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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Swerve Left To Avoid That Satellite: The Growing Issue Of Space Debris

Think you have trouble getting rid of the clutter in your living room? After more than 50 years of launching rockets and satellites into space, the human race now has to deal with the clutter left behind -- or is it "above"? Dead satellites, spent rocket stages, paint flakes, and coolant from nuclear-powered satellites continue to orbit the Earth at ultrahigh velocities.

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©Tel Aviv University

It's a serious subject. Space debris threatens the lives of astronauts and the launch of new satellites today, says Dr. Noam Eliaz, Head of the Biomaterials and Corrosion Laboratory at the School of Mechanical Engineering at Tel Aviv University. An expert in materials science and engineering, Dr. Eliaz is working with a team at Soreq NRC to create and test new materials to make the heavens safer for satellites and astronauts alike.

Star

Rare 'Baby Boom' Galaxy Found In Distant Universe

Astronomers have uncovered an extreme stellar machine -- a galaxy in the very remote universe pumping out stars at a surprising rate of up to 4,000 per year. In comparison, our own Milky Way galaxy turns out an average of just 10 stars per year.

star-making galaxy
©NASA/JPL-Caltech/Subaru
The green and red splotch in this image is the most active star-making galaxy in the very distant universe.

The discovery, made possible by several telescopes including NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, goes against the most common theory of galaxy formation. According to the theory, called the Hierarchical Model, galaxies slowly bulk up their stars over time by absorbing tiny pieces of galaxies -- and not in one big burst as observed in the newfound "Baby Boom" galaxy.

"This galaxy is undergoing a major baby boom, producing most of its stars all at once," said Peter Capak of NASA's Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. "If our human population was produced in a similar boom, then almost all of the people alive today would be the same age." Capak is lead author of a new report detailing the discovery in the July 10th issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Info

NASA: Ocean Wind Power Maps Reveal Possible Wind Energy Sources

WASHINGTON -- Efforts to harness the energy potential of Earth's ocean winds could soon gain an important new tool: global satellite maps from NASA. Scientists have been creating maps using nearly a decade of data from NASA's QuikSCAT satellite that reveal ocean areas where winds could produce wind energy.

The new maps have many potential uses including planning the location of offshore wind farms to convert wind energy into electric energy. The research, published this week in Geophysical Research Letters, was funded by NASA's Earth Science Division, which works to advance the frontiers of scientific discovery about Earth, its climate and its future.

"Wind energy is environmentally friendly. After the initial energy investment to build and install wind turbines, you don't burn fossil fuels that emit carbon," said study lead author Tim Liu, a senior research scientist and QuikSCAT science team leader at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "Like solar power, wind energy is green energy."

Star

Solar-powered asteroids make their own moons

Most asteroids with moonlets started off as solitary bodies that split in two while sunbathing, new computer simulations suggest.

Once thought to be rare, dozens of binary asteroid systems - kilometre-sized rocks orbited by small moonlets - have been found in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter since the first asteroid pair was spotted by the Galileo spacecraft in 1993. And 15% of all near-Earth asteroids, which cross Earth's orbit, boast satellites.

Various theories have been proposed to explain how they formed. One suggests the pairs were created by collisions between older asteroids, but because of the huge distances between objects in space, such impacts are very rare.

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©Kevin Walsh/Derek Charles Richardson/UMD
Pairs of asteroids can be created from a single parent body that spins so fast due to solar energy that it breaks apart. In new computer simulations, the parent body was modelled as a rubble pile. Loose material near its poles rolled to its equator, then floated off to become a moon

Clock

Radio-carbon tests reveal true age of Rome's she-wolf - and she's a relative youngster

It is the very symbol of the glory that was Rome. It figures on the badge of the Serie A side, AS Roma. It was used as the emblem of the 1960 Rome Olympics. For Benito Mussolini, Italy's fascist dictator, there was nothing more representative of the might of the empire he hoped to revive than this magnificent, life-size bronze of a she-wolf suckling the city's legendary founders, Romulus and Remus.

Only problem: it was made 1,700-1,800 years later than supposed.

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©Ron Chapple Stock / Corbis
A lady never reveals her age ... The Capitoline wolf in Rome.

Evil Rays

Universe Is More Transparent To High-energy Radiation Than Previously Assumed

Measurements by the MAGIC Telescope (Major Atmospheric Gamma-ray Imaging Cherenkov Telescope) on La Palma have shown that the universe is more transparent to high-energy radiation than previously assumed. A new publication in Science with ETH Zurich participation describes how measurements of high-energy gamma radiation from 5.3 billion light years away are yielding new knowledge about the nature of the universe.

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©ETH Zurich
Diagrammatic representation of the measurement method for radiation in the (VHE) gamma region.

Astronomers assume that our universe is approximately 14 billion years old. During this time it has changed greatly, for example through the formation of new galaxies that emit electromagnetic waves including light that can be perceived visually. A small fraction of the latter is absorbed, but the majority is retained in the universe. In this respect the universe can also be imagined as a background of invisible electromagnetic radiation. Since high-energy rays interact with low-energy ones, astronomers assumed for a long time that because of this enormous universal background radiation, only high-energy rays from very close active galaxies would be detectable on Earth - the remainder would be absorbed.


Telescope

Gumball in the Galaxy - Supernova SN1006

The remnant of a supernova called SN 1006 hangs like a gumball 7,000 light-years away in a composite image released last Tuesday by NASA.

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©NASA/CXC/Rutgers/G.Cassam-Chenao, J.Hughes et al.; Radio: NRAO/AUI/NSF/GBT/VLA/Dyer, Maddalena & Cornwell; Optical: Middlebury College/F.Winkler, NOAO/AURA/NSF/CTIO Schmidt & DSS
Supernova SN1006

When it was first seen from Earth more than a thousand years ago, the explosion of the white dwarf star that created SN 1006 was reportedly brighter than Venus in the night sky.

House

Ancient ruins found in Bolivia

Archeologists have begun digging at an ancient ceremonial site in eastern Bolivia to piece together the rites and daily life of cultures dating as far back as 3,000 years ago.

Locals stumbled upon the remains while clearing the ground to build a new market in the picturesque town of Copacabana, a tourist hotspot on the shores of Lake Titicaca.

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New scans show evidence of water on the moon

Tiny green and orange glass balls brought back from the moon nearly 40 years ago by astronauts show evidence that water existed there from the very beginning, scientists reported on Wednesday.

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©REUTERS/NASA
Green glass spherules collected from the Apollo 15 landing site at Hadley Rille on the Moon are shown in this undated handout photo. Scientists using a new kind of spectrograph have found evidence of water on the moon, contained in tiny volcanic glass beads collected by astronauts who landed on the Moon nearly 40 years ago. These samples represent volcanic deposits formed early in the Moon's geologic history.

They used a new method of analyzing elements in the lunar sand samples to show strong evidence of water, dating back 3 billion years.

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Room Temperature Superconductivity

Scientists at the University of Cambridge have for the first time identified a key component to unravelling the mystery of room temperature superconductivity, according to a paper published in the journal Nature.

The quest for room temperature superconductivity has gripped physics researchers since they saw the possibility more than two decades ago. Materials that could potentially transport electricity with zero loss (resistance) at room temperature hold vast potential; some of the possible applications include a magnetically levitated superfast train, efficient magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), lossless power generators, transformers, and transmission lines, powerful supercomputers, etc.

Unfortunately, scientists have been unable to decipher how copper oxide materials superconduct at extremely cold temperatures (such as that of liquid nitrogen), much less design materials that can superconduct at higher temperatures.