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Astro Wonders

Logo of telegram channel thewonderofspace — Astro Wonders A
Logo of telegram channel thewonderofspace — Astro Wonders
Channel address: @thewonderofspace
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Language: English
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🌌 This channel is all about Astronomy. In this channel we provide you with the information related to Astronomy and Physics
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The latest Messages 2

2022-08-29 05:35:05
Simulation of the collision of the Milky Way with the Andromeda galaxy. At the end of the process, a new galaxy is formed. But no longer spiral, but elliptical.

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251 views02:35
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2022-08-28 18:36:32 The asteroid NASA will slam into in September is right where scientists expected

Six nights of observations by two powerful telescopes confirmed that the orbit of double asteroid Didymos is perfectly aligned for NASA's asteroid-smashing DART spacecraft to arrive in late September.

The observations, conducted in early July by the Lowell Discovery Telescope in Arizona and the Magellan Telescope in Chile, confirmed earlier orbit calculations from 2021. The new data comes as the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft is racing to the pair with plans to crash into the smaller rock, dubbed Dimorphos, to test a potential technique to deflect an asteroid that threatens Earth, which Didymos and Dimorphos do not.

"The measurements the team made in early 2021 were critical for making sure that DART arrived at the right place and the right time for its kinetic impact into Dimorphos," Andy Rivkin, the DART investigation team co-lead at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland, said in a statement. "Confirming those measurements with new observations shows us that we don't need any course changes and we're already right on target."

Didymos and its moon Dimorphos will make their closest approach to Earth in years in late September, passing at a distance of about 6.7 million miles (10.8 million kilometers) from the planet. During this time, on Sept. 26, the DART spacecraft will slam into the 560-foot-wide (170 meters) Dimorphos in an attempt to alter its orbit around the 0.5-mile-wide (780 m) Didymos. The experiment, the first ever attempt to change an orbit of an asteroid, might pave the way for a future planetary defense mission if an asteroid were ever to threaten Earth.

Scientists need the detailed orbital parameters of the two space rocks not just to reliably guide DART to its target. After the impact, astronomers all over the world will measure the asteroids' orbits again, to see how the orbit of Dimorphos sped up following the collision. The alteration might be rather minute and therefore extremely precise measurements of the initial configuration are required.

"The before-and-after nature of this experiment requires exquisite knowledge of the asteroid system before we do anything to it," Nick Moskovitz, an astronomer with Lowell Observatory in Arizona and co-lead of the July observation campaign, said in the statement. "We don't want to, at the last minute, say, 'Oh, here's something we hadn't thought about or phenomena we hadn't considered.' We want to be sure that any change we see is entirely due to what DART did."

Apart from the obvious forces, such as the gravitational pulls of larger bodies, asteroid orbits can be influenced by more subtle phenomena, such as the pressure of solar radiation, the scientists said in the statement.

The orbit of Dimorphos around Didymos is expected to shorten by several minutes after the impact, as the moon moves closer to the bigger asteroid. By measuring the change with maximum precision, astronomers will be able to glean important information about Dimorphos' structure and properties of the material it is made of.

The recent measurement campaign determined the orbital period of Dimorphos around Didymos by observing the change in brightness that takes place when one asteroid passes in front of the other. It was, however, tricky to make enough observations, as skywatching conditions at this time of the year are not favorable due to the short summer nights coinciding with the rainy season in Arizona, the researchers said. Earlier this year, the asteroids were too far away from Earth to be observable.

"It was a tricky time of year to get these observations," Moskovitz said. "We asked for six half-nights of observation with some expectation that about half of those would be lost to weather, but we only lost one night. We got really lucky. We really have high confidence now that the asteroid system is well understood and we are set up to understand what happens after impact."

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290 views15:36
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2022-08-28 18:30:07 New technique may bring moon's shadowy polar craters into the light

A new technique relying on deep learning could allow scientists to peek inside the moon's permanently shadowed polar craters for the first time.

The moon's south pole is of great interest, as NASA plans to land the Artemis 3 mission there in the mid-2020s and hopes to establish a research base in the area over the following years.

The new imaging technique developed by a team of researchers led by NASA could enable scientists to see inside those craters before the humans get there.

The technique detects photons that were reflected into those shadowed regions by the surrounding mountains and crater walls in images captured by the Narrow Angle Camera instrument on NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The new processing work produces "high-signal and high-resolution images" that will help future moon explorers do their work more efficiently, the researchers said in a new study announcing the results.

"Visible routes into the permanently shadowed regions can now be designed, greatly reducing risks to Artemis astronauts and robotic explorers," study co-author David Kring, the principal investigator of the Center for Lunar Science and Exploration, which is jointly run by NASA's Johnson Space Center and the Lunar and Planetary Institute, said in a statement.

During the early missions of NASA's Artemis program, astronauts will only be able to spend a couple of hours in those dark regions. The images obtained with the new technique could help mission planners guide the explorers to particularly interesting features and help them locate the most promising samples.

The floors of the moon's polar craters are permanently dark as the sun never passes overhead but always moves in a circle around the horizon. The shadowy landscapes around the poles are therefore freezing cold, with temperatures dropping below minus 280 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 170 degrees Celsius). The scientists said that such low temperatures are crucial for water and other substances to remain locked in lunar soils and not evaporate into the vacuum of space.

Lunar water is an interesting resource as it could be used to make fuel for future exploration and provide life support for astronauts. But it could also hold clues about water transfer between the moon and Earth, the scientists said.

"There is no evidence of pure surface ice within the shadowed areas, implying that any ice must be mixed with lunar soil or underneath the surface." Valentin Bickel, a former graduate student intern at the Lunar and Planetary Institute, and lead author of the new study, said in the statement.

The study, which examined a decade-worth of images from the lunar south pole, was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters on Friday (Aug. 26).

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214 views15:30
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2022-08-28 18:13:14 Lightning strikes Artemis 1 launch pad 2 days before liftoff (video)

Don't worry — the big moon rocket should be fine.

This is why launch pads have lightning towers.

https://cdn.jwplayer.com/previews/TW9kcCIu

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213 views15:13
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2022-08-28 05:49:31
The last flight of the Juno probe over the surface of Jupiter

In Roman mythology, Juno is the wife of the God Jupiter. The station has been operating in a polar highly elliptical orbit since the beginning of July 2016.

"Polar" means that the spacecraft flies close to the poles, and "highly elliptical" means that out of 53 days of one revolution, the flight near Jupiter takes only about two hours. Juno's scientific instruments allow scientists to look under the planet's cloud layer in different ranges.

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314 views02:49
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2022-08-27 18:16:14 NASA's begins countdown for Artemis 1 moon mission launch

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The countdown is on for NASA's biggest test flight of the year.

At 10:23 a.m. EDT (1423 GMT) today (Aug. 27), the countdown clock began ticking down to the planned launch of NASA's Artemis 1 mission, an ambitious first flight to the moon by the agency's most powerful rocket ever — the Space Launch System (SLS) — and its Orion spacecraft. The uncrewed test flight is scheduled to launch Monday (Aug. 29) at 8:33 a.m. EDT (1233 GMT) from Pad 39B here at the Kennedy Space Center.

"This first launch is another step in the blueprint of our sustainable exploration of the solar system," Jim Free, NASA's associate administrator for exploration systems development, told reporters here in a briefing Friday. You can watch the Artemis 1 moon mission launch live online, courtesy of NASA TV. A live webcast will begin Monday at 6:30 a.m. EDT (1030 GMT).

Artemis 1 is the vanguard mission of NASA's Artemis program, which aims to return astronauts to the moon by 2025 and land the first woman and person of color at the lunar south pole, a region astronauts have never seen with their own eyes. The mission flight will send an uncrewed Orion capsule on a 42-day trip to orbit the moon and return to Earth to test if the spacecraft is ready to carry astronauts.

If this mission succeeds, NASA will follow it up with Artemis 2, a crewed trip around the moon in 2024, which will then lead to the Artemis 3 crewed lunar landing a year later. The ultimate goal, NASA has said, is to fly yearly missions to the moon after Artemis 3, stage crewed landings from a Gateway space station in lunar orbit and then aim for crewed flights to Mars.

There is a 70% chance of good weather for the Artemis 1 launch, with scattered rain showers as the main concern, according to NASA and the U.S. Space Force's Space Launch Delta 45 weather group. NASA has a two-hour window in which to launch Artemis 1 to allow for some wiggle room if Mother Nature doesn't cooperate.

During the two-day countdown for Artemis 1, NASA launch controllers will put the mission's 322-foot-tall (98 meters) Space Launch System megarocket and its Orion spacecraft through their final paces for flight. Engineers closed the hatch on the Orion capsule for the last time on Thursday (Aug. 25).

On Friday, engineers also closed the hatch on the SLS rocket's launch abort system, which sits atop the Orion spacecraft, and retracted the crew access arm astronauts will eventually use to board the spacecraft for future missions.

NASA will begin fueling the SLS rocket in the wee hours Monday morning, which NASA will webcast live at 12 a.m. EDT (0400 GMT). You'll be able to watch that event live on Space.com, courtesy of NASA TV, on our Artemis 1 webcast page.

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28 views15:16
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2022-08-27 18:03:00 Alien-hunting array catches Voyager 1 signal from interstellar space

The Allen Telescope Array in California detected signal from the Voyager 1 probe, the NASA satellite launched 45 year ago that is currently speeding toward the outer edges of the solar system, way beyond the orbit of Pluto.

Allen Telescope Array (ATA), a recently refurbished radio observatory near San Francisco in California dedicated to the search for extraterrestrial life, made contact with the Voyager 1 probe on July 9, using 20 of its 42 dish antennas, which are each over 20 feet (6.1 meters) wide. The telescope recorded 15 minutes of data, according to a statement, which were stored on a disk.

"The detection of Voyager 1, the farthest human-made object, with the refurbished Allen Telescope Array is an excellent display of the telescope's capabilities and strengths, and a representation of the outstanding hard work put by the ATA team since the start of the refurbishment program in 2019," the team said in the statement.

The statement didn't provide any additional information about the signal it caught. NASA has been investigating a strange glitch that has caused Voyager 1 to send back nonsense data about its location in space. NASA first reported the glitch in May, although it has not specified when the issue began. The agency is confident the spacecraft is safe because if the gibberish data were accurate, the signal from Voyager 1 wouldn't be properly pointed toward Earth.

Currently located about 14.5 billion miles (23.3 billion kilometers) away from Earth, 156 times the sun-Earth distance, Voyager 1 is still being tracked by NASA's Deep Space Network, sending a meager 160 bits per second of data back home. For comparison, a regular home broadband connection is measured in megabits per second, that is millions of bits per second.

The spacecraft, which entered what astronomers define as interstellar space 10 years ago, is measuring properties of the interstellar medium beyond the edge of the heliosphere, the bubble of plasma created by the sun that surrounds the planets.

Voyager 1 still has to fly through the Oort Cloud, a spherical disc of comets and asteroids at the farthest reaches of the solar system, more than 200 sun-Earth distances away from the sun.

No spacecraft has ever visited the Oort Cloud and Voyager 1 will take about 300 years to get there. By then, however, the probe will long be dead as it's expected to run out of fuel to power its systems as early as 2025.

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40 views15:03
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