(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted

(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted
(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted
(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted

(Causus maculatus) -  Common names include forest rhombic night adder, West African night adder and spotted night adder.

More Posts from Xyhor-astronomy and Others

7 years ago
Image Of The Planet Neptune Seen By The Space Probe Voyager 2

Image of the planet Neptune seen by the space probe Voyager 2

Image credit: NASA/JPL

7 years ago
A Movie Showing The Dynamics Of The Inner Part Of The Crab Nebula Made Using The Chandra X-ray Observatory.

A movie showing the dynamics of the inner part of the Crab Nebula made using the Chandra X-ray Observatory.

Credit: NASA/CXC/ASU/J.Hester et al.

7 years ago
Meteor Impact Craters Of The World

Meteor impact craters of the world

7 years ago

evosia Chasing auroras is much like living life: if you show up, always be prepared for the amazing to happen.

7 years ago

ISS | Credit: NASA

Time-lapse imagery captured June 25, 2017 by Expedition 52.

7 years ago

What’s the deal about gravitational waves?

I guess y’all have heard about the discovery gravitational waves, and the recent observation of gravity waves linked to a visual observation as well.

What are they?

Gravitational waves are disturbances in space-time that are caused by objects in motion. Objects with mass distort spacetime, and thus when they move they also create disturbances. Think moving your hand along the surface of a pond - your hand’s motion creates waves and ripples in the water. Gravity waves were theorized by Einstein when he published his paper on General Relativity in the mid 1900s, and they were finally confirmed by LIGO about a year or two ago. The discovery of gravitational waves was considered the last major test of General Relativity, meaning that everything it’s predicted has held up to testing. As these gravity waves pass through space, they stretch it in one direction and compress it in the other. Check these two gifs out for a good visualization:

What’s The Deal About gravitational Waves?
What’s The Deal About gravitational Waves?
What’s The Deal About gravitational Waves?

What is LIGO?

Ligo, or Laser Inferometer Gravity-wave Observatory, is one of three gravity wave observatories in the world. It works by splitting a laser into two perpendicular components. The light waves travel down long tunnels, bounce off a mirror, and recombine at the intersection. The interference pattern of the two light waves is measured (interference is how two light waves interact with each other - if the peaks and troughs line up, they cancel, but if the peaks line up they add together). When a gravitational wave passes by, it stretches everything in one direction while compressing it in the other direction, then vice versa. This causes a change in the interference pattern, which is then measured. Here’s a good diagram:

What’s The Deal About gravitational Waves?

If you want more information about gravity waves, check out these videos:

Sources: Image 1 2 3 4, check out the links for good explanations. 

Let me know if y’all have any questions!!! I’m happy to answer them.

7 years ago

(CNN) On October 19, the Pan-STARRS 1 telescope in Hawaii spotted something strange zooming through our solar system. It turned out to be a visitor from beyond our solar system, and it's unlike anything astronomers have seen before.


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7 years ago

Eight curiosities about black holes

In this post contains some facts and curiosities about one of the most extreme objects in the universe - Black Holes. Black holes are some of the strangest and most fascinating objects found in outer space. They are objects of extreme density, with such strong gravitational attraction that even light cannot escape from their grasp if it comes near enough.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

1° A Massive Star Collapsing In Upon Itself

Say you have a star that’s about 20 times more massive than the Sun. Our Sun is going to end its life quietly; when its nuclear fuel burns out, it’ll slowly fade into a white dwarf. That’s not the case for far more massive stars. When those monsters run out of fuel, gravity will overwhelm the natural pressure the star maintains to keep its shape stable. When the pressure from nuclear reactions collapses, according to the Space Telescope Science Institute, gravity violently overwhelms and collapses the core and other layers are flung into space. This is called a supernova. The remaining core collapses into a singularity — a spot of infinite density and almost no volume. That’s another name for a black hole.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

2° Black holes come in a range of sizes.

There are at least three types of black holes, ranging from relative squeakers to those that dominate a galaxy’s center. Primordial black holes are the smallest kinds, and range in size from one atom’s size to a mountain’s mass. Stellar black holes, the most common type, are up to 20 times more massive than our own Sun and are likely sprinkled in the dozens within the Milky Way. And then there are the gargantuan ones in the centers of galaxies, called “supermassive black holes.” They’re each more than one million times more massive than the Sun. How these beasts formed is still being examined.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

3° The first black hole wasn’t discovered until X-ray astronomy was used

Cygnus X-1 was first found during balloon flights in the 1960s, but wasn’t identified as a black hole for about another decade. According to NASA, the black hole is 10 times more massive to the Sun. Nearby is a blue supergiant star that is about 20 times more massive than the Sun, which is bleeding due to the black hole and creating X-ray emissions.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

4° Black holes are only dangerous if you get too close

Like creatures behind a cage, it’s okay to observe a black hole if you stay away from its event horizon — think of it like the gravitational field of a planet. This zone is the point of no return, when you’re too close for any hope of rescue. But you can safely observe the black hole from outside of this arena. By extension, this means it’s likely impossible for a black hole to swallow up everything in the Universe (barring some sort of major revision to physics or understanding of our Cosmos, of course.)

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

5° We aren’t sure if wormholes exist

A popular science-fiction topic concerns what happens if somebody falls into a black hole. Some people believe these objects are a sort of wormhole to other parts of the Universe, making faster-than-light travel possible. But as this Smithsonian Magazine article points out, anything is possible since we still have a lot to figure out about physics. “Since we do not yet have a theory that reliably unifies general relativity with quantum mechanics, we do not know of the entire zoo of possible spacetime structures that could accommodate wormholes,” said Abi Loeb, who is with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

6°  Black holes will spaghettify you and everything else

If a person was able to survive long enough to describe falling into a black hole, he would at first experience weightless as he goes into free fall, but then feel intense “tidal” gravitational forces as he got closer to the center of the black hole. In other words, if his feet were closer to the centre than his head, then they would feel a stronger pull until he eventually is stretched and then ripped apart. As he falls in he may observe distorted images as the light bends around him and he will also still be able to see beyond the black hole as light continues to reach him from the outside.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

7° Weird time stuff happens around black holes

This is best illustrated by one person (call them Unlucky) falling into a black hole while another person (call them Lucky) watches. From Lucky’s perspective, Unlucky’s time clock appears to be ticking slower and slower. This is in accordance with Einstein’s theory of general relativity, which (simply put) says that time is affected by how fast you go, when you’re at extreme speeds close to light. The black hole warps time and space so much that Unlucky’s time appears to be running slower. From Unlucky’s perspective, however, their clock is running normally and Lucky’s is running fast.

Eight Curiosities About Black Holes

8° Massive Black Hole in The Center Of Milky Way 

It is now thought that most galaxies are held together by supermassive black holes at their centers, which cluster hundreds of solar systems around them. In fact, 30,000 light years away at the centre of our own Milky Way galaxy is a black hole with 30 million times the mass of our own sun.

Source: space.com, universetoday.com, sciencealert.com & astronomytrek.com

7 years ago
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As
December 13, 1965 – Truly Spectacular Images Of Our Planet Captured By The Astronauts Of Gemini 7 As

December 13, 1965 – Truly spectacular images of our planet captured by the astronauts of Gemini 7 as they zoomed around the Earth. In this era when we receive a daily dose of awesomeness from hi-res cameras on the ISS and various satellites, it’s easy to take beautiful Earth images for granted. I will never cease to be amazed by the stunning photography produced during the Project Gemini missions.

(NASA/Arizona State University)

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xyhor-astronomy - Xpand Your Horizons w/ Astronomy & Spacefaring
Xpand Your Horizons w/ Astronomy & Spacefaring

For more content, Click Here and experience this XYHor in its entirety!Space...the Final Frontier. Let's boldly go where few have gone before with XYHor: Space: Astronomy & Spacefaring: the collection of the latest finds and science behind exploring our solar system, how we'll get there and what we need to be prepared for!

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