Monday, September 29, 2008

It's Snowing on Mars!

It is wintertime at the Phoenix Mars lander site. And there is snow to prove it!  The Phoenix has a laser device to study the atmosphere- and it detected snow falling about 4 km (2.5 miles) above the study area. It appears to be evaporating before it hits the ground.  "Nothing like this view has ever been seen on Mars," said Jim Whiteway, of York University, Toronto, lead scientist for the Canadian-supplied Meteorological Station on Phoenix. "We'll be looking for signs that the snow may even reach the ground." 
Five months ago when the lander began its three month mission, the sun never set at that latitude. Now, however, the sun is setting for four hours at a time, and the solar panels are producing less and less energy. The mission is expected to run out of energy before the end of the year.  Before that happens, though, the team hopes to activate a microphone, allowing us to hear what Mars sounds like. Watch- and listen to- this space!
Information from JPL Martian Sunrisehttp://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?

Happy 50th Birthday NASA!

NASA is the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.  It was officially created on October 1st, 1958.  Before that, it was the armed forces (army and navy) that had responsibility for the rocketry and space sciences.  
The first successful launch of an American satellite was the January 1958 Explorer I spacecraft, about three months after the Soviet Union launch the very first successful orbital satellite, Sputnik I, and about two months after the Soviets put the first living thing into orbit around the earth, a dog named Laika.  She was a stray Siberian husky, around three years old. She was strapped in, and had access to food and water, and many probes attached to monitor her vital signs. However, there was no attempt made to return the dog safely to Earth. She died in space when her air supply was exhausted. The spacecraft later fell into the atmosphere and burned.  There is a monument to Laika and other fallen cosmonauts in Russia.
It's pretty incredible that it was only about ten years later that the first humans escaped the Earth's gravity and travelled to the moon in Apollo 8, launched by the United States in 1968.  From 1969 to 1972, the United States landed twelve humans on the moon and returned them safely. Since then, we have relied on robotic missions to explore space beyond a low earth orbit. 
Examples of some of these unmanned probes include the Voyagers, launched in the 1970's and just now approaching the edges of our solar system; the robotic explorers of Mars, Opportunity and Spirit, and the recent Phoenix probe; The Hubble Space Telescope; and many many more.  
NASA is currently collaborating with fifteen other countries on the International Space Station.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Chinese Astronauts in Orbit


China is one of only three nations on Earth to send people into space.  Space being, more precisely, in orbit about 350 kilometers (about 200 miles) above the surface of the earth. On September 25 China sent its third manned mission into orbit, with the goal of this mission being a space walk.  China's manned space program has been in existence for 16 years. Previous missions were launched in 2003 and 2005. The next missions are designed to support the Chinese effort to build a space station in orbit around the earth.  Future plans include landing Chinese astronauts on the Moon by 2017 with the expressed purpose of looking into the possibility of exploiting the Moon's Tritium, or Hydrogen-3 as an energy source back on earth...
Although I refer to the Chinese space travelers as "astronauts", they are often referred to in English as "taikonauts" much as Russians are referred to as "cosmonauts". "Taikong" is the Chinese word for space. In China, however, the astronauts are referred to as "yuhangyuans", which translates as "space navigators".  The picture above is artwork from http://www.spacetoday.org/China/ChinaTaikonauts.html 

Monday, September 15, 2008

The LHC is getting lots of press!

The LHC (Large Hadron Collider) got a lot of media attention last week, with Google even modifying their logo to look like the collider.  Apparently it has also generated some music on youtube.  While this video is amusing, it also is quite informative.  The unusual voice at the beginning and end are meant to simulate the voice of Dr. Steven Hawking.
Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Cutting Edge Science? Or Doomsday Machine?

Scientists at the world renowned CERN research facility (the same laboratory that created the World Wide Web) are about to engage in some new research, creating an environment never before created on Earth. In fact, the objective of the experiment is to do no less than recreate the conditions of the "big bang", the origin of the universe itself. Literally thousands of scientists are involved, from over 80 countries. The laboratory has built a $10 BILLION dollar piece of equipment in a tunnel under the French-Swiss border. It is commonly known (!) as an "atom smasher". With an atom smasher this big, though the amount of data being gathered is staggering. "You can think of each experiment as a giant digital camera with around 150 million pixels taking snapshots 600 million times a second," said CERN's Ian Bird, who leads the grid project. To do the analysis, a new computer grid has been created allowing 150 laboratories to work together on the project. The new computer grid alone has potential to contribute to research that could lead to new drugs to new energy sources.
But some folks worry that the machine could create mini black holes that might just engulf the earth! "It's nonsense," said CERN chief spokesman James Gillies. John Ellis, a British theoretical physicist at CERN, said doomsayers assume that the collider will create micro black holes in the first place, which he called unlikely. And even if they appeared, he said, they would instantly evaporate, as predicted by Hawking.
Well they start work Wednesday September 10th. I guess we'll find out who is right soon!
Items in italics were taken from the AOL News web site http://news.aol.com/article/10-billion-science-project-to-launch/167810?icid=100214839x1209027366x1200509309 and you can go there for more information, and photos.