Archive for August, 2009

Scientists Say Saturn Moon Like ‘Early Earth’

Posted in News, Science on August 11th, 2009 by admin – Be the first to comment

9:36am UK, Tuesday August 11, 2009

Scientists believe they have located Earth’s nearest likeness – circling Saturn as one of its moons.

l-nasa-impression

Artist’s concept of a methane rainstorm on Titan. (Pic: NASA/JPL)

Although it is millions of miles away from us, planet-sized Titan also has choking smog and flash floods – just like Earth.

“It really is surprising how closely Titan’s surface resembles Earth’s,” said planetary geologist Rosaly Lopes, from Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), in California.

“In fact, Titan looks more like the Earth than any other body in the solar system, despite the huge differences in temperature and other environmental conditions.”

Dr Lopes announced the news at a Titan presentation at the the International Astronomical Union Assembly in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Scientists activated radar beams on Nasa’s Cassini probe to see through the smoggy atmosphere and they have now mapped a third of Titan’s surface.

Titan is one of the biggest moons in the solar system, larger than the planet Mercury and approaching Mars in size.

But despite an atmosphere hostile to humans, it is scattered with lakes, dunes, mountain ridges and possibly volcanoes.

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Cassini has been probing Saturn and its moons for five years, as well as communicating with the European Space Agency’s Huygens probe, which descended on Titan in 2005.

One exciting question is whether Titan’s chemical processes today support a prebiotic chemistry similar to that under which life evolved on Earth?

Nasa’s research senior scientist, Robert M Nelson

Titan has long-fascinated astronomers as the only moon known to possess a thick atmosphere, and as the only celestial body other than Earth to have stable pools of liquid on its surface.

Nasa had earlier, unfulfilled plans to use blimps to chart the Titanic territory.

The many lakes that pepper the northern polar latitudes, with a scattering appearing in the south as well, are thought to be filled with liquid hydrocarbons, such as methane and ethane.

“With an average surface temperature hovering around -180° Celsius, water cannot exist on Titan except as deep-frozen ice as strong as rock,” Dr Lopes said.

Methane rain cuts channels and forms lakes on the surface and causes erosion, helping to erase the meteorite impact craters that pockmark most other rocky worlds, such as our Moon and on Mercury.

180-nasa-blimp

Nasa floated a blimp idea

Other research presented at the conference points to volcanic activity on Titan, but instead of scorching hot lava, scientists think “cryovolcanoes” eject cold slurries of water-ice and ammonia.

“These new results are the next advance in this exploration process,” Robert M Nelson, a senior JPL research scientist, said.

Although the chemical concoctions on Titan sound deadly, they were in fact essential ingredients for life on our own planet.

“It has not escaped our attention that ammonia, in association with methane and nitrogen, the principal species of Titan’s atmosphere, closely replicates the environment at the time that life first emerged on Earth,” Mr Nelson revealed.

“One exciting question is whether Titan’s chemical processes today support a prebiotic chemistry similar to that under which life evolved on Earth?”

Vela Supernova Remnant (& more) Wide-Field One Gigapixel Image

Posted in News, Science on August 10th, 2009 by admin – 1 Comment

By Daniel Saltman

About 11,000 years ago a star in the constellation of Vela exploded. This bright supernova may have been visible to the first human farmers. Today the Vela supernova remnant marks the position of a relatively close and recent explosion in our Milky Way Galaxy. A roughly spherical, expanding shock wave is visible in X-rays. In the optical photograph shown here, the 100+ light-years span spherical blast wave is shown in detail. As gas flies away from the detonated star, it reacts with the interstellar medium, knocking away closely held electrons from even heavy elements. When the electrons recombine with these atoms, light in many different colors and energy bands is produced.
(Text adapted from the Astronomy Picture of the Day website)

This image has been chosen as NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day for February 13, 2007.

Vela Supernova Remnant in Vela constellation

View and interact with the nearly full-res image

or view and save a screensize JPG

The image is available for Museum, Planetariums, Publishers and Authors in high-resolution (up to 33,421 × 30,477 pixels, can be printed up to 223 × 203 inches and more). Please, e-mail me with your request.
Please, don’t ask the high-res for private use, I can’t fullfill this kind of requests.

The Vela SNR image presented here is one of the largest deep-sky image ever released; the full-resolution version is a whopping 1.018 gigapixel, or 1,018 megapixel. For comparison, a modern digital camera produces images of just 8-10 megapixel and a good modern LCD screen is able to show just 1/1000th of the full-res in a time. The uncompressed version of the file is nearly 3 Gigabytes.

The image’s field of view is about 9.3 × 8.5 arc degrees, so it shows a plague of sky nearly wide as 19 times the apparent diameter of the full Moon.

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Moving the cursor over the image will bring up an annotated version. Clicking on the image will bring up the zoomable high resolution version (half-res).Remarkable features
Moving the cursor over the image will bring up an annotated version.
Clicking on the image will bring up the zoomable high resolution version (half-res).
NGC 2736 is the Pencil Nebula, a shockwave expanding through interstellar space at 500,000 kilometers per hour. The Pencil Nebula is part of the Vela Supernova Remnant. Initially the shockwave was moving at millions of kilometers per hour, but the weight of all the gas it has swept up has slowed it considerably.

Vela SNR VideoWhy don’t you take three minutes of additional relax?

Click the “play” button, adjust the volume and start a brief voyage throughout the delicate filaments of the Vela Supernova Remnant, the nice Gum nebulas and the many clusters rich of stars that populate this plague of sky.

Enjoy!

Do you want a better quality? To download the video in nearly DVD-quality right click here, then click “Save target as…” on the menu
(format WMV- about 32 Megabyte)
.

Find Chart

The position of the Vela Supernova Remnant (in the red circle) in Vela.
Image from Cartes du Ciel.

In order to produce the color image seen here, I worked with data coming from 19 different photographic plates taken at the UK Schmidt Observatory starting from 1975. The original file is 33,421 × 30,477 pixels with a resolution of about one arc second per pixel. The image show an area of sky large 9.3° × 8.5° (for comparison, the full-Moon is about 0.5° in diameter).