The ultimate astronomy picture cache

logoFor a few years, I’ve been following a picture site that is managed by NASA. It’s been a source of contemplation for me, as well as a great archive of information. There’s a new picture every day, and the list goes back to June 16 1995. You could spend hours on this if you like to study astronomy. There are many pictures of distant galaxies and stars, along with lots of other stuff related to our planet’s position in the universe. Go to the Astronomy Picture of the Day Archive for some of the best pictures of outer space that you will ever see! If you like science, you don’t want to miss out on this one.

An interesting observation on extra-terrestrial encounter

“The METI Controversy”: Should Detection by an Exo Civilization Be Viewed as a Threat?

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If we should pick up signals from alien civilizations, Stephen Hawking, our century’s Einstein, warns: “we should have be wary of answering back, until we have evolved” a bit further. Meeting a more advanced civilization, at our present stage,’ Hawking says “might be a bit like the original inhabitants of America meeting Columbus. I don’t think they were better off for it.”

Mankind has always been driven by contradictory drives.  The relentless curiosity that pushes us forward and is directly responsible for our progress from caves to  cities.  The fear of change that tells us “hang on, these caves/cities are really nice, we don’t want to risk losing them.”  There isn’t any greater potential threat to the status quo than the discovery of extraterrestrial life, which is why some people would prefer we didn’t try.

There has been some outrage recently over attempts to contact intelligent aliens, where instead of hiding in the corner and listening real hard some astronomers beamed intense directional messages up up and away.  Critics decried these actions as dangerous, though their fears reveal more about us than any eventual ETs.  They assume that they would be similar to humanity, so their first response to finding a more primitive culture would be to exploit the hell out of it. Read More »

Microsoft vs Google Space Race

Microsoft vs Google Space Race. Place Your Bets Now!

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Are Microsoft and Google in a space race? We think they are. Their rivalry is also, we believe, a precursor to the next great post-Internet technology boom: space exploration and development.

Microsoft  released its new Worldwide Telescope this spring, which will access images from NASA’s great fleet of space-born telescopes and earth-bound observatories such as the future Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, partially funded by Microsoft founder Bill Gates, which is projected for ‘first light’ in 2014 in Chile’s Atacama Desert -the world’s Southern Hemisphere space-observatory mecca. The 8.4-meter telescope will be able to survey the entire visible sky deeply in multiple colors every week with its 3-billion pixel digital camera. The telescope will probe the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy, and it will open a movie-like window on objects that change or move rapidly: exploding supernovae, potentially hazardous near-Earth asteroids and distant Kuiper Belt objects.

LSST is truly an Internet telescope, which will put terabytes of data each night into the hands of anyone that wants to Read More »

Speed of light

Was the Speed of Light Faster in the Early Universe?

6a00d8341bf7f753ef01156fa47136970c-800wiA brilliant young physicist João Magueijo  asks the heretical question: What if the speed of light—now accepted as one of the unchanging foundations of modern physics—were not constant?

Magueijo, a 40-year old native of Portugal, puts forth the heretical idea that in the very early days of the universe light traveled faster—an idea that if proven could dethrone Einstein and forever change our understanding of the universe. He is a pioneer of the varying speed of light (VSL) theory of cosmology -an alternative to the more mainstream theory of cosmic inflation- which proposes that the speed of light in the early universe was Read More »

The power of light

The FLASH XASER: Massive Laser Zaps Einstein

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At the end of the nineteenth century scientists thought they had all the answers.  They were spectacularly wrong, demonstrated by “The Ultraviolet Catasptrophe”: a light experiment which simply couldn’t be explained by the science of the day.  This lead to quantum mechanics, the particle-wave duality of light, and an entire new mode of science – which we’ve just broken again with a massive laser!

The explanation of the ultraviolet catastrophe was the photon, the idea that light had a minimum unit whose energy was determined by its color – so in certain circumstances, you could shine as much red light as you wanted on something but no one photon would ever have enough energy to knock out an electron.  Instead you needed a higher frequency photon, one of which could knock out an electron (this was called the photoelectric effect).  Now scientists have used a German X-ray überlaser to blow Xenon atoms to pieces, and we need a new model again.

One reason this effect hasn’t been observed before is the intensity of the X-ray radiation:  the FLASH XASER (which sounds like it should be battling Ming the Merciless) delivers ten quadrillion Watts of X-ray per square centimeter. At the surface of the sun you barely get twenty thousand watts, and that’s wimpy regular light.  This massive intensity obliterates the Xenon atoms in an entirely new way – instead of knocking off one of the easy outer electrons, as in the photoelectric effect, the ultra-xaser blasts electrons out of the inner layers of the atom.  Other electrons then collapse into the holes, releasing more energy which knocks even more electrons off.  The imploding-exploding atoms can lose over twenty electrons at once, thereby blowing previous models to pieces.

People first thought that light was a wave.  The photoelectric effect convinced some it must also be a particle, and now the mega-blaster says it’s actually a wave again – instead of firing photons at the Xenon like a bunch of cannonballs, the huge field intensity can resonate with the atom and fire out deeply buried electrons (and lots of them at once).  Scientists are currently working out what’s going on and, we imagine, giggling with glee as they wonder what they’ll detonate next.

One thing’s for sure: scientists will never be bored.  If you eat something it goes away, if you spend money you have less, but if you enjoy learning things you’ll always find that there’s more you don’t know.  Yet.

Posted by Luke McKinney

Extreme Ultraviolet Challenges Einstein

We’re probably not alone.

Michio Kaku’s Civilizations of the Cosmos

Tma1_tycho_3 “What does it mean for a civilization to be a million years old? We have had radio telescopes and spaceships for a few decades; our technical civilization is a few hundred years old … an advanced civilization millions of years old is as much beyond us as we are beyond a bushbaby or a macaque.”

Carl Sagan

Michio Kaku, professor of theoretical physics at City University of New York, in the current issue of Cosmos writes that Sagan’s question is no longer just a matter of idle speculation.

Soon, humanity may face an existential shock as we discover Earth-sized twins of our planet orbiting nearby solar systems. This may usher in a new era in our relationship with the universe, so that we will never see the night sky in the same way. Realizing that scientists may eventually compile an encyclopedia identifying the precise coordinates of perhaps hundreds of Earth-like planets, gazing at the night sky, we will forever after wonder if someone is gazing back at us.

Kaku takes up where some/one of the world’s pioneer astronomers left off with a definition of civilizations in the universe that mimics the work of Read More »

The Power of Pee | Popular Science

The Power of Pee

Cars and devices could soon be powered by hydrogen extracted from urine

Urine Sample Cups Image courtesy of Daquella manera via Flickr.com

Because it’s the universe’s most abundant element, hydrogen is a good candidate for a renewable energy source. But there’s a problem: the finicky element is difficult to manage. Storing it in its pure form is a hassle that requires high pressure and low temperature, and unbinding it from paired elements used to stabilize it comes with significant secondary energy costs.

Fortunately, though, there’s urine to the rescue.

Gerardine Botte, an Ohio University professor, sees the liquid as a solution thanks to the particular composition of its major component, urea. Its make-up, a 2-to-1 ratio of hydrogen and nitrogen, is convenient because hydrogen can be extracted from nitrogen using much less electricity than that needed to, say, pull apart hydrogen and oxygen. (It’s a matter of 0.037 Volts versus 1.23 Volts, if you really need to know.)
Botte has recently come up with a nickel-based electrode that can do just that: dip the electrode into urine, apply electrical current, and voila, hydrogen is released. While the research is still in an initial phase, it’s possible that urine could power cars, homes, and various devices in as near of a future as six months from now.

via The Power of Pee | Popular Science.

Heat “waves” rising from a surface

When you see visible distortions above an object or a surface, you are technically seeing a Mirage: an optical illusion in which atmospheric refraction by a layer of hot air distorts or inverts reflections of distant objects

A mirage is sometimes described as waves of heat rising from an object.

Search for dark matter goes deep, with Earth as a blocker: Scientific American Blog

Search for dark matter goes deep, with Earth as a blocker

underground dark matter labDark matter, written into theory to explain the behavior of massive celestial objects far above us, could be detected by heading down below—nearly a mile into the Earth. That’s the hope, anyway, of an experiment scheduled to begin next year in a South Dakota gold mine that closed in 2002.

The Sanford Underground Laboratory, dedicated this week 4,850 feet (1.5 kilometers) belowground at the Homestake Mine in Lead, S.D., will be home to the Large Underground Xenon (LUX) dark matter detector, among other experiments. Dark matter is the mysterious, invisible stuff believed to contribute roughly six times as much mass to the universe as does ordinary matter—the atoms, molecules and structures of everyday life. Its effects have been seen in its gravitational pull on large-scale structures in the universe, but its true nature remains unknown.

LUX will benefit from the Earth’s shielding from cosmic radiation as it looks for the minute collisions hypothesized to occur between ordinary atoms and dark matter particles. A prevailing theory of dark matter holds that the particles are WIMPs—weakly interacting massive particles—which interact only via gravity and the weak nuclear force, the force responsible for particle decay. “We’re looking for the very occasional interaction of dark matter with ordinary material,” says Brown University physicist Richard Gaitskell, co-spokesperson for LUX.

That ordinary material is about a third of a ton (350 kilograms) of liquid xenon, shielded by a massive water tank and watched by photomultiplier tubes and charge detectors for any photons or electrons produced as dark matter passes through the detector and scatters off a xenon nucleus.

Gaitskell says the LUX team plans to move the experiment onto the Sanford site this year and to start taking data by the middle of next year.

Whatever the outcome, Homestake already has a particle-physics pedigree: the mine was home to the late physicist Raymond Davis’s experiments that began in the 1960s. Davis used an even larger liquid tank than that of LUX to detect other lightly interacting particles, neutrinos produced in the sun, in work that earned him a share of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics.

via Search for dark matter goes deep, with Earth as a blocker: Scientific American Blog.

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By Sean Fallon on Patent

Not content with being the world’s richest man, Bill Gates is planning on extending his power to control the weather. More specifically, he has filed a patent for a system that he hopes will prevent the next Katrina.

Along with ex-Microsoft CTO Nathan Myhrvold, Gates has applied for five patents that call for a fleet of specially equipped vessels to be deployed in a hurricane’s path—vessels that are capable of reducing the surface temperature of the ocean by mixing in colder water from greater depths. This would reduce the heat-driven condensation that fuels hurricanes.

Of course, significantly altering the surface temperature of a large body of water is going to require many, many ships…a reality that is not lost on Gates. In the patent filings, there are a few proposals on how an endeavor like this one could be financed—including selling insurance policies in areas that are prone to major storms. While I seriously doubt the plausibility of such a scheme, if anyone can pull it off it would be Bill Gates. Besides, even if this doesn’t work out he always has his important work with high tech kegs to fall back on. [Patent via Tech Flash via

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