New Horizons: Images reveal ice mountains on Pluto

Found on BBC News on Thursday, 16 July 2015
Browse Astronomy

Pluto has mountains made of ice that are as high as those in the Rockies, images from the New Horizons probe reveal.

Mission scientist John Spencer told journalists that the first close-up image of Pluto's surface showed a terrain that had been resurfaced by some geological process - such as volcanism - within the last 100 million years.

A really impressive mission.

'Breathtaking' solar eclipse witnessed by millions

Found on BBC News on Friday, 20 March 2015
Browse Astronomy

Millions of people in the UK and northern Europe have glimpsed the best solar eclipse in years.

Scientific agencies had planes and even satellites gathering video to relay on the web and on television.

Actually it was pretty disappointing. It would have gone unnoticed, but the news were full of panic and warned of blackouts which never happened; like the year 2000 bug.

The Dominant Life Form in the Cosmos Is Probably Superintelligent Robots

Found on Motherboard on Friday, 19 December 2014
Browse Astronomy

While scores of philosophers, scientists and futurists have prophesied the rise of artificial intelligence and the impending singularity, most have restricted their predictions to Earth. Fewer thinkers—outside the realm of science fiction, that is—have considered the notion that artificial intelligence is already out there, and has been for eons.

“Most people have an iconic idea of aliens as these biological creatures, but that doesn’t make any sense from a timescale argument,” Shostak told me. “I’ve bet dozens of astronomers coffee that if we pick up an alien signal, it’ll be artificial life.”

It's quite a stretch to call them life forms.

Philae Lands Successfully On Comet

Found on Slashdot on Wednesday, 12 November 2014
Browse Astronomy

The European Space Agency has confirmed that the Philae probe has successfully landed on the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko and established contact with headquarters. The harpoons have deployed and reeled in the slack, and the landing gear has retracted. (Edit: They're now saying the harpoons didn't fire after all.)

Simply impressive.

Cause of Fatal Virgin Galactic Crash a Mystery to Designers

Found on ABC News on Friday, 31 October 2014
Browse Astronomy

The crash of the Virgin Galactic spacecraft that killed one pilot and injured another scattered wreckage across a large area of the Mojave desert, but it also clearly rattled the “small” community of test pilots and technicians in the field.

The craft dubbed SpaceShipTwo was destroyed after it separated from its mother ship, White Knight Two, the company said.

First Antares from Orbital Sciences, now SpaceShipTwo from Virgin Galactic; all in one week. Not only did the USA land on the moon when they were at a lower technolgy level; the market always told people how much better private companies are when it comes to getting something done.

Private flights may make space station more expensive

Found on New Scientist on Tuesday, 23 September 2014
Browse Astronomy

A report from NASA's internal auditor, inspector general Paul Martin, says the space agency has underestimated the cost of keeping the International Space Station running until 2024. In particular, buying flights to the ISS from private companies rather than Russia is expected to increase costs.

NASA expects its annual spend on the ISS to increase from $3 billion to $4 billion over the next 10 years, with the largest increase coming from transportation costs.

Funny that those lobbying for more market freedom always argue that companies and competition makes everything better and cheaper.

Europe launches two satellites into wrong orbit

Found on New Scientist on Thursday, 28 August 2014
Browse Astronomy

The orbits were lower than planned, elliptical instead of round, and set at the wrong angle. Worse, it may not be possible reroute them.

If they cannot be rescued, ESA may use them for technology demonstrations.

That moment when you realize that you placed some multi-million dollar satellites on the wrong orbit.

Viewpoint: Mars - what we've learnt in five years

Found on BBC News on Sunday, 26 May 2013
Browse Astronomy

Five years ago today, the Phoenix Lander started its descent towards the northern plains of Mars. I was following the live feed from Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the Phoenix Science Operations Center in Arizona.

Perhaps the highest profile achievement of Phoenix was to dig down to a buried layer of ice just below the Martian surface. I was the scientist on watch who first recognised that the "white stuff" Phoenix was digging up was slowly disappearing.

If Curiosity, or any other mission, does find signs that there was once, long ago, life on Mars, Phoenix will at least deserve a nod for showing where to direct the search.

Maybe there should be life on Mars again. There has been discussions about a one-way mission which brings a couple of astronauts to the red planet. Volunteers are out there, so at least that problem does not exist.

Black hole dismembers and eats a large planet

Found on Ars Technica on Thursday, 04 April 2013
Browse Astronomy

Astronomers M. Nikołajuk and R. Walter caught a black hole in the act of destroying and consuming part of a large planet or small brown dwarf. This event involved a supermassive black hole located in a relatively nearby galaxy, and emitted a burst of intense X-ray light that fluctuated over a short time span, then faded.

Typically, as matter falls onto a black hole at the center of a galaxy, it forms an accretion disk, a rotating region of material that heats to very high temperatures. The result is often strong emissions in gamma rays and radio light, with the output fluctuating only slightly.

Black holes and gamma ray bursts. You don't want any of that to get even remotely close to you.

Wait for It: Voyager 1 Has Not Yet Left the Solar System

Found on Wired on Wednesday, 20 March 2013
Browse Astronomy

Launched more than 35 years ago, Voyager 1 is the most distant man-made object from Earth. After making an incredible tour of the outer planets of our solar system, the probe was directed on a course away from the sun and is now more than 18 billion kilometers from our world.

Voyager 1′s instruments have detected a drop in radiation levels and a spike in cosmic rays. Whether or not this means the probe is outside the solar system or simply in a new, previously undiscovered area remains to be seen.

It's still working, despite drifting through space for 35 years now. Thanks to planned obsolescence, this couldn't happen anymore with today's technology.