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Hundreds of Rogue Black Holes May Lurk in Our Galaxy

Friday May 1, 2009

bh21243Hundreds of massive black holes left over from the early universe may wander the Milky Way, according to new calculations.

These rogue black holes are thought to have originally lurked at the centers of tiny, low-mass galaxies. Over billions of years, those dwarf galaxies smashed together to form full-sized galaxies like the Milky Way.

The idea of such wandering black holes has been suggested before, but a new computer simulation calculated that hundreds of them should be left over, and predicted that they might now be shrouded by small star clusters. Read the rest of this entry »


The Farthest Thing Ever Seen

Tuesday Apr 28, 2009

farthest-grb-090423_380A faint gamma-ray burst (GRB) captured last Thursday by NASA’s Swift satellite has smashed the record for the earliest, most-distant known object in the universe.

The burst, named GRB 090423 for its discovery date, went off in Leo and was seen to last for 10 seconds. Several teams, including a group using the Gemini-North telescope in Hawaii and a European group using the Very Large Telescope in Chile, followed up the Swift detection by observing the burst’s fading infrared afterglow. Based on how much the afterglow’s light was stretched by cosmic expansion since the era when the burst happened, the group determined that it went off about 630 million years after the Big Bang. Read the rest of this entry »


NASA Chandra X-ray observatory space picture dubbed ‘hand of God

Thursday Apr 16, 2009

handWe’ve already seen pictures of his eye … now we have the first image of the hand of God.

A ghostly blue cloud seems to form an outstretched thumb and fingers grasping a ball of fire.

The amazing image was taken by NASA’s Chandra X-ray observatory, which is orbiting 580km above the Earth.

It recalls pictures of the Helix planetary nebula, with its blue centre surrounded by white clouds which earned it the nickname “the eye of God”. Read the rest of this entry »


Star crust is 10 billion times stronger than steel

Thursday Apr 16, 2009

starThe crust of neutron stars is 10 billion times stronger than steel, according to new simulations. That makes the surface of these ultra-dense stars tough enough to support long-lived bulges that could produce gravitational waves detectable by experiments on Earth.

Neutron stars are the cores left behind when relatively massive stars explode in supernovae. They are incredibly dense, packing about as much mass as the sun into a sphere just 20 kilometres or so across, and some rotate hundreds of times per second.

Because of their extreme gravity and rotational speed, neutron stars could potentially make large ripples in the fabric of space – but only if their surfaces contain bumps or other imperfections that would make them asymmetrical. Read the rest of this entry »


The Sun When It Dies

Thursday Mar 26, 2009

dn16822-2_300The Sun will begin its death throes in about 5 billion years, when it starts to swell into a red giant star. Though it’s not clear exactly what its planetary nebula will look like – its shape will likely be sculpted by factors such as the Sun’s future magnetic field – observations of the 1600 or so known planetary nebulae suggest our star will go out in a blaze of glory.

Lasting no more than a few tens of thousands of years, planetary nebulae help seed space with heavier chemical elements that can be incorporated into the next generation of stars. Read the rest of this entry »


Pluto Not A Planet Anymore

Monday Mar 16, 2009

plutoPluto’s status nowadays as a so-called plutoid and former planet may be official in the latest textbooks, but someone forgot to tell the astronomers.

A panel of six of them gathered here last Tuesday to debate the former ninth planet’s status at the American Museum of Natural History, along with moderator Neil deGrasse Tyson.

Public interest in poor Pluto has peaked ever since the International Astronomical Union demoted Pluto from planet status in 2006. And it became clear at the museum event that fierce disagreement still exists among top scientists at the leading edge of the debate. Read the rest of this entry »


Photo of the Day: Helix Nebula

Thursday Mar 5, 2009

helix_nebula1The European Organisation for Astronomical Research has released an impressive image of the Helix Nebula captured by La Silla Observatory in Chile. The nebula, lying at around 700 light-years away in the constellation of Aquarius, has quickly been dubbed the “Eye of God”, for obvious reasons. The organization explains that the Helix (NGC 7293) is the result of the “final blooming” of a Sun-like star before its “retirement” as a white dwarf.


Saturn’s Mysterious Aurora

Monday Nov 17, 2008

Saturn has given scientists a light show like nothing they’ve ever seen, NASA announced Wednesday.

The Cassini orbiter has captured a unique aurora (shown in blue) on the ringed planet that illuminates much of its northern polar cap.

Auroras occur when charged particles stream across a planet’s magnetic field lines and into its atmosphere.

But they don’t usually light up such a wide area.

“It’s not just a ring of auroras like those we’ve seen at Jupiter or Earth,” Tom Stallard, a scientist at the University of Leichester, U.K., said in a statement. He added that “finding such a bright aurora here is a fantastic surprise.” Read the rest of this entry »


Alien Planet Orbiting Sun-like Star

Monday Sep 15, 2008

An image released today of a distant star and its potential planetary companion could go down in history as the first picture of a planet outside our solar system orbiting a sunlike star.

The possible planet—a hot, young body (upper left) about eight times more massive than Jupiter—sits roughly 330 times as far from its host star as Earth is from the sun. The pair lies about 500 light-years from Earth.

In 2004 a European team took the first direct snapshot of a likely planet near a brown dwarf, a dim object that astronomers think is a type of failed star. But scientists have been able to “see” extrasolar planets near sunlike stars only by looking for their gravitational effects.

Now scientists at the University of Toronto have captured infrared images of a so-called normal star and its potential orbiter using a ground-based telescope at the Gemini Observatory in Hawaii. Read the rest of this entry »


Computer Virus Travels Into Orbit, Lands on the Space Station

Wednesday Aug 27, 2008

A pesky computer virus that has popped up on computers around the world has now made the leap into space. NASA announced yesterday that several laptops on board the International Space Station were infected with the virus in July, and also admitted that such infections have happened before.

“This is not the first time we have had a worm or a virus,” NASA spokesman Kelly Humphries said. “It’s not a frequent occurrence, but this isn’t the first time.” … NASA downplayed the news, calling the virus mainly a “nuisance” that was on non-critical space station laptops used for things like e-mail and nutritional experiments [Wired News].

Read the rest of this entry »


Former astronaut Edgar Mitchell claims aliens are real

Monday Aug 18, 2008

HOUSTON: Former NASA astronaut and moon-walker Dr Edgar Mitchell – a veteran of the Apollo 14 mission has stunningly claimed aliens exist. And he says extra-terrestrials have visited Earth on several occasions – but the alien contact has been repeatedly covered up by governments for six decades.Mitchell, 77, said during a radio interview that sources at the space agency who had had contact with aliens described the beings as “little people who look strange to us”. He said supposedly real-life ET’s were similar to the traditional image of a small frame, large eyes and head. Chillingly, he claimed our technology is “not nearly as sophisticated” as theirs and “had they been hostile”, he warned “we would be been gone by now”. Read the rest of this entry »


Fishtronauts: Scientists sending fish into space.

Sunday Aug 10, 2008

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – Scientists plan to launch 60 tiny fish on a zero gravity rocket ride from above the Arctic Circle on Monday to try to plumb the secrets of motion sickness.

Tomas Hedqvist, project manager for Sweden’s Esrange Space Centre, said the baby cichlid fish will head 260 km (160 miles) into the air on an 11-metre (36-foot) two-stage rocket, where they will experience six minutes of weightlessness.

Read the rest of this entry »