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EverythingScience

Logo of telegram channel everythingscience — EverythingScience E
Logo of telegram channel everythingscience — EverythingScience
Channel address: @everythingscience
Categories: Education
Language: English
Subscribers: 14.70K
Description from channel

The best science facts, news, discoveries, videos and more! Daily!
Official Chat: @EverythingScienceChat
Contact: @DigitisedRealitySupport
Links: @DigitisedRealityHub

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The latest Messages 11

2022-09-27 10:08:02
Animation (sped up 500x) from one of LCO Global's 1 meter telescope at SAAO South Africa showing effects of #DARTMission impact into Dimorphos

(Still no threat to the Earth... Long straight streak is camera artifact)
@astrosnapper
@EverythingScience
763 views07:08
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2022-09-27 02:34:53
Watch the final moments from the DART Mission on its collision course with asteroid Dimporphos.
Video
@EverythingScience
401 viewsedited  23:34
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2022-09-27 02:15:55
Impact confirmed! Visual confirmation and loss of signal.
614 views23:15
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2022-09-27 02:13:53
T-1 minute to impact
391 viewsedited  23:13
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2022-09-27 02:02:03
‍Dimorphos has been precision locked by the DART spacecraft. Impact is in about 15 minutes! Time to see what impacting an asteroid actually does to alter its trajectory.

Stream
@EverythingScience
501 views23:02
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2022-09-26 19:13:50 Watch a Live Feed from NASA’s DART Spacecraft on Approach to Asteroid Dimorphos (upcoming)

NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) has one single instrument onboard – the Didymos Reconnaissance and Asteroid Camera for Optical Navigation, aka the DRACO camera. DRACO serves as the spacecraft’s eye and will guide DART to its final destination: impact with asteroid Dimorphos. The stream you'll be watching will be a real-time feed from the DART spacecraft enabled through the DRACO camera sending one image per second to Earth.

In the hours before impact, the screen will appear mostly black, with a single point of light. That point is the binary asteroid system Didymos which is made up of a larger asteroid named Didymos and a smaller asteroid that orbits around it called Dimorphos.

As the 23:14 UTC impact of asteroid Dimorphos nears closer, the point of light will get bigger and eventually detailed asteroids will be visible.

At 23:14 UTC, the DART spacecraft is slated to intentionally crash into asteroid Dimorphos. This stream will be delayed due to the time it takes the images to arrive at Earth, plus additional time for feeding the images to various platforms.

After impact, the feed will turn black – due to a loss of signal. After about 2 minutes, this stream will turn into a replay – showing the final moments leading up to impact. That replay file will also become available on NASA websites and social media accounts.

DART is a spacecraft designed to impact an asteroid as a test of technology. DART’s target asteroid is NOT a threat to Earth. This asteroid system is a perfect testing ground to see if intentionally crashing a spacecraft into an asteroid is an effective way to change its course, should an Earth-threatening asteroid be discovered in the future.

Stream
@EverythingScience
946 viewsedited  16:13
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2022-09-25 21:54:31 NASA is going to impact their DART small satellite into Diomorphos asteroid, as a method of planetary defense test

NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) is set to make history next Monday (3rd Oct) as the world’s first planetary defense test, and the spacecraft’s own “mini-photographer” LICIACube (short for Light Italian CubeSat for Imaging Asteroids) is warming up to capture the event.

Article
@EverythingScience
772 views18:54
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2022-09-08 14:47:35 Designing a way to make oxygen injectable

What if emergency medical personnel could treat a desperately ill patient in need of oxygen with a simple injection instead of having to rely on mechanical ventilation or rush to get them onto a heart-lung bypass machine?

A new approach to transporting gases using a class of materials called porous liquids represents a big step toward artificial oxygen carriers and demonstrates the immense biomedical potential of these unusual fluids.

Article
@EverythingScience
1.1K views11:47
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2022-09-06 18:46:23 Tarantula Nebula (NIRCam) Full Res
In this mosaic image stretching 340 light-years across, Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) displays the Tarantula Nebula star-forming region in a new light, including tens of thousands of never-before-seen young stars that were previously shrouded in cosmic dust. The most active region appears to sparkle with massive young stars, appearing pale blue.

Scattered among them are still-embedded stars, appearing red, yet to emerge from the dusty cocoon of the nebula. NIRCam is able to detect these dust-enshrouded stars thanks to its unprecedented resolution at near-infrared wavelengths.

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597 views15:46
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2022-09-06 18:30:35
Webb’s NIRCam instrument draws attention to bright, hot features, such as the massive young stars in blue. As seen here, its MIRI instrument sees in longer wavelengths of light, uncovering cooler gas and dust deeper within the clouds.

#Webb
High-res
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@EverythingScience
538 viewsedited  15:30
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