The Astronomy Thread
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Re: The Astronomy Thread
I posted earlier in the thread about the discovery of gigantic x-ray-emitting bubbles extending out of the north and south poles of our galaxy. Now an image has been captured of similar bubbles in galaxy NGC 3079. This phenomenon seems to be fairly rare; as I understand it, this galaxy and ours are the only two known examples.
http://chandra.si.edu/photo/2019/ngc3079/
http://chandra.si.edu/photo/2019/ngc3079/
Re: The Astronomy Thread
Just read about this in the news today: https://phys.org/news/2019-03-hubble-ga ... milky.html
According to new findings by ESA Gaia mission combined with Hubble data, apparently the Milky Way's mass is now estimated at 1.5 trillion M☉ which is larger than M31/Andromeda's calculated at 800 billion M☉ last year.
According to new findings by ESA Gaia mission combined with Hubble data, apparently the Milky Way's mass is now estimated at 1.5 trillion M☉ which is larger than M31/Andromeda's calculated at 800 billion M☉ last year.
Re: The Astronomy Thread - Black hole photographed
Source: XKCD, 2135.
Yeah, I imagined our system even smaller, and voyager less far out.
Also: forum back online. Yeah!
The Ur-Quan Masters finally gets a continuation of the story! Late backing possible, click link.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
While one can never say with a straight face that the first image of a black hole isn't cool, I can't help but be slightly disappointed that the black hole imaged was in the giant, distant M87 galaxy instead of Sag A* in our own Milky Way (which is what the pre-release hype seemed to indicate), and that the image essentially looks exactly as predicted. Sure, it's great to have existing theories confirmed, but it also means that we didn't learn anything new. (Though no doubt the boffins will tease many interesting new tidbits out of the data in the coming months and years.)
What I'm really excited about is what they can do with the Even Horizon Telescope (the network of radiotelescopes used to capture the M87 black hole data) and other systems like it in the future. Imagine what you can do when you can image objects down to the resolution of a solar system at 50 million light years. A bit like the gravity wave observatories, this marks a new era in astronomy.
What I'm really excited about is what they can do with the Even Horizon Telescope (the network of radiotelescopes used to capture the M87 black hole data) and other systems like it in the future. Imagine what you can do when you can image objects down to the resolution of a solar system at 50 million light years. A bit like the gravity wave observatories, this marks a new era in astronomy.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
Imagine what you could do if you could add a couple telescopes on the moon to this setup.
- Mithramuse
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Re: The Astronomy Thread
I think the Sag A* data is still being processed. Maybe due to there being more dust etc. in the way?Arioch wrote:While one can never say with a straight face that the first image of a black hole isn't cool, I can't help but be slightly disappointed that the black hole imaged was in the giant, distant M87 galaxy instead of Sag A* in our own Milky Way (which is what the pre-release hype seemed to indicate), and that the image essentially looks exactly as predicted. Sure, it's great to have existing theories confirmed, but it also means that we didn't learn anything new. (Though no doubt the boffins will tease many interesting new tidbits out of the data in the coming months and years.)
And yup, maybe a bit less exciting than hoped for, but I think the main tidbits to come will be once we do start comparing the various black holes that we will now be able to image... picturing one of something is nifty, but hard to confirm/deny anything. Get a couple dozen black hole pictures (or more), and there will likely be something to talk about!
Agreed, there.Arioch wrote:What I'm really excited about is what they can do with the Even Horizon Telescope (the network of radiotelescopes used to capture the M87 black hole data) and other systems like it in the future. Imagine what you can do when you can image objects down to the resolution of a solar system at 50 million light years. A bit like the gravity wave observatories, this marks a new era in astronomy.
Imagine the headaches establishing the accurate timing required... But yes, it would be pretty cool.GeoModder wrote:Imagine what you could do if you could add a couple telescopes on the moon to this setup.
In the same vein, I'm curious if anything ever came of thoughts about using observations six months apart to do this kind of thing, e.g. the size of the radio telescope is the size of Earth's orbit... at least, to some degree. Probably even more issues with calibrating the various 'scopes, though.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
Yeah, the issue was despite being a thousand times closer, Sag A* is a thousand times smaller than M87* and also less active, so it's actually apparently dimmer, and the interactions with nearby stars and its relative closeness meant that it was more of a moving target. From what I gathered reading up on it, they still plan to release a Sag A* image when it's ready, but that may not be for several years, as I think they said they aren't going to do new observations until 2020 due to technical problems. Keeping in mind that the image they just released was derived from observations made two years ago.Mithramuse wrote:I think the Sag A* data is still being processed. Maybe due to there being more dust etc. in the way?
I don't think this will work, because this method only works if observations are made at the same time in different locations (and precisely timing them down to the microsecond).Mithramuse wrote:In the same vein, I'm curious if anything ever came of thoughts about using observations six months apart to do this kind of thing, e.g. the size of the radio telescope is the size of Earth's orbit... at least, to some degree. Probably even more issues with calibrating the various 'scopes, though.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
With a very precise and stable timebase and a coherent source, it's possible to use measurements taken over time...it's essentially how synthetic aperture radar works. But there's no coherent source here (and we certainly can't emit it ourselves), and doing it over a 6 month span would be quite a feat.Arioch wrote:Yeah, the issue was despite being a thousand times closer, Sag A* is a thousand times smaller than M87* and also less active, so it's actually apparently dimmer, and the interactions with nearby stars and its relative closeness meant that it was more of a moving target. From what I gathered reading up on it, they still plan to release a Sag A* image when it's ready, but that may not be for several years, as I think they said they aren't going to do new observations until 2020 due to technical problems. Keeping in mind that the image they just released was derived from observations made two years ago.Mithramuse wrote:I think the Sag A* data is still being processed. Maybe due to there being more dust etc. in the way?
I don't think this will work, because this method only works if observations are made at the same time in different locations (and precisely timing them down to the microsecond).Mithramuse wrote:In the same vein, I'm curious if anything ever came of thoughts about using observations six months apart to do this kind of thing, e.g. the size of the radio telescope is the size of Earth's orbit... at least, to some degree. Probably even more issues with calibrating the various 'scopes, though.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
If you built your telescope at the wrong latitude, it wouldn't ever be able to point at the target. If you happened to build it at just the right latitude, it'd only be able to observe the target for days per month. Those observations would periodically be roughly lined up with Earth, reducing the baseline. Observations taken during the lunar night period would be limited to what can be powered by batteries, those in the day by the relative position of the sun. This is all in addition to the thermal cycling, the dust, and the fact that it'd cost a 1-2 orders of magnitude more to put the telescope on the lunar surface compared to just putting it in orbit, and you'll get a far smaller telescope for a given amount of material due to the need to have it support itself against 1/6th g. The moon is a terrible place for telescopes.GeoModder wrote:Imagine what you could do if you could add a couple telescopes on the moon to this setup.
It's easier to put telescopes in orbit, landing telescope parts on the moon and assembling them there vastly drives up cost. Telescopes in orbit can point anywhere in the sky at any time (within limits imposed by the sun, etc), and can be located as far apart as your technology allows you to operate as nodes of an interferometer. Put big radio telescopes at the Earth-Sun L4, L5, and L3 points, and you have 674 times the baseline and nothing in the solar system can block all three nodes from an observation at once. Distance and the ability to directly measure interference from Earth, the Sun, etc are better than any amount of shielding the moon provides (especially a moon industrialized enough to allow construction of big telescopes).
Re: The Astronomy Thread
All true, of course.
But alot of things had to line up as well for all those Earth-based telescopes to do their spiel.
IIRC, they had to schedule quite a bit to have 4 days of nice weather in all locations at the same (observation) time(s).
But alot of things had to line up as well for all those Earth-based telescopes to do their spiel.
IIRC, they had to schedule quite a bit to have 4 days of nice weather in all locations at the same (observation) time(s).
Re: The Astronomy Thread
Hamburg’s University Observatory provides some more context on what’s surrounding the M87 black hole and on what frequencies the various details can me detected by means of interferometry.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
hi hi
I saw this a few days ago while the forums were down, but I just remembered it. A while back, there was some lengthy discussion about what kind of natural objects could exist in a white dwarf system. This most recent discovery adds another interesting twist.
Heavy metal planet fragment survives destruction from dead star
I saw this a few days ago while the forums were down, but I just remembered it. A while back, there was some lengthy discussion about what kind of natural objects could exist in a white dwarf system. This most recent discovery adds another interesting twist.
Heavy metal planet fragment survives destruction from dead star
Re: The Astronomy Thread
planetesimal? Gosh no, that's some kind of alien habitat wandering aroun' the system!icekatze wrote:hi hi
I saw this a few days ago while the forums were down, but I just remembered it. A while back, there was some lengthy discussion about what kind of natural objects could exist in a white dwarf system. This most recent discovery adds another interesting twist.
Heavy metal planet fragment survives destruction from dead star
Re: The Astronomy Thread
hi hi
That would be quite a twist!
That would be quite a twist!
Re: The Astronomy Thread
"Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun."
Zoomable map of our neighbourhood, based on ESA Gaia data
Zoomable map of our neighbourhood, based on ESA Gaia data
Re: The Astronomy Thread
hi hi
Speaking of black hole visualizations, Scott Manley's got an excellent one. It's a 360° youtube video (the first and only I've ever seen.) so you can look around as it goes. It's even better in VR, but still good otherwise.
Speaking of black hole visualizations, Scott Manley's got an excellent one. It's a 360° youtube video (the first and only I've ever seen.) so you can look around as it goes. It's even better in VR, but still good otherwise.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
Now that's something that Space Engine might be useful for... that effect is not simply done in a normal 3D package.
Re: The Astronomy Thread
hi hi
While it's definitely too early to jump to conclusions, I've got a feeling someone will be sending a probe to Venus in the near future to take a closer look.
Possible Marker of Life Spotted on Venus
While it's definitely too early to jump to conclusions, I've got a feeling someone will be sending a probe to Venus in the near future to take a closer look.
Possible Marker of Life Spotted on Venus