RECOMMENDED IMAGE(S): 10 fascinating images from the sky and beyond (click on any image to enlarge it)

  1. Via the European Space Agency, the microwave sky as seen by Planck:

  2. Mesospheric clouds captured by an astronaut aboard the International Space Station:

  3. Via HubbleSite, a Starburst Cluster:

  4. Via the Gemini Observatory, the first image of an extrasolar planet, or exoplanet:

  5. Via the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Saturn’s moon Daphnis. According to NASA, “the moon can be seen orbiting in a rift known as the Keeler Gap in one of Saturn’s rings.”

  6. Via the Eberly College of Science, “The brightest gamma-ray burst ever seen in X-rays temporarily blinded Swift’s X-ray Telescope on 21 June 2010.” According to David Burrows of Penn State University, “This gamma-ray burst is by far the brightest light source ever seen in X-ray wavelengths at cosmological distances.”

  7. Via The Daily Galaxy, a star is born near the Orion Nebula: “This object has a remarkable, very complicated appearance that includes two opposite jets that ram into the surrounding interstellar matter.”

  8. The galaxy—Messier 87—as captured by the Hubble space telescope. The image shows a jet of material being ejected out of the center of Messier 87. The material is being spewed by “a supermassive black hole [at the core of this galaxy] with an estimated (3.2 ± 0.9) × 109 times the mass of the Sun and a diameter larger than the orbit of Pluto. This is one of the highest masses known for a black hole.” Image via Wikipedia.

  9. HE 0437-5439 is a star that is escaping from the Milky Way. It’s a rare example of a hypervelocity star, and “for every 100 million stars in the Milky Way’s population of 100 billion stars, ‘there lurks one hypervelocity star.’” According to Wikipedia, “the star appears to be receding at an extremely high velocity of 723 km/s, or 2.6 million kilometres per hour. At this speed, the star is no longer gravitationally bound and will leave the Milky Way galaxy system and escape into intergalactic space.”

  10. Via HubbleSite, the Antennae galaxies, which are two colliding galaxies that are located a staggering 62-million light years from Earth.

On the Net

  1. Top 10 Star Mysteries

RECOMMENDED IMAGE(S): The Aurora Australis as observed from the International Space Station

Via

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RECOMMENDED IMAGE(S): The majestic Sombrero Galaxy

The enormity of our universe is staggering and unfathomable. The Sombrero Galaxy is “50,000 light-years across and is located 28 million light-years from Earth.” It’s called the Sombrero Galaxy, “because in visible light, it resembles the broad-brimmed Mexican hat. However, in Spitzer’s striking infrared view, the galaxy looks more like a ‘bull’s eye.’”

The Sombrero Galaxy in visible light:

The Sombrero Galaxy in infrared light:

Via HubbleSite and io9.

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EARTH DAY 2010

Today is the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day. The environmentally-themed day was “founded by U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson [of Wisconsin] as an environmental teach-in held on April 22, 1970.” Of course, everyday should be Earth Day, but today represents a special remembrance of where our livelihoods, our goods and services, or our well-being derives. The images below represent a mere sample of Earth’s unique possessions, and these images are a reminder of why it’s important to conserve our one and only home and her unique natural possessions.

Environment-themed art with a message (click on any image to enlarge it):

Environment-themed art by Tomás Sánchez, Walton Ford, and Alexis Rockman—some of my favorite artists.


Photo source for attribution here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. The authors or licensors of these images do not endorse my work or me and their images are protected under an attribution license.

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NASA discovers life … on Earth

NASA researchers were surprised to film a living creature—or a Lyssianasid amphipod, which looks somewhat like a shrimp—600 feet beneath an Antarctic ice sheet and 12.5 miles from open water. The discovery might not be of life on Mars, but it illustrates how complex forms of life can survive in extreme environments. More from NASA.gov:

At a depth of 600 feet beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet, a small shrimp-like creature managed to brighten up an otherwise gray polar day in November 2009. Bob Bindschadler of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., remembers the day well. He and his team were on a joint NASA-National Science Foundation expedition to examine the underside of the ice sheet when they found the pinkish-orange creature swimming beneath the ice.

“We were like little kids huddling around, just oohing and aahing at this little creature swimming around and giving us a little show,” said Bindschadler. “It was the thrill of discovery that made us giddy; just totally unexpected.”

The complex critter was identified as a Lyssianasid amphipod, about 3 inches in length. It was found beneath the 180-meter (590-foot) thick Ross Ice Shelf in Windless Bight, 20 miles northeast of McMurdo Station. Bindschadler and his team drilled an 8-inch diameter hole through the ice so that Alberto Behar of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., could submerge a small camera to obtain what are believed to be the first images of the underbelly of an ice shelf.

.       .       .

It’s not unusual to find amphipods and other marine life in Antarctic waters. The complex circulatory system of the surrounding ocean brings warm, salty, nutrient-rich water towards the Antarctic continent, helping to sustain life even in the cold, dark winter. When the Larsen B ice shelf collapsed in 2002, scientists discovered clams and bacterial mats, or large aggregations of bacteria, half a mile below the ocean surface. Even within their average temperature range of -1.8 to 1 degree Celsius (28.7 to 33.8 Fahrenheit), Antarctic waters are teeming with life.

“The ocean flows under ice sheets, and where there is exchange of water with the open ocean, there will be microbes and other food resources for larger animals such as jellyfish and amphipods,” according to Peter Wiebe, a biologist from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Woods Hole, Mass., who studies marine life in the waters around West Antarctica.

But for a group of glaciologists, a familiar face was the last thing they expected to see below the ice and so far from the open ocean. “We thought we were just going into a deep, dark cold water hole and never anticipated we’d see any life,” Bindshadler added. “The color was what caught our eyes.”

The science team — with members from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks; the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Calif.; and Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, Monterey — is now analyzing temperature, salinity and current data from the sub-glacial watering hole to understand if the comfortable conditions for this shrimp-like creature are typical.

NASA-funded scientists have long studied life in extreme environments. From astrobiology to extremeophiles and survivophiles, the search for life in harsh places has led to a smorgasbord of discoveries seemingly ripped from the pages of science fiction. The Antarctic amphipod has gotten scientists talking again: if life-forms as complex as these can survive deep within sub-glacial waters could they survive in other unusual and unfriendly environments in space?


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