andrewgreene:

Composite image from the new ALMA radio telescope. One part of the image is 75 million light-years away.

andrewgreene:

Composite image from the new ALMA radio telescope. One part of the image is 75 million light-years away.

(via hanuueshe)

1 year ago 23090 ♥ spacetech
itsfullofstars:

This diagram shows the approximate relative sizes of the terrestrial planets, from left to right: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. Distances are not to scale. A terrestrial planet is a planet that is primarily composed of silicate rocks. The term is derived from the Latin word for Earth, “Terra”, so an alternate definition would be that these are planets which are, in some notable fashion, “Earth-like”. Terrestrial planets are substantially different from gas giants, which might not have solid surfaces and are composed mostly of some combination of hydrogen, helium, and water existing in various physical states. Terrestrial planets all have roughly the same structure: a central metallic core, mostly iron, with a surrounding silicate mantle. Terrestrial planets have canyons, craters, mountains, volcanoes and secondary atmospheres.
Source.

itsfullofstars:

This diagram shows the approximate relative sizes of the terrestrial planets, from left to right: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. Distances are not to scale. A terrestrial planet is a planet that is primarily composed of silicate rocks. The term is derived from the Latin word for Earth, “Terra”, so an alternate definition would be that these are planets which are, in some notable fashion, “Earth-like”. Terrestrial planets are substantially different from gas giants, which might not have solid surfaces and are composed mostly of some combination of hydrogen, helium, and water existing in various physical states. Terrestrial planets all have roughly the same structure: a central metallic core, mostly iron, with a surrounding silicate mantle. Terrestrial planets have canyons, craters, mountains, volcanoes and secondary atmospheres.

Source.

(via hanuueshe)

approachingsignificance:

This is a real image taken by the robotic spacecraft Cassini of Saturn eclipsing the sun (via).
Amazing.  There is a little blue dot on the left side of the image just above the bright main rings.  That is Earth, approximately a billion miles away.
Not psychology related, just an incredible image.  Click for high resolution to see Earth.

approachingsignificance:

This is a real image taken by the robotic spacecraft Cassini of Saturn eclipsing the sun (via).

Amazing.  There is a little blue dot on the left side of the image just above the bright main rings.  That is Earth, approximately a billion miles away.

Not psychology related, just an incredible image.  Click for high resolution to see Earth.

(via hanuueshe)

discoverynews:

Martian Life’s Last Stand
If there was life on Mars, scientists may have found its final resting spot.
Read more

discoverynews:

Martian Life’s Last Stand

If there was life on Mars, scientists may have found its final resting spot.

Read more

(via hanuueshe)

rhamphotheca:

Super Earth Found in Habitable Zone
by Govert Schilling
The Milky Way abounds with low-mass planets, including small, rocky  ones such as Earth. That’s the main conclusion of a team of European  astronomers, based on their latest haul of extrasolar planets. The new  discoveries—55 new planets, including 19 “super-Earths”—were presented  here today at the Extreme Solar Systems II conference by team leader  Michel Mayor of the University of Geneva in Switzerland. “We find that  40% of all Sun-like stars are accompanied by at least one planet smaller  than Saturn,” he says. The number of Earth-like planets is expected to  be even higher.
The new planets were found with HARPS (High Accuracy Radial velocity  Planet Searcher), an extremely sensitive instrument used to analyze  starlight, mounted on the 3.6-meter telescope of the European Southern  Observatory (ESO) at Cerro La Silla in northern Chile. HARPS detects the  minute periodic wobbles of stars, caused by the gravity of orbiting  planets. So far, HARPS has discovered 155 exoplanets, including  two-thirds of all planets less massive than Neptune.
Of the 19 newly found super-Earths (exoplanets between a few and 10  times the mass of Earth), the most intriguing is HD 85512b, which weighs  in at only 3.6 Earth masses. Its orbit lies in the habitable zone of  its parent star, which means temperatures are just right for liquid  water to exist on its surface, says Lisa Kaltenegger of the Max Planck  Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany. “We’re entering an  incredibly exciting period in history.”…
(read more: Science NOW)   (image: ESO)

rhamphotheca:

Super Earth Found in Habitable Zone

by Govert Schilling

The Milky Way abounds with low-mass planets, including small, rocky ones such as Earth. That’s the main conclusion of a team of European astronomers, based on their latest haul of extrasolar planets. The new discoveries—55 new planets, including 19 “super-Earths”—were presented here today at the Extreme Solar Systems II conference by team leader Michel Mayor of the University of Geneva in Switzerland. “We find that 40% of all Sun-like stars are accompanied by at least one planet smaller than Saturn,” he says. The number of Earth-like planets is expected to be even higher.

The new planets were found with HARPS (High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher), an extremely sensitive instrument used to analyze starlight, mounted on the 3.6-meter telescope of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) at Cerro La Silla in northern Chile. HARPS detects the minute periodic wobbles of stars, caused by the gravity of orbiting planets. So far, HARPS has discovered 155 exoplanets, including two-thirds of all planets less massive than Neptune.

Of the 19 newly found super-Earths (exoplanets between a few and 10 times the mass of Earth), the most intriguing is HD 85512b, which weighs in at only 3.6 Earth masses. Its orbit lies in the habitable zone of its parent star, which means temperatures are just right for liquid water to exist on its surface, says Lisa Kaltenegger of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany. “We’re entering an incredibly exciting period in history.”…

(read more: Science NOW)   (image: ESO)

(via infinity-imagined)

n-a-s-a:

Fresh Tiger Stripes on Saturn’s Enceladus 

n-a-s-a:

Fresh Tiger Stripes on Saturn’s Enceladus 

(via hanuueshe)

sneakystratus:

Earthrise

sneakystratus:

Earthrise

(Source: samanthorium, via bindi342)

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