MTM’s Epiphany epiphany – or the Wenlock Edge Moment
I love the New Year. Christmas is over and I am home free. You know how, if you let a bee out of the window it flies miles up into the air as if it’s delighted to have escaped.* Well, yeh, I feel like that. * Obviously, it isn’t delighted to have escaped. It’s a bee. It’s actually going up there to orientate itself and find its way back to its hive but there’s no harm in a little Victorian-style…
View On WordPress
Win PayPal $30 cash for newsletter contest or $300 PayPal cash & above for adding contests & sharing at http://contestchest.com/contests/win-a-macbook-air-21
Note- These contests are not hosted by this blog, it’s just shared here.
$310 Amazon gift card a Rafflecopter giveaway
Keep your Surface looking and working great with these easy steps.
Type Cover sold separately.
Some users are currently experiencing problems accessing Twitter. We are aware of the issue and are working towards a resolution.
RED
(On sale)
The NASA Village… You Need to Experience It
“I’m obsessed with physics and finding something we can all agree on is the answer or what’s really going on here on the most quantum level. I love health and started to become in tune with being healthy and learning more. Everyone has an opinion; there are a billion scientists and doctors but at the end of the day you want to live kind of a pure and healthy life. I love gaming; I’m kind of a nerd like that. I love film. I’m a huge fan of film. I love golf, as well. I’m terrible at it but I just discovered it and I really love doing it.”
- Fred Durst on how he picked his Flipboard Magazine topics.
Tradition never dies. How many traditional instruments do you play?
Merry Christmas from Muse 🎅🎄
The Kepler space telescope has taught us there are so many planets out there, they outnumber even the stars. Here is a sample of these wondrous, weird and unexpected worlds (and other spectacular objects in space) that Kepler has spotted with its “eye” opened to the heavens.
Yes, Star Wars fans, the double sunset on Tatooine could really exist. Kepler discovered the first known planet around a double-star system, though Kepler-16b is probably a gas giant without a solid surface.
Nope. Kepler hasn’t found Earth 2.0, and that wasn’t the job it set out to do. But in its survey of hundreds of thousands of stars, Kepler found planets near in size to Earth orbiting at a distance where liquid water could pool on the surface. One of them, Kepler-62f, is about 40 percent bigger than Earth and is likely rocky. Is there life on any of them? We still have a lot more to learn.
One of Kepler’s early discoveries was the small, scorched world of Kepler-10b. With a year that lasts less than an Earth day and density high enough to imply it’s probably made of iron and rock, this “lava world” gave us the first solid evidence of a rocky planet outside our solar system.
When Kepler detected the oddly fluctuating light from “Tabby’s Star,” the internet lit up with speculation of an alien megastructure. Astronomers have concluded it’s probably an orbiting dust cloud.
What happens when a solar system dies? Kepler discovered a white dwarf, the compact corpse of a star in the process of vaporizing a planet.
The five small planets in Kepler-444 were born 11 billion years ago when our galaxy was in its youth. Imagine what these ancient planets look like after all that time?
This premier planet hunter has also been watching stars explode. Kepler recorded a sped-up version of a supernova called a “fast-evolving luminescent transit” that reached its peak brightness at breakneck speed. It was caused by a star spewing out a dense shell of gas that lit up when hit with the shockwave from the blast.
* All images are artist illustrations.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com