Ultima Thule

Their site is updated now with a countdown.

http://pluto.jhuapl.edu

Canberra reports it entered encounter mode successfully last night.

Article from site

NASA's New Horizons spacecraft is set to fly by a distant "worldlet" 4 billion miles from the Sun in just six days, on New Year's Day 2019. The target, officially designated 2014 MU69, was nicknamed "Ultima Thule," a Latin phrase meaning "a place beyond the known world," after a public call for name recommendations. No spacecraft has ever explored such a distant world. This is the first detection of Ultima Thule using the highest resolution mode of the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) aboard the New Horizons spacecraft.

Ultima, as the flyby target is affectionately called by the New Horizons team, is orbiting in the heart of our solar system's Kuiper Belt, far beyond Neptune. The Kuiper Belt — a collection of icy bodies ranging in size from dwarf planets like Pluto to smaller planetesimals like Ultima Thule (pronounced "ultima toolee") and even smaller bodies like comets — are believed to be the building blocks of planets. Ultima's nearly circular orbit indicates it originated at its current distance from the Sun. Scientists find its birthplace important for two reasons.

First, because that means Ultima is an ancient sample of this distant portion of the solar system. Second, because temperatures this far from the Sun are barely above absolute zero — mummifying temperatures that preserves Kuiper Belt objects — they are essentially time capsules of the ancient past.
Marc Buie, New Horizons co-investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and members of the New Horizons science team discovered Ultima using the Hubble Space Telescope in 2014.

The object is so far and faint in all telescopes, little is known about the world beyond its location and orbit. In 2016, researchers determined it had a red color. In 2017, a NASA campaign using ground-based telescopes traced out its size — just about 20 miles (30 kilometers) across — and irregular shape when it passed in front of a star, an event called a "stellar occultation." From its brightness and size, New Horizons team members have calculated Ultima's reflectivity, which is only about 10 percent, or about as dark as garden dirt. Beyond that, nothing else is known about it — basic facts like its rotational period and whether or not it has moons are unknown.

"All that is about to dramatically change on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day," said New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, also of SwRI. "New Horizons will map Ultima, map its surface composition, determine how many moons it has and find out if it has rings or even an atmosphere. It will make other studies, too, such as measuring Ultima's temperature and perhaps even its mass. In the space of one 72-hour period, Ultima will be transformed from a pinpoint of light — a dot in the distance — to a fully explored world. It should be breathtaking!"

"New Horizons is performing observations at the frontier of planetary science," said Project Scientist Hal Weaver, of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, "and the entire team looks forward to unveiling the most distant and pristine object ever explored during a spacecraft flyby."

"From Ultima's orbit, we know that it is the most primordial object ever explored. I'm excited to see the surface features of this small world, particularly the craters on the surface," said Deputy Project Scientist Cathy Olkin, of SwRI. "Young craters could provide a window to see the composition of the subsurface of Ultima. Also by counting the number and impactors that have hit Ultima, we can learn about the number of small objects in the outer solar system."

The New Horizons spacecraft is on course to fly by Ultima on New Year's Day, Jan. 1, at 12:33 a.m. EST. For a listing of flyby programming and where to watch it online, visit the New Horizons website at http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/News-Center/Where-to-Watch.php.

The Kuiper Belt lies in the so-called "third zone" of our solar system, beyond the terrestrial planets (inner zone) and gas giants (middle zone). This vast region contains billions of objects, including comets, dwarf planets like Pluto and "planetesimals" like Ultima Thule. The objects in this region are believed to be frozen in time — relics left over from the formation of the solar system. Credits: NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI
 
China going to land its first rover on the Moon in a couple of days too.

Hoping it will be livestreamed
 
China going to land its first rover on the Moon in a couple of days too.

Hoping it will be livestreamed

iu
 
The problem here is that the maths behind string theory works so well in some cases.

It's an interesting situation. Physics has always preferred elegant maths as solutions to problems - that is, maths that doesn't require a ton of edge cases or huge theories in order to explain it. String theory math is very elegant and simple.

The only problem is that it often doesn't link into what we'd expect to see in reality. Which as far as physics goes is a pretty big fucking drawback.

As I said, this doesn't totally discount string theory but it's yet another knock against an increasingly wobbly model.

The issue was to do with the strength of gravitational waves. One of the big mysteries of the Universe is why gravity is so weak compared to the other forces - you defeat the entire gravity of planet Earth when you jump for example. The idea was that gravity wasn't travelling in 3 spatial dimensions but instead travelled in every dimension simultaneous which pretty well explained why it was so weak in the 4 we know.

That result showed that the strength of the gravitational waves produced by the meeting of the neutron stars didn't drop off as expected but instead was exactly how we thought it would operate if in three spatial dimensions.

Now for M theory, which considers the Universe as interacting membranes for each dimension, that's a complete contradiction.

However the dimensions in string theory are so small that they've got a built in get out clause to excuse why the drop off in strength didn't happen. But they would have claimed the resulting drop off as evidence to support if it had happened so the string theorists are having to go back to the drawing board a bit.

String theory is frustrating. We know that much of it is along the right lines but we can't put it altogether into a coherent idea. In fact string theory itself is built on top of supersymmetry which is something designed to take a few different observations and argue that it's the same observation from different perspectives in an 11 dimensional Universe.

This is a place where we really need an original thinker to come along and tie up a lots of loose ends akin to an Einstein type figure.
As someone with a keen interest in physics but not the knowledge in it (which I'd like to make clear from the start) string theory has always had far too much in common with the grand unifying conspiracy theory for me in that every flaw in the theory has been explained by extra dimensions that we can't sense. Understand that it's not the same as the maths works but I've never had faith in it. Just an extended mathematical exercise for me.
 
China going to land its first rover on the Moon in a couple of days too.

Hoping it will be livestreamed

Hopefully shut up the fake moon landing bellends. Although, they cunts will just say it was China going aling with the hoax for a reduction in Tariffs.
 
Hopefully shut up the fake moon landing bellends. Although, they cunts will just say it was China going aling with the hoax for a reduction in Tariffs.

Everyone knows it was a Scotsman who invented the rocket and in fact, even the fucking moon.

i know all this because a Scotsman told me!
 
Everyone knows it was a Scotsman who invented the rocket and in fact, even the fucking moon.

i know all this because a Scotsman told me!

We invented everything. Look it up if you have a spare couple of days. :)

We didn’t invent the moon though, we just howl at it. :)
 

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