Tag Archives: barely

Rocket Launch Seen From Space (NASA, International Space Station, 02/16/11)

The Expedition 26 crew member aboard the International Space Station who snapped this photograph of the Ariane 5 rocket, barely visible in the far background, just after lift off from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, and the rest of the crew have a special interest in the occurrence. ESA’s second Automated Transfer Vehicle, Johannes Kepler, was just a short time earlier (21:50 GMT or 18:50 Kourou time on Feb. 16, 2011) launched toward its low orbit destination and eventual link-up with the ISS. The unmanned supply ship is planned to deliver critical supplies and reboost the space station during its almost four-month mission. The elbow of Canadarm2 is in the foreground.

Image credit: NASA

View original image/caption:
spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/station/crew-26/html/…

More about space station research:
www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/index.html

There’s a Flickr group about Space Station Research. Please feel welcome to join! www.flickr.com/groups/stationscience/

By: NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center

Video: Video Game Genres – Adventure Games



(Episode 5) In this episode of Video Game Genres, we take a very good look at the most important genre in video games, period. This is a genre that does not have action in them, but rather puzzle-solving, exploration, dialog, and story-driven type of games that we don’t see as often. These games are some of the most well crafted and well designed games than many of the modern mainstream games that oversaturated action cliché that barely makes a difference. Adventure games are all about using your brains which requires hard thinking and patients when in play. They were once the most popular game genre in the 1980′s, but now they’re far from being the number 1 genre of gaming today. So my duty is to promote this video game genre and show you guys what many of these games have to offer; memorable & well-developed characters, original & creative setting, and some of the BEST story-lines in video games, ever! The storylines in these adventure games has some of the most thrilling, comedic, and intuitive storylines that you can EVER find in video games. Even more original than many people’s favorite game’s storyline and that’s saying a lot in talking about this genre as a whole. If you’re not familiar with this genre, you MUST see this video because no one else would show this genre’s glory!!! ___________________________________________________________ Also these are the fallowing games that are [in this video] that I’ve played that you should check out!: -Adventure (1977

First Low-Mass Star Detected in Globular Cluster

PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Thursday, December 22, 2011
Source: University of Zurich

First Low-Mass Star Detected in Globular Cluster

space  First Low Mass Star Detected in Globular Cluster

Even the most powerful high-tech telescopes are barely able to record remote low-mass and thus faint stars. Together with researchers from Poland and Chile, an astrophysicist from the University of Zurich has now detected a low-mass star in globular cluster M22 for the first time through microlensing. The result indicates that the overall mass of globular clusters might well be explained without enigmatic dark matter.

Until now, it was merely assumed that low-mass and therefore extremely faint stars must exist. However, in view of the vast distances and weak luminosity of low-mass stars, even the most modern telescopes fail. Together with a Polish-Chilean team of researchers, Swiss astrophysicist Philippe Jetzer from the University of Zurich has now detected the first low-mass star in the globular cluster M22 indirectly. As their recent article published in Astrophysical Journal Letters reveals, it involves a dwarf star that has less than a fifth of the mass of our Sun and is 3.2 kiloparsecs from it (one kiloparsec corresponding to 3,210 light-years).

The evidence, which enables the mass to be determined highly accurately, is based upon so-called gravitational microlensing and requires the highest technical standards available. The measurements were carried out on the ESO VLT 8-meter telescope with adaptive optics at the Paranal Observatory in Chile.

Major Breakthrough in 2000

In August 2000 Polish astronomers discovered that the brightness of a star located at about two arcminutes from the center of the globular cluster M22 increased for twenty days. They suspected that the phenomenon was due to so-called gravitational microlensing, which is based on the fact that light spreads along a curved path near large masses as opposed to in a straight line. The brightness of the star increases briefly through the gravitation of an object crossing in front of it, which acts as a lens. The star — the source, in other words — appears brighter for a short time before fading again after passing by the lens. In order to confirm this supposition, the astronomers turned to gravitational microlensing specialist Philippe Jetzer from the University of Zurich. The control measurement carried out on July 17, 2011, at the Paranal Observatory confirmed the hypothesis. “The detailed analysis revealed that the source was outside M22,” explains Jetzer. “A low-mass star acted as a lens within the globular cluster itself.”

Low-Mass Stars Instead of Dark Matter?

The first evidence of a low-mass star in a globular cluster is extremely important for astrophysics as it sheds new light on the structure of globular clusters. Until now, the overall mass of globular clusters could not be explained other than with dark matter, the existence of which, however, is unproven. “The overall mass or at least a significant proportion of globular clusters can now be explained through the presence of previously undetected low-mass, faint stars,” says Jetzer.

# # #

Reference: P. Pietrukowicz, D. Minnitit, Ph. Jetzer, J. Alonso-Garcia, A. Udalski, “The first confirmed microlens in a globular cluster,” Astrophysical Journal Letters, 15 Dec. 2011.

Preprint: http://arxiv.org/abs/1112.0562v1

Published Article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/744/2/L18

Media Contact:
Dr. Calista Fischer
Faculty of Science
University of Zurich
+41 (0) 44 635 40 80
c.fischer@mnf.uzh.ch

Science Contact:
Prof. Dr. Philippe Jetzer
Institute for Theoretical Physics
University of Zurich
+41 (0)44 635 58 19
jetzer@physik.uzh.ch



News from Commercial Space Watch

Read More