The Crab Nebula

The Crab Nebula

The Crab Nebula

via reddit

More Posts from Fillthevoid-with-space and Others

Does all capsules drops in Kazakhstan on return after every mission?

Since the US Space Shuttle retired in 2011, we launch to and return from the Space Station with the Russian Space Agency.  So yes, these capsules (the Soyuz) land in Kazakhstan (or surrounding regions).  However, different spacecrafts have different reentry trajectories, depending on where they aim to land.  As you might recall, the Apollo mission capsules landed in the ocean.  Since Space-X and Boeing are currently building new vehicles so that we will also launch from the US again to get to the International Space Station, these spacecraft will return to the US. For example, you may have seen footage of Space-X cargo vehicles splashing down into the Pacific over the last few years. The Boeing Starliner plans to land on land instead of water. NASA is also currently building the Orion spacecraft, which will take us to destinations beyond low earth orbit (where the Space Station is), whether that be the Moon or Mars or another target.  Orion will also splash down in the ocean.  


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This is an article from last year, but still very exciting news! I wonder how far it’s progressed since?

Voyager 1's thrusters fired up for first time since 1980
NASA scientists are able to fire up a set of thrusters on Voyager 1 for the first time since 1980, allowing the spacecraft to orient itself in interstellar space, 13 billion miles from Earth.

The venerable Voyager 1 spacecraft.  Still impressing after all these years. 


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30 Doradus, Located In The Heart Of The Tarantula Nebula, Is The Brightest Star-forming Region In Our

30 Doradus, located in the heart of the Tarantula nebula, is the brightest star-forming region in our galactic neighborhood. The nebula resides 170,000 light-years away in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Links to very large images in comments.

js


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When The Sun Sets On Stonehenge On The Shortest Day Of The Year, It’s Rays Align With Several Important
When The Sun Sets On Stonehenge On The Shortest Day Of The Year, It’s Rays Align With Several Important
When The Sun Sets On Stonehenge On The Shortest Day Of The Year, It’s Rays Align With Several Important
When The Sun Sets On Stonehenge On The Shortest Day Of The Year, It’s Rays Align With Several Important
When The Sun Sets On Stonehenge On The Shortest Day Of The Year, It’s Rays Align With Several Important

When the sun sets on Stonehenge on the shortest day of the year, it’s rays align with several important stones.  Twice a year, the streets of Manhattan also line up with the setting sun, a phenomenon dubbed “Manhattanhenge”. Really, most cities with grid systems will see a similar effect (though it’s most dramatic in cities with tall buildings and a view of the true horizon).  You can use a great tool called The Photographer’s Ephemeris to find out the “henge” dates for your city grid - or even individual streets.

Yesterday, (Friday, January 24th) the sun lined up with New York Avenue, a street in DC that runs diagonally up to the White House. (The orange line indicates alignment with the setting sun).

I went out with our multimedia intern Meg Vogel, and captured some images of the sun setting in line with a rather Stonehenge-y sculpture that sits in the middle of that street.

Here are dates for sunset “henge” events in some cities this year:

Manhattan May 25th, July 17th

Philadelphia April 5th, September 6th

Washington DC March 18th, September 24th

Chicago March 16th, September 26th

Phoenix March 20th, September 22nd

Portland, OR March 18th, September 24th

Is your city/town a grid? When’s your henge?


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How does a microgravity garden grow when there’s no up or down? An advanced chamber, about the size of a mini-fridge, is giving us a clearer perspective of plant growth habits. Without gravity and the addition of a wide variety of light and humidity settings, the plants cultivated on the International Space Station provide a world of opportunity to study space-based agricultural cycles.

Learn more about our space garden HERE.

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


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Ep. 17 Dark Sky Reserves - HD and the Void
Dark Sky Reserves exist to prevent light pollution in select areas. Learn about the reasons why these reserves are so important, and also hear about the Bortle Scale, which amateur astronomers use to quantify sky conditions when they are out obser...

Stargazing is a difficult task, especially under adverse weather conditions, but human beings have also made it much harder for ourselves with all these pesky electrical lights and such. Light pollution affects vast swathes of inhabited land, but the introduction of Dark Sky Reserves helps to improve observational conditions for amateur and professional astronomers. Today, you get to hear more about Dark Sky Reserves as well as the Bortle Scale, which is used to judge the amount of light pollution affecting stargazing within an area.

Below the cut are my sources, music credits, a vocab list, and the transcript of this episode. Suggest what you think I should research next by messaging me here, tweeting at me at @HDandtheVoid, or asking me to my face if you know me. Please subscribe on iTunes, rate it and maybe review it, and tell friends if you think they’d like to hear it!

(My thoughts on the next episode are space race history, the transit of Venus, Shen Kuo, or Walter Baade. The next episode will be up on December 18th.)

Glossary

airglow - a very faint, bluish, naturally occurring glow that hangs around the horizon on Earth, usually within about 15 degrees of the horizon line.

Bortle Scale - an objective scale to measure the clarity and effect of light pollution on a night’s stargazing. Black and grey zones are the best for stargazing, blue is for rural skies, green and yellow are the rural/suburban transition zone, orange is the suburban sky, red is bright suburbia, and white is for cities and inner cities.

deep-sky object - any cosmological object that isn’t individual stars or something from our Solar System. It’s a classification that includes nebulae, galaxies, and star clusters, and it has its roots in amateur astronomy.

ecliptic - the path of the Sun across the sky over the course of a year.

gegenschein - a faint brightening in the night sky directly opposite the Sun. Astronomers think it’s caused by the reflection of sunlight off of dust ejected by comets or resulting from asteroid destruction.

light pollution - the excessive, misdirected, or intrusive use of artificial, human-made lighting. There are several major types of light pollution:

glare - when too-bright and poorly directed lights blind people.

light trespass - when neighboring lights are so bright that their light spills over and illuminates others’ property.

overillumination - when excessive lights are used in a small area.

skyglow - the visible glow caused by light scattering and reflecting off of the droplets of atmospheric molecules.

lumen - a measurement of a light’s brightness.

magnitude - the measurement of a star’s brightness as seen from Earth. The brighter it is, the lower its magnitude value. Ex. the Sun has an apparent magnitude of -27.

Messier object - a deep-sky object included on a list of 103-110 deep-sky objects made by Charles Messier and his colleagues in the 18th century in an attempt to prevent fuzzy, bright objects from being confused with comets.

zodiacal light - a faint brightening in the night sky along the ecliptic that results from sunlight scattered forward off dust in the direction of the Sun.

Transcript

Sources

Sodium lamp light pollution reduction effects via Flagstaff Dark Skies Coalition

Types of light pollution via the British Astronomical Association’s Campaign for Dark Skies, 2009

Light pollution via Sky and Telescope, Dec 2008

The World Atlas of Artificial Night Sky Brightness via the Light Pollution Science and Technology Institute

Lumens and watts via Lowes

UNESCO World Heritage Site list

Invention of the light bulb via SPS Industrial

Lightbulb components via CIO

Walter Baade bio via the Royal Astronomy Society of Canada

International Dark-Sky Association

“An IDA International Dark Sky Reserve is a public or private land possessing an exceptional or distinguished quality of starry nights and nocturnal environment that is specifically protected for its scientific, natural, educational, cultural, heritage and/or public enjoyment. Reserves consist of a core area meeting minimum criteria for sky quality and natural darkness, and a peripheral area that supports dark sky preservation in the core. Reserves are formed through a partnership of multiple land managers who have recognized the value of the natural nighttime environment through regulations and long-term planning.”

“The core area must provide an exceptional dark sky resource, relative to the communities and cities that surround it, where the night sky brightness is routinely equal to or darker than 20 magnitudes per square arc second.”

John Bortle’s article on his magnitude scale via Sky and Telescope, July 2006

“I have created a nine-level scale. It is based on nearly 50 years of observing experience. I hope it will prove both enlightening and useful to observers — though it may stun or even horrify some! Should it come into wide use, it would provide a consistent standard for comparing observations with light pollution.”

John E. Bortle receives the Leslie C. Peltier Award in 2013 via the Astronomical Society

Bortle dark sky scale via Big Sky Astronomy Club

Bortle dark sky scale via LSU

Gegenschein via Sky and Telescope, Oct 2015

Messier List via Fred Espenak’s website, Astropixels

Caldwell List via Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS)

Intro Music: ‘Better Times Will Come’ by No Luck Club off their album Prosperity

Filler Music: ‘New Son/Burnt Iron’ by Trampled by Turtles off their album Palomino

Outro Music: ‘Fields of Russia’ by Mutefish off their album On Draught


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LUCIDA 

LUCIDA 

[noun] 

the brightest star in a constellation.

Etymology: from the full phrase in Latin stella lūcida meaning “bright star”. Lucida can be traced to the Latin verb lūcēre, "to shine,“ from lux, "light.”

[Tim Barton - Amber of the Void]


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Bright Spiral Galaxy M81 : One Of The Brightest Galaxies In Planet Earths Sky Is Similar In Size To Our

Bright Spiral Galaxy M81 : One of the brightest galaxies in planet Earths sky is similar in size to our Milky Way Galaxy: big, beautiful M81. This grand spiral galaxy can be found toward the northern constellation of the Great Bear . This superbly detailed view reveals M81s bright yellow nucleus, blue spiral arms, and sweeping cosmic dust lanes with a scale comparable to the Milky Way. Hinting at a disorderly past, a remarkable dust lane actually runs straight through the disk, to the left of the galactic center, contrary to M81s other prominent spiral features. The errant dust lane may be the lingering result of a close encounter between M81 and its smaller companion galaxy, M82. Scrutiny of variable stars in M81 has yielded one of the best determined distances for an external galaxy 11.8 million light-years. via NASA

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Cost Per Kg For Human Spaceflight

Cost per kg for human spaceflight

via reddit


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Ep. 22 African-American Astrophiles - HD and the Void
As Black History Month 2018 wraps up, learn about some of the African-American men and women who have contributed to space research and exploration! 7 astronomers and 9 astronauts shine in this episode, which spans from the 1700s to modern-day folks.

February is Black History Month, and it’s been the perfect excuse to research all of the African-American people who have contributed to space research and exploration! I talk about seven astronomers and nine astronauts who have delved into outer space because it was just so dang amazing, nothing could stop them from learning about it; astrophiles, if you will. Space-lovers.

Below the cut, I have the transcript, sources, music credits, and timeline of people I talked about! Maybe you have something you want to hear me talk about that’s related to space. I’m kind of set for topics for the next few months but I’ll take suggestions here or you can tweet at me on Twitter at @HDandtheVoid, or you can ask me to my face if you know me. Please subscribe on iTunes, rate my humble podcast and maybe review it, and tell friends if you think they’d like to hear it!

(My thoughts on the next episode are the SOFIA observatory, Chuck Yaeger, the transit of Venus, or quasars and blasars. The next episode will go up March 19th, unfortunately; I have a work retreat the day I’d usually post and I don’t trust the wifi out there. See you then!)

Script/Transcript

Timeline

Benjamin Banneker, American (1731-1806)

Dorothy Vaughan, American (1910-2008)

Katherine Johnson, American (1918- )

Mary Jackson, American (1921-2005)

Ed Dwight, American (1933- )

Robert Henry Lawrence, American (1935-1967)

Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II, American (1936-2001)

Frederick Gregory, American (1941- )

Guion "Guy" Bluford, American (1942- )

Doctor Ronald E. McNair, American (1950-1986)

Ilan Ramon, Israeli, American (1954-2003)

Doctor Bernard Harris, Jr., American (1956- )

Doctor Mae Jemison, American (1956- )

Neil DeGrasse Tyson, American (1958- )

Michael P. Anderson, American (1959-2003)

Leland Melvin, American (1964- )

Doctor Beth A. Brown, American (1969-2008)

Sources

African Americans in Astronomy and Space via ThoughtCo (Mar 2017)

Benjamin Banneker via Encyclopedia Britannica

Benjamin Banneker via PBS

Benjamin Banneker via America’s Library

Benjamin Banneker via Brookhaven National Laboratory

Hidden Figures (2016)

Katherine Johnson via NASA

Mary Jackson via NASA

Dorothy Vaughan via NASA

Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II via Encyclopedia Britannica

Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II obituary via the American Astronomical Society

Ed Dwight via The History Makers

Robert Henry Lawrence via Black Past

Robert Henry Lawrence via PBS

Robert Henry Lawrence via Hill Air Force Base

Guion "Guy" Bluford via Space.com (Feb 2017)

Guion Bluford: “I mean, I laughed and giggled all the way up. It was such a fun ride.” 

Guion "Guy" Bluford via NASA

Guion "Guy" Bluford via Encyclopedia Britannica

Doctor Ronald E. McNair via NASA

Doctor Ronald E. McNair via Black Past

Doctor Ronald E. McNair via New Jersey Institute of Technology

Frederick “Fred” Gregory via NASA

Frederick “Fred” Gregory via Black Past

The Harris Foundation website

“empower individuals, in particular minorities and others who are economically and/or socially disadvantaged, to recognize their potential and pursue their dreams.”

Doctor Mae Jemison via NASA

Doctor Mae Jemison via NASA

Doctor Mae Jemison via the U.S. National Library of Medicine

Mae Jemison: “I followed the Gemini, the Mercury, and the Apollo programs, I had books about them and I always assumed I would go into space. Not necessarily as an astronaut; I thought because we were on the moon when I was 11 or 12 years old, that we would be going to Mars—I'd be going to work on Mars as a scientist. And that's despite the fact that there were no women, and it was all white males—and in fact, I thought that was one of the dumbest things in the world, because I used to always worry, believe it or not as a little girl, I was like: What would aliens think of humans? You know, these are the only humans?”

Michael P. Anderson via NASA

Michael P. Anderson via Black Past

Ilan Ramon via NASA

Leland Melvin via Space.com (Nov 2017)

Leland Melvin as Makers Men via Space.com (May 2017)

Leland Melvin via NASA

Leland Melvin via Pioneer Works

Doctor Beth A. Brown via the American Physical Society

Doctor Beth A. Brown via the American Astronomical Society

Doctor Beth A. Brown via NASA

Neil DeGrasse Tyson via Hayden Planetarium

Neil DeGrasse Tyson via the New Yorker

StarTalk Radio via Apple Podcasts

Intro Music: ‘Better Times Will Come’ by No Luck Club off their album Prosperity

Filler Music: ‘Dorothy Dandridge Eyes (feat. Esperanza Spalding)’ by Janelle Monáe off her album The Electric Lady.

Outro Music: ‘Fields of Russia’ by Mutefish off their album On Draught


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fillthevoid-with-space - Fill the void with... SPACE
Fill the void with... SPACE

A podcast project to fill the space in my heart and my time that used to be filled with academic research. In 2018, that space gets filled with... MORE SPACE! Cheerfully researched, painstakingly edited, informal as hell, definitely worth everyone's time.

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