NASA and the European Space Agency are doubling down in the search for alien planets.
Tags: european space agency, alien planets <BR/>NASA and the European Space Agency are doubling down in the search for alien planets.
Tags: european space agency, alien planets <BR/>Experts have estimated that there are 29,000 objects 10 cm or larger orbiting Earth. Only 7 percent are working satellites. The European Space Agency is looking at ways to mitigate the threat.
Tags: space debris, european space agency <BR/>A non-profit founded by a Dutch entrepreneur with a mission of building a permanent human settlement on Mars by 2023 is looking for some unique astronauts.
No experience is necessary. They’ll handle the training. You just need to be a a team player with a very, very good attitude. Here’s why:
The Mars One astronauts will depart Earth assuming that they will never return. This radically changes the mission requirements, reducing the need for return vehicles associated with currently unavailable technologies and far greater costs.
Mars One launched its worldwide search for astronauts this week. You can sign up here! The final candidates will be selected—how else?—in an online vote.
Whether or not Mars One ever launches its mission is an open question, but its founders appear to be earnest. CEO Bas Lansdorp is a Dutch entrepreneur and founder of wind energy company Ampyx Power and CTO Arno A. Wielders is a veteran of the European Space Agency. Several NASA scientists are also on board as advisers.
Who’s paying for it? Mars One plans to turn its mission into the world’s biggest reality show. The mission to Mars will be televised… and heavily ad-supported.
When Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the Moon, the whole world watched. In 2023, about four billion people will have access to video images. We expect that virtually every one of them will watch.
There is already Mars mission merch up for grabs, including T-shirts, coffee mugs and hoodies.
So far, the website shows about $72,000 in donations. Mars One estimates that it will cost about $6 billion to put the first four astronauts on Mars.
For more details on the mission, scroll down and watch the video below.
Article source: http://upstart.bizjournals.com/companies/media/2013/04/23/sign-up-for-a-one-way-ticket-to-mars.html
Tags: european space agency, Arno A. Wielders <BR/>The European Space Agency opened a new space weather center last week in Brussels to keep tabs on solar storms.
Tags: european space agency, Space Weather Center <BR/>The European Space Agency opened a new space weather center last week in Brussels to keep tabs on solar storms.
Tags: Space Weather Center, european space agency <BR/>European Space Agency (ESA) and NASA scientists have created the most detailed map of the universe to date. The map, called the Cosmic Microwave Background map, shows an ancient light that was implanted on the sky approximately 370,000 years after the Big Bang. The NASA/ESA map shows minuscule temperature variations that correspond to regions of different densities–regions that seeded our modern-day galaxies and stars.
The Cosmic Microwave Background map was produced as part of the NASA/ESA/Caltech Planck mission, which tests many of the key concepts of modern astrophysics. Despite the more media-friendly Mars Rover mission taking up NASA publicists’ time much more, Planck has made major discoveries. Since the project launched, scientists discovered that the universe is 100 million years older, and expanding more slowly, than previously believed.
[Image: NASA]
Article source: http://www.fastcompany.com/3007387/fast-feed/nasa-unveils-new-map-universe
Tags: european space agency, cosmic microwave background, map of the universe <BR/>The European Space Agency’s Planck observatory created the map by measuring the cosmic microwave background.
Tags: Planck observatory, european space agency, cosmic microwave background <BR/>March 21, 2013
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PASADENA, Calif. — The Planck space mission has released the most accurate and detailed map ever made of the oldest light in the universe, revealing new information about its age, contents and origins.
Planck is a European Space Agency mission. NASA contributed mission-enabling technology for both of Planck’s science instruments, and U.S., European and Canadian scientists work together to analyze the Planck data.
The map results suggest the universe is expanding more slowly than scientists thought, and is 13.8 billion years old, 100 million years older than previous estimates. The data also show there is less dark energy and more matter, both normal and dark matter, in the universe than previously known. Dark matter is an invisible substance that can only be seen through the effects of its gravity, while dark energy is pushing our universe apart. The nature of both remains mysterious.
“Astronomers worldwide have been on the edge of their seats waiting for this map,” said Joan Centrella, Planck program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “These measurements are profoundly important to many areas of science, as well as future space missions. We are so pleased to have worked with the European Space Agency on such a historic endeavor.”
The map, based on the mission’s first 15.5 months of all-sky observations, reveals tiny temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background, ancient light that has traveled for billions of years from the very early universe to reach us. The patterns of light represent the seeds of galaxies and clusters of galaxies we see around us today.
“As that ancient light travels to us, matter acts like an obstacle course getting in its way and changing the patterns slightly,” said Charles Lawrence, the U.S. project scientist for Planck at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. “The Planck map reveals not only the very young universe, but also matter, including dark matter, everywhere in the universe.”
The age, contents and other fundamental traits of our universe are described in a simple model developed by scientists, called the standard model of cosmology. These new data have allowed scientists to test and improve the accuracy of this model with the greatest precision yet. At the same time, some curious features are observed that don’t quite fit with the simple picture. For example, the model assumes the sky is the same everywhere, but the light patterns are asymmetrical on two halves of the sky, and there is a spot extending over a patch of sky that is larger than expected.
“On one hand, we have a simple model that fits our observations extremely well, but on the other hand, we see some strange features which force us to rethink some of our basic assumptions,” said Jan Tauber, the European Space Agency’s Planck project scientist based in the Netherlands. “This is the beginning of a new journey, and we expect our continued analysis of Planck data will help shed light on this conundrum.”
The findings also test theories describing inflation, a dramatic expansion of the universe that occurred immediately after its birth. In far less time than it takes to blink an eye, the universe blew up by 100 trillion trillion times in size. The new map, by showing that matter seems to be distributed randomly, suggests that random processes were at play in the very early universe on minute “quantum” scales. This allows scientists to rule out many complex inflation theories in favor of simple ones.
“Patterns over huge patches of sky tell us about what was happening on the tiniest of scales in the moments just after our universe was born,” Lawrence said.
Planck launched in 2009 and has been scanning the skies ever since, mapping the cosmic microwave background, the afterglow of the theorized big bang that created our universe. This relic radiation provides scientists with a snapshot of the universe 370,000 years after the big bang. Light existed before this time, but it was locked in a hot plasma similar to a candle flame, which later cooled and set the light free.
The cosmic microwave background is remarkably uniform over the entire sky, but tiny variations reveal the imprints of sound waves triggered by quantum fluctuations in the universe just moments after it was born. These imprints, appearing as splotches in the Planck map, are the seeds from which matter grew, forming stars and galaxies. Prior balloon-based and space missions learned a great deal by studying these patterns, including NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) and the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), which earned the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Planck is the successor to these satellites, covering a wider range of light frequencies with improved sensitivity and resolution. Its measurements reveal light patterns as small as one-twelfth of a degree on the sky.
“Planck is like the Ferrari of cosmic microwave background missions,” said Krzysztof Gorski, a U.S Planck scientist at JPL. “You fine tune the technology to get more precise results. For a car, that can mean an increase in speed and winning races. For Planck, it results in giving astronomers a treasure trove of spectacular data, and bringing forth a deeper understanding of the properties and history of the universe.”
The newly estimated expansion rate of the universe, known as Hubble’s constant, is 67.15 plus or minus 1.2 kilometers/second/megaparsec. A megaparsec is roughly 3 million light-years. This is less than prior estimates derived from space telescopes, such as NASA’s Spitzer and Hubble, using a different technique. The new estimate of dark matter content in the universe is 26.8 percent, up from 24 percent, while dark energy falls to 68.3 percent, down from 71.4 percent. Normal matter now is 4.9 percent, up from 4.6 percent.
Complete results from Planck, which still is scanning the skies, will be released in 2014.
NASA’s Planck Project Office is based at JPL.
More information is online at http://www.nasa.gov/planck, http://planck.caltech.edu and http://www.esa.int/planck.
Whitney Clavin 818-354-4673
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
whitney.clavin@jpl.nasa.gov
J.D. Harrington 202-358-5241
Headquarters, Washington
j.d.harrington@nasa.gov
2013-109
Article source: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-109
Tags: dark matter, european space agency <BR/>
Astronomers have found some of the youngest stars ever seen, thanks to the Herschel Space Observatory, a European Space Agency (ESA) mission.
Observations from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope in Chile, a collaboration involving the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany, the Onsala Space Observatory in Sweden, and the European Southern Observatory in Germany, contributed to the findings.
Dense envelopes of gas and dust surround the fledging stars known as protostars, making their detection difficult. The 15 newly observed protostars turned up by surprise in a survey of the biggest site of star formation near our solar system, located in the constellation Orion. The discovery gives scientists a peek into one of the earliest and least understood phases of star formation.
“Herschel has revealed the largest ensemble of such young stars in a single star-forming region,” said Amelia Stutz of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy. “With these results, we are getting closer to witnessing the moment when a star begins to form.”
Stars spring to life from the gravitational collapse of massive clouds of gas and dust. This changeover from stray cool gas to the ball of super-hot plasma we call a star is relatively quick by cosmic standards, lasting only a few hundred thousand years. Finding protostars in their earliest, most short-lived and dimmest stages poses a challenge.
Astronomers long had investigated the stellar nursery in the Orion Molecular Cloud Complex, a vast collection of star-forming clouds, but had not seen the newly identified protostars until Herschel observed the region.
“Previous studies have missed the densest, youngest, and potentially most extreme and cold protostars in Orion,” Stutz said. “These sources may be able to help us better understand how the process of star formation proceeds at the very earliest stages, when most of the stellar mass is built up and physical conditions are hardest to observe.”
Herschel spied the protostars in far-infrared, or long-wavelength light, which can shine through the dense clouds around burgeoning stars that block out higher-energy, shorter wavelengths, including the light our eyes see.
The Herschel Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) instrument collected infrared light at 70 and 160 micrometers in wavelength, comparable to the width of a human hair. Researchers compared these observations to previous scans of the star-forming regions in Orion taken by Spitzer. Extremely young protostars identified in the Herschel views but too cold to be picked up in most of the Spitzer data were further verified with radio wave observations from the APEX ground telescope.
“Our observations provide a first glimpse at protostars that have just begun to ‘glow’ at far-infrared wavelengths,” said Elise Furlan from the National Optical Astronomy Observatory in Tucson, Arizona.
Of the 15 newly discovered protostars, 11 possess red colors, meaning their light output trends toward the low-energy end of the electromagnetic spectrum. This output indicates the stars are still embedded deeply in a gaseous envelope, meaning they are very young. An additional seven protostars previously seen by Spitzer share this characteristic. Together, these 18 budding stars constitute only 5 percent of the protostars and candidate protostars observed in Orion. That figure implies the very youngest stars spend perhaps 25,000 years in this phase of their development, a mere blink of an eye considering a star like our Sun lives for about 10 billion years.
Researchers hope to document chronologically each stage of a star’s development rather like a family album, from before birth to early infancy, when planets also take shape.
“With these recent findings, we add an important missing photo to the family album of stellar development,” said Glenn Wahlgren from NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. “Herschel has allowed us to study stars in their infancy.”
Article source: http://www.astronomy.com/~/link.aspx?_id=3a45f49b-9cce-4fbc-a8cc-b3daef938672
Tags: european space agency, european southern observatory, star formation, spitzer space telescope, Herschel Space Observatory, Atacama Pathfinder Experiment <BR/>The European Space Agency (ESA) said it signed a deal on Thursday with its Russian counterpart to launch two unmanned missions to Mars, a quest that was rocked by a US pullout last year.
Called ExoMars, the scheme entails sending an orbital probe to the Red Planet in January 2016 to look for atmospheric traces of methane gas, a pointer to the existence of microbial life.
It will also send down a small stationary lander to test key technologies for the second mission — the launch of a six-wheeled rover in 2018.
Tags: unmanned missions, Russian counterpart, european space agency, the Red Planet <BR/>