Search found 38 matches
- Wed Aug 17, 2022 11:39 am
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: What caused the big bang
- Replies: 30
- Views: 19983
Re: What caused the big bang
Just as a bit of play with universes and those exotic ideas of multiple dimensions, I imagined two high-dimensional bubbles intersecting, whose intersection 'circle' is our 4-dimensional universe. At first the intersection is an infinitesimal point; then, as the intersection deepens, it expands dram...
- Sun Oct 11, 2020 1:24 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: Tactile Universe
- Replies: 0
- Views: 3095
Tactile Universe
Dear All, TV programme UK BBC4 tonight 11 Oct 2020 at 2200 BST (2100 UTC): The Sky at Night Tonight's programme reports on the work by vision-impaired astronomers using techniques of sound and touch. With University of Portsmouth Institute of Cosmology & Gravitation Tactile Universe team's Nicol...
- Sat Apr 25, 2020 4:24 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: Coronavirus, aviation and astromonical seeing
- Replies: 4
- Views: 3577
Re: Coronavirus, aviation and astromonical seeing
Hi all - In the context of pollution (or its reduction), I've been wondering whether you can take a ground-based stellar spectrograph for a star, and then 'subtract' spaceborne readings for the same star, to give you an indication of our own atmosphere's intervening pollutants/gases and their likely...
- Fri Apr 03, 2020 2:58 pm
- Forum: Open Space: Discuss Anything
- Topic: Covid-19
- Replies: 57
- Views: 33320
Re: Covid-19
Yes, it's all very concerning. I'm glad we can still stare up at the stars and see the liberating imagery on APOD. In so many ways we're luckier than our 1918 pandemic forbears. One of the loneliest places just now must be the ISS. I wouldn't recommend old magazines for, er, um, posterior hygiene pu...
- Thu Apr 02, 2020 3:02 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: Coronavirus, aviation and astromonical seeing
- Replies: 4
- Views: 3577
Coronavirus, aviation and astromonical seeing
Dear all, [I just did a search in hope I wasn't duplicating an existing topic; sorry if I missed one after all] After 9/11, as I recall, after just a few days of almost no air traffic over the US, the daily peak temperature range (lowest night-time, highest daytime temperatures) expanded dramaticall...
- Sun Jan 19, 2020 7:23 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: A photon's point of view and the future of the Universe
- Replies: 12
- Views: 5977
Re: A photon's point of view and the future of the Universe
These are great. Thanks, all. I do still wonder if, for a photon travelling at 'c', an enormous journey (as we describe it) in the future Universe would nevertheless seem (to the photon) to be an instant . Anyway, I can't ask any photon for its opinion and, as you'll no doubt have guessed, I'm not t...
- Wed Jan 08, 2020 7:49 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: A photon's point of view and the future of the Universe
- Replies: 12
- Views: 5977
A photon's point of view and the future of the Universe
Talk of the fate of Betelgeuse got me thinking (again) about how a photon 'sees' the Universe. With the time-dilation of lightspeed a photon should experience its emission, and reception somewhere, somewhen, as an indivisible 'event' without duration or distance. For our part, we tend to think of th...
- Wed Jul 04, 2018 2:24 pm
- Forum: The Communications Center: Breaking Science News
- Topic: Interstellar Asteroid 1I/2017 U1 'Oumuamua
- Replies: 101
- Views: 97039
Re: Interstellar Asteroid 1I/2017 U1 'Oumuamua
These are helpful, thanks to both. I guess observers will always be on the lookout for variations in rotation as well.
- Wed Jul 04, 2018 11:53 am
- Forum: The Communications Center: Breaking Science News
- Topic: Interstellar Asteroid 1I/2017 U1 'Oumuamua
- Replies: 101
- Views: 97039
Re: Interstellar Asteroid 1I/2017 U1 'Oumuamua
I get the idea that outgassing could change 'Oumuamua's velocity; but I understand that the object is tumbling. Therefore how would any outgassing have a useful constant direction? Could the outgassing be so rapidly responsive e.g. to the Sun's heat that it still manages to outgas preferentially on ...
- Thu Jun 28, 2018 9:42 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Favorite APOD
- Replies: 208
- Views: 3096224
Re: Favorite APOD
My enduring favourite is Home from Above , at https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap101115.html - a print goes everywhere with me in the back of my sketchbook. It has something of 19thC Romantic landscape (+ portraiture) about it. A fabulous view. Other more detailed photos of the interior of the Cupola show...
- Thu Oct 12, 2017 3:18 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: What happens when galactic Dark Matter haloes meet?
- Replies: 3
- Views: 16382
What happens when galactic Dark Matter haloes meet?
Dark Matter seems not to interact with anything we can detect, or to reveal itself except by gravitational effects. But is it thought to interact with itself ? What might happen when galactic haloes meet - for example our galaxy and M31 in Andromeda? Two pennies, placed about twenty diameters apart,...
- Wed Oct 11, 2017 3:08 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: APOD: Star Cluster NGC 362 from Hubble (2017 Oct 11)
- Replies: 31
- Views: 11141
Re: APOD: Star Cluster NGC 362 from Hubble (2017 Oct 11)
What I notice about this picture is the lace-doily appearance: despite its 3D globular aspect, there are many little 'hollows' in the outer reaches, reminiscent of grass tussocks in an arid landscape. It's a lovely texture, an overall smoothness composed of distinct clumpiness. Is this a feature of ...
- Sun Feb 05, 2017 1:53 pm
- Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
- Topic: Submissions: 2017 February
- Replies: 152
- Views: 133696
Re: Submissions: 2017 February
Still life with lunar eclipses I (Painting) Still life with lunar eclipses I.JPG Based on the progress of Earth's shadow across the Moon's face during a lunar eclipse, I played with superficial representations of such events as columnar stacks of 'slices of time' - a kind of temporal tomography. I ...
- Fri Feb 03, 2017 3:57 pm
- Forum: The Communications Center: Breaking Science News
- Topic: Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, Portsmouth University - Visually impaired people helped to ‘see’ Universe
- Replies: 0
- Views: 789
Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, Portsmouth University - Visually impaired people helped to ‘see’ Universe
http://www.icg.port.ac.uk/2017/01/visua ... -universe/
Also Twitter @TactileUniverse
Here you can read about ICG's 3D printing of astronomical imagery. Asterisms become stippled terrains, galaxies like whirls of sand under the fingertips.
Also Twitter @TactileUniverse
Here you can read about ICG's 3D printing of astronomical imagery. Asterisms become stippled terrains, galaxies like whirls of sand under the fingertips.
- Fri Dec 30, 2016 5:15 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: APOD: Lunar Farside (2016 Dec 30)
- Replies: 28
- Views: 12050
Re: APOD: Lunar Farside (2016 Dec 30)
I should have been quicker to notice, that the direction of lighting varies: sometimes from the left, sometimes the right. A lovely portrait, that does things that a simple photograph could not (and that might not occur to an artist to do!).
- Tue Nov 15, 2016 5:31 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: APOD: Supermoon and Space Station (2016 Nov 14)
- Replies: 22
- Views: 7571
Re: APOD: Supermoon and Space Station (2016 Nov 14)
The ISS travels at about 100x its length per second, yet these photographers manage to snap and freeze the Station as it transits the Moon - and gather enough light to capture the scene! Great kit and craft, and beautiful results.
- Tue Nov 15, 2016 5:18 pm
- Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
- Topic: Submissions: 2016 November
- Replies: 183
- Views: 80498
Re: Submissions: 2016 November
Honky-tonk Moon (Painting) Honky-tonk Moon.JPG 27 December 2012: from the train near London Waterloo station I sketched the fat Moon rising near the 'Shard' building. The syncopated rhythm of light and dark storeys put me in mind of keyboards and Scott Joplin's rags. (It helped that the building's ...
- Sat Nov 05, 2016 8:40 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
- Replies: 11
- Views: 4643
Re: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
I could give it a 'whirl' !
- Tue Nov 01, 2016 8:30 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
- Replies: 11
- Views: 4643
Re: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
I think paintings of women look nice. :D :wink: Hmm... I wouldn't want to strain too hard against the fence marked !OFF TOPIC! lest I be asked to take my quadruple espresso to the forum next door. But... A Gaia-esque personification of fine human science, wisdom, stewardship, love etc, features in ...
- Tue Nov 01, 2016 3:30 pm
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
- Replies: 11
- Views: 4643
Re: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
Lewis Wolpert once said that "Art has zero to offer Science". http://www.calbuzz.com/wp-content/uploads/alfred_e_neuman-115x150.jpg Art? Is that true? :shock: Ann There's this BBC Radio 4 archive page - alas the 'Listen Again' link didn't work for me. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/science/t...
- Tue Nov 01, 2016 1:47 am
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
- Replies: 11
- Views: 4643
Re: NPR: Out Of This World: How Artists Imagine Planets Yet Unseen
Even painting pictures of our own planet's face and landscapes can be tricky! And I really enjoy Chris Peterson's point: it goes to the heart of the difficulties. Turning a few bits of data into something visual, borrowing from our existing 'visual vocabulary' - Earthly or gained via space probes - ...
- Sun Oct 23, 2016 12:00 pm
- Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
- Topic: Submissions: 2016 October
- Replies: 174
- Views: 64171
Re: Submissions: 2016 October
Bach shell I (Painting) Bach shell I.jpg At Christmastide in 2005, BBC Radio 3 cleared its schedules for a 214-hour, round-the-clock broadcast of the complete works of J.S. Bach. I came to imagine a spherical shell of music, 10 light-days thick, expanding from Earth; but soon refined the vision int...
- Sun Oct 23, 2016 11:40 am
- Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
- Topic: Juno: Unlocking Jupiter's Mysteries (NASA New Frontiers)
- Replies: 70
- Views: 136010
Re: Juno: Unlocking Jupiter's Mysteries (NASA New Frontiers)
How will this Safe Mode impact the planned series of orbits?
- Wed Sep 28, 2016 6:58 pm
- Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
- Topic: Submissions: 2016 September
- Replies: 198
- Views: 118979
Re: Submissions: 2016 September
Home (Painting) Home.jpg Gazing down at Earth, you see Home. But here I imagined the need for a tangible memory of an Earth walked on, touched - to bridge the emotional as well as physical gulf: a scruffy photograph of some summer cottage scene. It was inspired by the demise of the Mir space statio...
- Fri Sep 23, 2016 3:26 pm
- Forum: Open Space: Discuss Anything
- Topic: Ahem
- Replies: 2
- Views: 1847
Ahem
Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, Harrison Schmitt & Frank Borman appear in a series of short video interviews, talking about their Moon missions. But their voices are a bit croaky, like they've got colds or dry throats, or have just been talking a while. In fact it all seems rather doom-laden. Perha...