My God, It’s Full Of Stars

My God, it’s full of stars

- Dave Bowman, 2001 a Space Odyssey

When you look up from a dark site on a clear moonless night, the sky appears full of stars, almost too many to count.

It turns out that, with the naked eye, one can see anywhere between 5000 to 10000 stars, depending on whom you ask and how they estimate this number and just half of that on a given night because the Earth gets in your way. Still a lot but really nothing when you consider there are billions - maybe hundreds of billions of stars in our Galaxy and trillions of galaxies in the Universe.

It’s a completely different matter when you use optical aid. A pair of 50 mm binoculars can pull in some hundreds of thousands of stars; a small - say 80 mm telescope - like mine-can “ see” millions.

And here is an example. This is the much loved deep southern object known familiarly as 47 Tucanae- Tuc 47 to friends- and it is what is known as a globular cluster.

It contains over a million stars - I am unable to determine what the latest estimate is- a couple of decades ago we used to say it contained half a million stars but that estimate has since been upped.

It’s the second largest of this type of cluster- there are around 150 of these distributed in a halo around our galaxy that we know of.

And quite spectacular in a telescope of any size. It cannot but bring to mind Dave Bowman’s famous exclamation in “2001 a Space Odyssey “

Imaged from my backyard last weekend; an image salvaged despite the usual trials and tribulations that beset the amateur astrophotographer including tangled cables and the camera slamming into the tripod leg and so on and so forth.

Given the long weather forecast it’s going to be slim pickings this summer so you take what you get

What would it be like to live on a planet within a globular cluster? In 1941 Issac Asimov wrote a great short story “ Nightfall “ imagining just that. Highly recommended if you have forgotten it

Sadly the Hubble Space Telescope looked for planets in Tuc 47… and found none. So we have no evidence that planets form within these globular clusters- thus far

https://flic.kr/p/2mGS9cC

More Posts from Starry-shores and Others

3 years ago
Comet Meets Cluster By Europeanspaceagency

Comet meets cluster by europeanspaceagency

4 years ago
Shout Out To All Of My Awake Friends!

Shout out to all of my awake friends!


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4 years ago

Ultra-Close Orbits of Saturn = Ultra-Cool Science

On Sept. 15, 2017, our Cassini spacecraft ended its epic exploration of Saturn with a planned dive into the planet’s atmosphere–sending back new science to the very last second. The spacecraft is gone, but the science continues!

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New research emerging from the final orbits represents a huge leap forward in our understanding of the Saturn system – especially the mysterious, never-before-explored region between the planet and its rings. Some preconceived ideas are turning out to be wrong while new questions are being raised. How did they form? What holds them in place? What are they made of?

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Six teams of researchers are publishing their work Oct. 5 in the journal Science, based on findings from Cassini’s Grand Finale. That’s when, as the spacecraft was running out of fuel, the mission team steered Cassini spectacularly close to Saturn in 22 orbits before deliberately vaporizing it in a final plunge into the atmosphere in September 2017.

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Knowing Cassini’s days were numbered, its mission team went for gold. The spacecraft flew where it was never designed to fly. For the first time, it probed Saturn’s magnetized environment, flew through icy, rocky ring particles and sniffed the atmosphere in the 1,200-mile-wide (2,000-kilometer-wide) gap between the rings and the cloud tops. Not only did the engineering push the spacecraft to its limits, the new findings illustrate how powerful and agile the instruments were.

Many more Grand Finale science results are to come, but today’s highlights include:

Complex organic compounds embedded in water nanograins rain down from Saturn’s rings into its upper atmosphere. Scientists saw water and silicates, but they were surprised to see also methane, ammonia, carbon monoxide, nitrogen and carbon dioxide. The composition of organics is different from that found on moon Enceladus – and also different from those on moon Titan, meaning there are at least three distinct reservoirs of organic molecules in the Saturn system.

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For the first time, Cassini saw up close how rings interact with the planet and observed inner-ring particles and gases falling directly into the atmosphere. Some particles take on electric charges and spiral along magnetic-field lines, falling into Saturn at higher latitudes – a phenomenon known as “ring rain.” But scientists were surprised to see that others are dragged quickly into Saturn at the equator. And it’s all falling out of the rings faster than scientists thought – as much as 10,000 kg of material per second.

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Scientists were surprised to see what the material looks like in the gap between the rings and Saturn’s atmosphere. They knew that the particles throughout the rings ranged from large to small. They thought material in the gap would look the same. But the sampling showed mostly tiny, nanograin- and micron-sized particles, like smoke, telling us that some yet-unknown process is grinding up particles. What could it be? Future research into the final bits of data sent by Cassini may hold the answer.

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Saturn and its rings are even more interconnected than scientists thought. Cassini revealed a previously unknown electric current system that connects the rings to the top of Saturn’s atmosphere.

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Scientists discovered a new radiation belt around Saturn, close to the planet and composed of energetic particles. They found that while the belt actually intersects with the innermost ring, the ring is so tenuous that it doesn’t block the belt from forming.

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Unlike every other planet with a magnetic field in our Solar System, Saturn’s magnetic field is almost completely aligned with its spin axis. Think of the planet and the magnetic field as completely separate things that are both spinning. Both have the same center point, but they each have their own axis about which they spin. But for Saturn the two axes are essentially the same – no other planet does that, and we did not think it was even possible for this to happen. This new data shows a magnetic-field tilt of less than 0.0095 degrees. (Earth’s magnetic field is tilted 11 degrees from its spin axis.) According to everything scientists know about how planetary magnetic fields are generated, Saturn should not have one. It’s a mystery physicists will be working to solve.

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Cassini flew above Saturn’s magnetic poles, directly sampling regions where radio emissions are generated. The findings more than doubled the number of reported crossings of radio sources from the planet, one of the few non-terrestrial locations where scientists have been able to study a mechanism believed to operate throughout the universe. How are these signals generated? That’s still a mystery researchers are looking to uncover.

For the Cassini mission, the science rolling out from Grand Finale orbits confirms that the calculated risk of diving into the gap – skimming the upper atmosphere and skirting the edge of the inner rings – was worthwhile.

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Almost everything going on in that region turned out to be a surprise, which was the importance of going there, to explore a place we’d never been before. And the expedition really paid off!

Analysis of Cassini data from the spacecraft’s instruments will be ongoing for years to come, helping to paint a clearer picture of Saturn.

To read the papers published in Science, visit: URL to papers

To learn more about the ground-breaking Cassini mission and its 13 years at Saturn, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/main/index.html

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.


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3 years ago
Look At The Bottom Gif! The Long Tentacles Are Pushed Out And Parallel To Each Other While The Jelly
Look At The Bottom Gif! The Long Tentacles Are Pushed Out And Parallel To Each Other While The Jelly

Look at the bottom gif! The long tentacles are pushed out and parallel to each other while the jelly is motionless. This behavior is predatory, which means that the Marianas Trench Jelly is set in attack mode! 

Read more about the 2016 discovery of the Marianas Trench Jelly

2 years ago

It makes me sad how no one ever seems to mention how wild the crocodilian-line archosaurs were. Dinosaurs get all the attention when there was equally crazy shit happening on the other branch of the archosaur tree.

There was a whole linage of bipedal crocodylomorphs during the Triassic that were basically identical to theropod dinosaurs, so much so that a lot of them were initially classified as dinosaurs!

It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs
It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs
It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs

Just fucking look at them!

And these weren’t just little lizard guys, there were some big lads running around.

It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs
It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs

Not to mention the long-legged ones that galloped around on all fours like some kind of terrifying reptilian dogs.

It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs

These crazy crocodiles aren’t just from the Triassic, either; there was a galloping, hoofed crocodilian that lived during the Eocene and likely hunted horses. (They were smaller and not quite as fast as modern horses, but still)

It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs

But don’t worry, they weren’t all meat-eaters! There were vegetarian and omnivore crocodylomorphs too! Just look at this guy!

It Makes Me Sad How No One Ever Seems To Mention How Wild The Crocodilian-line Archosaurs Were. Dinosaurs

He was an ankylosaur before ankylosaurs were cool (or even existed).


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3 years ago
Jupiter Auroras By NASA Hubble

Jupiter Auroras by NASA Hubble


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4 years ago
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France
Fontainebleau Forest In France

Fontainebleau forest in France

All these are post-organic material: a petrified bones and organs of giants.


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4 years ago
(by lorenz.weisse)

(by lorenz.weisse)


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4 years ago
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990
Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, Circa 1990

Steve Gildea Planetary Suite, circa 1990


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starry-shores - No Frontiers
No Frontiers

Amateur astronomer, owns a telescope. This is a side blog to satiate my science-y cravings! I haven't yet mustered the courage to put up my personal astro-stuff here. Main blog : @an-abyss-called-life

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