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Thread: NASA Voyager 1 spacecraft nears interstellar space

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    Trinnity's Avatar Banned
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    Cool NASA Voyager 1 spacecraft nears interstellar space

    NASA Voyager 1 spacecraft nears interstellar space

    NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft has encountered a new environment more than 11 billion miles from Earth, suggesting that the venerable probe is on the cusp of leaving the solar system.
    The Voyager 1 probe has entered a region of space with a markedly higher flow of charged particles from beyond our solar system, researchers said. Mission scientists suspect this increased flow indicates that the spacecraft — currently 11.1 billion miles (17.8 billion kilometers) from its home planet — may be poised to cross the boundary into interstellar space.
    Neato. I read about a month or two ago it was entering IS. No matter....it's cool. They say we'll be able to track it for another 25 years...

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    Yeah.....lets hope it don't attract any attention to hostile aliens.
    History does not long Entrust the care of Freedom, to the Weak or Timid!!!!! Dwight D. Eisenhower ~

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    It is amazing that they have lasted this long!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Trinnity View Post
    Neato. I read about a month or two ago it was entering IS. No matter....it's cool. They say we'll be able to track it for another 25 years...
    Yeah, it's really derned cool that these probes are now sending back data from so deep in space!

    We'll all have to live hundreds if not thousands of years to find out about alien planets first-hand, though. The distances are just so enormous!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Безбожник View Post
    Yeah, it's really derned cool that these probes are now sending back data from so deep in space!

    We'll all have to live hundreds if not thousands of years to find out about alien planets first-hand, though. The distances are just so enormous!
    That assumption is based on our current space engine technology- chemical rockets.

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    Moreover it does count the aspect of anything showing up around here.
    History does not long Entrust the care of Freedom, to the Weak or Timid!!!!! Dwight D. Eisenhower ~

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    Red face

    Is it a bird, is it a plane? - No it's a big ol' Giant Pink Fire Extinguisher...

    Interstellar Visitor Shaped Like a Giant Pink Fire Extinguisher
    November 16, 2017 — A newly discovered object from another star system that's passing through ours is shaped like a giant pink fire extinguisher.
    That's the word this week from astronomers who have been observing this first-ever confirmed interstellar visitor. "I'm surprised by the elongated shape — nobody expected that,'' said astronomer David Jewitt of the University of California, Los Angeles, who led the observation team that reported on the characteristics. Scientists are certain this asteroid or comet originated outside our solar system. First spotted last month by the Pan-STARRS telescope in Hawaii, it will stick around for another few years before departing our sun's neighborhood. Jewitt and his international team observed the object for five nights in late October using the Nordic Optical Telescope in the Canary Islands and the Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tucson, Arizona.

    At approximately 100 feet by 100 feet by 600 feet (30 meters buy 30 meters by 180 meters), the object has proportions roughly similar to a fire extinguisher — though not nearly as red, Jewitt said Thursday. The slightly red hue — specifically pale pink — and varying brightness are remarkably similar to asteroids in our own solar system, he noted. Astronomer Jayadev Rajagopal said in an email that it was exciting to point the Arizona telescope at such a tiny object "which, for all we know, has been traveling through the vast emptiness of space for millions of years.'' "And then by luck passes close enough for me to be able to see it that night!''


    The Pan-STARRS1 Observatory on Haleakala, Maui, Hawaii at sunset. Object named Oumuamua first spotted last month by the Pan-STARRS telescope.


    The object is so faint and so fast it's zooming through the solar system at 40,000 mph (64,000 kph) — it's unlikely amateur astronomers will see it. In a paper to the Astrophysical Journal Letters, the scientists report that our solar system could be packed with 10,000 such interstellar travelers at any given time. It takes 10 years to cross our solar system, providing plenty of future viewing opportunities, the scientists said. Trillions of objects from other star systems could have passed our way over the eons, according to Jewitt. It suggests our solar system ejected its own share of asteroids and comets as the large outer planets — Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune — formed.

    Why did it take so long to nail the first interstellar wanderer? "Space is big and our eyes are weak,'' Jewitt explained via email. Anticipating more such discoveries, the International Astronomical Union already has approved a new designation for cosmic interlopers. They get an "I'' for interstellar in their string of letters and numbers. The group also has approved a name for this object: Oumuamua (OH'-moo-ah-moo-ah) which in Hawaiian means a messenger from afar arriving first.

    https://www.voanews.com/a/interstell...-/4119803.html

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    Red face

    Uncle Ferd talks to aliens alla time...

    Scientists check out ‘Oumuamua for alien signals
    Thu, Dec 14, 2017 - CIGAR-SHAPED OBJECT: The Green Bank telescope in West Virginia is listening for radio signals from the interstellar object that was first spotted in October
    Astronomers are using one of the world’s largest telescopes to check a mysterious object that is speeding through the solar system for signs of alien technology. The Green Bank telescope in West Virginia is listening for radio signals being broadcast from a cigar-shaped body that was first spotted in the solar system in October. The body arrived from interstellar space and reached a peak speed of 315,431kph as it swept past the sun. Scientists on the Breakthrough Listen project, which searches for evidence of alien civilizations, said the Green Bank telescope started monitoring the object, named ‘Oumuamua, yesterday. The first phase of observations was expected to last 10 hours and would tune in to four different radio transmission bands. “Most likely it is of natural origin, but because it is so peculiar, we would like to check if it has any sign of artificial origin, such as radio emissions,” said Avi Loeb, professor of astronomy at Harvard University and an adviser to the Breakthrough Listen project. “If we do detect a signal that appears artificial in origin, we’ll know immediately.”

    The interstellar body, the first to be seen in the solar system, was initially spotted by researchers on the Pan-Starrs telescope, which the University of Hawaii uses to scan the heavens for killer asteroids. Named after the Hawaiian word for “messenger,” the body was picked up as it swept past Earth at 85 times the distance to the moon. While many astronomers believe the object is an interstellar asteroid, its elongated shape is unlike anything seen in the asteroid belt in our own solar system. Early observations of ‘Oumuamua show that it is about 400m long, but only one-10th as wide. “It’s curious that the first object we see from outside the solar system looks like that,” Loeb said.


    An undated handout photo made available by the European Southern Observatory on Nov. 20 shows an artist’s impression of the first interstellar asteroid, ‘Oumuamua, spotted in the solar system.

    The body is now about twice as far from Earth as the sun, but from that distance the Green Bank telescope can still detect transmissions as weak as those produced by a mobile phone. Loeb said that while he did not expect Green Bank to detect an alien transmission, it was worth checking. “The chances that we’ll hear something are very small, but if we do, we will report it immediately and then try to interpret it,” Loeb said. “It would be prudent just to check and look for signals. Even if we find an artifact that was left over and there are no signs of life on it, that would be the greatest thrill I can imagine having in my lifetime. It’s really one of the fundamental questions in science, perhaps the most fundamental: Are we alone?”

    The Breakthrough Listen project was launched at the Royal Society in London in 2015, when Cambridge cosmologist Stephen Hawking announced the effort to listen for signs of life on planets that orbit the million stars closest to Earth. The US$100 million project is funded by Internet billionaire Yuri Milner and has secured time on telescopes in the US and Australia to search for alien civilizations. Astronomers do not have good ideas about how such elongated objects could be created in asteroid belts. By studying ‘Oumuamua more closely, they hope to learn how they might form and whether there are others in the solar system that have so far gone unnoticed. “If it’s of natural origin, there should be many more of them,” Loeb said.

    http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worl.../14/2003683960

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    Cool

    Uncle Ferd says it looks like sumpin ' dat's been squeezed through a black hole...

    Our First Interstellar Visitor Likely Came From Two-star System
    March 19, 2018 — Our first known interstellar visitor likely came from a two-star system.
    That's the latest from astronomers who were amazed by the mysterious cigar-shaped object, detected as it passed through our inner solar system last fall. The University of Toronto's Alan Jackson reported Monday that the asteroid — the first confirmed object in our solar system originating elsewhere — is probably from a binary star system. That's where two stars orbit a common center. According to Jackson and his team, the asteroid was likely ejected from its system as planets formed. "It has been wandering interstellar space for a long time since," the scientists wrote in the Royal Astronomical Society's journal, Monthly Notices.

    Discovered in October by a telescope in Hawaii millions of miles away, the asteroid is called Oumuamua, Hawaiian for messenger from afar arriving first, or scout. The red-tinged rock is estimated to be possibly 1,300 feet (400 meters) long and zooming away from the Earth and sun at more than 16 miles (26 kilometers) per second.




    An artist's illustration of the asteroid 'Oumuamua, the first interstellar object ever known to visit our solar system.


    Last month, a science team led by Wesley Fraser of Queen's University Belfast reported that Oumuamua is actually tumbling through space, likely the result of a collision with another asteroid or other object that kicked it out of its home solar system. He expects it to continue tumbling for billions of more years.

    Scientists originally thought it might be an icy comet, but now agree it is an asteroid. "The same way we use comets to better understand planet formation in our own solar system, maybe this curious object can tell us more about how planets form in other systems," Jackson said in a statement. Close binary star systems may be the source of the majority of interstellar objects out there, both icy comets and rocky asteroids, according to the researchers.

    https://www.voanews.com/a/our-first-...-/4306432.html

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