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خاموشی ابدی فضاهای لایتناهی، مرا به هراس می اندازد.

New measurements of Mars' South Polar Region indicate extensive frozen water. The polar region contains enough frozen water to cover the whole planet in a liquid layer approximately 11 meters (36 feet) deep. A joint NASA- Italian Space Agency instrument on the European Space Agency's Mars Express spacecraft provided these data.

This new estimate comes from mapping the thickness of the ice. The Mars Express orbiter's radar instrument has made more than 300 virtual slices through layered deposits covering the pole to map the ice. The radar sees through icy layers to the lower boundary, which is as deep as 3.7 kilometers (2.3 miles) below the surface.

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ادامه مطلب
+ نوشته شده در  پنجشنبه 1386/11/18ساعت 14:37  توسط سپهـــر | 

Astronomers have laid down the cosmic equivalent of yellow 'caution' tape around super hot stars, marking the zones where cooler stars are in danger of having their developing planets blasted away.

In a new study from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, scientists report the first maps of so-called planetary 'danger zones.' These are areas where winds and radiation from super hot stars can strip other young, cooler stars like our sun of their planet-forming materials. The results show that cooler stars are safe as long as they lie beyond about 1.6 light-years, or nearly 10 trillion miles, of any hot stars. But cooler stars inside the zone are likely to see their potential planets boiled off into space.

'Stars move around all the time, so if one wanders into the danger zone and stays for too long, it will probably never be able to form planets,' said Zoltan Balog of the University of Arizona, Tucson, lead author of the new report, appearing May 20 in the Astrophysical Journal.

The findings are helping astronomers pinpoint the types of environments where planets beyond our solar system, including some that might be hospitable to life, are most likely to form.

Planets are born out of a flat disk of gas and dust, called a protoplanetary disk, that swirls around a young star. They are believed to clump together out of the disk over millions of years, growing in size like dust bunnies as they sweep through the dust.
TinyPic image

This infrared image from NASA's Spitzer Spac

e Telescope shows the Rosette nebula, a pretty star-forming

region more than 5,000 light-years away in the constellation Monoceros.

In optical light, the nebula looks like a rosebud,

or the 'rosette' adornments that date back to antiquity

Previous studies revealed that these protoplanetary disks can be destroyed by the most massive, hottest type of star in the universe, called an O-star, over a period of about a million years. Ultraviolet radiation from an O-star heats and evaporates the dust and gas in the disk, then winds from the star blow the material away. Last year, Balog and his team used Spitzer to capture a stunning picture of this 'photoevaporation' process at work (www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/happenings/20061003/).

The team's new study is the first systematic survey for disks in and around the danger zone, or 'blast radius' of an O-star. They used Spitzer's heat-seeking infrared eyes to look for disks around 1,000 stars in the Rosette Nebula, a turbulent star-forming region 5,200 light-years away in the constellation Monoceros. The stars range between one-tenth and five times the mass of the sun and are between 2 and 3 million years old. They are all near at least one of the region's massive O-stars.

The observations revealed that, beyond 10 trillion miles of an O-star, about 45 percent of the stars had disks - about the same amount as there were in safer neighborhoods free of O-stars. Within this distance, only 27 percent of the stars had disks, with fewer and fewer disks spotted around stars closest to the O-star. In other words, an O-star's danger zone is a sphere whose damaging effects are worst at the core. For reference, our sun's closest star, a small star called Proxima Centauri, is nearly 30 trillion miles away.

In addition, the new study indicates that a protoplanetary disk will boil off faster in the zone's perilous core. For example, a disk two times closer to an O-star than another disk will evaporate twice as fast. 'The edges of the danger zone are sharply defined,' said Balog. 'It is relatively safe for protoplanetary disks outside it, whereas a disk that gets dragged along by its star to be really close to an O-star could disappear in as fast as a hundred thousand years.'

Despite this doomsday scenario, there is a chance some planets could survive a close encounter with an O-star. According to one alternative theory of planet formation, some gas giants like Jupiter might form in less than one million years. If such a planet already existed around a young star whose disk is blown away, the gas giant would stay put while any burgeoning rocky planets like Earth would be forever swept away.

Some astronomers think our sun was born in a similarly violent neighborhood studded with O-stars before migrating to its present, more spacious home. If so, it was lucky enough to escape a harrowing ride into any danger zones, or our planets, and life as we know it, wouldn't be here today.

Other paper authors include James Muzerolle, Kate Su, George Rieke and Erick Young of the University of Arizona; and Tom Megeath of the University of Toledo, Ohio.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the Spitzer mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Science operations are conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology, also in Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. Spitzer's multiband imaging photometer, which collected the new data, was built by Ball Aerospace Corporation, Boulder, Colo.; the University of Arizona; and Boeing North American, Canoga Park, Calif. Co-author Rieke is the instrument's principal investigator

 

+ نوشته شده در  جمعه 1386/02/07ساعت 23:12  توسط سپهـــر | 

A new image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows the colorful 'last hurrah' of a star like our sun. The picture was taken on Feb. 6, 2007, by Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, which was designed and built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

                                 Image hosting by TinyPic                                      
The star is ending its life by casting off its outer layers of gas, which formed a cocoon around the star's remaining core. Ultraviolet light from the dying star makes the material glow. The burned-out star, called a white dwarf, is the white dot in the center. Our sun will eventually burn out and shroud itself with stellar debris, but not for another 5 billion years.

Our Milky Way galaxy is littered with these stellar relics, called planetary nebulae. The objects have nothing to do with planets. Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century astronomers named them that because through small telescopes they resembled the disks of the distant planets Uranus and Neptune.

The planetary nebula in this image is called NGC 2440. The white dwarf at the center of NGC 2440 is one of the hottest known, with a surface temperature of nearly 200,000 degrees Celsius (400,000 degrees Fahrenheit). The nebula's chaotic structure suggests that the star shed its mass episodically. During each outburst, the star expelled material in a different direction. This can be seen in the two bow tie-shaped lobes. The nebula also is rich in clouds of dust, some of which form long, dark streaks pointing away from the star. NGC 2440 lies about 4,000 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Puppis.

The colors in the image correspond to material expelled by the star. Blue corresponds to helium; blue-green to oxygen, and red to nitrogen and hydrogen
.

+ نوشته شده در  دوشنبه 1385/11/30ساعت 13:20  توسط سپهـــر | 

NASA's Cassini spacecraft has seen something never before seen on another planet -- a hurricane-like storm at Saturn's south pole with a well-developed eye, ringed by towering clouds.

The 'hurricane' spans a dark area inside a thick, brighter ring of clouds. It is approximately 8,000 kilometers (5,000 miles) across, or two thirds the diameter of Earth.

'It looks like a hurricane, but it doesn't behave like a hurricane,' said Dr. Andrew Ingersoll, a member of Cassini's imaging team at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. 'Whatever it is, we're going to focus on the eye of this storm and find out why it's there.'

              Image hosting by TinyPic

                            A view of the hurricane-like

                      vortex from a different wavelength

A movie taken by Cassini's camera over a three-hour period reveals winds around Saturn's south pole blowing clockwise at 550 kilometers (350 miles) per hour. The camera also saw the shadow cast by a ring of towering clouds surrounding the pole, and two spiral arms of clouds extending from the central ring. These ring clouds, 30 to 75 kilometers (20 to 45 miles) above those in the center of the storm, are two to five times taller than the clouds of thunderstorms and hurricanes on Earth.

Eye-wall clouds are a distinguishing feature of hurricanes on Earth. They form where moist air flows inward across the ocean's surface, rising vertically and releasing a heavy rain around an interior circle of descending air that is the eye of the storm itself. Though it is uncertain whether such moist convection is driving Saturn's storm, the dark 'eye' at the pole, the eye-wall clouds and the spiral arms together indicate a hurricane-like system.

Distinctive eye-wall clouds had not been seen on any planet other than Earth. Even Jupiter's Great Red Spot, much larger than Saturn's polar storm, has no eye or eye-wall and is relatively calm at the center.

This giant Saturnian storm is apparently different fromhurricanes on Earth because it is locked to the pole and does not drift around. Also, since Saturn is a gaseous planet, the storm forms without an ocean at its base.

In the Cassini imagery, the eye looks dark at infrared wavelengths where methane gas absorbs the light and only the highest clouds are visible.

'The clear skies over the eye appear to extend down to a level about twice as deep as the usual cloud level observed on Saturn,' said Dr. Kevin H. Baines of Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 'This gives us the deepest view yet into Saturn over a wide range of wavelengths, and reveals a mysterious set of dark clouds at the bottom of the eye.'

Infrared images taken by the Keck I telescope in Mauna Kea, Hawaii, had previously shown Saturn's south pole to be warm. Cassini's composite infrared spectrometer has confirmed this with higher-resolution temperature maps of the area. The spectrometer observed a temperature increase of about 2 Kelvin (4 degrees Fahrenheit) at the pole. The instrument measured high temperatures in the upper troposphere and stratosphere, regions higher in the atmosphere than the clouds seen by the Cassini imaging instruments.

'The winds decrease with height, and the atmosphere is sinking, compressing and heating over the South Pole,' said Dr. Richard Achterberg, a member of Cassini's composite infrared spectrometer team at NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

Observations taken over the next few years, as the south pole season changes from summer to fall, will help scientists understand the role seasons play in driving the dramatic meteorology at the south pole of Saturn.

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The Cassini orbiter was designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging team is based at the Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo. The visual and infrared mapping spectrometer team is based at the University of Arizona. The composite infrared spectrometer team is based at Goddard.

   

+ نوشته شده در  سه شنبه 1385/10/19ساعت 10:6  توسط سپهـــر | 
             Image hosting by TinyPic
+ نوشته شده در  سه شنبه 1385/09/07ساعت 9:42  توسط سپهـــر | 

فضا پیمای AKARI آژانس فضایی ژاپن در ادامه ماموریت نقشه برداری فرو سرخ از آسمان ، ابرهای ماژلانی را به تصویر کشید.این ابرها همچون ماهواره ای در اطراف کهکشان راه شیری قرار دارند وبا فاصله ای برابر 160 هزار سال نوری از ما در گروه کهکشان های نا منظم طبقه بندی می شوند. 

 

Image hosting by TinyPic      


ادامه مطلب
+ نوشته شده در  پنجشنبه 1385/08/25ساعت 21:15  توسط سپهـــر | 
 
صفحه نخست
تمـــاس با مــا
آرشیو
درباره وبلاگ
فیزیک ؛
فرصت شناور شدن در ژرفای ذرات
تا کرانه های ناپیدای کرات است.
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لذت این سفر را از دست ندهید.

***************
راه هـایی ﺁشـکار مـی شوند کـه اجـــازه مـی دهند حلقه محـدود ﺁگــاهی مان را شکسته و به خارج قدم بگذاریم.

ﺁگــاهی ، کلـیتی است در مــاورا فضا – زمان ، چیزی که شاید از نظر ماهیت «من» حقیقی باشدو مـا به این ادراک رسـیده ایم که آگاهی و انرژی یکی هستند ؛ اینکه تمـامی فضا – زمـان از آگاهی ساخته شده است ؛ اینکـه احساس و دریـافت معمول مـا از واقعـیت ، ترکیبی از تعداد نامتناهی از جهان هاست که در آن زیسـته ایم ، و اینکـه آنچه از خود به عـنوان خودمــان درک می کنــیم فقـط نمــایش متمرکزی از کلیت خود حقیقی مان است.

بنابراین همه انرژی مان به بررسی آگــاهی اختصاص می یابد و ایـن یگانه راه است.

***************
هر اتفاقی را که در جهان های بی شمـار بر آن تاثیر می گذراید تشخیص دهید ....... درک کنید که در هر چیزی زندگی جریان دارد ؛ دریــابـید که شمــا آموخته هایتـان نیستید ، بگذارید تا آگاهی با شمـــا یکی شود.
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رسوخ جهان ها در هم ، آغاز شده است !

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مدیریت این وبلاگ؛ بعنوان عضوی کوچک، افتخـــار همکاری با مرکز تحقیقات فیزیک نظری و ریاضیات ایران (IPM) و انجمن فیزیک ایران را دارد.

***************
استـفــاده از مطالـب ایـن وبلاگ با ذکـر منبـع و یا ذکـــر آدرس آن مجاز مـی باشـد.
Zeta.Sepehr@gmail.com

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