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Every member is welcome here, just talk about things related to space like the Mars Rover please keep thread clean, thank you :)

Strange star spiral offers clues to sun's fate

An intriguing spiral structure surrounding a pulsing red giant star may be offering a preview of how the sun will behave at the end of its life.
Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) in northern Chile, an international team of astronomers found the spiral structure, one never seen before, in the envelope of gas and dust around a red giant about 1,000 light-years from Earth and took a detailed three-dimensional reading of its composition.
The spiral is thought to be created from the gases being expelled by the dying red giant called R Sculptoris. The structure provides information about the velocity of the wind blowing off of R Sculptoris, revealing that the star has expelled three times as much mass as previously estimated.
"We can 'walk along' the spiral and use it as a clock to see what happened when," said Matthias Maercker, of Germany's University of Bonn. [Weird Spiral Around Red Giant Star (Video)]
Thermal pulsing
Low- to intermediate-mass stars like the sun expand into red giants during the last stages of their evolution. (When the sun reaches this stage in about 5 billion years, its outer layer will spread as far as Earth's orbit.)
Every 10,000 to 50,000 years, these gaseous behemoths burn helium for a few hundred years in a runaway process known as a thermal pulse, causing the layers of the star to mix.
"Thermal elements are an essential part of late stellar evolution," Maercker told SPACE.com in an email. "They are responsible for the formation of new elements, which eventually will get incorporated into new stars and planets."
These new elements take time to reach the outer layers of the star. By studying the corkscrewed expulsion from R Sculptoris, the astronomers calculated that the star was shedding more mass during thermal pulses than had been estimated.
"This means that much more mass is lost during a time where new elements cannot yet be incorporated into the wind," Maercker said. "Hence it will take longer for these elements to be blown into space ? most likely, only during the next pulse."
The spiral shape was caused by a companion star pushing through the layers expelled by T Sculptoris. The formation is allowing the scientists to study the history of the thermal pulses: Elements blown off at higher speeds create more widely separated spirals, while phases of slower mass loss are more tightly packed. The intensity of the spiral reveals how much mass was lost in each phase.
"Now that the companion star causes the spiral structure in the stellar wind from R Sculptoris, we can see it and, in a very detailed way, measure how it has evolved since the last thermal pulse," Maercker said.
The research was published in today's (Oct. 10) online version of the journal Nature.
ALMA and the star
Located in the constellation Sculptor in the Southern Hemisphere, R Sculptoris is a typical red giant, so its evolution could provide a hint of what to expect from the sun down the road.
ALMA is a new network of 66 radio dishes linked together to observe cooperatively. The facility won't be fully operational before next year; fewer than half of the telescopes in the array were functional when R Sculptoris was examined.
Maercker and his team hope to use ALMA's full array to get an even closer look at R Sculptoris in the future. "We hope to see exactly where the spiral begins," he said.
That information should reveal the mass and orbits of R Sculptoris and its companion star, providing more exact information about what happens to red giants during and after their thermal pulses.
"This will allow us to understand late stellar evolution better, and where and how the material for new stars is created," Maercker said.

Strange star spiral offers clues to sun's fate | Fox News

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i love galaxies, man i wanna travel through time and want to be in alien planet
 
Curiosity Rover Resumes Eyeing 1st Scoop of Mars Dirt
NASA's Mars rover Curiosity will resume working with its first scoop of Red Planet dirt today (Oct. 10) after taking a few days off to study an odd scrap of detritus on the ground, NASA officials said.

Curiosity scooped up the sandy soil on Sunday (Oct. 7) to test out — and clean out — the sampling system at the end of its 7-foot (2.1 meters) robotic arm. But work with the soil was put on hold after mission scientists noticed a strange bright object lying near the scoop location.

The 1-ton rover took some close-up shots of the mysterious shard on Monday (Oct. 8), allowing the team to determine that it's likely some type of plastic wrapping material, such as the sort that might go around a wire.

The plastic may have fallen onto Curiosity from the rover's sky crane descent stage, which lowered the huge robot onto the Martian surface on the night of Aug. 5, researchers said.

Curiosity's sampling system is designed to deliver bits of soil and pulverized rock into two instruments on the rover's body known as SAM (Sample Analysis at Mars) and CheMin (Chemistry & Mineralogy). SAM and CheMin are two of the main tools Curiosity will use to determine if Mars could ever have supported microbial life.

Sunday's scoop won't make it into these instruments, however, and neither will the next scoop Curiosity snags. The first two samples will be vibrated vigorously inside the sampling system and then discarded, to ensure that the system is scrubbed clean of all Earth-originating residues, researchers have said.

After finishing its activities with the first scoop, Curiosity may take some more time to investigate the plastic material before grabbing scoop number two, NASA officials said.

The $2.5 billion Mars rover Curiosity landed inside the Red Planet's huge Gale Crater on Aug. 5 and is expected to spend the next two years or more roving about its Martian environs. The six-wheeled robot currently sits at a spot called "Rocknest" about 1,300 feet (400 meters) from its landing site as the crow flies.

http://http://www.space.com/18006-mars-rover-curiosity-scoop-martian-dirt.html

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Spectacular nebula views captured with X-ray vision

Amazing glowing nebulae resembling cosmic candy take center stage in a group of new photos unveiled Wednesday by the science team behind NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.

The pictures are part of a survey the Chandra space telescope is making of nearby planetary nebulae, which are formed when dying stars push off their outer gaseous layers. The first stage of this survey, which includes Chandra observations of 21 of these nebulae, has now been released. Chandra also released a video of the surveyed nebulae.
Chandra observes the universe in short-wavelength X-ray light. This data, shown in pink, was combined with optical imagery from the Hubble Space Telescope, shown in red, green and blue. The four nebulae pictured above are the Cat's Eye nebula (NGC 6543), as well as NGC 7662, NGC 7009 and NGC 6826.
"Planetary nebulae have provided astrophysicists with dying star 'laboratories' for more than a century," Rochester Institute of Technology astronomer Joel Kastner, who led the study, said in a statement. "They provide test beds for theories of stellar evolution and give us insight into the origin of heavy elements in the universe and on Earth. Yet we still don’t fully understand why they take on such a dazzling variety of shapes."
All the nebulae being studied in the survey lie relatively close, astronomically speaking, within 5,000 light-years of Earth. [Gallery: Amazing Chandra Nebula Photos]
"Because they all just happen to lie relatively nearby, we think this group of objects is fairly representative of planetary nebulae in general," Kastner said.
The sun itself is expected to produce a planetary nebula in several billion years. This will happen when the sun runs out of hydrogen to burn up in its core, and expands into a red giant star, engulfing the Earth and inner planets of the solar system in its new radius that will be tens to hundreds of times wider.
Then the sun, like all stars at this stage, will puff out its external layers while its hot core collapses down into a dense white dwarf star. This hot core will emit a fast wind that speeds outward, pushing out the ejected gas layers to create the glowing shells typical of planetary nebulae.
The diffuse X-ray light observed by Chandra in the four nebula above is thought to be caused by shock waves created when the stellar wind hits the gaseous layers.

About half of the new Chandra photos also reveal bright points of X-ray light in the centers of the nebulae that could indicate the presence of a companion star in addition to the white dwarfs there. This suggests that stars with planetary nebulae have a high likelihood of being part of binary star systems.
"Future studies should help clarify the role of double stars in determining the structure and evolution of planetary nebulas," Chandra scientists wrote in a statement. For instance, companion stars may help explain why many planetary nebulae aren't spherical.
The $1.65 billion Chandra observatory was launched on the space shuttle Columbia in July 1999.

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http://http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49364199/ns/technology_and_science-space/#.UHXyAbTA8io

[:::~Spartacus~:::];3490393 said:
i love galaxies, man i wanna travel through time and want to be in alien planet
Yeah being Human is kinda lame :sick:
 
Polaris Moon Rover to Prospect for Water in $20 Million Prize Attempt [VIDEO]

rivate space exploration has kicked into high gear, and here’s another example: Polaris, a robot that will land at the moon’s northern pole. Its mission will be to find water by drilling three feet into the lunar surface.

After missions to the moon by the U.S. and India discovered water on the moon, scientists now think there might be enough water ice on or near the lunar surface to serve as a source of water for astronauts, which can also be used to provide oxygen and rocket fuel.

You might be wondering why its solar panel is mounted vertically. That’s because at the northernmost points of the moon — one of the two polar regions on the moon where scientists think there could be substantial water — the sunlight will hit this eight-foot long Polaris Rover at just the right angle.

Even with that tall solar panel, it still might be difficult to retrieve water, which will probably be found at the bottoms of craters. That’s why the rover’s designers plan to land the spacecraft close enough to the lunar pole to find ice, but not so far north that its three solar arrays can’t gather enough sunlight.

Polaris will reach the moon via the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, the same launch vehicle that lifted the SpaceX Dragon capsule to orbit this week, where it docked with the International Space Station on Wednesday in the world’s first commercial cargo mission.

Polaris is currently in the prototype stage, as you can see in the video above. It was built by Astrorobotic Technology, a spinoff company of a research group at Carnegie Mellon University. In addition to the funding and ice prospecting expertise it’s receiving from NASA, the company hopes to win additional funds from Google, whose Lunar X Prize offers a $20 million grand prize to the first craft to land on the moon and then travel 500 feet while sending images, data and video back to Earth.

There is still much work to be done. Astrorobotic Technology says the Polaris “has the same configuration as the Rover that will eventually land on the moon,” but still needs to improve its navigation software. The company didn’t say when the rover would be ready to begin exploring the lunar surface, but there’s some talk of the mission taking place byin 2015, the X Prize deadline.

Will they make it? We’ve contacted Astrorobotic Technology for fresh quotes, and will add them here when we get a response.

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I LOVE Watching Stars :smitten:
 
 
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ohhhhh man imagine that :woot:

 
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