Blue planet with 2,000-degree glass rainstorms could help find new Earth

NASA‘s Hubble space telescope has identified the true color of a planet 63 light years away from Earth, a distant blue marble that, unlike our own planet, has torrential rainstorms of glass. HD 189733b, orbiting star HD 189733, would be seen by human eyes as a striking cobalt blue, the Hubble team says, ostensibly similar to Earth when viewed from space. However, in actual fact the exoplanet is one of a bizarre collection of “hot Jupiters” where temperatures can reach almost 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit (over 1,000 degrees Celcius).

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It’s that extreme temperature – caused by the planet’s very close orbit to the star – that gives HD 189733b what’s perhaps its most unusual feature: its storms of glass. The atmosphere is filled with silicate particles, NASA explains, and when they condense in the tremendously furious heat, they could rain down as tiny droplets of glass.

In fact, the potential glass storms could rage at up to 4,500 mph. It’s the silicate that gives the planet its distinctive color, with the droplets scattering more blue light than red in the visible spectrum.

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Scientists have known about HD 189733b since it was first spotted in 2005, when the exoplanet’s unusual orbit was identified. Around 2.9m miles from its star, it is gravitationally locked and as such one side of the planet always faces it; the roughly 500 degree Fahrenheit difference between the bright and dark sides are what cause the violent winds.

HD 189733b is, unsurprisingly, not a candidate for supporting human life. However, the team responsible for figuring out its color believes that the same technique could be used again to spot planets more hospitable.

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Frederic Pont, of the University of Exeter team in the UK who deduced the color, measured the changes in light before the planet passed behind the star, during that time, and then afterwards. “We saw the light becoming less bright in the blue but not in the green or red. Light was missing in the blue but not in the red when it was hidden” Pont said. “This means that the object that disappeared was blue.”

The same system could help identify planets similar to Earth, however, with the blue color being used as a useful telltale for water and atmospheric conditions, Pont says. NASA plans to deploy the TESS telescope in 2017 to further that search.


Blue planet with 2,000-degree glass rainstorms could help find new Earth is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

For Just $250 a Week You Can Rent Your Very Own Satellite

For Just $250 a Week You Can Rent Your Very Own Satellite

On August 4, a resupply mission is scheduled to take off for the International Space Station carrying a satellite for hire with it. It’s actually a nanosatellite, since it’s only 10 centimeters wide, and it’s yours to use if you’ve got the cash.

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NASA’s 3D-Printed Rocket Injector Test: A Beautiful Inferno

NASA's 3D-Printed Rocket Injector Test: A Beautiful Inferno

NASA and Aerojet Rocketdyne tested their first 3D-printed rocket engine injector today. What you see above is the little guy passing the test with flying—and flaming—colors. Success is a beautiful thing.

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National park on Moon proposed by legislators

National parks are quite abundant here on Earth. They’re full of wildlife, plants, trees, mountains, lakes, and pretty much anything else you can think of that deals with nature. However, lawmakers are looking to take the national park movement to the Moon in order preserve the Apollo equipment that still remains on the surface.

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The bill is called the Apollo Lunar Landing Legacy Act, and it states that “it is necessary to protect the Apollo lunar landing sites for posterity.” Plus, a national park on the moon “will expand and enhance the protection and preservation of the Apollo lunar landing sites, and provide for greater recognition and public understanding of this singular achievement in American history.”

Here’s where it gets a little complicated, however. The national park won’t actually consist of the Moon, but rather only the Apollo equipment and artifacts left on the surface of the Moon. This is because no one can own the Moon, and it’s “not subject to national appropriation of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means,” according to the Outer Space Treaty of 1967.

Things that would be preserved in the national park would be Apollo landing gear left behind, as well as even footprints of the astronauts that set foot on the moon over 40 years ago. The bill also calls for the Moon’s national park to be submitted as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which would set beside other historical landmarks on Earth, such as the Roman Colosseum, Serengeti National Park, and the Sydney Opera House.

As for whether or not this bill will pass, we’re surprisingly pessimistic. We’re sure that Congress has more important bills to look over, and while preserving history is important, the artifacts on the Moon will still be there when we need them — they won’t be blowing away anytime soon, unless the aliens get to it first.

VIA: Parade


National park on Moon proposed by legislators is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Broken Satellite? The Next Generation Canadarm Will Fix What Ails You

Broken Satellite? The Next Generation Canadarm Will Fix What Ails You

Commander Chris Hadfield may be the new poster boy for the Canadian Space Agency, but before the Mustachioed Ontarian hit the scene that crown was held by the supremely versatile Canadarm telerobotic system. Now a new generation of robo-arms are taking to the skies, where they’ll act as orbiting satellite mechanics.

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NASA reveals the solar system has a tail of its own

Many stunning objects in our solar system have tails. We see them most often in comets, meteoroids, asteroids, etc. Tails are formed when dust and ice on these objects burn up as they heat up, which results in debris letting loose and leaving a trail behind the comet. As it turns out, even our own solar system has a tail.

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NASA has discovered that our entire solar system consisting of Earth and other planets has its own tail that stretches 93 billion miles long. You may have not given it any thought really, but our solar system is also flying through the universe just like a comet would, leaving behind its own trail of space dust and ice.

NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) is currently out in space and mapping the edges of the solar system. Specifically, it has recently mapped the boundaries of the tail of the heliosphere, which is something that has never been possible before. Scientists have long assumed that the solar system has a tail, but we’ve never been able to see until now.

It’s officially called a “heliotail,” and it’s made up of both slow and fast-moving particles that were released by the sun. These particles escape the magnetic field surrounding the solar system and are invisible to the naked eye by the time they reach the edge of this magnetic field, but luckily, NASA is able to map them out with IBEX.

Scientists, astronomers, and researchers are still determining exactly how long the tail is, since 93 billion miles is simply just a rough estimate, but it seems that NASA has most of the details confirmed, and the study was published today in The Astrophysical Journal.

VIA: NASA


NASA reveals the solar system has a tail of its own is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Hubble researchers identify color of an exoplanet for the first time (video)

Hubble telescope identifies an exoplanet as blue, but it's no Earth video

While exoplanets are seemingly a dime a dozen, their looks have been mysteries; they often exist only as measurements. Scientists using the Hubble Space Telescope have partly solved that riddle by pinpointing the visible color of an extrasolar world for the first time. By measuring reflected light, they can tell that HD 189733b (conceptualized above) is a cobalt blue, much like Earth’s oceans. Not that we can claim much kinship, though. The planet is a gas giant 63 light-years away — its blue tint comes from an atmosphere likely full of deadly silicate. As disappointing as that may be, the discovery should at least help us understand planet types that don’t exist in the Solar System.

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Source: ESA

NASA Caught the First Glimpse of the Solar System’s Stunning Tail

The solar system isn’t stationary; it’s careening through the infinite abyss of space as we speak. Just like a comet, it comes complete with its own tail, and for the first time, we’ve actually been able to see it.

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10 Years Ago, Opportunity Rover Began a 90-Day Mission That Never Ended

10 Years Ago, Opportunity Rover Began a 90-Day Mission That Never Ended

When NASA’s Opportunity rover launched on July 7th, 2003, expectations were modest. It would spend 90 Martian days exploring soil and rock samples and taking panoramas of the Red Planet; anything else would be a bonus. Nearly ten years after its initial shift was up, Opportunity is still going strong.

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SpaceX Grasshopper Reusable Rocket Knows How to Park in Reverse

We’ve already invented a (partially) reusable spacecraft. But the rockets that were used to boost NASA’s space shuttles – and other spacecraft in general – were all designed for one-time use only. That makes space travel wasteful and expensive. That’s why the space transport company SpaceX is working on creating reusable rockets.

spacex grasshopper reusable rocket test

Like other rockets, the SpaceX Grasshopper takes off vertically. But instead of returning to Earth as a thousand molten bits when its work is done, the Grasshopper gracefully lands vertically, like a gymnast with a flaming butt. Have you seen one of those? They’re amazing. The video below shows it rising up to a height of 1,066 ft. before landing smoothly on the same launchpad that it came from. SpaceX claims that, thanks to its advanced navigation sensors, it was “directly controlling the vehicle based on new sensor readings, adding a new level of accuracy in sensing the distance between Grasshopper and the ground, enabling a more precise landing.”

Either that or they just played the first half of the video in reverse. Then again, the geniuses at SpaceX literally specialize in rocket science, so uh, rocket science… isn’t rocket science for them. I think I broke an idiom. Anyway, let’s just believe in them and egg them on so that one day a SpaceX rocket can teach me how to parallel park.

[SpaceX via Reddit]