General Astronomy Thread [With Pics!]

Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

Markt85 said:
How does the aurora happen ?

It's charged particles from the sun interacting with the Earth's atmosphere which shields the planet from them amongst other things. My wife and I are going to Reykjavik In december to see it.
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

Great thread. Even thought it's hard to understand much about astronomy, I find it to be one of the most fascinating things. All the possibilities out there...

The Gliese 581 system is very interesting, there is a very big chance at least one of them (probably 581 g) is a habitable planet for humans.

This is what the system could look like (via NASA):

485055main_GJ581g_FNLa_800-600.jpg


<a class="postlink" href="http://alien-ufo-research.com/space-info/list-of-habitable-planets/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://alien-ufo-research.com/space-inf ... e-planets/</a>
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

Fantastic thread.

I fucking love Astronomy and I don't give a shit if that makes me a geek. Anyone who doesn't is a nobber.

I'm frequently up in a town called Chipping, north of Blackburn, with my telescope. You have a clear view of the Milky Way from there on an Evening in the Summer months.

The detail you can see on Jupiter up there rather than light polluted areas closer to Manchester is amazing, and worth braving the cold just to see it. (Jupiter is at its best in the Winter months).

And don't even get me started on Saturn. Nobody on the Earth should die before seeing Saturn through a telescope.
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

Northern lights from space:

[bigimg]http://i.imgur.com/xnIiR.jpg[/bigimg]

Also,a stellar nursery

[bigimg]http://i.imgur.com/M1tgg.jpg[/bigimg]
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

I think I've posted this one before, but it's still my favourite astro pic( with the possible exception of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field.

OmegaCen.jpg


Omega Centauri. The brightest Globular cluster in the sky and home to between 5 and 10 million stars. Visible to the naked as well, it is one of the sights I always take in whenever I'm out with my scope (looks good through Bino's as well)
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

Damocles said:
[bigimg]http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/1210/goataurora_casado_800.jpg[/bigimg]

A photo of an aurora taken from Greenland last August.


...surely that's the head of the eagle-thing on the city crest?....

god's team.
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

[bigimg]http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/628459main_Apollo_11.jpg[/bigimg]

Apollo 11 Landing Site, taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter orbiting the Moon in February.

The LRO is mapping the Moon in the detail of a Google Earth type thing as part of the mission to create a permanent base there (they are looking for the best terrain to do so).

Acronym explanation:

You can see the remnants of their first steps as dark regions around the Lunar Module (LM) and in dark tracks that lead to the scientific experiments the astronauts set up on the surface. The Passive Seismic Experiment Package (PSEP) provided the first lunar seismic data, returning data for three weeks after the astronauts left, and the Laser Ranging RetroReflector (LRRR) allows precise measurements to be collected to this day. You can even spot the discarded cover of the LRRR.

A different view of the same spot:

[bigimg]http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/628460main_a11pan.jpg[/bigimg]
 
Re: General Astronomy Picture Thread

[bigimg]http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2006/1e0657/1e0657.jpg[/bigimg]

This composite image shows the galaxy cluster 1E 0657-56, also known as the "bullet cluster." This cluster was formed after the collision of two large clusters of galaxies, the most energetic event known in the universe since the Big Bang.

Hot gas detected by Chandra in X-rays is seen as two pink clumps in the image and contains most of the "normal," or baryonic matter in the two clusters. The bullet-shaped clump on the right is the hot gas from one cluster, which passed through the hot gas from the other larger cluster during the collision. An optical image from Magellan and the Hubble Space Telescope shows the galaxies in orange and white. The blue areas in this image show where astronomers find most of the mass in the clusters. The concentration of mass is determined using the effect of so-called gravitational lensing, where light from the distant objects is distorted by intervening matter. Most of the matter in the clusters (blue) is clearly separate from the normal matter (pink), giving direct evidence that nearly all of the matter in the clusters is dark.

The hot gas in each cluster was slowed by a drag force, similar to air resistance, during the collision. In contrast, the dark matter was not slowed by the impact because it does not interact directly with itself or the gas except through gravity. Therefore, during the collision the dark matter clumps from the two clusters moved ahead of the hot gas, producing the separation of the dark and normal matter seen in the image. If hot gas was the most massive component in the clusters, as proposed by alternative theories of gravity, such an effect would not be seen. Instead, this result shows that dark matter is required.
 

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