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Astro Wonders

Logo of telegram channel thewonderofspace — Astro Wonders A
Logo of telegram channel thewonderofspace — Astro Wonders
Channel address: @thewonderofspace
Categories: Education
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
🌌 For further any doubts about the posts in the channel you can join our discussion group.
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The latest Messages 8

2022-06-15 05:44:18
Meet one of the most powerful rockets in the world. The Delta IV Heavy rocket.

Video shows DeltaIV taking off last week from Space Launch Complex 6 at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California — Generating 2.1 million pounds of thrust — the equivalent of 51 million horsepower — the hydrogen-fueled engines quickly propelled the rocket skyward, consuming 5,000 pounds of liquid hydrogen and oxygen propellants per second as it arced away on a southerly path over the Pacific Ocean.

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2022-06-14 09:38:48 Strawberry supermoon of June rises on Tuesday. Here's what to expect.

June's full moon, normally seen as the final full moon of spring or the first of summer, is traditionally called the Strawberry Moon. In a season filled with four supermoons (they occur monthly from May to August), June's lunar event reaches its peak on Tuesday, June 14 at 7:51 a.m. EDT (1151 GMT).

If bad weather clouds your Tuesday night sky, you can see the Strawberry supermoon of June live online in a free webcast from the Virtual Telescope Project in Ceccano, Italy. It will begin at 3:15 p.m. EDT (1915 GMT).

Supermoons are typically defined as any full moon situated at a distance of at least 90% of perigee (that point where the moon is nearest Earth). June’s full moon finds itself at 222,238.4 miles (357,658 km) from our planet when it rises at dusk. Moon lovers should point their gaze in the southeast direction after sunset as the Strawberry Moon lifts elegantly up over the horizon.

Supermoons are often known to appear slightly larger than a normal full moon, up to 30% brighter and 17% larger, but in reality it seem to appear much the same, observed as a bright orb casting a slight golden tint.

The Full Strawberry Moon gets its name from its occurrence during the brief harvest season for its namesake strawberries. That name and other colorful full moon monikers found in the pages of The Old Farmer's Almanac are derived from multiple sources, including Native American influences, colonial American traditions, and Old World European customs. Names for full or new moons were historically used to monitor certain seasons but in modern times we mostly use them as evocative nicknames that harken back to simpler days.
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2022-06-14 09:32:50 A long solar flare just erupted from the sun and the video is stunning

https://www.space.com/long-solar-flare-cme-spacecraft-video-june-2022

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2022-06-13 18:43:57 Giant galaxy cluster collision triggers vast shock wave stretching over a million light-years long

Two giant galaxy clusters crashing into each other triggered enormous shock waves stretching 1.6 million light-years through space.

The findings, revealed by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, are helping astronomers better understand the powerful processes at work in collisions between clusters of thousands of galaxies.

Galaxies make up only a small percentage of the total mass of a galaxy cluster. The majority consists of an immense halo of dark matter and a cloud of hot, diffuse gas called the intra-cluster medium that envelops the galaxies in the cluster. Because the gas is so hot, radiating at hundreds of millions of degrees Celsius, it shines brightly in X-rays.

When two clusters come into contact, the individual galaxies slide harmlessly past each other, but the gas of the intra-cluster medium undergoes a far more energetic encounter, generating vast shock waves.

The particular cluster collision studied here by Chandra, Abell 2146, is located 2.8 billion light-years away. It's one of only three cluster collisions in the universe where the shock fronts are bright enough to be studied in detail.

A team led by Helen Russell, an astronomer at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., used Chandra to observe Abell 2146 for a total of 23 days — the deepest look at a cluster's shock waves ever undertaken.

One of the clusters is falling through the other one. As it does so, it generates two shock waves: a "bow shock" at its leading edge (like at the prow of a boat moving through water) and an "upstream shock" behind it.

The bow shock has a simple explanation: Gas is compressed ahead of the infalling cluster as it passes through. The upstream shock is a little more complex, and forms when gas that's removed from the infalling cluster — in a process known as "ram-pressure stripping" — is left behind and interacts with the in situ gas in the cluster that it is moving through.

Russell's team measured not only the length of these shocks — 1.6 million light-years long, in the case of the main bow shock — but also, for the first time, their width. Theory predicts that the upstream shock should be narrower because it is younger, having formed after the bow shock. This is indeed what Chandra discovered, measuring the depth of the bow shock to be 55,000 light-years wide and the upstream shock to be about 35,000 light-years wide.

Using Chandra, Russell's team measured the energy of the gas (which we might loosely think of as its temperature) in the upstream shock as rising from 6 to 8 kilo-electron volts. The gas seems to have obtained this energy primarily by the compression effect of the shock wave energizing electrons in the gas. Crucially, collisions between individual atoms and molecules are rare, because the gas is very diffuse.

Chandra measured the random motion of particles in the intra-cluster medium as being about 290 kilometers per second (650,000 mph), and those particles can travel up to 50,000 light-years, on average, before they encounter another particle. So, although Chandra measured some secondary heating from particle collisions, this heating must have happened slowly, building up over 200 million years.

The confirmation that most of the heating in a galaxy cluster collision is through "collisionless" shocks allows comparisons to be drawn with events on a much smaller scale, here in our own solar system. The solar wind, for example, experiences collisionless shocks when it encounters an obstacle such as Earth, and these shocks can disturb the planet's magnetic field and accelerate charged particles to instigate a geomagnetic storm. By comparing the creation of these collisionless shocks on vastly different scales, scientists may gain further insight into the physics of how the shocks in cluster collisions, as well as those in solar and stellar winds, take place.

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2022-06-13 18:43:47
Giant galaxy cluster collision triggers vast shock wave stretching over a million light-years long

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2022-06-13 18:31:36 Astra rocket suffers major failure during launch, 2 NASA satellites lost

An Astra rocket carrying two small hurricane-tracking satellites for NASA failed to reach orbit Sunday (June 12) after a major malfunction shortly after liftoff.

The Astra rocket, called Launch Vehicle 0010 (LV0010), suffered a second-stage failure after lifting off from a pad at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 1:43 p.m. EDT (1743 GMT). Two NASA cubesats, the first of a six-satellite fleet to track hurricanes as part of a $30 million mission, were lost.

"We had a nominal first stage flight; however, the upper-stage engine did shut down early and we did not deliver our payloads to orbit," Astra's Amanda Durk Frye, senior manager for first stage and engine production, said during live launch commentary.

"We have shared our regrets with @NASA and the payload team," Astra officials added in a Twitter update. "More information will be provided after we complete a full data review." Sunday's attempted launch was initially targeted for 12 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT), but was delayed by a boat in the launch zone and a fueling issue.

Astra's LV0010 mission was carrying the first satellites of NASA's Time-Resolved Observations of Precipitation structure and storm Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats (TROPICS). It was the first of three planned TROPICS missions this year by Astra, each carrying two NASA cubesats about the size of a loaf of bread, to complete the hurricane-watching constellation. Astra's three-mission TROPICS deal with NASA is worth a total of $7.95 million for the company.

https://www.space.com/astra-rocket-launch-failure-nasa-hurricane-satellites-lost

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2022-06-13 07:27:29
Our full address

The Perseus -Pegasus Galactic Thread, a complex of Whale-Fish superclusters, a local group of galaxies, the Milky Way galaxy, the Orion Arm, the Solar System, the Earth.


And then everything else

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2022-06-12 14:54:28
Behold the coiled beauty of this snake-like galaxy 80 million light-years from Earth

A spiral galaxy is curled up like a sleeping serpent in a striking new image from the European Southern Observatory's (ESO) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA).

Swirling silently 80 million light-years from Earth like a sleeping, coiled snake, NGC 1087 is an intermediate spiral galaxy that spans 86,800 light-years in the constellation Cetus. This area of the sky is named after a sea monster from Greek mythology and is home to other water-themed constellations, like Aquarius and Pisces.

Seen as a composite image composed of shots taken at different wavelengths, ALMA's observations capture the galaxy's lava-like reddish hue, which represents cold clouds of star-spawning molecular gas.

The blue-tinted regions indicate areas of older, more mature stars, all imaged by the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer on ESO's Very Large Telescope, located at the expansive ALMA observatory site.
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2022-06-12 06:55:42
June 2022 Astronomical Events

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2022-06-10 17:15:24
NASA gets serious about UFOs

The space agency on Thursday announced a new study that will recruit leading scientists to examine unidentified aerial phenomena—a subject that has long fascinated the public and recently gained high-level attention from Congress.

The project will begin early this fall and last around nine months, focusing on identifying available data, how to gather more data in future, and how NASA can analyze the findings to try to move the needle on scientific understanding.

While NASA probes and rovers scour the solar system for the fossils of ancient microbes, and its astronomers look for so-called "technosignatures" on distant planets for signs of intelligent civilizations, this is the first time the agency will investigate unexplained phenomena in Earth's skies.

With its access to a broad range of scientific tools, NASA is well placed not just to demystify UFOs and deepen scientific understanding, but also to find ways to mitigate the phenomena.
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