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Special Updates, Information Technology Changes.

Try Something NewNASA TV Via Peer-to-Peer Streaming:

NASA and Digimeld are conducting a pilot study to stream NASA TV using Digimeld's peer-to-peer streaming technology. Users who would like to try this kind of technology can follow the address below to go to Digimeld's site.

www.digimeld.com/nasatv/default.aspx

The Phoenix Has Landed on Mars Saftely "See Pheonix Landing Page"
NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander uses its Meteorological Station and its Robotic Arm at the same time in this artist's concept of the spacecraft on the surface of Mars.

The other instruments in the spacecraft's science payload are the Surface Stereoscopic Imager; the Microscopy, Electrochemistry, and Conductivity Analyzer; the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer; the Mars Descent Imager; and the Robotic Arm Camera.

The dark "wings" to either side of the lander's main body are solar panels for providing electric power.

The Phoenix mission is led by Principal Investigator Peter H. Smith of the University of Arizona, Tucson, with project management at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and development partnership with Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver. International contributions for Phoenix are provided by the Canadian Space Agency, the University of Neuchatel (Switzerland), the University of Copenhagen (Denmark), the Max Planck Institute (Germany) and the Finnish Meteorological institute. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UA/Lockheed Martin 
 

 Phoenix Returns Treasure Trove for Science
June 26, 2008

NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander performed its first wet chemistry experiment on Martian soil flawlessly yesterday, returning a wealth of data that for Phoenix scientists was like winning the lottery.

"We are awash in chemistry data," said Michael Hecht of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, lead scientist for the Microscopy, Electrochemistry and Conductivity Analyzer, or MECA, instrument on Phoenix. "We're trying to understand what is the chemistry of wet soil on Mars, what's dissolved in it, how acidic or alkaline it is. With the results we received from Phoenix yesterday, we could begin to tell what aspects of the soil might support life."

"This is the first wet-chemical analysis ever done on Mars or any planet, other than Earth," said Phoenix co-investigator Sam Kounaves of Tufts University, science lead for the wet chemistry investigation.

About 80 percent of Phoenix's first, two-day wet chemistry experiment is now complete. Phoenix has three more wet-chemistry cells for use later in the mission.

"This soil appears to be a close analog to surface soils found in the upper dry valleys in Antarctica," Kouvanes said. "The alkalinity of the soil at this location is definitely striking. At this specific location, one-inch into the surface layer, the soil is very basic, with a pH of between eight and nine. We also found a variety of components of salts that we haven't had time to analyze and identify yet, but that include magnesium, sodium, potassium and chloride."

"This is more evidence for water because salts are there. We also found a reasonable number of nutrients, or chemicals needed by life as we know it," Kounaves said. "Over time, I've come to the conclusion that the amazing thing about Mars is not that it's an alien world, but that in many aspects, like mineralogy, it's very much like Earth."

Another analytical Phoenix instrument, the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer (TEGA), has baked its first soil sample to 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,800 degrees Fahrenheit). Never before has a soil sample from another world been baked to such high heat.

TEGA scientists have begun analyzing the gases released at a range of temperatures to identify the chemical make-up of soil and ice. Analysis is a complicated, weeks-long process.

But "the scientific data coming out of the instrument have been just spectacular," said Phoenix co-investigator William Boynton of the University of Arizona, lead TEGA scientist.

"At this point, we can say that the soil has clearly interacted with water in the past. We don't know whether that interaction occurred in this particular area in the northern polar region, or whether it might have happened elsewhere and blown up to this area as dust."

Leslie Tamppari, the Phoenix project scientist from JPL, tallied what Phoenix has accomplished during the first 30 Martian days of its mission, and outlined future plans.

The Stereo Surface Imager has by now completed about 55 percent of its three-color, 360-degree panorama of the Phoenix landing site, Tamppari said. Phoenix has analyzed two samples in its optical microscope as well as first samples in both TEGA and the wet chemistry laboratory. Phoenix has been collecting information daily on clouds, dust, winds, temperatures and pressures in the atmosphere, as well as taking first nighttime atmospheric measurements.

Lander cameras confirmed that white chunks exposed during trench digging were frozen water ice because they sublimated, or vaporized, over a few days. The Phoenix robotic arm dug and sampled, and will continue to dig and sample, at the 'Snow White' trench in the center of a polygon in the polygonal terrain.

"We believe this is the best place for creating a profile of the surface from the top down to the anticipated icy layer," Tamppari said. "This is the plan we wanted to do when we proposed the mission many years ago. We wanted a place just like this where we could sample the soil down to the possible ice layer."

The Phoenix mission is led by Peter Smith of The University of Arizona with project management at JPL and development partnership at Lockheed Martin, located in Denver. International contributions come from the Canadian Space Agency; the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland; the universities of Copenhagen and Aarhus, Denmark; Max Planck Institute, Germany; and the Finnish Meteorological Institute. For more information on the Phoenix mission, link to http://www.nasa.gov/phoenix and http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu
Click on link below to see complete animation of spacecraft landing!
 http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/phoenix/phx20080522.php


 


NASA Kepler Mission Offers Opportunity to Send Names Into Space
May 05, 2008

PASADENA, Calif. – How cool would it be to have your name on board the spacecraft that discovers the first known Earth-like planet beyond our solar system? Well, here's your chance.

NASA today announced an opportunity for anyone to submit their name to be included on a DVD and rocketed into space as part of NASA's Kepler Mission, scheduled to launch in February 2009 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla.

"This mission will provide our first knowledge of Earth-like planets beyond our solar system," said Kepler Mission principal investigator William Borucki.

The Name in Space DVD will be mounted on the exterior of the spacecraft in November 2008. A video of the DVD being mounted on the spacecraft will be taken and posted on the Kepler mission Web site prior to the spacecraft being shipped to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in December of this year. A copy of the DVD with all of the names and messages will be given to the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Washington.

"It's a way for the public to participate in our space program," explained David Koch, deputy principal investigator for the Kepler Mission. According to Koch, there's no limit to the number of names that can be submitted for inclusion on the DVD.

"We're looking for several million names," Koch said. "The only limitation is people's interest."

Anyone who wants to participate in the Name in Space project should submit their name, the state or country they live in and, if they desire, a short statement (500 words or less) answering the question: "Why do you think the Kepler Mission is important?" The deadline for submissions to the Kepler Mission Web site is Nov. 1, 2008.

Certificates of Participation will be available for printing from the Kepler mission Web site. The certificate states that the person whose name has been submitted has been included on the list of names launched in 2009 with the Kepler spacecraft into orbit around the sun. There is no charge for participating in the project or for printing the certificate.

Name in Space is an international activity associated with the International Year of Astronomy 2009 in recognition of the 400th anniversary of Johannes Kepler's publication of his first two laws of planetary motion.

Kepler is a NASA Discovery mission. NASA Ames is the home organization of the science principal investigator and is responsible for the ground system development, mission operations and science data analysis. Kepler mission development is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colo., is responsible for developing the Kepler flight system.

To submit names and learn more about the Kepler Mission, visit http://kepler.nasa.gov/ .

For more information about NASA programs, visit http://www.nasa.gov .

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Astronomy Newsletter
July 25, 2008
  News

NASA/Swift Science Team/Stefan Immler
The quiet explosion
A team of astronomers from Europe are providing hints that a recent supernova may not be as normal as initially thought. Instead, the star that exploded is now understood to have collapsed into a black hole, producing a weak jet, typical of much more violent events, gamma-ray bursts. The object, SN 2008D, is thus probably among the weakest explosions that produce very fast moving jets ... Read more.



D. Finley/NRAO/AUI
Magnetic fields stronger than expected
Mining the far reaches of the universe for clues about its past, a team of scientists including Philipp Kronberg of Los Alamos National Laboratory has proposed that magnetic fields of ancient galaxies like ours were just as strong as those existing today, prompting a rethinking of how our galaxy and others may have formed ... Read more.



A. Bolton (UH/IfA) for SLACS and NASA/ESA
Team uses gravitational lenses to weigh 70 galaxies
An international team of astronomers has recently announced a finding that helps to settle a long-standing debate over the relationship between mass (the amount of matter) and luminosity (brightness) in galaxies ... Read more.



NASA/JPL-Caltech/STScI
Image shows 'no organics' zone around Pinwheel
The fluffy-looking galaxy, officially named Messier 101, is dominated by a mishmash of spiral arms. In Spitzer's new view, in which infrared light is color coded, the galaxy sports a swirling blue center and a unique, coral-red outer ring ... Read more.



IAU/M. Kornmesser (ESA/Hubble)
Fourth dwarf planet named Makemake
The International Astronomical Union has given the name Makemake to the newest member of the family of dwarf planets - the object formerly known as 2005 FY9 - after the Polynesian creator of humanity and the god of fertility ... Read more.



Herman Mikuz, Crni Vrh Observatory
Astronomy magazine podcast: Touring Scutum
Senior Editor Michael Bakich highlights the small constellation Scutum. Listen to the audio or watch the video.
  Celebrate the wonders of the night sky!

All new from Astronomy magazine, 100 Most Spectacular Sky Wonders teaches you how to find beautiful objects in the night sky with ease using nearly any telescope. You'll be awestruck by the beautiful photos, and star maps will make observing easy.

This special issue includes:
100 stunning full-color photos
Detailed maps of all 100 objects
Tips and techniques
And much more!

Reserve your copy today and receive FREE shipping!
  Caught a glimpse of the Sun lately?.......................(Advertisement)

The Sun in Motion presents solar phenomena IMAX-style. Marvel at the intricate magnetic structures of sunspots, filaments, and prominences. Compare C-class flares that create stunning auroras to an X-class eruption that interferes with GPS satellites. Explore the brief life of countless spicules that blanket the solar surface as well as "Ellerman bombs" and the luminous regions of plage.

Steady skies and enjoy the view!

--Gary Palmer

Catch a glimpse of the closest star at theSuninMotion.com.
  Reader gallery
Pete Lawrence
Pete Lawrence photographed the Sun from Selsey, England.
Click here to view.

Guilherme Venere imaged Centaurus A from Alto Paraiso, Brazil.
Click here to view.

Chuck Hemrick captured Comet Hale-Bopp from Rural Hall, North Carolina, in 1997.
Click here to view.

If you have images you'd like to share with other newsletter readers, attach them to an e-mail sent to jmcgovern@astronomy.com. Make sure you include in your e-mail the date, location, equipment, and methods used in taking and processing each image. Submitted images may be used elsewhere on Astronomy.com.
  Stargaze under Sierra La Rana's dark skies .......(Advertisement)

Experience the development exclusively designed for astronomy enthusiasts: Sierra la Rana Astronomy Village. This neighborhood preserves the dark skies for our residents, the McDonald Observatory, and the Big Bend region. We are adopting stringent lighting restrictions to protect and enhance nighttime stargazing. Sierra La Rana is a gated community just outside of the city of Alpine in West Texas and has some of the darkest skies in North America.

Learn more about Sierra La Rana.
  Travel the world with Astronomy

David J. Eicher
Italy: Galileo's Tuscan Sky Tour, March 25-April 2, 2009
Nearly 400 years ago, Galileo Galilei pointed a telescope to the heavens for the first time. To commemorate this historic event, Astronomy Editor David J. Eicher and MWT Associates are leading a tour to Rome, Florence, and the Italian countryside.

Watch a video preview.

Learn more.


MWT Associates
China: Total Solar Eclipse and Grand Yangtze River Cruise, July 13-26, 2009
On July 22, 2009, totality will cross China and throw eclipse chasers into shadows along the Yangtze River. Astronomy magazine and MWT Associates invite you to join us as we celebrate more than 5 minutes of totality, and the ebb and flow of Chinese life in the 21st century.

Watch a video preview.

Learn more.

Book soon, this tour is filling fast!
  The sky this month
Look for fireworks from Aquarius
Astronomy: Roen Kelly
The summer meteor season begins with a favorable display from the Delta Aquarids. The meteor shower, which is active now to mid-August, peaks July 27.

This shower favors observers in the southern half of North America. The reason: Southern latitudes place the radiant higher in the sky.

Observing Delta Aquarid meteors just got a little easier. According to the International Meteor Organization, several faint summer showers with reported radiants near Aquarius confused observers. Several new studies, however, indicate the Delta Aquarid radiant is the only real one.

The Delta Aquarid shower produces between 10 and 20 fast - but not especially bright - meteors per hour. The Last Quarter Moon July 25 will create only minor interference with your meteor hunt.
  New book presents alternatives to Big Bang ....(Advertisement)

The Origin and Location of Our Universe, a new book just published by Joseph P. Zwack, presents a reasonable and simple answer to the big question - What was the origin of our universe? Big Bang theory's myriad problems are solved, and surprising alternatives to Big Bang, Steady State, and multiverse theories are presented. "CUT" and "SUSE" could change the world of cosmology forever.

Learn more.
 Astronomy blog
The magazine's staff shares stories, views, reviews, and cool items from the news.

Introducing NASA's "lone gunmen"

Remember the "lone gunmen," the trio of The X-Files who tracked government conspiracies? It appears NASA's got an infestation of them, too.

In a story this week by Jay Reeves of the Associated Press, I learned of a merry band of dissident NASA engineers and managers who are quietly and mostly anonymously designing an alternative space-launch system to the well-underway Constellation program ... Read the rest of this and our other blog posts.
  Job opportunities with Astronomy
Kalmbach Publishing Co. has two exciting opportunities with Astronomy magazine. We are looking for an Associate Editor and Assistant Editor to work on the world's best-selling astronomy magazine.

Click here to learn more about these jobs and Kalmbach Publishing Co.
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