Paratus-simulator - Paratus

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8 years ago
A Mechanical Harmony To NASA’s Webb Telescope Sunshield

A Mechanical Harmony to NASA’s Webb Telescope Sunshield

NASA’s Webb telescope sunshield, opened for inspection. In this photo, engineers and scientists examine the sunshield layers on this full-sized test unit.    Image courtesy Northrop Grumman and Alex Evers. For a larger version of this image please go here. Watch a video on the research here and here.

Read more ~ SpaceDaily


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8 years ago
Here’s How Fast You’d Have To Go To Leave Every Planet In The Solar System:

Here’s how fast you’d have to go to leave every planet in the solar system:


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8 years ago
MEN! WOMEN! Guard Your Homeworld!

MEN! WOMEN! Guard your homeworld!


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8 years ago
Concept Art By Nick Foreman.
Concept Art By Nick Foreman.
Concept Art By Nick Foreman.
Concept Art By Nick Foreman.

Concept art by Nick Foreman.


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8 years ago
Recombine
Recombine

recombine


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art
8 years ago
Cat’s Eye Nebula (NGC 6543) 

Cat’s Eye Nebula (NGC 6543) 

Source: x

8 years ago

How Well Do You Know Mercury?

Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system and is only slightly larger than Earth’s moon. To give you some perspective, if the sun were as tall as a typical front door, Earth would be the size of a nickel and Mercury would be about as big as a green pea.

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Mercury is the closest planet to the sun. Daytime temperatures can reach 430 degrees Celsius (800 degrees Fahrenheit) and drop to –180 degrees Celsius (-290 degrees Fahrenheit) at night.

Here are a few fun facts about Mercury:

Mercury takes only 88 Earth days to orbit the sun

If we could stand on Mercury’s surface when it is at its closest point to the sun, the sun would appear more than three times larger than it does here on Earth

Mercury is home to one of the largest impact basins in the solar system: the Caloris Basin. The diameter of this impact basin is the length of 16,404 football fields (minus the end zones) placed end to end!

Mercury is one of only two planets in our solar system that do not have moons (Venus is the other one)

Mercury completes three rotations for every two orbits around the sun. That means that if you wanted to stay up from sunrise to sunrise on Mercury, you’d be up for 176 Earth days…you’d need a LOT of coffee! 

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Two missions have visited Mercury:

Mariner 10 was the first mission to Mercury, and 30 years later, our MESSENGER mission was the second to visit the planet. Mariner 10 was also the first spacecraft to reach one planet by using the gravity of another planet (in this case, Venus) to alter its speed and trajectory.

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MESSENGER was the first spacecraft to orbit Mercury, The spacecraft had its own shades to protect it from the light of the sun. This is important since sunlight on Mercury can be as much as 11 times brighter than it is here on Earth. The spacecraft was originally planned to orbit Mercury for one year, but exceeded expectations and worked for over four years capturing extensive data. On April 30, 2015, the spacecraft succumbed to the pull of solar gravity and impacted Mercury’s surface.

Water Ice?

The MESSENGER spacecraft observed compelling support for the long-held hypothesis that Mercury harbors abundant water ice and other frozen volatile materials in its permanently shadowed polar craters.

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This radar image of Mercury’s north polar region. The areas shown in red were captured by MESSENGER, compared to the yellow deposits imaged by Earth-based radar. These areas are believed to consist of water ice.

Mercury Transit of the Sun

For more than seven hours on Monday, May 9, Mercury will be visible as a tiny black dot crossing the face of the sun. This rare event – which happens only slightly more than once a decade – is called a transit.

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Where: Skywatchers in Western Europe, South America and eastern North America will be able to see the entirety of the transit. The entire 7.5-hour path across the sun will be visible across the Eastern U.S. – with magnification and proper solar filters – while those in the West can observe the transit in progress at sunrise.

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Watch: We will stream a live program on NASA TV and the agency’s Facebook page from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. – an informal roundtable during which experts representing planetary, heliophysics and astrophysics will discuss the science behind the Mercury transit. Viewers can ask questions via Facebook and Twitter using #AskNASA. Unlike the 2012 Venus transit of the sun, Mercury is too small to be visible without magnification from a telescope or high-powered binoculars. Both must have safe solar filters made of specially-coated glass or Mylar; you can never look directly at the sun.

To learn more about our solar system and the planets, visit: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/

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


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8 years ago

NASA vs Amtrak vs the National Park Service

Space tourism is still a ways off, but NASA, everybody’s favorite government agency, released some pretty sweet posters for destinations you’ll (hopefully!) be able to visit someday. 

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Turns out, they’re not the only agency with some pretty rad graphic design. Here’s one of Amtrak’s iconic rail lines. 

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And this poster for Yellowstone National Park, from 1938. 

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Although NASA claims there might be a few more geysers to see on Enceladus

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Or maybe take a trip closer to home.

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Or go visit the histroic Sequoia National Park. This poster is from the early 40′s. 

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For the history buff, see some of NASA’s historic sites, on Mars!

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But even NASA knows, there’s only one Earth, “Your Oasis in Space.” 

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See the full NASA collection over at their website. 

-Austin


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8 years ago
2016 Mercury Transit, As Seen By NASA’s SDO In 171 Angstroms.
2016 Mercury Transit, As Seen By NASA’s SDO In 171 Angstroms.
2016 Mercury Transit, As Seen By NASA’s SDO In 171 Angstroms.

2016 Mercury Transit, as seen by NASA’s SDO in 171 Angstroms.


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8 years ago
November 2, 2177 - By Paul Pepera
November 2, 2177 - By Paul Pepera

November 2, 2177 - by Paul Pepera


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Real world space simulator.

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