kellylepo, (edited ) to Halloween
@kellylepo@astrodon.social avatar

Happy Halloween 🎃

Here are the pumpkins I carved this year: An active red dwarf star and its gas giant planet. I call it an exo-pumpkin.

CosmicRami, to Astro
@CosmicRami@aus.social avatar

A real fascinating story of how an 81-year-old former Air Force chap had come forward to announce he saw pulsars well before they were discovered but could not talk about it for half a century until the military instruments he observed them with were decommissioned and de-classified.

In a nutshell, he was using radar for a Ballistic Missile early warning system and noticed a pulsating signal showing up in his data, which was rising 4 mins earlier each day. He asked astronomers after writing down the location, and it was the Crab Pulsar!

The woman who discovered pulsars, Dame Prof. Jocelyn Bell Burnell - agreed with his discoveries.

https://www.nature.com/articles/448974a

Sent this to our team's slack channel overnight, and my supervisor told me he and another one of our team's astronomers were the folks that the Air Force chap got in touch with!

Small world, and a nice Aussie connection!

https://pubs.aip.org/aip/acp/article-abstract/983/1/642/620966/An-Independent-1967-Discovery-of-Pulsars?redirectedFrom=PDF

markmccaughrean, to Astronomy
@markmccaughrean@mastodon.social avatar

Morning.

Here it is, several thousand years in the making: the protostellar jet HH212 as seen in the infrared by .

We discovered this jet in 1993, glowing in the light of shocked molecular hydrogen at 2.12 microns, as gas emerges symmetrically at about 100 km/s from the two poles of a young protostar not far from the Horsehead Nebula in Orion.

Our new JWST image spans six wavelengths & is ten times sharper than any previous infrared image.

1/

vicgrinberg, (edited ) to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

For all the folks starting their (or their master thesis) today - a reminder why your PhD advisor can solve a problem so "easily" ...

CosmicRami, to Astronomy
@CosmicRami@aus.social avatar

Wooooaaahhhh!

The new JWST image of a small bit of the Horsehead Nebula is INCREDIBLE.

To give you a sense of scale here, here’s an image of the nebula from my backyard. That small white box … that’s the JWST field of view! 🤯🤯🤯

Look at ALL those galaxies, all in that tiny white box.

JWST image credit:

Dodgy image with white boxes is my own.

#JWST #SpaceTelescope #HorseheadNebula #Astronomy #Galaxies #Astrodon

At the bottom of the image a small portion of the Horsehead Nebula is seen close-in, as a curved wall of thick, smoky gas and dust. Above the nebula various distant stars and galaxies can be seen up to the top of the image. One star is very bright and large, with six long diffraction spikes that cross the image. The background fades from a dark red colour above the nebula to black.

astro_jcm, (edited ) to chile
@astro_jcm@mastodon.online avatar

1/ This is the longest exposure I've ever taken: 8 months long! It shows the Sun's path on the sky between Apr 17 - Dec 11 2018, as seen from ESO's Paranal Observatory in .

This is part of a collaboration with Diego López Calvín, an expert in solarigraphy: https://solarigrafia.com

Diego sent me some of his hand-made cameras, which I placed all over Paranal. So what do we see here? See thread below 👇

rdword, to climate

Hello! I’m a professor of planetary science based at Harvard, interested in rocky planet evolution, #climate, habitability, and related topics.

Finally decided to get a social media account and Mastodon seemed like a logical choice right now. Looking forward to figuring out what this site (or sites??) is all about…

#introduction #astrodon #geoscience

CosmicRami, to Astro
@CosmicRami@aus.social avatar

🚨BIG SCIENCE NEWS 🚨

And our results (along with our international colleagues) have dropped!

Our team (and others) have started to see the strongest evidence as yet of the stochastic gravitational wave background - ripples in space-time cause by ALL the supermassive black holes in the history of the Universe colliding!

We use pulsars to study these riplles and we needed almost 20 years of data to even get the first hints! It's the long game!

I'm a co-author on the Aussie papers (as part of my work) but I also wrote about it here in my latest feature article on

This is why I have been going on about pulsars for a few weeks now - this was coming!

Check it out here: https://www.spaceaustralia.com/feature/australian-scientists-help-uncover-cosmic-gravitational-rumblings

📸 Shanika Galaudage

vicgrinberg, (edited ) to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

It's only since Cecilia Payne's PhD thesis in 1925, that we know what the stars - and our Sun - are made of: mostly hydrogen.

Her thesis was described as ""the most brilliant PhD thesis ever written in astronomy" and it extremely readable: https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1925PhDT.........1P/abstract

Yet It took until 1956, 10 years before her retirement, for her to become full professor - because women were barred from becoming full professors at Harvard.

(Posted because she was born ).

stargazerrob, to Astro
@stargazerrob@mastodon.online avatar

Jupiter as seen from my garden this morning.

vicgrinberg, to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

Just in case you want to add some color to your office - some downloadable and printable posters

▶️ https://www.esa.int/About_Us/ESA_Publications/ESA_Posters

CosmicRami, to Astro
@CosmicRami@aus.social avatar

Forgot to share this here, but 6 August is the anniversary of the discover of by Dame Professor Jocelyn Bell Burnell.

She was looking through the roll of data from the telescope she helped build and noticed a little bit of ‘scruff’.

Her discovery changed our understanding of the Universe but sadly her male supervisor took credit and got the Nobel prize for it!

Read more: https://www.spaceaustralia.com/feature/55-years-pulsar-science

astro_jcm, to Astro
@astro_jcm@mastodon.online avatar

The Event Horizon Telescope has unveiled how Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy, looks like in polarised light, which tells us a lot about the magnetic field around this monster.

The lines overlaid on the image below mark the orientation of the polarisation, from which astronomers can work out the structure of the magnetic field around the black hole.

More details: https://www.eso.org/public/news/eso2406/

📷 EHT Collaboration

astro_jcm, to chile
@astro_jcm@mastodon.online avatar

Outstanding shot of the #Sun rising behind ESO's Extremely Large #Telescope, currently under construction in #Chile. The dome is about 80 m tall; look at the size of those cranes! The ELT will have a 39 m primary mirror — the largest optical-infrared telescope in the world.

More info: https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2336a/

📷 E. Garcés/ESO. Ack.: N. Dubost

#astrodon #astronomy #space

coreyspowell, to science
@coreyspowell@mastodon.social avatar

I love a science mystery, and this is a good one:
About once a year, a mysterious blue flash appears from a different part of the sky, then fades in a matter of days. Nobody knows what these things are. And the latest one, nicknamed "the Finch," may be the strangest one yet.
https://science.nasa.gov/missions/hubble/nasas-hubble-finds-bizarre-explosion-in-unexpected-place

vicgrinberg, to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

It's mind-blowing how young some of our knowledge about the Universe is 🤯

⭐ It's only since the seminal thesis of Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin in 1925 that we know that stars are mainly made of hydrogen & helium:
▶️ https://physicsworld.com/a/cecilia-payne-gaposchkin-the-woman-who-found-hydrogen-in-the-stars/

🌀 And it's just so less than 100 years ago since Hubble, building on Henrietta Swan Leavitt’s period-luminosity relation for Cepheids, has shown that our own Milky Way is just one galaxy among many:
▶️ https://mastodon.social/@mcnees/111681549432325681

vicgrinberg, to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

Want to become my colleague? is looking for a planetary scientist to fill the role of the archives scientist for the planetary science archive, initially assigned to missions:

▶️ https://jobs.esa.int/job/Villanueva-de-la-Ca%C3%B1ada-Archive-Scientist/987806201/

Deadline: 18. October 2023

(OK, almost my colleague, same agency, different location - you'd be based in Villanueva de la Cañada close to Madrid, Spain, while I'm in Noordwijk, NL).

markmccaughrean, to Astro
@markmccaughrean@mastodon.social avatar

And we are live 🙀

It has only taken 25 years to get to this point, but here we are.

I'll post much more soon, but first I think need a moment.

https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Webb/Webb_s_wide-angle_view_of_the_Orion_Nebula_is_released_in_ESASky

CosmicRami, to Astro
@CosmicRami@aus.social avatar

Wow! 16 pro-amateur astrophotographers imaged the Whirlpool Galaxy, then combined their data to produce an image with 255 hours integration time. This is the result.

Credits and results in here: https://www.astrobin.com/7hwtz0/?fbclid=IwAR1pAzvCnwViMAZebbwJ0ypUHmzZ9YFLWNyM_ZMT8Id1W_nRcix5A7ajLRg

I absolutely love hearing about amateur and pro-am communities collaborating and working together to really highlight the contributions they can make to science.

These communities are pretty much self-funded but can deliver lots!

More on the processing of this image can be found here as well: https://theastroenthusiast.com/m51-processing/

There's also a video they have put together here as well: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkES2ltGSoc

jaztrophysicist, (edited ) to Astro
@jaztrophysicist@astrodon.social avatar

I am very excited to introduce a new online space,

https://lookingup.francois-rincon.org

where I will be posting musings on my recently initiated research career transition from astrophysics to ecology. I would like this place to be a lively forum, especially for scientists involved in similar matters. First post is online 🎉 , boosts welcome ! 💚 🍂 🔭

You can register by following @lookingup.francois-rincon.org or using the rss feed link on the site.

vicgrinberg, to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

Physics World has talked to me about my science and about all the things I do as a scientist that are not my science - climate activism and Astronomers for Planet Earth (@a4e), my art and outreach in general :)

If podcasts are your thing, you may like this one (also download able on all usual sources):

▶️ https://physicsworld.com/a/astrophysicist-uses-x-rays-to-explore-the-universe-heat-pumps-could-prevent-potholes/

vicgrinberg, (edited ) to Astro
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

If you prefer to read things instead of listening (as do I myself; not an audio person ... 😅 ), Physics World has now turned the podcast with me into a written interview:

▶️ https://physicsworld.com/a/victoria-grinberg-the-astrophysicist-sharing-her-love-for-science/

It's about my science, but also about all the things I do as a scientist that are not my science - climate crisis outreach and Astronomers for Planet Earth, my art and outreach in general.

CosmicRami, (edited ) to Astro
@CosmicRami@aus.social avatar

Wowowow @markmccaughrean !!!

EXPLOSION FINGERS?!?!?!?

JWST’s new images from Orion Nebula are spectacular! Look at this structure 🥹🤩😱

📸 JWST / ESA / NASA / CSA / M. McCaughrean / S. Pearson

#JWST #Astrodon #OrionNebula #Astronomy

kellylepo, to Astronomy
@kellylepo@astrodon.social avatar

JWST is a fancy telescope designed for science. So while it can produce very beautiful images, it's not quite a point-and-shoot camera.

Here is an image of the Pillars of Creation that I downloaded from the MAST archive. Notice how all of the stars have black centers? That's not what the stars actually look like — it's an artifact introduced by the NIRCam detector.

A 🧵 on image artifacts.
1/

Learn more: https://webbtelescope.org/contents/articles/how-are-webbs-full-color-images-made

markmccaughrean, to random
@markmccaughrean@mastodon.social avatar

It's paper time!

The first results from my #JWST time, in a project shared with Tom Ray et al. from the MIRI consortium, a study of the extremely young protostellar outflow, HH211, in Perseus, published in advance form in Nature today.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06551-1

Here's the headline image, a composite of three of the NIRCam filters we used.

#Astrodon #SpaceScience

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • megavids
  • thenastyranch
  • rosin
  • GTA5RPClips
  • osvaldo12
  • love
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • khanakhh
  • everett
  • kavyap
  • mdbf
  • DreamBathrooms
  • ngwrru68w68
  • provamag3
  • magazineikmin
  • InstantRegret
  • normalnudes
  • tacticalgear
  • cubers
  • ethstaker
  • modclub
  • cisconetworking
  • Durango
  • anitta
  • Leos
  • tester
  • JUstTest
  • All magazines