Archive

Posts Tagged ‘astronomy’

The Air Force’s X-37B Space Plane Returns to Earth After a 15-Month Secret Mission

June 19, 2012 2 comments

By Clay Dillow Posted 06.18.2012 at 1:06 pm

The Air Force’s X-37B–its secret robotic space plane that’s been orbiting the Earth on a mission shrouded in mystery for more than a year–landed safely in the wee hours Saturday morning at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Orbital Test Vehicle 2 (OTV-2) is the second X-37B test vehicle to successfully complete an orbital mission and autonomously return to Earth, following sister spacecraft OTV-1’s 225-day mission in 2010.

Cassini sees tropical lakes on Saturn moon


June 15, 2012
Scientists had thought that Titan simply had extensive dunes at the equator and lakes at the poles, but now they know that Titan is more complex than previously thought.
by Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
Saturn’s rings lie in the distance as the Cassini spacecraft looks toward Titan and its dark region called Shangri-La, east of the landing site of the Huygens Probe. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has spied long-standing methane lakes, or puddles, in the “tropics” of Saturn’s moon Titan. One of the tropical lakes appears to be about half the size of Utah’s Great Salt Lake, with a depth of at least 3 feet (1 meter).The result, which is a new analysis of Cassini data, is unexpected because models had assumed the long-standing bodies of liquid would only exist at the poles.

Where could the liquid for these lakes come from? “A likely supplier is an underground aquifer,” said Caitlin Griffith from the University of Arizona in Tucson. “In essence, Titan may have oases.”

Understanding how lakes or wetlands form on Titan helps scientists learn about the moon’s weather. Like Earth’s hydrological cycle, Titan has a “methane cycle,” with methane rather than water circulating. In Titan’s atmosphere, ultraviolet light breaks apart methane, initiating a chain of complicated organic chemical reactions. But existing models haven’t been able to account for the abundant supply of methane.

“An aquifer could explain one of the puzzling questions about the existence of methane, which is continually depleted,” Griffith said. “Methane is a progenitor of Titan’s organic chemistry, which likely produces interesting molecules like amino acids, the building blocks of life.”

Global circulation models of Titan have theorized that liquid methane in the moon’s equatorial region evaporates and is carried by wind to the north and south poles, where cooler temperatures cause methane to condense. When it falls to the surface, it forms the polar lakes. On Earth, water is similarly transported by the circulation, yet the oceans also transport water, thereby countering the atmospheric effects.

The latest results come from Cassini’s visual and infrared mapping spectrometer, which detected the dark areas in the tropical region known as Shangri-La, near the spot where the European Space Agency’s Huygens probe landed in 2005. When Huygens landed, the heat of the probe’s lamp vaporized some methane from the ground, indicating it had landed in a damp area.

Areas appear dark to the visual and infrared mapping spectrometer when liquid ethane or methane is present. Some regions could be ankle-deep puddles. Cassini’s radar mapper has seen lakes in the polar region but hasn’t detected any lakes at low latitudes.

The tropical lakes detected by the visual and infrared mapping spectrometer have remained since 2004. Only once has rain been detected falling and evaporating in the equatorial regions, and only during the recent expected rainy season. Scientists therefore deduce that the lakes could not be substantively replenished by rain.

“We had thought that Titan simply had extensive dunes at the equator and lakes at the poles, but now we know that Titan is more complex than we previously thought,” said Linda Spilker from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “Cassini still has multiple opportunities to fly by this moon going forward, so we can’t wait to see how the details of this story fill out.”

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2012-172

Out of this world, quite literally: The beautiful and mysterious Fukang meteorite


By LYLE BRENNAN

PUBLISHED: 15:45 GMT, 14 April 2012 | UPDATED: 15:45 GMT, 14 April 2012
When it slammed into the surface of Earth, there was little sign of the beauty that lay inside.

But cutting the Fukang meteorite open yielded a breathtaking sight.

Within the rock, translucent golden crystals of a mineral called olivine gleamed among a silvery honeycomb of nickel-iron.


Cosmic wonder: Marvin Killgore of the Arizona Meteorite Laboratory lets the sun shine through a polished slice of the Fukang rock

The rare meteorite weighed about the same as a hatchback when it was discovered in 2000, in the Gobi Desert in China’s Xinjiang Province.

It has since been divided into slices which give the effect of stained glass when the sun shines through them.

An anonymous collector holds the largest portion, which weighs 925lb. in 2008, this piece was expected to fetch $2million (£1.26million) at auction at Bonham’s in New York – but it remained unsold.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2129747/The-beautiful-mysterious-Fukang-pallasite-meteorite.html#ixzz1xxGEGnk3

NASA’s black hole-hunting NuSTAR mission launched today


By   posted Jun 13th 2012  

NASA launches black holehunting NuSTAR mission today

The black hole-hunting telescope NASA announced last month launched from Kwajalein Atoll in the central Pacific Ocean today. The $165 million NuSTAR mission will spend two years scouring the universe for black holes by scanning X-ray light at higher energies than its predecessors. According to Space.com, NuSTAR will especially target high-energy regions of the universe where “matter is falling onto black holes, as well as the leftovers from dead stars after they’ve exploded in supernovas.” Head on past the break for a video of the launch and click through to the source link for more details and images.

 
 
 
 

NASA Adopts Two Spare Spy Telescopes, Each Maybe More Powerful Than Hubble


The National Reconnaissance Office is giving away its secret double Hubbles
 
By Rebecca Boyle Posted 06.05.2012
It almost sounds too good to be true. Twin Hubble-quality space telescopes currently collecting dust in upstate New York are getting a second chance at flight, and they could be the best thing to happen to NASA since the real Hubble’s mirrors were fixed. The unused scopes are even the same size as the beloved space telescope, and nary a civilian knew they existed until yesterday.

Neil Armstrong narrates his own moon landing, looks forward to getting his camera back


 
  • Armstrong wraps up four-part interview 
  • Discusses moon conspiracy theories 
  • Narrates Google Moon version of landing 
Neil Armstrong

Armstrong says he hopes man goes back to the moon. He left his camera there. Picture: CPA Australia/evoTV Source: news.com.au

 

YOU’RE in the lunar module Eagle and the moon is less than 1000m below you.

Problem – you’ve got to cover that last kilometre and find a safe landing spot before your

fuel  runs out in oh, about three minutes.

It’s all a bit lumpy down there. Lucky you’ve got a gun pilot in one Neil A. Armstrong by

your side.

Well, not really. It’s just archive footage through the window of Apollo 11’s famous

lander as it makes it descent to the moon back in 1969.

But Neil Armstrong’s commentary is real.

He sat down with CPA Australia CEO Alex Malley to talk through those final

knuckle-whitening minutes when he realised Eagle’s auto-pilot was trying to set

 them amongst a minefield of slopes and boulders.

“Those slopes are steep, the rocks are very large – the size of automobiles,” he tells

Mr Malley in the rare “live” commentary.

“It’s certainly not a place where I want to land, so I took over manually from the

computer, the auto-pilot. Like a helicopter, on out to the west, to try to find a

smoother, more level landing spot.”

Neil Armstrong

Neil Armstrong

An Apollo fan recreated Eagle’s approch to the moon using Google Moon imagery. Picture: GoneToPlaid
Source: news.com.au

 

Commander Armstrong spots a smooth spot other side of crater.

“I’m running low on fuel. I’ve got less than two minutes of fuel,” he tells Mr Malley.

The actual footage shows Eagle’s rocket engine starting to kick up moon dust.

A 30-second fuel warning pings.

“I need to get it down here on the ground pretty soon, before we run out,” Cmdr Armstrong says.

Then a light thump, followed by the immortal words: “Tranquility to base here.

The Eagle has landed.”

Watch Neil Armstrong’s call of the moon landing at The Bottom Line

The first man to step foot on the moon is just as famous for his reluctance to talk

 about his experience, having given the barest handful of television interviews since

 that landmark day in 1969.

Even at the age of 82, he’s not comfortable in the public spotlight. Last year, his nerves

 were painfully obvious as he presented an Apollo enthusiast’s recreation of the moon landing

using Google Moon images to a US House Committee on Space, Science and Technology.

 

 

It’s broken into four parts, which you can watch here.

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/technology/sci-tech/neil-armstrong-narrates-his-own-moon-landing-looks-forward-to-getting-his-camera-back/story-fn5fsgyc-1226363100121#ixzz1vrURKYze

Engineer Details Plans to Build a Real, Burj-Dubai-Sized Starship Enterprise in 20 Years


By Rebecca Boyle Posted 05.14.2012

 

Real Starship Enterprise BuildTheEnterprise.org
 

The year 2245 is just too distant — we should build and commission a real USS Enterprise right now, cracking the champagne across her hull within 20 years, according to an enterprising engineer. The gigantic ship would use ion propulsion, powered by a 1.5-GW nuclear reactor, and could reach Mars in three months and the moon in three days. Its 0.3-mile-diameter, magnetically suspended gravity wheel spinning at 2 RPM would provide 1G of gravity, and the thing looks just like the “Star Trek” ship of lore.

This project is the brainchild of an engineer who calls himself BTE Dan. As in “Build The Enterprise,” which is also the name of his brand-new website.

“We have the technological reach to build the first generation of the spaceship known as the USS Enterprise – so let’s do it,” BTE Dan writes. He even sifts through the federal budget and proposes tax hikes and spend ing cuts to cover the $1 trillion cost.

Though the “Star Trek” connection lends the project an air of sci-fi fun, BTE Dan is hardly the only engineer dreaming up a next-generation spaceship to the stars. DARPA’s 100-Year Starship project is designed partly to foster ideas just like this one, from a project planning roadmap to a real ship.

Read more: http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2012-05/build-real-starship-enterprise-make-it-so-ambitious-engineer-says

http://www.buildtheenterprise.org/

Russian Space Chief: ‘We’re Talking About Establishing Permanent Bases’ On the Moon

May 24, 2012 3 comments

By Clay Dillow Posted 05.23.2012 at 1:07 pm

Yesterday, the heads of the space agencies for Europe, Canada, Russia, India, and Japan met in Washington D.C. (without NASA, which had all hands on deck for the SpaceX launch in Florida). The most interesting topic of conversation? The moon, which seems to be the destination on everyone’s agenda except for NASA. And for Russia, it’s less a destination and more a frontier for colonization.

Would You Ride This Pencil-Shaped Capsule To Space?

May 24, 2012 2 comments

By Rebecca Boyle Posted 05.23.2012

The amateur rocketeers at Copenhagen Suborbitals are getting closer and closer to orbit, testing a new bi-liquid fuel combination for a hand-built, donation-funded, non-profit rocket. The group tested its alcohol- and liquid oxygen-powered TM65 rocket over the weekend, the largest amateur bi-liquid rocket in the world.

Kepler Spots a Doomed Planet Slowly Evaporating into Space


By Clay Dillow Posted 05.21.2012 at 12:51 pm @ http://www.popsci.com/

Of all the ways planets can die–consumed by their host stars, for instance, or obliterated by a collision with another planet or asteroid–evaporation isn’t one that had crossed many astronomer’s minds. But data from the exoplanet-hunting Kepler observatory has revealed a nearby planet–just 1,500 light years from Earth–that appears to be evaporating before our very eyes. Over the next 100 million years, the planet will completely disintegrate.