Dave Reneke's
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Weird, Wild & Breaking News Stories in Space and Astronomy from around the World 24/7 delivered free every week with regular updates as they happen.
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Here’s a selection of Astronomy/Space related stories you may find interesting. Be sure to sign up for your own copy of Astro Space News. I absolutely do not disclose your address to anyone! There is no cost and no obligation for this service. Anyone can subscribe by completing the opt in form just over there on the right … see it, do it now! We work 24/7/365 to report the most relevant ‘Astro-Space’ news back to you … virtually as it breaks. Bookmark this page and check back regularly.
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If you are interested, an interview with astronomer, writer, educator and public lecturer representing Australasian Science Magazine and Editor of Astro Space News, Dave Reneke(Astro-Dave) can be arranged by contacting Dave by Phone/Fax(02) 65 85 2260 Mobile: 0400 636 363 or email Dave for an instant reply to davereneke@gmail.com. David is well experienced talking to the media and presents information in an easy to understand, up to date and informative manner. Interviews can be on any subject, tailored to your requirements.
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LETTERS TO DAVE
Your letters are welcome on any subject covered by the scope of this newsletter or any aspect of astronomy/space in general. All letters requesting help or advice will be answered personally by me.
Hi
I
Thanks for the interesting question. From some work I did on this some time agao I managed to locate a few sites that might help. Remember this isn
http://woudc.ec.gc.ca/e/ozone/ozoneworld.htm And try this as well
http://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/Environment/GreenhouseAndAirQuality/CurrentStatus/Ozone.asp
Good luck. Dave
Excellent News bulletins, thank you. Chickens aren't "ugly".
Regards, Bill.
Heh heh … G'day Bill. Yep, I agree, chickens have some pretty good points… and I kinda like the they taste as well. Thanks for the kind words about the newsletter.
Dave
Thank you for the article published on SpaceDaily. I researched related claims in 2000 and prepared an article for Space.com. Unfortunately the Murchison meteorites had plenty of opportunity to be infested with earthly bacteria. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/generalscience/murchison_metor_000221.html
( PDF copy here) http://idisk.mac.com/mpaineau-Public/rocks_from_space/meteorite_bacteria.pdf )
Best regards, Michael P.
Hi
Thanks very much for the email and the links to those stories. I especially liked your story in Space.Com. I agree there may be contaminative conjecture in the samples taken but I guess we have to work with what we have. Thanks very much for pointing out another side and perspective to this issue. It is appreciated.
All the best.
ASTRO DAVE 'SOUNDS OFF' (And yes, there is a resemblance)
I sent out an email to all regional Aussie newspapers last month (after being completely ignored by the metros) with the first edition of a FREE column on astronomy offered and I got… wait for it…. 2 replies!!!!! TWO replies out of hundreds I sent out across Australia. Yet all of these papers run at least a quarter page of 'Your Stars' which is utter crap and completely made up!!!
Funnily though, they'll take this and run it yet completely ignore some good, factual, educational material that might actually compel somebody to look at a career path in science, or at least, start a rewarding, life-long hobby. Anyway, undaunted, I tried again this week and BINGO … over a dozen positive replies from newspapers all across Australia willing to run it every month! As well I received a ton of good wishes from those who physically couldn't help because of their internal workloads and/or lack of space.
Here's a part of how my initial email tirade went:
" ……..my goodness, it's FREE each Month. It's a column I produce showing people what's in their night skies. It's by a well known Australian amateur astronomer, its reasonably short in length so won't take up much space … AND your readers will love it!
I talk on radio to over 3 million people every week and they all want to know what is in the sky they can look at. This column IS good for all of Australia! GIVE IT A GO! The second one is attached and I'll send you a new column, print ready, each month. All I ask you to do is return email me saying you'll take it."
Most of the replies were polite and constructive – mainly letting me know they don't have enough room for their region's news as it is. Ok, that's cool and I accepted that and thanked them for their honesty and their reply. BUT some were, well at best and to be kind, hostile or just plain negative on the approach I took. Ok ,it was brash, but I had a point to make and I was left with no choice.
Here's part of one reply from a large regional newspaper editor I took exception with: (names and addresses removed)
Dave Your 'rudely written' email certainly got my attention. Now if I were to reply to every email I receive (more than 200 each day) then I would not have time to produce our weekly edition of our local newspaper.If an email does not mention the word 'Cobar' or the 'western area' in the first few paragraphs, it is disregarded. We are a local community newspaper that covers only local events. That's our 'niche' market.
HERE'S MY REPLY:
Hi ………
Read 'rudely' as "frustration." You'll be surprised to know however that I did receive a good response this time around after my initial "polite" effort last month failed miserably. There's truth in the adage,'one needs to shout to be heard.'
Seems not all newspaper editors ignore something that could be potentially beneficial to their readership. I have acceptance from (at the time of writing) nine newspapers all across the country who said they will now take the column. Your comment about being a local paper covering local issues would, I presume, be a commonality within your industry and other regional papers would likely follow the same format. The column I write IS relevant to your area… your readers in your area will see and be able to benefit from the column's material. These are local events, they're happening in your skies. You may just have a biased point of view to matters of this nature.
On reflection, it's amazing too how many newspapers carry the 'your stars' columns – some even devoting half and full pages to something that somebody's dreamed up! The good solid discoveries about the real stars get the duck-shove. Are 'Your Stars' columns about local issues? Relevant only to your area? No, but you'll print 'em huh? Anyway, you're entitled to your point of view, as am I. Hope you reconsider now and run the piece… it would make my day. :
Regards, Dave Reneke
That's it. I have a firm belief that the majority of people want to know about space and astronomy issues, new discoveries and ideas. Let me know what you think. I know I'm going out on a limb here but your comments would be interesting to receive. Astro-Dave.
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ASTRO TOURS AND LECTURES STARTING IN PORT MACQUARIE WEEKLY – WITH 'ASTRO' DAVE RENEKE
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THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY
"WHAT THE…!!!" Two Objects Crash to Ground in Mongolia

"WHAT THE…!!!" Two Objects Crash to Ground in Mongolia

Two objects reportedly crashed to the ground near Ulan Bator, the capital of Mongolia on Feb. 19, 2010. The first object, according to the report on the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) witness database, weighed 10 kg, while the second larger object weighed approximately 2 tons. Other than that, there's not a lot of information available about the objects. But of course, UFOers are having a field day, calling the image, above, that accompanied the report a "leaked UFO crash" picture. But the object looks suspiciously like a rocket or jet engine, or perhaps a rocket nose cone. Objects that crash to Earth likely have a very terrestrial origin. We'll provide an update when any news becomes available.
The already untidy mass of orbital debris that litters low Earth orbit nearly got nastier last month.A head-on collision was averted between a spent upper stage from a Chinese rocket and the European Space Agency's (ESA) huge Envisat Earth remote-sensing spacecraft. Space junk tracking information supplied by the U.S. military, as well as confirming German radar data, showed that the two space objects would speed by each other at a nail-biting distance of roughly 160 feet (50 meters).
ESA's Envisat tips the scales at 8 tons, with China's discarded rocket body weighing some 3.8 tons. A couple of tweaks of maneuvering propellant were used to nudge the large ESA spacecraft to a more comfortable miss distance. But what if the two objects had tangled?
Universre Today – Image: Credit MUFON
MORE ASTRO-SPACE NEWS
Could the Space Shuttle Program Be Extended to 2015?
Congressional legislators in Florida are mounting a campaign to extend space shuttle operations to 2015, adding two flights each year. U.S. Rep. Suzanne Kosmas said a bipartisan plan is in the works, which would require adding another $200 million to the NASA budget for 2010 and between $1.5 – $2 billion a year starting in the 2011-12 budget year.
"We're not going to do anything that's not safe," Kosmas was quoted in Florida Today, adding that securing the funding would be difficult in tight budget times, but "we're going to go for it," she said.
Pic: Space shuttle Endeavour lands in darkness on Runway 15 at the Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Photo credit: NASA/Sandra Joseph and Kevin O'Connell
At Kennedy Space Center early last Monday morning after Endeavour returned home safely following the STS-130 mission, space shuttle program managers confirmed that while the shuttles are in good shape to continue flying, extending the program is not the direction their teams have been headed.
"From a technical, engineering standpoint, there would be nothing stopping the vehicles from being able to fly," said space shuttle integration manager Mike Moses. "They have a lot of life in them. We talk about the risks and hazards of flying, and that's a two edged sword. Anytime you're launching into space is a risky proposition, but this is a vehicle that we understand its risks very well, and we've learned how to work around the pieces that can cause us problems – the foam from Columbia is a good example. We've come a long way, if you look at the performance of the external tank since then, we have put a set of controls in place that have been paying off and really driving our risk numbers down."
Congressional legislators in Florida are mounting a campaign to extend space shuttle operations to 2015, adding two flights each year. U.S. Rep. Suzanne Kosmas said a bipartisan plan is in the works, which would require adding another $200 million to the NASA budget for 2010 and between $1.5 – $2 billion a year starting in the 2011-12 budget year. "We're not going to do anything that's not safe," Kosmas was quoted in Florida Today, adding that securing the funding would be difficult in tight budget times, but "we're going to go for it," she said.
At Kennedy Space Center early Monday morning after Endeavour returned home safely following the STS-130 mission, space shuttle program managers confirmed that while the shuttles are in good shape to continue flying, extending the program is not the direction their teams have been headed. "From a technical, engineering standpoint, there would be nothing stopping the vehicles from being able to fly," said space shuttle integration manager Mike Moses. "They have a lot of life in them.
We talk about the risks and hazards of flying, and that's a two edged sword. Anytime you're launching into space is a risky proposition, but this is a vehicle that we understand its risks very well, and we've learned how to work around the pieces that can cause us problems – the foam from Columbia is a good example. We've come a long way, if you look at the performance of the external tank since then, we have put a set of controls in place that have been paying off and really driving our risk numbers down."
"So we could continue fly," Moses continued," and I'm confident we could fly at the rate and the risk level we have been flying and it wouldn't be hard to do. But it becomes a political question: Is that the right thing to do? And from a budgetary standpoint can you commit the resources of NASA to go continue to fly those vehicles? The direction that we're getting from (NASA) Headquarters is that we are going off to do bigger things and explore more. Unfortunately the budgetary realities are we can't continue to do everything and fly the shuttles as well. So while it's hard to let go and shut down a program, that's the way the budget works out. But if you want to turn it around you certainly could there is nothing technically that is stopping you from doing it."
Kosmas said the budget proposed by President Barack Obama's is not acceptable as is because it would cede the United States' leadership position in spaceflight in the short term — and possibly the long term. The plan being drafted would direct NASA to examine ways to build a heavy-left rocket by salvaging work done in the Constellation program. Obama's budget called for the end of Constellation, the architecture that would return astronauts to the moon.
Universe Today
Space Pioneer Burt Rutan Blasts NASA Plan
Commercial space pioneer Burt Rutan has sharply criticized Obama administration proposals to outsource key portions of NASA's manned space program to private firms.
The White House wants NASA to use outside firms to develop and operate new rockets and spacecraft that would transport astronauts into orbit and beyond, functions that had previously been considered a core function of the agency.
Mr. Rutan, a veteran aerospace designer and entrepreneur, in a letter addressed to lawmakers on Capitol Hill, says he is "fearful that the commercial guys will fail" to deliver on the promises to get beyond low earth orbit, and that the policy risks setting back the nation's space program.
"That would be a very big mistake for America to make," according to the letter sent to lawmakers that is expected to be released Wednesday during a Senate Commerce subcommittee hearing on the future of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Such comments are unexpected from a maverick engineer long identified with pushing the boundaries of commercial space projects, and the man who designed the first commercial suborbital rocketship.
"From my past comments on NASA's" lack of direction and success, "an observer might think that I would applaud the decision to turn this important responsibility over to commercial developers," the letter says. However, he adds, that's "wrong."
Mr. Rutan has prided himself on avoiding being tied to federal funds, and his company, Scaled Composites, is currently developing a fleet of space-tourism rocketships entirely with private funds. While reiterating his support for commercial space projects, Mr. Rutan compared depending too heavily on them at this point to giving up "an airport where I know I can get in on the approach, for one where I might" be able to land.
Wall St Journal
Space Travel is Ready For Booking
Back in 1984, Advertising Age ran an article noting that 2010—a newly-released film and the sequel to 2001: A Space Odyssey—contained an odd product placement: a futuristic 2010 commercial for Pan American World Airways' Space Clipper service that would feature "convenient non- stops to the moon and all the major space stations."
Well, now it really is 2010 and Pan Am is long gone. Yet the dream of shuttling civilians into space is closer than ever. So close, in fact, that Congress has begun debating the specifics. And several entities are willing to accept your bookings—as well as your deposits. Who's in charge?
For some, the time has come. Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin has developed the ShareSpace Foundation, designed to "foster affordable space travel opportunities for all people." The non-profit Space Tourism Society dubs itself a "visionary space experience research and design organization" that is promulgating the "Orbital Lifestyle" for everything from space hotels to space cruise ships.
But already there is tension between regulators and the private entrepreneurs who hope to carry paying passengers into space. In December, the House Subcommittee on Aviation held hearings on Commercial Space Transportation and the Chair of the Transportation Committee, Rep. James Oberstar (D-Minn.), predicted that "regularly scheduled, manned commercial space flights" could generate upwards of $700 million a year in revenues. However, he also stated: "I continue to have concerns about its safety. As with any emerging industry, we must ensure that it is receiving the proper Federal safety oversight without discouraging development."
This prompted an angry essay on The Space Review site entitled "Will James Oberstar Kill the Space Tourism Industry?" The piece included this commentary: "In spite of some weasel wording, the hard legal requirements of Oberstar's proposed regulation would effectively kill the whole entrepreneurial suborbital industry." Indeed, last week I spoke to Eric Anderson, the CEO of Space Adventures, who said, "I hope the regulation is not excessive."
An investigation in 2006 by the U.S. Government Accountability Office found the FAA had "provided a reasonable level of safety oversight for commercial launches." But new challenges await. The FAA's Office of Commercial Space Transportation, known as AST, weighed in at the December hearing as well. And the associate administrator of AST testified that safety is not an absolute, noting: "Climbing aboard a rocket carries with it the potential for unfavorable results."
There are other considerations too. Rep. Jerry Costello (D-Ill.), the chair of the Subcommittee on Aviation, pointed out at the hearing that the scheduled retirement of NASA's shuttle fleet in 2011 will leave the United States without launch vehicles for years to come, and noted: "The reality is that the United States may have to rely on other countries to facilitate this travel unless commercial space transportation is able to fill the gap." At the same time, foreign states such as Russia, Singapore, and Dubai are reportedly ramping up their own space programs.
All indications are that the era of space travel being dominated by the federal government is giving way to an age when governmental and private entities will be interdependent. Actually, it's happening now since some companies are already up and running.
Undoubtedly the most recognizable name in commercial space travel is Richard Branson, and the world-famous entrepreneur and airline executive has invested heavily in Virgin Galactic, what he hopes will become the world's first private "spaceline" by 2011. The company received a bit of a boost in 2007 when it signed a Memorandum of Understanding with NASA to "explore the potential for collaborations" in a range of technical areas.
In addition, Virgin is the "anchor tenant" of its base at Spaceport America, the industry's first commercial facility, in Las Cruces, N.M. And unlike other space tourism entrepreneurs, Branson is covering both the manufacturing and operational ends of the business by also launching The Spaceship Company (think Virgin Atlantic Airways not only operating but also building its own 747s). See this video for how it's gonna be when you do get a ride into space!!!
Back in December, news of Virgin Galactic unveiling its new craft, SpaceShipTwo, was reported on this site. I was able to get up close and personal with SpaceShipTwo—designed by Branson's partner, aerospace engineer Burt Rutan—at an unveiling in New York two years ago and it was quite an experience. Branson was recently quoted as saying: "NASA spent billions upon billions of dollars on space travel and has only managed to send 480 people.
We're literally hoping to send thousands of people into space over the next couple of years. We want to make sure that we build a spaceship that is 100% safe." About 250 would-be travelers have already booked flights, and you can do the same on the Virgin Galactic site at a cost of $200,000, with a deposit of $20,000. The company is even allowing low-tech bookings through travel agents—excuse me…"space agents."
USA Today
Galileo's Finger
I'm afraid this is something that I wouldn't want in my collection despite its value and historical significance. Two fingers and a tooth that were removed from Galileo's body nearly 300 years ago and went missing about 100 years ago have recently resurfaced.
They were purchased at auction by an astute buyer who recognized them and brought them to the Museum of the History of Science in Florence.
Removing body parts from saints and other revered people was common practice in Europe hundreds of years ago. These items were thought to have special significance and sacred power.
It's ironic that Galileo should be treated this way, given his history with the Catholic Church who declared him a heretic and sentenced him to life-long house arrest.
In this day and age I think it's time to put an end to displaying body parts like this. Although I'm a rationalist I find it unsettling and somewhat disrespectful. I like to think that Galileo is giving us one last gesture telling us what he thinks of it too…
c/o Dave Owen
Cannibal Star is Devouring a Planet, Astronomers Say
Like the Roman god Saturn who ate his own children, a star 600 light years from Earth is slowly gobbling up one of its own planets, according to a study released on Wednesday in Nature, the British science journal.
Pic: This picture relased by the European Space Agency in 2006 shows an artist's impression of what a "hot Jupiter" (planets so close to their stars they have short orbital periods) might look like… gobbling up one of its own planets.
The planet, whose discovery was reported last year, is a "gas giant" with a mass about 40 percent greater than that of Jupiter, the biggest planet of our Solar System, and with a radius 79 percent bigger.
But whereas Jupiter takes nearly 12 years to plod around the Sun, it takes WASP-12b a mere 26 hours to race around its star, WASP-12, located in the constellation of Auriga. So close is its orbit that the gravitational tug of the star has helped to squeeze the planet into a prolate shape, meaning that it has taken the form of a rugby ball, or American football.
Searing heat is stripping away layers of the gas, whose mass is then captured by the star. The disk of captured matter around the star may mask "a detectable resonant super-Earth," whose presence may cause WASP-12b to orbit in a remarkably egg-shaped path, suggests the study. Most planets that orbit close to their sun have a more circular track.
The investigation is led by Shu-lin Li of the Department of Astronomy at the Peking University, Beijing. More than 400 so-called exoplanets — the term for planets that orbit stars other than the Sun — have been spotted since 1995, although none has turned out to be a rocky, watery world like our own.
Most, like WASP-12b, are so-called "hot Jupiters," or huge gassy balls that are heated to scorching temperatures by proximity to their planets. A planet with water would have to inhabit what has been termed the Goldilocks Zone, meaning that it is not so close that its precious water evaporates nor so far that the water freezes, but somewhere in between so that water can exist in liquid form.
AFP
The view from the recently installed observation window fitted to the international Space Station
The Endeavour astronauts cranked open aluminum shutters protecting the windows in the space station's new observation deck early Wednesday, giving the crew inside an "absolutely incredible" view of the Earth 220 miles below.
The Sahara Desert, as viewed through the space station's new seven-window cupola.
(Credit: NASA/Soichi Noguchi)
During the shuttle mission's third and final spacewalk, Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick removed insulation blankets from the cupola's seven windows late Tuesday and unbolted launch locks holding the aluminum shutters in place.
Astronauts Terry Virts and Kay Hire, standing by inside the cupola, then were cleared to crank open the shutters one at a time to test the deployment mechanisms, starting with the module's large central window.
"Well, as expected, the view from window seven is absolutely spectacular," Station Commander Jeffrey Williams marveled. "This has to be the largest window on board and when we have the others around it open, it'll give us a view of the entire globe. Absolutely incredible."
Later, all seven shutters were opened at the same time and television views from inside the station showed Williams, wielding a camera with a large telephoto lens, floating in the middle of the cupola with the brilliant Earth below.
"I don't think space station's ever going to be the same after this," said astronaut Stephen Robinson, the spacewalk coordinator.
When not in use, the windows will be covered by the aluminum shutters, which are manually cranked open and closed by the astronauts.
The greatest threat from a debris standpoint is from the front, in the direction of the station's 5-mile-per-second velocity. Shutters on the forward facing windows typically will remain closed unless visibility in that direction is needed.
Trailing windows can remain open for longer periods. "We do have a very long flight rule that deals with the operations of this particular set of equipment," Dempsey said. "The two most major concerns of operating the shutters are thermal and micrometeoroid debris…The debris concern, obviously, is more severe.
"Even though they're reinforced to prevent anything happening to the crew, we want to keep them in good pristine condition so…the crew will have good views. This will be used for not only Earth observations, but for things like capturing, with the robotic arm, upcoming visiting vehicles."
Pics supplied by Tom Savage. Florida USA
Daily Galaxy
NASA Breaks Ground on New Deep Space Network Antennas
NASA officials broke ground near Canberra, Australia on Wednesday, Feb. 24, beginning a new antenna-building campaign to improve Deep Space Network communications.
Following the recommendations of an independent study, NASA embarked on an ambitious project to replace its aging fleet of 70-meter-wide (230-foot-wide) dishes with a new generation of 34-meter (112-foot) antennas by 2025.
The three 70-meter antennas, located at the NASA Deep Space Network complexes at Goldstone, Calif., Madrid, Spain, and Canberra, are more than 40 years old and show wear and tear from constant use.
The new antennas, known as "beam wave guide" antennas, can be used more flexibly, allowing the network to operate on several different frequency bands within the same antenna. Their electronic equipment is more accessible, making maintenance easier and less costly. The new antennas also can receive higher-frequency, wider-bandwidth signals known as the "Ka band." This band, required for new NASA missions approved after 2009, allows the newer antennas to carry more data than the older ones.
In the first phase of the project near Canberra, NASA expects to complete the building of up to three 34-meter antennas by 2018. The decision to begin construction came on the 50th anniversary of U.S. and Australian cooperation in space tracking operations.
"There is no better way to celebrate our 50 years of collaboration and partnership in exploring the heavens with the government of Australia than our renewed commitment and investment in new capabilities required for the next five decades," said Badri Younes, deputy associate administrator for Space Communications and Navigation at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
Space Communications and Navigation is responsible for managing all NASA space communications and navigation resources and their operations. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the agency's Deep Space Network, an important component of the agency's space communications resources.
NASA's goal is to integrate all NASA communications resources into a unified, far more capable network. Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization manages the communication complex near Canberra for NASA.
The California Institute of Technology in Pasadena manages JPL for NASA.For more information about the Complex go to: www.cdscc.nasa.gov
Space Archaeologists Search For Hidden Heritage
** Thanks to colleague Alice Gorman for making me aware of this story.
A group of space archaeologists are investigating the material culture (remains) of space exploration at the Orroral Valley NASA Tracking Station in the Namadgi National Park thanks to an ACT Government Heritage grant.
Dr Alice Gorman, archaeologist from Flinders University, and her research team mapped the site from Saturday 13 February to Monday 15 February 2010, using electromagnetic induction techniques and differential GPS to find out exactly what remains below the ground.
Pic: The Orroral Valley Tracking Station 26 metre antenna and operations building – looking to the south west. Credit Ted Barnes
"Australia has had a long involvement in international space exploration, and while not widely recognised, Orroral Valley was involved in many major NASA projects and played a critical role in Australia's early ventures into space," Dr Gorman said. "Our project aims to not only map and document material culture of space exploration from the site, but to raise awareness of the site's heritage significance."
"We will be using electromagnetic induction to identify the location of cables, tanks, and construction trenches and rubbish dumps at the site. The remains of the tracking station cover approximately 40 hectares. "Electromagnetic induction measures the electrical properties of objects below the surface. These instruments are not invasive and do not require direct contact with the ground. They are also easily integrated with a GPS unit allowing us to survey large areas."
"During the survey, former employees of the tracking station are invited to visit the site to contribute to an accurate interpretation of the data. Following mapping of the site there may also be opportunity to excavate materials which would further assist in the interpretation of how people lived and worked at the tracking station."
Chief Minister and Minister for the Arts and Heritage, Jon Stanhope, said the Orroral Valley Tracking Station is currently nominated on the ACT Heritage Register. "I am pleased the ACT Government has been able to contribute to the understanding of this site's heritage through a $9000 grant to support the investigation," he said.
The research team consists of Dr Alice Gorman (lecturer in archaeology, Flinders University), Ian Moffat (geophysicist), Rob Koch (surveyor), and graduate student Julia Garnaut from Flinders University.
Sir Winston Churchill Wanted A Full Report On UFOs
The "Churchill Memorandum" was sent from the World War II Prime Minister on July 28 1952 to Lord Cherwell, Secretary of State for Air. In the note, Churchill wrote: "What does all this stuff about flying saucers amount to? What can it mean? What is the truth? Let me have a report at your convenience."
The response to his memo on August 9 1952, explained that following an intelligence study conducted in 1951 the "flying saucers" could be explained by "one or other" of the following four causes.
These were listed as known astronomical or meteorological phenomena, mistaken identification of conventional aircraft, balloons and birds, optical illusions and psychological delusions or deliberate hoaxes.
The report added: "The Americans, who carried out a similar investigation in 1948/9 reached a similar conclusion." An extraordinary release of files documenting sightings of UFO’s and unidentified phenomenon have been disclosed by the National Archives in partnership with the Ministry of Defence after three years of compiling evidence.
The incidents took place between 1994 and 2000 highlighting that the thirst for interest in UFO’s has not been quenched. Some of the major episodes include a man from Ebbw Vale in Wales who was driving home when his car was enveloped by a “tube of light”. His vehicle was encrusted with dust and caused his mobile phone and car radio to fail.
The report read:“He felt and was indeed sick later on. He is still feeling ill today [dated 28/1/97] and has developed a skin condition. Advised to see doctor.”
Telegraph.UK
SETI Invites Citizens Of The World To Join In The Search For ET
This appears to be a reincarnation of a late 90s project called Seti@Home. For that project volunteer members of the wired public of the day downloaded a data sifter that ran in place of a screensaver. This program downloaded and analysed chunks of Seti data in your computer's downtimes and sent it back to Seti control.
The idea being to recreate the computing power of a mainframe on a global network of home PCs. SETI has just invited the citizens of the world to join the search for extraterrestrial life. All you need to do is log on to the new SETIQuest.org site.
SETIQuest is the result of astronomer Jill Tarter's TED Prize wish. Tarter wished that they would "empower Earthlings everywhere to become active participants in the ultimate search for cosmic company".
With SETIQuest, the TED Conference and Tarter are making that happen. The website will make vast amounts of SETI data available to the public, making the SETI Institute's signal-detection algorithm an open source code, inviting brilliant coders and amateur techies to tweak it and take it to new levels of discovery:
"Today we do a very good job at finding very narrowband signals buried deep in noise – a good guess for what a deliberately transmitted signal might look like. But we have only limited sensitivity to signals that are more complex. With available cloud storage and processing resources, we can provide digital signal processing experts and students with a lot of raw data from the ATA and invite them to develop new algorithms that can find other types of signals that we are now missing. We’ll take the best of those algorithms and work with the designer and the OS developers to make them run in real-time so that we can add them to our observational quiver.
"And finally for everyone else that doesn’t happen to have coding or algorithmic skills, we’d like to involve you by using your eyes to find anomalous patterns in data coming from the ATA. These patterns aren’t ones we can define right now, or develop algorithms to detect, but your eyes and your brain can find them anyway. True, most of these anomalies will turn out to be interference generated by terrestrial technologies, but we want you to become part of a global community that can rapidly sort through all the possibilities and perhaps turn up that needle we’ve all been seeking."
So, non-coding "Citizen scientists" can visually search the data for anything that looks like something other than white noise. Should you spot something anomalous, you can alert the global community. If enough citizen scientists agree that something looks like a real ET signal, their collective concern will direct SETI's telescopes to zoom in on the signal source. This time, the "WOW!" might just be the real thing.
Daily Galaxy via SETI.org
Falcon 9 Now Vertical on the Launchpad
Is the future here? Over the weekend, SpaceX rolled their Falcon 9 launch vehicle out to the launchpad at Space Launch Complex 40, Cape Canaveral. If all systems check out, SpaceX looks to do an engine test sometime this week, which should provide some dramatic rumbling and shaking here in Florida.
The rocket measures 47 meters long (154 feet) and 4 meters (12 feet) wide, and for the upcoming test launch (date currently not set), the payload will be a dummy of the company's Dragon capsule being developed to carry equipment to the International Space Station for NASA.
Pic: Falcon 9 at Cape Canaveral. Credit: SpaceX
The word around Cape Canaveral is that the range has been reserved for March 8, but SpaceX won't provide any specific potential launch dates; instead giving a range of sometime between March and May. SpaceX founder Elon Musk has said the Range date is "just a placeholder for the earliest possible countdown attempt." In an article in Spaceflightnow.com, Musk said the launch likely won't occur until April at the earliest.
SpaceX said that Falcon 9 is now undergoing a checkout of the critical flight connections including fuel, liquid oxygen, and gas pressure systems. Once all system interfaces are verified, the launch team will execute a full tanking test of both first and second stages (wet dress) followed by a brief ~3.5 static fire of the first stage.
"SpaceX has not set specific dates for wet dress or static fire as schedule will be driven by the satisfactory completion of all test objectives and a thorough review of the data," the company said in a press release.
Universe Today
India Plans To Send Two Astronauts Into Space
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) plans to send two astronauts to space within six to seven years, ISRO chairman K Radhakrishnan said.
He said India was among the leading countries in the world in space research, designing the most modern satellites in keeping with latest advances in technology
These satellites are very helpful in communication and distance, he said.
Radhakrishnan said the Nano satellites designed by students of Satyabama University, Chennai, would be installed in the PSLV rocket, to be launched in June or July.
ISR
* FREE SPACE –WALLPAPER http://www.space-images.com/wallpapers/galaxies/index.html
* FREE SPACE – ASTRONOMY VIDEOS http://www.space-video.info/
This 27-second video shows a mysterious unidentified object outside the Space Shuttle Atlantis in 1991 (mission STS-37).
British government releases UFO documents; 6000 pages of sightings
By
UFO sightings – MoD 'blanked out' insults about reports
Defence officials
Police officer 'saw UFO over Chelsea's Stamford Bridge'
A police officer saw an unidentified flying object hovering over Chelsea FC
Newport driver 'fell ill' after Ebbw Vale UFO sighting
A driver became ill after encountering a light shaped like a "massive star", government UFO files released reveal. In his account to police he described how …
New YouTube clip sparks UFO debate
Melbourne: People believing in the existence of the extra terrestrial and UFO say a new video uploaded onto YouTube shows an alien plane either entering or …
UFO close encounters laid bare as 'X-Files' released by records office
Equally mystifying were UFO sightings by police over the North Sea near
UFO seen and photographed over Budapest, Hungary
An account, along with a photograph (above), of a UFO event that occurred in the skies above Budapest, the capital city of the Central European nation of …
IN THE SKY THIS MONTH
March 2010
It’s March in Australia so welcome to the best skies in the world. Out of the 88 constellations we’ve got the pick of the crop! So, it’s just you, me and the starry night. Depending on your age and your eyesight, you can see up to about 1500 to 2000 stars on a clear night. Ready? Then let’s go!
The Moon is always a great sight in a scope. Any size will show you the craters and darker areas we call ‘seas’. New moon is on the 16th and probably the best time to scout for planets but be prepared to act silly, there’s a full Moon on March 30 and that’s also a Blue Moon! Yep, two full moons in the one calendar month mean the last one is ‘Blue’.
Being March, it’s still lovely and warm, but to skywatch you’ll need a blanket to sit on, a pair of binoculars, and a pillow. Mercury is almost lost to sight as it sets a little lower each night. Venus the ‘evening star’ also hugs the horizon in March making it a little difficult to see as well after sunset but, a good telescope or binoculars will still give you a tantalizing view.
Mars in the constellation Cancer is the showpiece this month. Look for it as a bright reddish ‘star’ in the northeastern sky as it gets dark. On the 25th the 9 day old moon can be seen close to the planet. Grab a good telescope, you just might be in time to spot Mars’ white polar cap and some dark surface features.
Jupiter in Aquarius appears in the morning dawn sky in late March and is probably the easiest planet to observe with a small telescope. Look for its circling moons and banded surface features. It gets better. Saturn, the lord of the rings, makes an appearance low in the eastern evening sky. This striking world is magnificent in any telescope!
Hey, what about stars? Look to the west and then turn back slightly to the right. A short distance above the horizon look for a ‘V’ shaped group of stars with one orange reddish star called Aldebaran, 44 times the size of our Sun, at the top of the V. This is the famous constellation of Taurus the Bull. Another reddish star, Betelgeuse, a closed fist below the ‘Saucepan’ (Orion) is twice that size and further to the right you’ll find Sirius, our brightest but not closest star. Long ago the Egyptians used its position in relation to the morning rise of the Sun to calculate the length of the year. You’ve gotta admit, in March things are certainly looking up!
Dave Reneke
FEATURE STORY
Robotic Probes Poised to Explore Milky Way by 2020

By the year 2020, scientists are expected to launch intelligent space robots that will venture out to explore the universe for us.
"Robotic exploration probably will always be the trail blazer for human exploration of far space," says Wolfgang Fink, physicist and researcher at Caltech. "We haven't yet landed a human being on Mars but we have a robot there now. In that sense, it's much easier to send a robotic explorer. When you can take the human out of the loop, that is becoming very exciting."
While Fink is encouraged by the progress made by missions such as the Mars Phoenix and its robotic arm, he emphasizes that the link between human and robot needs to be eliminated, allowing robots to make their own decisions on what science needs to be carried out. In reference to the Phoenix's robotic arm he said, "The arms are the tools, but it's about the intent to move the arms. That's what we're after. To have the robot know that something there is interesting and that's where it needs to go and then to go get a sample from it. That's what we've after. You want to get rid of the joystick, in other words. You want the system to take control of itself and then basically use its own tools to explore."
The physicist said he envisions a time when humans send out intelligent probes to explore the far reaches of the universe and send information back to Earth – without having to send people on excruciatingly long and dangerous space missions.
"In the old Star Wars movies, especially in the Empire Strikes Back, the empire was sending out probes or floating robots," said Fink. "Those were ideal robotic explorers because they floated over planets and had sensors and communication capabilities. Once you venture out to other planets, you need something that can operate on its own. You can't monitor and supervise every single step. You want to deploy something that, on its own, can start a reconnaissance of the area and report back."
The key attribute robots need to possess is the ability to recognize something of interest, such as a rock or crater, something that a human mind would see as a scientific opportunity. At Caltech, Fink and others are working on programs that use images for robots to distinguish colors, textures, shapes and obstacles. Once artificial intelligence has the ability to do this, if the programming is complex enough, the robot can notice something that is out of place, or a region worth investigating (such as a strangely coloured patch of Mars regolith that a Mars robot will decide to dig into).
The researchers also are working on a wish list of sorts for the spacecraft. The list would include things that NASA and university scientists would like the robot to investigate. "It's very difficult to teach a spacecraft," said Fink. "When a geologist goes into the field, they can tell you if they see something that sparks their interest. Based on that interest, it triggers more refined research. But the problem is if you encounter something that scientists had not foreseen, then you run the risk of not detecting it We'll equip it with a database and a wish list, along with the ability to flag an anomaly."
Fink said NASA has shown some interest in their work. And that makes sense since NASA is planning an unmanned mission to Titan, Saturn's largest moon, around 2017. The CalTech physicist explained that an orbiter would most likely release a balloon-type vehicle that would float above the surface of the moon and send its findings back to Earth.
"It takes more than hour to send communications back and forth to a space probe at Saturn or Titan," said Fink. "It is not a problem so much if you are dealing with a Lander, which is immobile, or when you're dealing with a rover which is not moving too fast. It becomes a significant problem if you deploy a balloon or air ship on Titan, let's say. They are floating so you need a much quicker reaction time. If there's a mountain or hill coming up, you need to make a decision right there and then.
The main question is will robotic missions trump our basic human desire to explore space via manned missions?
Daily Galaxy Insight
ASTRO PIC OF THE WEEK
The Secret Galaxy" of Centaurus A
Deep inside Centaurus A, the closest active galaxy to Earth, about 1,000 light-years across, is a twisted cosmic dust cloud shaped like a parallelogram -likely the result of a smaller spiral galaxy falling into the giant Centaurus A. The Spitzer Space Telescope's penetrating infrared cameras recorded this startling vista in February 2004.
NASA
Ever Wondered???
Why does sunset look red?
The Sun is always a little redder because of the scattering, but at sunrise and sunset the light has to pass through more atmosphere and loses much more blue light, so appears much redder.
Did You Know?
Why does the Earth's moon not have a name (like Saturn's moons: Titan, Mimas, etc.)?
The Moon was called Selene or Artemis by the Greeks and Luna by the Romans. I'm sure other cultures also had names for the Moon. But in English, Moon (from Mona and Moone in Old and Middle English) was used before anyone had any idea that the other planets had moons. So it was more a case that the specific name for the Moon was extended to mean small bodies revolving around planets elsewhere. The Moon's name is the Moon.
Ever Wondered???
What Happens if Earth Stops Rotating?
What happens to all the earthlings, if Earth stops spinning? Will we be thrown off the Earth's surface, since Earth is spinning at ~1000 mph? Of course, this can't happen, but if it did, everything not attached would go flying off to the east, parallel to the surface of the Earth. The speed would depend upon your latitude. Only the people at the poles would be safe. You wouldn't go flying off into space because the 1000 mph maximum (at the equator) isn't enough to overcome gravity, which would still be present. If you survived, the resulting six month day and six month night would probably take care of you pretty quick.
Events
Global Astronomy Month
Global Astronomy MonthProfessional and amateur astronomers, educators and all astronomy enthusiasts worldwide are invited to celebrate the Universe in April 2010, during Global Astronomy Month – an international project that builds on the achievements of The International Year of Astronomy 2009, by combining a wide array of activities with the possibility of sharing experiences in real-time!
Taking place during April 2010, Global Astronomy Month (GAM2010) is a community-based effort aiming to achieve international collaboration and more interaction between participants than ever before. The primary idea of GAM2010 is to share ideas, experiences and successes, allowing communities that organize their own events to carry their ideas and inspiration forward.
Please look at organising events throughout Australia to share the Universe with as many people out ther as you can – let me know what you areplanning so we can publicise it and share it with the world.
Some ideas?
GAM2010 includes the most popular events for both astronomers and the public: telescopes will be available for the viewing of the Moon, Saturn and other objects, not only at observatories and planetariums, but also in public locations; dark sky observing of distant objects, Messier marathon, Lyrid Meteor Shower observing parties and events for the annual celebration of Astronomy Day (April, 24) are just some of the activities planned; special events by IYA2009-created global programs, observing with telescopes controlled over the Internet, webcasts and podcasts of special presentations, exhibitions, public competitions, astrophotography contests and workshops and much more will ensure that there is something for everyone.
Check out the website http://www.gam-awb.org and blogs – http://gam-awb.org/gam-project-blog.html for more info.
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NACAA 2010 – National Australian Convention for Amateur Astronomers
Workshop. Start Time: Friday, April 2 at 7:25pm Sunday, April 4 at 10:25pm. Where: Rydges Capitol Hill Hotel, Forrest,
http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=258264943077&mid=1d04ba3G20ce0a77G55b1fd6G7
Download The Evening Sky Map
The Evening Sky Map (PDF) is a 2-page monthly guide to the night sky suitable for all sky watchers including newcomers to Astronomy. AND its entirely FREE. Designed to print clearly on all printers.
The Evening Sky Map is ready-to-use and will help you to: Identify planets, stars and major constellations – Find sparkling star clusters, wispy nebulae & distant galaxies – Locate and follow bright comets across the sky – Learn about the night sky and Astronomy.
The Evening Sky Map is free for personal non-commercial educational use. Receive news of updated sky maps, reminders of Sky Calendar events, and other noteworthy news for sky watchers. And it's FREE! Sky Map Download
Southern Cross Observatory – Tasmania, Australia.
If you are interested in Astro-Photography take note and learn from the experts! Shevill Mathers is recognized as one of the world’se leading amateur astronomers and is a specialist in his field.
His regular columns and newspaper articles are now augmented by a wide range of articles including ATM articles, Astro News items and Activities from Tasmania as well as reviewing a wide range of astronomical equipment.Shevill Mathers has been a keen amateur astronomer / telescope and camera builder in the UK since the early 60’s, with a special interest in astrophotography.
A member of the BAA, London (Lunar Section), his photographic expertise was greatly encouraged by Patrick Moore, with whom he has maintained a lasting friendship. Elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1968.
Shevill is a regular contributor to many various magazines. He is a local media source for TV, radio and the print media.Contact details:shevill.mathers@southernphone.com.au Shevillm@gmail.com Web:www.shevillmathers.id.au
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[...] original here: 1 March 2010 « David Reneke Bookmark It Hide Sites $$('div.d334').each( function(e) { [...]
Well… I dont agree with you, there are for sure other angles to look at it… or what do you think?