Archive for the ‘Astronomy and Space’ Category

The Longest Total Solar Eclipse This Century

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

People in Asia have seen the longest total solar eclipse this century, with large areas of India and China plunged into darkness.

TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE

Amateur stargazers and scientists travelled far to see the eclipse, which lasted six minutes and 39 seconds at its maximum point.

The eclipse could first be seen early on Wednesday in eastern India.

It then moved east across India, Nepal, Burma, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, Japan and the Pacific.

The eclipse first became total over India at 0053GMT, and was last visible from land at Nikumaroro Island in the South Pacific nation of Kiribati. It ended at 0418GMT.

Elsewhere, a partial eclipse was visible across much of Asia.

The next total solar eclipse will occur on 11 July, 2010. It will be visible in a narrow corridor over the southern hemisphere, from the southern Pacific Ocean to Argentina.

Video Solar Eclipse 2009:

Explore the moon in Google Earth

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Google Earth the MoonEver since I was a young girl, it has been a dream of mine to travel into space. In September of 2006, I was fortunate enough to make that dream a reality - I took off from the launch pad in Baikonur bound for the International Space Station and became the world’s first private female space tourist. Since then, it’s been my mission to help as many people as possible think ambitiously about ways to push the boundaries of exploration, both here on Earth and beyond. As a trustee of the X PRIZE Foundation, and the sponsor of the Ansari X PRIZE, I support Google’s goal of opening up space through projects like the Google Lunar X PRIZE, which serve to educate the public about the global benefits of space exploration.

That’s why I’m so excited about the release of Moon in Google Earth, which is launching today at the Newseum in Washington D.C. This tool will make it easier for millions of people to learn about space, our moon and some of the most significant and dazzling discoveries humanity has accomplished together. Moon in Google Earth enables you to explore lunar imagery as well as informational content about the Apollo landing sites, panoramic images shot by the Apollo astronauts, narrated tours and much more. I believe that this educational tool is a critical step into the future, a way to both develop the dreams of young people globally, and inspire new audacious goals.

With Google Earth, young explorers around the world can bounce around the galaxy in Sky, fly to Mars and now visit the moon from wherever they may be. To learn more watch the video below or visit the Lat Long Blog. Finally, outer space doesn’t seem so far away anymore.

Source: Google Blog, by Anousheh Ansari, Trustee, X PRIZE Foundation, and first female private space explorer

DASCH project seeks to digitize observatory`s glass plate archives

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

Harvard researchers are building a celestial time machine that lets astronomers look back at hundreds of thousands of objects in the Earth’s skies over the past century.

The effort aims to digitize 525,000 glass photographic plates taken at observing sites around the world between the 1880s and the 1980s. The collection, the largest such in the world, contains a treasure trove of largely unexamined data, according to Paine Professor of Practical Astronomy Jonathan Grindlay, who is leading the digitizing effort.

Photo Kris Snibbe/Harvard University News Office

Photo Kris Snibbe/Harvard University News Office

Grindlay said each of the plates has been examined for one or a few objects of interest to specific astronomers. When one considers that each plate holds images of upwards of 100,000 objects and that each visible object has been photographed between 50 and 3,000 times over the years, the potential knowledge about the changing universe hidden in the Harvard College Observatory plate stacks is enormous.

DASCH will look at every object on the plate with specially developed software and measure its brightness. You can not know what you’re looking for and still find something,” Grindlay said. “We’re part of a wave that is looking at the sky for its variable objects, for everything that goes bump in the night — and that turns out to be a lot. DASCH will open a new window for time domain astronomy.”

The digitizing effort, called DASCH for Digital Access to a Sky Century @ Harvard, got under way in 2004 when it received funding from the National Science Foundation. After two years spent on the development of a custom-made scanner for the plates and an initial version of the scanning software, the first scans began in 2006. Since then, work has focused on crafting software to make sense of the enormous amount of data the plates hold.

Alvin Powell
Harvard News Office

Cancer aggressiveness `triggered` by bacteria

Wednesday, April 18th, 2007
 

Electron microscopic image of a single human lymphocyte. National Cancer Institute

Electron microscopic image of a single human lymphocyte. National Cancer Institute

New research in lymphatic cancer shows that bacteria can cause cancer to be more aggressive. Patients with skin lymphoma may benefit from antibiotic treatments used for bacteria-infections.

 

The results are published in the current issue of “Blood” (Journal of the American Society of Hematology).

How does it work?

Patients with lymphatic cancer in the skin often have bacteria-infections, which shows as e.g. eczema or skin-sores. The research results indicate that bacteria can aggravate the cancer. The bacteria activates the immune system, which indirectly stimulates the cancer cells to spread further.

Professor Niels Ødum from Department of Molecular Biology, University of Copenhagen says:

- The results are surprising. Further research is necessary to completely understand the mechanisms between the immune response and development of lymphatic cancer, but we know that more than half of the patients suffering from lymphatic cancer in the skin also get bacteria skin-infections. We have helped to show how these bacteria can affect the cancer disease in a negative way, and that this may be relieved by a simple antibiotic treatment.

The research was conducted by a group of researchers from University of Copenhagen, University of Pennsylvania and Copenhagen University Hospital, and is funded by The Danish Cancer Society. The results are published in the current issue of “Blood” (Journal of the American Society of Hematology).

Do you want to know more?

Contact: Niels Ødum

The research is published in the journal “Blood” (Journal of the American Society of Hematology), vol 109, pp 3325-3332, 2007

 

 
University of Copenhagen

What is the difference between the ecliptic line And the equatorial line?

Sunday, February 4th, 2007

The ecliptic lineThe ecliptic line is the projection of the plane of the earth’s orbit around the Sun onto the sky. It is an imaginary line in the sky that represents the plane of the earth’s orbit around the sun.

The equatorial line is the projection of the Earth’s equator onto the sky.

The earth’s orbital motion and the angle between the ecliptic plane and the equatorial plane cause the seasons.

Dark Energy

Thursday, January 18th, 2007
This is the part of the Universe that the research group ESSENCE has been observing. To the left you see a famous cluster of galaxes, Abell 168 Photo: Peter Challis

This is the part of the Universe that the research group ESSENCE has been observing. To the left you see a famous cluster of galaxes, Abell 168 Photo: Peter Challis

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen’s Dark Cosmology Centre at the Niels Bohr Institute have brought us one step closer to understanding what the universe is made of. As part of the international collaboration ESSENCE they have observed distant supernovae (exploding stars), some of which emitted the light we now see more than half the age of the universe ago. Using these supernovae they have traced the expansion history of the universe with unprecedented accuracy and sharpened our knowledge of what it might be that is causing the mysterious acceleration of the expansion of the universe.

Background and outline

At the end of last century astronomers discovered the startling fact that the expansion of our universe is not slowing down, as all our previous understanding of gravity had predicted. Rather the expansion is speeding up. Nothing in conventional physics can explain such a result. It means that either the universe is made up of around 70% ‘dark energy’ (something that has a sort of anti-gravity) or our theory of gravity is flawed.

Now, as part of the international collaboration “ESSENCE”, researchers at the Danish Dark Cosmology Centre have added a new piece to the puzzle. In two papers recently released they detail observations of supernovae (exploding stars) that allow them to trace the expansion history of the universe in unprecedented detail. ESSENCE is an extension of the original team that discovered the acceleration of the universe and these results push the limits of technology and knowledge, observing light from dying stars that was emitted almost half the age of the universe ago. 

In a third paper, led by the Danish team and released this week, the many new theories that have been proposed to explain the acceleration of the universe are critically assessed in the face of this new data. Dr. Jesper Sollerman and Dr. Tamara Davis lead the team who show that despite the increased sophistication in cosmological models over the last century the best model to explain the acceleration remains one that was proposed by Einstein back in 1917. Although Einstein’s reasoning at the time was flawed (he proposed the modification to his theory so it could support a static universe, because in those days everyone ‘knew’ the universe was not expanding, it may be that he was right all along.

Scientific details:

The primary aim of the experiment is to measure the ‘dark energy’ – the ‘thing’ that is causing the acceleration of the universe – to better than 10%. We measure the dark energy’s ‘equation of state’.  This also allows us to check whether our theory of gravity needs modification. So far it looks like our theory is correct and that the strange acceleration of the expansion of the universe can be explained by Einstein’s ‘cosmological constant’.

In modern terms the cosmological constant is viewed as a quantum mechanical phenomenon called the ‘energy of the vacuum’. In other words, the energy of empty space.  It is this energy that is causing the expansion to accelerate. The new data shows that none of the new theories that have been proposed in the last decade are necessary to explain the acceleration. Rather, vacuum energy is the most likely cause and the expansion history of the universe can be explained by simply adding this constant background of acceleration into the normal theory of gravity.

The ESSENCE team includes 38 top researchers from many different countries on four continents.

For further information contact:

Tamara Davis, Astrophysicist, Ph.D.
DARK Cosmology Centre, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen,
Phone: +45 3532-5981, tamarad @ dark-cosmology.dk

Jesper Sollerman, Astrophysicist, Ph.D.
DARK Cosmology Centre, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen,
Phone: +45 3532-5899, jesper @ astro.su.se