Solar System: 5 Things To Know This Week

Solar System: 5 Things to Know This Week

Our solar system is huge, so let us break it down for you. Here are 5 things to know this week:

1. It’s Lunacy, Whether by Day or Night

Solar System: 5 Things To Know This Week

What’s Up in the night sky during November? See all the phases of the moon by day and by night, and learn how to look for the Apollo landing sites. Just after sunset on November 13 and 14, look near the setting sun in the western sky to see the moon as a slender crescent. For more, catch the latest edition of the monthly “What’s Up” Tumblr breakdown.

2. Answer to Longstanding Mars Mystery is Blowin’  in the Wind

Solar System: 5 Things To Know This Week

What transformed Mars from a warm and wet environment, one that might have supported surface life, to the cold, arid planet it is today? Data from our Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission pins much of the blame on the sun. Streams of charged solar particles crash against the Martian atmosphere, and without much of a magnetic field there to deflect the onslaught, over time the solar wind has stripped the air away.

3. Orbital Maneuvers in the Dark

Solar System: 5 Things To Know This Week

The New Horizons mission team has set a new record. They recently performed the last in a series of trajectory changes that set the spacecraft on a course for an encounter with a Kuiper Belt object in January 2019. The Kuiper Belt consists of small bodies that orbit the sun a billion miles or more beyond Pluto. These latest course maneuvers were the most distant trajectory corrections ever performed by any spacecraft.

4. Visit Venus (But Not Really — You’d Fry)

Solar System: 5 Things To Know This Week

Mars isn’t the only available destination. You can visit all the planets, moons and small worlds of the solar system anytime, right from your computer or handheld device. Just peruse our planets page, where you’ll find everything from basic facts about each body to the latest pictures and discoveries. Visit Venus HERE.

5. Titan Then and Now

Solar System: 5 Things To Know This Week

Nov. 12 marks the 35th anniversary of Voyager 1’s Saturn flyby in 1980. Voyager saw Saturn’s enshrouded, planet-sized moon Titan as a featureless ball. In recent years, the Cassini mission haas revealed Titan in detail as a complex world. The spacecraft has peered beneath its clouds, and even delivered a probe to its encounter, which will include infrared scans, as well as using visible light cameras to look for methane clouds in the atmosphere.

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

More Posts from Ritasakano and Others

4 years ago
Fire Sprinklers Erupt From Ingeniously Camouflaged Huts To Protect A Historic Japanese Village
Fire Sprinklers Erupt From Ingeniously Camouflaged Huts To Protect A Historic Japanese Village
Fire Sprinklers Erupt From Ingeniously Camouflaged Huts To Protect A Historic Japanese Village

Fire Sprinklers Erupt from Ingeniously Camouflaged Huts to Protect a Historic Japanese Village

8 years ago
Jupiter’s Galilean Moons
Jupiter’s Galilean Moons
Jupiter’s Galilean Moons
Jupiter’s Galilean Moons

Jupiter’s Galilean Moons

Io - Jupiter’s volcanic moon

Europa -  Jupiter’s icy moon

Ganymede - Jupiter’s (and the solar system’s) largest moon

Callisto -  Jupiter’s heavily cratered moon

Made using: Celestia, Screen2Gif & GIMP Based on: @spaceplasma‘s solar system gifs Profile sources: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets, http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/joviansatfact.html

7 years ago

A incrível dança do Universo!!

Eclipse Across America

August 21, 2017, the United States experienced a solar eclipse! 

image

An eclipse occurs when the Moon temporarily blocks the light from the Sun. Within the narrow, 60- to 70-mile-wide band stretching from Oregon to South Carolina called the path of totality, the Moon completely blocked out the Sun’s face; elsewhere in North America, the Moon covered only a part of the star, leaving a crescent-shaped Sun visible in the sky.

image

During this exciting event, we were collecting your images and reactions online. 

Here are a few images of this celestial event…take a look:

image

This composite image, made from 4 frames, shows the International Space Station, with a crew of six onboard, as it transits the Sun at roughly five miles per second during a partial solar eclipse from, Northern Cascades National Park in Washington. Onboard as part of Expedition 52 are: NASA astronauts Peggy Whitson, Jack Fischer, and Randy Bresnik; Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy; and ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Paolo Nespoli.

Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

image

The Bailey’s Beads effect is seen as the moon makes its final move over the sun during the total solar eclipse on Monday, August 21, 2017 above Madras, Oregon.

Credit: NASA/Aubrey Gemignani

image

This image from one of our Twitter followers shows the eclipse through tree leaves as crescent shaped shadows from Seattle, WA.

Credit: Logan Johnson

image

“The eclipse in the palm of my hand”. The eclipse is seen here through an indirect method, known as a pinhole projector, by one of our followers on social media from Arlington, TX.

Credit: Mark Schnyder

image

Through the lens on a pair of solar filter glasses, a social media follower captures the partial eclipse from Norridgewock, ME.

Credit: Mikayla Chase

image

While most of us watched the eclipse from Earth, six humans had the opportunity to view the event from 250 miles above on the International Space Station. European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Paolo Nespoli captured this image of the Moon’s shadow crossing America.

Credit: Paolo Nespoli

image

This composite image shows the progression of a partial solar eclipse over Ross Lake, in Northern Cascades National Park, Washington. The beautiful series of the partially eclipsed sun shows the full spectrum of the event. 

Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

In this video captured at 1,500 frames per second with a high-speed camera, the International Space Station, with a crew of six onboard, is seen in silhouette as it transits the sun at roughly five miles per second during a partial solar eclipse, Monday, Aug. 21, 2017 near Banner, Wyoming.

Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky

To see more images from our NASA photographers, visit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasahqphoto/albums/72157685363271303

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

9 years ago

Não importa o tempo ou o artista a cerejeira sempre é a rainha da imagem.

Hawk And Cherry Blossoms.   Woodblock Print, About 1834, Japan, By Artist Katsushika Hokusai

Hawk and Cherry Blossoms.   Woodblock print, about 1834, Japan, by artist Katsushika Hokusai


Tags
7 years ago

Lentes gravitacionais.

What is Gravitational Lensing?

A gravitational lens is a distribution of matter (such as a cluster of galaxies) between a distant light source and an observer, that is capable of bending the light from the source as the light travels towards the observer. This effect is known as gravitational lensing, and the amount of bending is one of the predictions of Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity.

image

This illustration shows how gravitational lensing works. The gravity of a large galaxy cluster is so strong, it bends, brightens and distorts the light of distant galaxies behind it. The scale has been greatly exaggerated; in reality, the distant galaxy is much further away and much smaller. Credit: NASA, ESA, L. Calcada

There are three classes of gravitational lensing:

1° Strong lensing: where there are easily visible distortions such as the formation of Einstein rings, arcs, and multiple images.

image

Einstein ring. credit: NASA/ESA&Hubble

2° Weak lensing: where the distortions of background sources are much smaller and can only be detected by analyzing large numbers of sources in a statistical way to find coherent distortions of only a few percent. The lensing shows up statistically as a preferred stretching of the background objects perpendicular to the direction to the centre of the lens. By measuring the shapes and orientations of large numbers of distant galaxies, their orientations can be averaged to measure the shear of the lensing field in any region. This, in turn, can be used to reconstruct the mass distribution in the area: in particular, the background distribution of dark matter can be reconstructed. Since galaxies are intrinsically elliptical and the weak gravitational lensing signal is small, a very large number of galaxies must be used in these surveys.

What Is Gravitational Lensing?

The effects of foreground galaxy cluster mass on background galaxy shapes. The upper left panel shows (projected onto the plane of the sky) the shapes of cluster members (in yellow) and background galaxies (in white), ignoring the effects of weak lensing. The lower right panel shows this same scenario, but includes the effects of lensing. The middle panel shows a 3-d representation of the positions of cluster and source galaxies, relative to the observer. Note that the background galaxies appear stretched tangentially around the cluster.

3° Microlensing: where no distortion in shape can be seen but the amount of light received from a background object changes in time. The lensing object may be stars in the Milky Way in one typical case, with the background source being stars in a remote galaxy, or, in another case, an even more distant quasar. The effect is small, such that (in the case of strong lensing) even a galaxy with a mass more than 100 billion times that of the Sun will produce multiple images separated by only a few arcseconds. Galaxy clusters can produce separations of several arcminutes. In both cases the galaxies and sources are quite distant, many hundreds of megaparsecs away from our Galaxy.

Gravitational lenses act equally on all kinds of electromagnetic radiation, not just visible light. Weak lensing effects are being studied for the cosmic microwave background as well as galaxy surveys. Strong lenses have been observed in radio and x-ray regimes as well. If a strong lens produces multiple images, there will be a relative time delay between two paths: that is, in one image the lensed object will be observed before the other image.

image

As an exoplanet passes in front of a more distant star, its gravity causes the trajectory of the starlight to bend, and in some cases results in a brief brightening of the background star as seen by a telescope. The artistic concept illustrates this effect. This phenomenon of gravitational microlensing enables scientists to search for exoplanets that are too distant and dark to detect any other way.Credits: NASA Ames/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle

Explanation in terms of space–time curvature

image

Simulated gravitational lensing by black hole by: Earther

In general relativity, light follows the curvature of spacetime, hence when light passes around a massive object, it is bent. This means that the light from an object on the other side will be bent towards an observer’s eye, just like an ordinary lens. In General Relativity the speed of light depends on the gravitational potential (aka the metric) and this bending can be viewed as a consequence of the light traveling along a gradient in light speed. Light rays are the boundary between the future, the spacelike, and the past regions. The gravitational attraction can be viewed as the motion of undisturbed objects in a background curved geometry or alternatively as the response of objects to a force in a flat geometry.

image

A galaxy perfectly aligned with a supernova (supernova PS1-10afx) acts as a cosmic magnifying glass, making it appear 100 billion times more dazzling than our Sun. Image credit: Anupreeta More/Kavli IPMU.

To learn more, click here. 

8 years ago

Um trabalho primoroso de Ivan Mizanzuk. Histórias reais sobre pessoas reais.


Tags
8 years ago

Re-Discovering Meiji Japan

http://img.fotor.mobi/msg/html/0ca2b8090b924bcba218c519f6fbc3de.html

8 years ago

Fantástico!!

What’s That Green Streak In Front Of The Andromeda Galaxy? A Meteor. While Photographing The Andromeda

What’s that green streak in front of the Andromeda galaxy? A meteor. While photographing the Andromeda galaxy last Friday, near the peak of the Perseid Meteor Shower, a sand-sized rock from deep space crossed right in front of our Milky Way Galaxy’s far-distant companion. The small meteor took only a fraction of a second to pass through this 10-degree field. The meteor flared several times while braking violently upon entering Earth’s atmosphere. The green color was created, at least in part, by the meteor’s gas glowing as it vaporized. Although the exposure was timed to catch a Perseids meteor, the orientation of the imaged streak seems a better match to a meteor from the Southern Delta Aquariids, a meteor shower that peaked a few weeks earlier

Object Names: Andromeda Galaxy

Image Type: Astronomical

Credit: Fritz Helmut Hemmerich

Time And Space

  • naotaro
    naotaro liked this · 4 years ago
  • megaradcollectionwolfthings-blog
    megaradcollectionwolfthings-blog liked this · 9 years ago
  • moonlitvisionary
    moonlitvisionary liked this · 9 years ago
  • fullmetalvalchemist
    fullmetalvalchemist liked this · 9 years ago
  • anaglyph-anemoia
    anaglyph-anemoia liked this · 9 years ago
  • myownzodiac
    myownzodiac liked this · 9 years ago
  • lldrnkgns
    lldrnkgns liked this · 9 years ago
  • sexymermaidspock
    sexymermaidspock liked this · 9 years ago
  • camikazo
    camikazo liked this · 9 years ago
  • acemex7
    acemex7 liked this · 9 years ago
  • beacon-hills-lacross-blog
    beacon-hills-lacross-blog reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • sekhmets-laws
    sekhmets-laws liked this · 9 years ago
  • sekhmets-laws
    sekhmets-laws reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • crestfallenpixie
    crestfallenpixie liked this · 9 years ago
  • pigeon-feet
    pigeon-feet liked this · 9 years ago
  • wilted-pansies
    wilted-pansies liked this · 9 years ago
  • wetcheetoaficionado
    wetcheetoaficionado reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • 2k17cashton
    2k17cashton liked this · 9 years ago
  • ansuushkie0220
    ansuushkie0220 liked this · 9 years ago
  • parfaitstar
    parfaitstar reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • parfaitstar
    parfaitstar liked this · 9 years ago
  • videogamesandviagra-blog
    videogamesandviagra-blog reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • noneconsistency
    noneconsistency liked this · 9 years ago
  • uh-strology
    uh-strology liked this · 9 years ago
  • disturbed-silence
    disturbed-silence liked this · 9 years ago
  • 11g
    11g liked this · 9 years ago
  • linanlu
    linanlu liked this · 9 years ago
  • harperhug
    harperhug reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • wandering-xo
    wandering-xo liked this · 9 years ago
  • starhasarrived
    starhasarrived reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • sunshine-and-shitposts
    sunshine-and-shitposts reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • tristanshoard
    tristanshoard reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • kamenotaku
    kamenotaku liked this · 9 years ago
  • snortgort
    snortgort reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • snortgort
    snortgort liked this · 9 years ago
  • spacecow2455
    spacecow2455 reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • cryptobotanical
    cryptobotanical reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • stripmesoftly
    stripmesoftly liked this · 9 years ago
  • subject-to-change42
    subject-to-change42 liked this · 9 years ago
ritasakano - Outubros
Outubros

Aventuras e Arte Da Vida entre outras e outros

282 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags