The Faint Rings Of Uranus

The Faint Rings Of Uranus
The Faint Rings Of Uranus
The Faint Rings Of Uranus

The Faint Rings of Uranus

Taken in January, 1986 by Voyager 2. Uranus assembled using orange, simulated green, and violet light. The rings were taken in clear (white) light, but colored red here.

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Kevin M. Gill

More Posts from Carlosalberthreis and Others

4 months ago
Relembrando O Sorvete Da Segunda-feira Que Ocorreu Em 2024, Na Companhia Da Minha Mãe E O Seu Joaz Que

Relembrando o sorvete da segunda-feira que ocorreu em 2024, na companhia da minha mãe e o Seu Joaz que é intitulado por mim de "O Sineiro Da Catedral". 🍦

📅 Data de registro: 3 de junho de 2024 às 19:58


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8 years ago

What’s Up for June 2016?

What’s Up For June 2016?

What’s Up for June? Saturn at its best! Plus, good views of Mars, Jupiter and Jupiter’s moons continue from dusk to dawn.

What’s Up For June 2016?

You don’t have to stay up late to see Jupiter, Mars and Saturn this month, because they’re all visible soon after sunset. Jupiter is the brightest of the three, visible in the western sky all evening. 

What’s Up For June 2016?

The four Galilean moons are easily visible in binoculars or telescopes. If you think you’re seeing 5 moons on June 10th, you’re not. One of them is a distant star in the constellation Leo.

What’s Up For June 2016?

For telescope viewers, the time near Mars’ closest approach to Earth, May 30th this year, is the best time to try to see the two moons of Mars: Phobos and Deimos. It takes patience, very steady skies and good charts! Mars is still large and bright in early June, but it fades as speedy Earth, in its shorter orbit around the sun, passes it.

What’s Up For June 2016?

Saturn has been close to Mars recently. This month Saturn reaches opposition, when Saturn, Earth and the sun are in a straight line with Earth in the middle, providing the best and closest views of the ringed beauty and several of its moons. You’ll be able to make out cloud bands on Saturn, in delicate shades of cream and butterscotch. They’re fainter than the bands of Jupiter. Through a telescope you’ll see Saturn’s rings tilted about as wide as they get: 26 degrees.

What’s Up For June 2016?

You’ll also have a ring-side view of the Cassini division, discovered by Giovanni Domenico Cassini, namesake of our Cassini spacecraft, orbiting Saturn since 2004 and continuing through September 2017. When you look at Saturn through a telescope, you can’t help but see several of its 4 brightest moons, and maybe more. If you just see one, that’s Titan, 50% larger than our own moon. A telescope can also reveal more moons, like Saturn’s two-colored moon Iapetus. It takes 3 months to orbit Saturn, and it’s fairly easy to see.

What’s Up For June 2016?

There’s a bright comet visible this month, Comet PanSTARRS. It’s best seen from the southern hemisphere, but it’s also visible from the U.S. low in the morning sky. Comet PanSTARRS can be seen through a telescope near the beautiful Helix Nebula on June 4, but it is visible all month.

What’s Up For June 2016?

Watch the full June “What’s Up” video for more: https://youtu.be/M7RtIa9zBYA

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

7 years ago

The Moon in Motion

Happy New Year! And happy supermoon! Tonight, the Moon will appear extra big and bright to welcome us into 2018 – about 6% bigger and 14% brighter than the average full Moon. And how do we know that? Well, each fall, our science visualizer Ernie Wright uses data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) to render over a quarter of a million images of the Moon. He combines these images into an interactive visualization, Moon Phase and Libration, which depicts the Moon at every day and hour for the coming year. 

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Want to see what the Moon will look like on your birthday this year? Just put in the date, and even the hour (in Universal Time) you were born to see your birthday Moon.

Our Moon is quite dynamic. In addition to Moon phases, our Moon appears to get bigger and smaller throughout the year, and it wobbles! Or at least it looks that way to us on Earth. This wobbling is called libration, from the Latin for ‘balance scale’ (libra). Wright relies on LRO maps of the Moon and NASA orbit calculations to create the most accurate depiction of the 6 ways our Moon moves from our perspective.

1. Phases

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The Moon phases we see on Earth are caused by the changing positions of the Earth and Moon relative to the Sun. The Sun always illuminates half of the Moon, but we see changing shapes as the Moon revolves around the Earth. Wright uses a software library called SPICE to calculate the position and orientation of the Moon and Earth at every moment of the year. With his visualization, you can input any day and time of the year and see what the Moon will look like!

2. Shape of the Moon

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Check out that crater detail! The Moon is not a smooth sphere. It’s covered in mountains and valleys and thanks to LRO, we know the shape of the Moon better than any other celestial body in the universe. To get the most accurate depiction possible of where the sunlight falls on the lunar surface throughout the month, Wright uses the same graphics software used by Hollywood design studios, including Pixar, and a method called ‘raytracing’ to calculate the intricate patterns of light and shadow on the Moon’s surface, and he checks the accuracy of his renders against photographs of the Moon he takes through his own telescope.

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3. Apparent Size 

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The Moon Phase and Libration visualization shows you the apparent size of the Moon. The Moon’s orbit is elliptical, instead of circular - so sometimes it is closer to the Earth and sometimes it is farther. You’ve probably heard the term “supermoon.” This describes a full Moon at or near perigee (the point when the Moon is closest to the Earth in its orbit). A supermoon can appear up to 14% bigger and brighter than a full Moon at apogee (the point when the Moon is farthest from the Earth in its orbit). 

Our supermoon tonight is a full Moon very close to perigee, and will appear to be about 14% bigger than the July 27 full Moon, the smallest full Moon of 2018, occurring at apogee. Input those dates into the Moon Phase and Libration visualization to see this difference in apparent size!

4. East-West Libration

Over a month, the Moon appears to nod, twist, and roll. The east-west motion, called ‘libration in longitude’, is another effect of the Moon’s elliptical orbital path. As the Moon travels around the Earth, it goes faster or slower, depending on how close it is to the Earth. When the Moon gets close to the Earth, it speeds up thanks to an additional pull from Earth’s gravity. Then it slows down, when it’s farther from the Earth. While this speed in orbital motion changes, the rotational speed of the Moon stays constant. 

This means that when the Moon moves faster around the Earth, the Moon itself doesn’t rotate quite enough to keep the same exact side facing us and we get to see a little more of the eastern side of the Moon. When the Moon moves more slowly around the Earth, its rotation gets a little ahead, and we see a bit more of its western side.

5. North-South Libration

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The Moon also appears to nod, as if it were saying “yes,” a motion called ‘libration in latitude’. This is caused by the 5 degree tilt of the Moon’s orbit around the Earth. Sometimes the Moon is above the Earth’s northern hemisphere and sometimes it’s below the Earth’s southern hemisphere, and this lets us occasionally see slightly more of the northern or southern hemispheres of the Moon! 

6. Axis Angle

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Finally, the Moon appears to tilt back and forth like a metronome. The tilt of the Moon’s orbit contributes to this, but it’s mostly because of the 23.5 degree tilt of our own observing platform, the Earth. Imagine standing sideways on a ramp. Look left, and the ramp slopes up. Look right and the ramp slopes down. 

Now look in front of you. The horizon will look higher on the right, lower on the left (try this by tilting your head left). But if you turn around, the horizon appears to tilt the opposite way (tilt your head to the right). The tilted platform of the Earth works the same way as we watch the Moon. Every two weeks we have to look in the opposite direction to see the Moon, and the ground beneath our feet is then tilted the opposite way as well.

So put this all together, and you get this:

Beautiful isn’t it? See if you can notice these phenomena when you observe the Moon. And keep coming back all year to check on the Moon’s changing appearance and help plan your observing sessions.

Follow @NASAMoon on Twitter to keep up with the latest lunar updates. 

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

11 months ago

No TRIunfo do Boi Caprichoso! 🌟🌟🌟

No TRIunfo Do Boi Caprichoso! 🌟🌟🌟

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6 years ago
Johannes Kepler

Johannes Kepler

Johannes Kepler was a German mathematician, astronomer, and astrologer.

Kepler is a key figure in the 17th-century scientific revolution. He is best known for his laws of planetary motion, based on his works Astronomia nova, Harmonices Mundi, and Epitome of Copernican Astronomy. These works also provided one of the foundations for Isaac Newton’s theory of universal gravitation.

In astronomy, Kepler’s laws of planetary motion are three scientific laws describing the motion of planets around the Sun.

The orbit of a planet is an ellipse with the Sun at one of the two foci.

image

A line segment joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.

Johannes Kepler

The square of the orbital period of a planet is proportional to the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit.

image

Most planetary orbits are nearly circular, and careful observation and calculation are required in order to establish that they are not perfectly circular. Calculations of the orbit of Mars, whose published values are somewhat suspect, indicated an elliptical orbit. From this, Johannes Kepler inferred that other bodies in the Solar System, including those farther away from the Sun, also have elliptical orbits.

Kepler’s work (published between 1609 and 1619) improved the heliocentric theory of Nicolaus Copernicus, explaining how the planets’ speeds varied, and using elliptical orbits rather than circular orbits with epicycles.

Isaac Newton showed in 1687 that relationships like Kepler’s would apply in the Solar System to a good approximation, as a consequence of his own laws of motion and law of universal gravitation. 

Johannes Kepler  

Kepler’s laws of planetary motion

8 months ago

☄️

Comet C/2023 
Comet C/2023 
Comet C/2023 

Comet C/2023 

Credit: Aixa Andrada, Jim Denny, Max


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10 months ago
❝Vou Pintar O Meu Brasil De Azul E Branco

❝Vou pintar o meu Brasil de azul e branco

Das cores da minha nação

Das cores do meu país

O azul do planeta do céu e do mar

Inspiração dos poetas

Que o próprio criador pintou

Veste a camisa azul e branca

Vem sentir a emoção

Sinta a magia que encanta

Do folclore do boi campeão❞


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6 years ago
Independente De Estar Classificado Ou Não, Sempre Serei #Cruzeiro 🔵✨

Independente de estar classificado ou não, sempre serei #Cruzeiro 🔵✨

9 years ago
Os Cientistas Da Missão New Horizons Da NASA Estão Aprendendo Cada Vez Mais Sobre A Estrutura E O Comportamento

Os cientistas da missão New Horizons da NASA estão aprendendo cada vez mais sobre a estrutura e o comportamento da complexa atmosfera de Plutão, descobrindo novos atributos das suas extensas camadas de névoas. As névoas foram descobertas pela primeira vez quando a sonda New Horizons as fotografou em Julho de 2015.

Os cientistas da missão descobriram que as camadas na atmosfera de nitrogênio de Plutão, variam em brilho dependendo da iluminação e do ponto de vista, embora ela mantenha sua estrutura vertical geral. As variações de brilho podem ocorrer devido as ondas de flutuações, que os cientistas também chamam de ondas de gravidade (e que nada tem a ver com as ondas gravitacionais), que são normalmente lançadas pelo fluxo de ar sobre as cadeias de montanhas. As ondas de gravidade atmosféricas são conhecidas na Terra, em Marte, e agora, provavelmente em Plutão.

As camadas da atmosfera de Plutão são vistas da melhor forma em imagens que foram feitas pela sonda New Horizons quando ela passou atrás do planeta anão. A sonda New Horizons, obteve uma série de imagens retroiluminadas enquanto ela passou por Plutão, no dia 14 de Julho de 2015. Nessas observações feitas pelo instrumento Long Range Reconnaissance Imager, ou LORRI, as camadas atmosféricas sobre localizações específicas em Plutão foram imageadas algumas vezes, num intervalo de 2 a 5 horas. O brilho das camada variam de cerca de 30%, apesar da altura das camadas acima da superfície permanecer a mesma.

Plutão é simplesmente espetacular, quando as primeiras imagens da estrutura da atmosfera foram observadas, elas surpreenderam a todos. O fato de não se ter observado as camadas atmosféricas se movendo para cima e para baixo será importante para os esforços de modelagem no futuro.

Fonte:

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/pluto-s-haze-varies-in-brightness

7 years ago

Reinventing the Wheel

Planning a trip to the Moon? Mars? You’re going to need good tires…

image

Exploration requires mobility. And whether you’re on Earth or as far away as the Moon or Mars, you need good tires to get your vehicle from one place to another. Our decades-long work developing tires for space exploration has led to new game-changing designs and materials. Yes, we’re reinventing the wheel—here’s why.

Wheels on the Moon

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Early tire designs were focused on moving hardware and astronauts across the lunar surface. The last NASA vehicle to visit the Moon was the Lunar Roving Vehicle during our Apollo missions. The vehicle used four large flexible wire mesh wheels with stiff inner frames. We used these Apollo era tires as the inspiration for new designs using newer materials and technology to better function on a lunar surface.

Up springs a new idea

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During the mid-2000s, we worked with industry partner Goodyear to develop the Spring Tire, an airless compliant tire that consists of several hundred coiled steel wires woven into a flexible mesh, giving the tires the ability to support high loads while also conforming to the terrain. The Spring Tire has been proven to generate very good traction and durability in soft sand and on rocks.

Spring Tires for Mars

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A little over a year after the Mars Curiosity Rover landed on Mars, engineers began to notice significant wheel damage in 2013 due to the unexpectedly harsh terrain. That’s when engineers began developing new Spring Tire prototypes to determine if they would be a new and better solution for exploration rovers on Mars.

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In order for Spring Tires to go the distance on Martian terrain, new materials were required. Enter nickel titanium, a shape memory alloy with amazing capabilities that allow the tire to deform down to the axle and return to its original shape.

These tires can take a lickin’

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After building the shape memory alloy tire, Glenn engineers sent it to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Mars Life Test Facility. It performed impressively on the punishing track.

Why reinvent the wheel? It’s worth it.

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New, high performing tires would allow lunar and Mars rovers to explore greater regions of the surface than currently possible. They conform to the terrain and do not sink as much as rigid wheels, allowing them to carry heavier payloads for the same given mass and volume. Also, because they absorb energy from impacts at moderate to high speeds, there is potential for use on crewed exploration vehicles which are expected to move at speeds significantly higher than the current Mars rovers.

Airless tires on Earth

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Maybe. Recently, engineers and materials scientists have been testing a spinoff tire version that would work on cars and trucks on Earth. Stay tuned as we continue to push the boundaries on traditional concepts for exploring our world and beyond.  

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.  

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carlosalberthreis - Carlos Alberth Reis
Carlos Alberth Reis

1994.4.26 • Parintins, Amazonas, Brasil

191 posts

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