that are shaping our future. 'Innovation
Now', the series of 90-second radio segments, debuted Sept. 1, online
and on WHRV 89.5 FM in Norfolk, Va.
September 3: Often, comets are portrayed as harbingers of gloom and
doom in movies and on television, but most pose no threat to Earth.
Comet Elenin, the latest comet to visit our inner solar system, is no
exception. Elenin will pass about 22 million miles (35 million
kilometers) from Earth during its closest approach on Oct. 16, 2011.
Astronomy & Space News For July 2011
Tags: Navigation Bar, Telescope Observations, Southern Hemisphere,
Voyager Probes, Optical Photometry
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January 28, 2011 at 7:34 pm
Quote " August 10: Aurora Alert - The solar eruption of August 7th
might affect Earth after all. Newly-arriving data from the Solar
and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) show a CME heading our way with
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should be alert for auroras when the cloud arrives on August 10th.
"
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10. aarav says:
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Reply
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The zorgium specific results appear in the right hand margin.
Find other ZORGIUM pages using your favorite search engine:
Enter your search keyword(s) and the keyword "zorgium" into the search input field of
http://bing.com,
http://yahoo.com or
http://google.com.
Heads up: There's an ongoing spamdexing of Google searchbot algorithms. Sites that are 'copies of copies' and cloaked sites which include Zorgium keywords presented to search engine crawlers yet garbage content presented to human visitors were hosted on thousands of IP addresses and domains registered immediately after the introduction of Zorgium in November of 2009. The Hostgator/'The Planet'/Softlayer datacenters in Texas seem to be the epicenter of this activity in conjunction with anonymously registered domains of various TLD's but primarily .info domains at Godaddy which, in our opinion, has some sort of connection to the domains of goldmint.in and goldmint.org. Google has begun to notice this and has begun to lower the ranking of these sites and put our original sites back on top of the search rankings. These actions, as far as we can tell, negatively impact the use of the keyword 'zorgium' as a search term and provided little benefit, if any, to the perpetrators.
ZORGIUM note to content providers: If you don't want your page to appear in Zorgium's search abstraction then put an exclusion for "Zorgium" in your web server's robots.txt file.
DISCLAIMER: Zorgium is a free world-wide-web engine from AZ.COM. You may use it, but by doing so you agree that your use of other people's information discovered via our website is entirely your responsibility. Enjoy!