Tag: space

  • First Image of Planet Birth Shows Tightly Packed Worlds

    Young Star HL Tau
    An ALMA image of the young star HL Tau and the disk of gas and dust surrounding it. New evidence suggests this is the first image ever obtained of planetary birth.
    Credit: ALMA (NRAO/ESO/NAOJ); C. Brogan, B. Saxton (NRAO/AUI/NSF)

    A controversial space image does indeed show the first picture of planets being born, a new study confirms.

    When an image of the system HL Tau was unveiled last year, it sparked controversy over whether or not grooves in the disk of dust surrounding the star could be explained by the presence of newly formed giant planets. Now, a new paper suggests that the orbit of those planets could serve to stabilize rather than eject one another, as had originally been suggested. That means this image is the first time scientists have observed a forming planetary system, and a tightly packed one at that.

    “The big question is, are we really seeing giant planets carving out the disk out of which they are forming?” lead author Daniel Tamayo, from the University of Toronto in Canada, had said in a presentation at the Emerging Researchers for Exoplanet Science Symposium hosted at Pennsylvania State University in April.

    The new research performed by Tamayo and his colleagues provides strong evidence that the answer is yes. [Video: Planet birth around the star HL Tau]

    Special orbits

    In October 2014, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) — a giant radio telescope in Chile — captured a puzzling image of HL Tau. Scientists immediately began debating whether planets were responsible for carving the gaps in the system, which lies about 450 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Taurus. Although they didn’t take the original ALMA image, Tamayo and his colleagues set out to investigate whether planets could survive so close to one another.

    Planets massive enough to carve the close-fitting gaps at the outer edges of the disk would have enough gravity to scatter other close-orbiting neighbors, Tamayo said. When his team ran simulations with planets five times as massive as Saturn, things became eccentric, and at least one of the planets wound up ejected.

    However, Tamayo and his colleagues noticed something interesting about the outermost lanes.

    “These outer three gaps, the ones that are closest to one another, their locations are close to where you’d have a chain of 4:3 resonance,” Tamayo said.

    In a 4:3 resonance, one planet would orbit the star four times for every three times its neighbor traveled around the star. These special orbits would just miss one another, allowing the entire system to remain stable over time. In Earth’s solar system, the presence of a similar orbit allows Pluto to travel inside of Neptune’s orbit but keeps the two from colliding.

    In its initial findings, the team argued that the resonances of the outer planets would keep their orbits elliptical. However, if these orbits were not resonant, the disk of gas and dust would make the orbits more circular. Soon after the original findings were published, the scientists who took the original image announced that the gaps were, indeed, elliptical.

    “I think that’s really promising evidence that planets are what’s responsible for these gaps,” Tamayo said.

    Still, he cautioned, “It’s not a slam dunk.”

    However, a system of matched-orbit giants has interesting implications, he said.

    “If these are giant planets resonantly interacting, this is the most closely packed system of giant planets,” Tamayo said.

    The results were published in the Astrophysical Journal.

    ‘A ticking time bomb’

    A system of close-orbiting massive planets may be stable today, but Tamayo and his colleagues questioned how it could have wound up that way.

    “It sets up a puzzle, and that’s the puzzle of formation,” Tamayo said.

    He described the special orbits as a cozy shelter, surrounded by a ring of fire of instability.

    “How do you slowly migrate across this ring of fire to get to this nice, cozy shelter?” he wondered.

    “It seems like we’re in a jam.”

    Massive exoplanets would be unlikely to move together without getting kicked out by one another’s gravity. But the scientists realized that smaller planets had the advantage. If the planets were captured into resonance at lower mass, they would avoid the instability issue. Slowly, these smaller planets could grow together into bodies large enough to clear gaps in the cloud of dust surrounding the star.

    Tamayo and his team started with planets roughly five times the size of Earth. Their models showed that the smaller protoplanets could form and move into stabilizing orbits without knocking each other out of the young system. Over time, the merged bodies would continue to accrete the gas and dust while in their special orbits, clearing out their own paths as they grew into massive planets roughly the mass of Saturn.

    But the system can only remain stable so long, Tamayo said. Eventually, the planets will accrete enough mass that they will bump each other out of resonance, knocking the system out of control, he said.

    “This system is a ticking time bomb,” Tamayo said.

    Follow Nola Taylor Redd on Twitter @NolaTRedd. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • Aerojet Rocketdyne Makes $2B Offer for United Launch Alliance

    WASHINGTON – Rocket engine maker Aerojet Rocketdyne has offered to buy launch services provider United Launch Alliance from Lockheed Martin and Boeing for at least $2 billion, an industry source told SpaceNews Sept. 8.

    The unsolicited bid is the latest twist in what has been a topsy-turvy year for ULA, the primary U.S. government launch services provider.

    The proposal is still in discussion, but an announcement could come as early as the week of Sept. 14 at the annual U.S. Air Force Association conference, to be held at National Harbor, Maryland, the source said. [Awesome Atlas V Rocket Launch Photos]

    Aerojet Rocketdyne’s bid starts at $2 billion, but could go higher after the company does its due diligence, the source said.

    Denver-based ULA operates and owns the production rights for the Atlas V and Delta IV rockets, which together launch the vast majority of U.S. government payloads. The Boeing-Lockheed Martin joint venture, established in 2006, also owns a rocket production plant in Decatur, Alabama, and launch infrastructure at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida and at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

    ULA faces an uncertain future owing to a congressional ban on the Russian-built RD-180 engine that powers its workhorse, the Atlas V, and a competitive challenge in its government market from upstart SpaceX. Congress appears willing to fund a U.S.-built RD-180 replacement, and Aerojet Rocketdyne is developing one called the AR-1, but ULA last September announced plans to use an alternative built by the secretive Blue Origin rocket company owned by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos.

    Kent, Washington-based Blue Origin’s planned BE-4 uses a different type of fuel than the RD-180 and as such cannot be retrofitted into the current Atlas V design. ULA, which plans to phase out all but the largest variants of the high-priced Delta IV, in April unveiled a new rocket design called Vulcan that accommodates the BE-4. The new vehicle, to debut around 2020, would essentially be an Atlas 5  outfitted with a new, larger first stage, at least in its initial incarnation.

    But Boeing and Lockheed Martin, who control ULA’s purse strings, have yet to agree to invest the roughly $1 billion that ULA says it needs to develop the Vulcan. Blue Origin is funding development of the BE-4, also to the tune of about $1 billion, ULA says.

    Spokesmen for Sacramento, California-based Aerojet Rocketdyne, Boeing and Lockheed Martin declined to comment. Jessica Rye, a spokeswoman for ULA, referred questions to Lockheed Martin and Boeing.

    In May, a consortium of three companies including Aerojet Rocketdyne asked the U.S. Department of Defense about the possibility of obtaining production rights to  the Atlas V. ULA rebuffed that overture.

    A purchase of ULA, if approved by the parent companies and the government, would be a dramatic turnaround for Aerojet Rocketdyne, which was stung by ULA’s decision to go with the BE-4 over the AR-1. ULA continues to fund work on the AR-1, but views that engine as a backup in case Blue Origin falters in its engine effort.

    This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

  • A heart full of stars


    The Hubble Space Telescope has found a giant galaxy cluster with a huge galaxy at its core that is bursting with new stars

  • Avezzano chequerboard


    Earth observation image of the week: a Sentinel-2 image of agricultural structures in Italy, also featured on the Earth from Space video programme

  • Galileo launch replay


    Full replay of the first part of the launch transmission for Galileo satellites 9 and 10

  • Galileo taking flight: ten satellites now in orbit

    Europe’s own satellite navigation system has come a step nearer to completion today, with Galileo 9 and 10 which lifted off together at 02:08 GMT on 11 September (04:08 CEST; 23:08 local time, 10 September) from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana, atop a Soyuz launcher.

  • [ISS / Japanese Experiment Module (KIBO)] Kibo-ABC Member Countries' News: Indonesia

    Kibo-ABC Member Countries’ News: Indonesia

    Last Updated: September 11, 2015

    Finalists of the Scientific Writing Competition for high school students in Indonesia, “Clinostat Experiment, Space Simulation on Life Science,” are conducting simulated microgravity experiments for the final competition in October

    The Scientific Writing Competition “Clinostat Experiment, Space Simulation on Life Science” has begun, in cooperation with the School of Life Sciences & Technology, ITB (Institut Teknologi Bandung) and the Indonesian space agency LAPAN. Using a Clinostat provided by LAPAN, five high school finalists are now conducting experiments in preparation for the final competition on October 10, 2015. A “Clinostat” is an experimental device that simulates microgravity environments, often used to study the effects of microgravity on cell cultures and animal embryos. It has a rotating disc to which the plant or animal cell sample is attached; the sample thus receives equal stimulus on all sides, negating the effects of gravitational pull on plant or cell growth.

    The five finalists were selected from among 28 proposals from high schools nationwide. Each experiment will be conducted by a team of three students with one assisting teacher. Finalists were selected by a panel of judges, based on their experiment’s feasibility and the potential benefit of its results. The winners of the final competition will be decided by scores based on their experiment’s process and results. The first-, second-, and third-place winners will be awarded certificates, trophies, telescopes, and Android tablets! The other two finalists will also be awarded certificates and small telescopes.

    These experiment ideas from Indonesia’s next generations are highly anticipated to one day grow into ideas for microgravity experiments in the Kibo module on the International Space Station, and to contribute to better utilization of the space environment by Indonesia and other Asia-Pacific countries.

    The competition is held as a part of “Space Science Festival,” an annual event organized by LAPAN to celebrate World Space Week (worldspaceweek.org). The event encourages students to learn more about space science and astronomy, and also promotes space experiments for better utilization of space technology. There will be an exhibition open to the public, and approximately 200 participants will attend the festival including 150 students already registered. The exhibition will feature reports from last year’s observation events, a mini planetarium, games, a bazaar, and an open house for space and atmospheric research laboratories in Indonesia.

    For further information, please visit LAPAN’s website: http://pussainsa.lapan.go.id/fsa

    This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

  • Galileo lifts off – replay


    Replay of liftoff of Soyuz ST-B carrying Galileo satellites 9 and 10, at 02:08 GMT, from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana

  • IMAX Hubble 3D: The Director’s Take – Exclusive Video

  • Virgin Galactic: Let The Journey Begin

  • Elon Musk vs. Neil Armstrong: SPACEX vs. Constellation

  • A Hotel Room in Space

  • Mars Pix, Orbiters for Sale, ISS News – This Week In Space

  • SpaceShipTwo Makes First Solo Test Flight

  • The Business of Space Flight

  • SpaceShip Two’s Roomy and Intense Ride

  • Too Late to Save the Shuttle?

  • Moon Base Baseball? Why Not!

  • Rocket Racing League Inaugural Flight

  • Planning the Assault: Why Bomb the Moon?

  • Rocket Men – CNBC Business Nation with Guest Dave Brody

  • SpaceShipTwo Party Crashed by Winds

  • Two Sides Has The Moon – And Here’s What’s On Them

  • The 1st Repeat Space Tourist

  • Riding Lasers to Space

  • Visions of Venus

  • 5 Minutes in Heaven: Sub-Orbital Space Training

  • Acrobat Space Tourist on Flight Training

  • Rocket Restarts Engine In Flight, Lands Vertically

  • The Expanding Danger of Space Debris: Fragmentation

  • Robert Bigelow: Lessons, Visions, Realities…

  • What’s Next for NASA?

  • SpaceX Unveils The Interior Of Crew Dragon | Video

  • Visions of Venus

  • The Expanding Danger of Space Debris: Fragmentation

  • Two Sides Has The Moon – And Here’s What’s On Them

  • The Business of Space Flight

  • Elon Musk vs. Neil Armstrong: SPACEX vs. Constellation

  • IMAX Hubble 3D: The Director’s Take – Exclusive Video

  • What’s Next for NASA?

  • A Hotel Room in Space

  • Too Late to Save the Shuttle?

  • Virgin Galactic: Let The Journey Begin

  • Riding Lasers to Space

  • Rocket Men – CNBC Business Nation with Guest Dave Brody

  • Planning the Assault: Why Bomb the Moon?

  • 5 Minutes in Heaven: Sub-Orbital Space Training

  • Moon Base Baseball? Why Not!

  • Rocket Racing League Inaugural Flight

  • Robert Bigelow: Lessons, Visions, Realities…

  • Acrobat Space Tourist on Flight Training

  • The 1st Repeat Space Tourist

  • Rocket Restarts Engine In Flight, Lands Vertically

  • SpaceShipTwo Makes First Solo Test Flight

  • SpaceShip Two’s Roomy and Intense Ride

  • SpaceShipTwo Party Crashed by Winds

  • Mars Pix, Orbiters for Sale, ISS News – This Week In Space

  • New Photos of Pluto Show a World More Complex and Beautiful Than Ever

    An “over-the-top” complex mix of craters, ice flows, mountains, valleys and apparent dunes coexist on Pluto in the latest amazing images from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft.

    “Pluto is showing us a diversity of landforms and complexity of process that rival anything we’ve seen in the solar system,” New Horizons’ principal investigator Alan Stern, from the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, said in a statement. “If an artist had painted this Pluto before our flyby, I probably would have called it over the top — but that’s what is actually there.” At Space.com, we combined the new Pluto images into an awesome video.

    After a break to send particle, solar-wind and space-dust data back to Earth, the New Horizons spacecraft has resumed sending images snapped during its July 14 flyby of Pluto. The new images released today (Sept. 10) have resolutions of up to 440 yards (400 meters) per pixel, and they show a chaotic hodgepodge of features offering many scientific puzzles. [See more of the new Pluto photos by New Horizons]

    Surface Features on Pluto

    This mosaic of the new high-resolution Pluto images shows 1,000 miles (1,600 km) of the dwarf planet’s surface, as taken from 50,000 miles (80,000 km) away during New Horizons’ closest approach.
    Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

    There may be dunes, officials said in the statement, adding that nitrogen ice flows travel from mountains down to plains, and a network of valleys seems to be carved by flowing material. Old, cratered terrain and “chaotically” jumbled mountains border new flat, icy planes in the segments scientists have seen.

    “The surface of Pluto is every bit as complex as that of Mars,” Jeff Moore, leader of the New Horizons Geology, Geophysics and Imaging (GGI) team at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California, said in the statement. “The randomly jumbled mountains might be huge blocks of hard water-ice floating within a vast, denser, softer deposit of frozen nitrogen within the region informally named Sputnik Planum.”

    Broken, Mountainous Terrain on Pluto

    Broken, mountainous terrain is visible on the left edge of the flat, icy Sputnik Planum. The mountains might be blocks of water-ice floating in Sputnik Planum’s frozen nitrogen, officials said. The image covers 300 miles (470 km).
    Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

    The flat plains of Sputnik Planum fall within the left side of Tombaugh Regio, the heart-shaped region first seen in July as New Horizons approached the dwarf planet from afar. It was one of the earliest features spotted on Pluto, and is only now revealed in full detail from 50,000 miles (80,000 kilometers) away.

    Along the border of Sputnik Planum are what look like dark, windswept dunes, an unexpected surprise on a world that has too thin an atmosphere for wind, officials said.

    Dark Ridges on Pluto

    The dark ridges in the center of this view, near the bottom of Sputnik Planum, suggest possible windswept dunes. Also visible is old, cratered terrain juxtaposed with new, smooth ground, as well as mountains.
    Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

    “Seeing dunes on Pluto — if that is what they are — would be completely wild, because Pluto’s atmosphere today is so thin,” William B. McKinnon, a GGI deputy lead from Washington University, St. Louis, said in the statement. “Either Pluto had a thicker atmosphere in the past, or some process we haven’t figured out is at work. It’s a head-scratcher.”

    Researchers also received more data about Pluto’s atmospheric haze. Imaged as Pluto blocked out the sun, this haze formed a glowing halo from the probe’s perspective. There are more layers than the data initially suggested, and a soft atmospheric glow illuminates the planet’s night side just before sunrise and after sunset.

    Sun Shining Through Pluto's Atmosphere

    A processed image of the sun shining through Pluto’s atmosphere (right, unedited version at left) reveals multiple layers of haze.
    Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

    “This bonus, twilight view is a wonderful gift that Pluto has handed to us,” John Spencer, a GGI deputy lead also from the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, said in the statement. “Now we can study geology in terrain that we never expected to see.”

    New Horizons continues to send back new images and data from the flyby while pressing onward, now over 43 million miles (63 million km) from Pluto and 3 billion miles (5 billion km) from the Earth.

    Friday (Sept. 11), officials will release detailed images of Pluto’s moons, taken during the flyby, that hint at a “tortured” geological past for Charon, officials say. Charon, like Pluto, is proving far more complicated than previously suspected.

    Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Pluto's Chaos Region Explored In New Probe Pics | Video

    Credit: NASA/JHPL/SWRI/mash mix: Space.com’s @SteveSpaleta

  • Total Solar Eclipse Visible From United States In 2017 | Visualization

    Credit: NASA/GSFC