astronomy
MacArthur Fellow 2008: Adam Riess, astronomer
submitted by: video_collector
Adam Riess of Johns Hopkins University is an astronomer designing experiments and devices to advance understanding of the geometry of the universe and the story of both its beginning and its end.
MacArthur Fellowships offer the opportunity for Fellows to accelerate their current activities or
take their work in new directions. The unusual level of independence afforded to Fellows
underscores the spirit of freedom intrinsic to creative endeavors. The extraordinary creativity of
...
ScienceFlash 21 - 7 maart 2008
submitted by: scienceflash
ScienceFlash aflevering 21 met o.a. hoe een file onstaat,
dode spin heeft meer seks, boren op Groenland en nieuwste model vrachtwagen voor op de maan.
Bekijk al onze vorige afleveringen op www.scienceflash.nl!
586 Million Year Cycle in Geology Matches Galactic Super-Cluster Spacings
submitted by: RayTomes
The longest geological cycle identified is described as about 600 million years in "Megacycles", the proceedings of a geological conference, Edited by G Williams. However Prof S Afanasiev of Moscow has determined the cycle very accurately to be 586.24 million years using his Nanocycles Method.
It so happens that cosmologists, Broadhurst, T.J., Ellis, R.S., Koo, D.C. & Szalay (Nature 343, p 726) have observed regular mega-walls of galaxies at spacings that they describe as 128 Mpc/h, which...
Galaxy-Quasar Associations: Is the Big Bang Bung?
submitted by: RayTomes
When we see a galaxy and a quasar near each other in the sky, it might be because they are really near each other, or it might be that they are far apart and just along the same line of sight. Tests performed by Alan Stockton (Astrophysical Journal 223:747-757, "The Nature of QSO Redshifts", 1978) on a sample of such pairs have shown that some galaxy-quasar pairs have the same redshift and so are accepted as being at the same distance. Other pairs with very different redshifts however have...
Harmonic Cloud Patterns on Jupiter
submitted by: RayTomes
Regularly spaced clouds appear in Jupiter's belts, sometimes white spots and sometimes swirling waves. A polar projection of Jupiter, made by NASA from the 2000 flyby, allows accurate testing of the hypothesis that these waves form as predicted by the Harmonics Theory. It is found that expected strong harmonics 12, 24 and 72 are present.
Hubblecast 01: Hubble sees 'Comet Galaxy' being ripped apart by galaxy cluster
submitted by: spacetelescope
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, in collaboration with several other ground- and space-based telescopes, has captured a galaxy being ripped apart by a galaxy cluster's gravitational field and harsh environment. The finding sheds light on the mysterious process by which gas-rich spiral-shaped galaxies might evolve into gas-poor irregular- or elliptical-shaped galaxies over billions of years.
Studying the Sun
submitted by: scivee-team
Getting a good look at the Sun - from Galileo's time to today.

