Category Archives: Science

SpaceX just flew its fastest Dragon astronaut trip to the space station ever

SpaceX just set a new record for its fastest Dragon astronaut trip yet. 

Elon Musk’s spaceflight company launched four Crew-4 astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA in less than 16 hours on Wednesday (April 27), the shortest flight time since SpaceX began crewed flights in 2020. 

“This is the fastest launch to dock that we’ve done,” Steve Stitch, NASA’s Commercial Crew Program manager, told reporters after the launch early Wednesday. “It’s about the same time it takes to go from New York to Singapore, so it’s kind of interesting.” 

SpaceX launched the Crew-4 astronauts on a new Crew Dragon capsule called Freedom and Falcon 9 rocket at 3:52 a.m. EDT (0752 GMT) from Pad 39A of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The astronauts arrived at the space station later that night, docking at 7:37 p.m. EDT (2337 GMT). Total flight time: 15 hours and 45 minutes.

Related: Amazing launch photos of SpaceX’s Crew-4 astronauts

For comparison, SpaceX’s first crewed flight for NASA, the Demo-2 mission in May 2020, took about 19 hours to reach the station, while its latest Crew-3 flight for NASA took nearly a full day. 

“I’d say it’s sort of a little bit of luck as to how we would up in this,” said Jessica Jensen, SpaceX’s vice president of customer operations and integration, adding that any delay could have changed the flight time. “You can vary by 10 to 20 hours of phasing just you know in a day or two. It’s not really that we changed anything, it’s just the orbital mechanics of where the ISS is and where it’s coming over Florida.”

The Crew-4 mission launched three NASA astronauts and one European Space Agency astronaut to the space station to kick off a six-month mission. Aboard the Crew Dragon, called Freedom, were Crew-4 mission commander Kjell Lindgren; pilot Bob Hines; mission specialist Jessica Watkins (all of NASA); and mission specialist Samantha Cristoforetti of the European Space Agency.

The shorter SpaceX flight came just ahead of a spacewalk (an Extravehicular Activity or EVA in NASA parlance) by two Russian cosmonauts outside the space station on Thursday, so getting the Dragon crew docked and settled in swiftly was a bonus, NASA officials said. 

“This short rendezvous was pretty favorable for us,” Stitch said. “We can get to station a little quicker and we can do the preparations we need once we dock to get dragon ready for the EVA.”

While Crew-4 Dragon flight was SpaceX’s fastest flight to the station, it wasn’t the fastest crewed flight ever. That title is still held by Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft, which holds the Guinness World Record for the fastest time to the station with a 3-hour, 3-minute trip in October 2020.

Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik. Follow us @SpacedotcomFacebook and Instagram.



Read original article here

Rare Black Moon solar eclipse takes bite out of sun over South America

Skywatchers across parts of the Southern Hemisphere were treated to the first partial eclipse of the year today. 

The partial solar eclipse of April 30, one of two happening in 2022, swept over parts of South America, Antarctica, and the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. The solar eclipse began at 2:45 p.m. EDT (1845 GMT) in the far southeastern Pacific near the coast of Antarctica. It lasted just under four hours, ending at 6:37 p.m. EDT (2237 GMT) over the south Atlantic Ocean, according to TimeandDate.com, although for many observers, the sun set while still partially eclipsed.

A solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between Earth and the sun. Today’s celestial event was a partial eclipse, meaning only part of the sun was obscured by the moon, depending on the viewer’s location. The maximum eclipse occurred at 4:41 p.m. EDT (2041 GMT) today, when the moon blocked about 64% of the sun’s disk for viewers just south of the southern tip of South America. 

Related: Amazing solar eclipse pictures from around the world

Image 1 of 6

The partial solar eclipse of April 30, 2022, as seen from Viña del Mar, Chile by eclipse scientist Jay Pasachoff and his research team.. (Image credit: Jay Pasachoff)
Image 2 of 6

The partial solar eclipse of April 30, 2022, as seen from Viña del Mar, Chile by eclipse scientist Jay Pasachoff and his research team.. (Image credit: Jay Pasachoff)
Image 3 of 6

The partial solar eclipse of April 30, 2022, as seen from Viña del Mar, Chile by eclipse scientist Jay Pasachoff and his research team.. (Image credit: Jay Pasachoff)
Image 4 of 6

The partial solar eclipse of April 30, 2022, as seen from Viña del Mar, Chile by eclipse scientist Jay Pasachoff and his research team.. (Image credit: Jay Pasachoff)
Image 5 of 6

The partial solar eclipse of April 30, 2022, as seen from Viña del Mar, Chile by eclipse scientist Jay Pasachoff and his research team.. (Image credit: Jay Pasachoff)
Image 6 of 6

A view of the early stages of a partial solar eclipse on April 30, 2022, as seen from El Colorado outside of Santiago, Chile. (Image credit: TimeandDate.com)

Unfortunately for skywatchers, today’s eclipse took place over largely unpopulated regions in the southeastern Pacific Ocean and the Antarctic, as well as over some South American countries, including Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia and Peru. 

However, viewers in the U.S. and other areas outside the eclipse path were able to watch the event live, thanks to online broadcasts from Timeanddate.com, which offered views from Santiago, Chile and parts of Argentina, and the India-based YouTube channel Gyaan ki gareebi Live, which showcased views from Cerro Shenolsh in the Tierra del Fuego province of Argentina.

Today’s eclipse also happened to coincide with the second new moon of the month, known as a Black Moon. Typically, a new moon occurs only once a month, when the Earth-facing side is fully cloaked in shadow. However, April started with a new moon on April 1 and ended with a second today.  

Related: The 8 Most Famous Solar Eclipses in History

The next partial solar eclipse will take place on Oct. 25, when the moon will block a portion of the sun for viewers in Europe, western Asia and northeast Africa. After that, we won’t see another solar eclipse until 2023. However, a total lunar eclipse is just around the corner, beginning on May 15. 

If you’re looking to prepare for the next eclipse and want to learn how to photograph a solar eclipse, check out our best cameras for astrophotography and best lenses for astrophotography to make sure you’re ready. 

Editor’s Note: If you snapped an amazing solar eclipse photo and would like to share it with Space.com’s readers, send your photo(s), comments, and your name and location to spacephotos@space.com. 

Follow Samantha Mathewson @Sam_Ashley13. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



Read original article here

Astronomer’s Mind-Blowing Animation Shows The True Scale of Our Solar System

Sometimes it takes an animation on Twitter to truly comprehend – or at least begin to comprehend – the amazing diversity of worlds making up our Solar System.

Enter planetary astronomer James O’Donoghue from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). He tweeted out a brief animation that starts off with the Ceres dwarf planet, and moves up through Solar System objects by size (including Earth), before closing by zooming out to take in the Sun.

 

There’s a slightly higher-quality version of the same clip over at YouTube.

Even if you know the relative size of everything in the Solar System, it’s still quite a moment when Jupiter and the Sun swing into view – and you might never have realized quite how fast Jupiter spins relative to Earth either.

We’d recommend setting aside a bit of time to watch these spinning orbs. The video clip is only 45 seconds long, but it’s mesmerizing enough that you’re going to be watching it several times over – as we write this it’s been viewed some 8 million times.

The sizes, tilts, and rotations are all to scale in this clip, though of course the positioning has been changed – all of the planets and stars you see have been pushed closer together so they’ll fit inside the same video clip.

If you want to know some of the numbers behind the animation, our own planet is 12,742 kilometers or 7,918 miles wide. Jupiter, in contrast, has a diameter of 139,820 kilometers or 86,880 miles – that’s more than 10 times larger in diameter.

The diameter of the Sun is around 1.39 million kilometers (863,706 miles), so that’s around 10 times bigger in terms of distance than Jupiter, and more than 100 times bigger than Earth. To put it another way, about a million Earths could fit into the Sun.

James O’Donoghue has previous form for this too – he’s put together plenty of other videos showing the jaw-dropping scale of the Solar System, and we’re very grateful to have them.

 



Read original article here

Massive Earthquake Swarm in Antarctica Suggest Sleeping Volcano Awakening

There is some intriguing analysis that has just been released about a massive swarm of earthquakes that occurred in Antarctica in 2020.

A ‘swarm’ of 85,000 earthquakes in Antarctica that lasted about six months in 2020 was triggered by magma from an underwater volcano, a new study says.

The swarm occurred at Orca Seamount, a deep-sea volcano near King George Island in Antarctica, in the Bransfield Strait, which has been inactive for ‘a long time’.

Researchers have used seismometers and remote sensing techniques to determine how long the swarm lasted, and what caused it.

Swarm quakes mainly occur in volcanically active regions, so the movement of magma in the Earth’s crust is therefore suspected as the cause.

During the swarm, ground on neighbouring King George Island moved 4.3 inches (11cm) – suggesting a ‘finger’ of magma almost reached the surface, the scientists report in their new study.

The international team of researchers said the swarm was the most intense earthquake activity ever recorded in the region.

“There have been similar intrusions in other places on Earth, but this is the first time we have observed it there,” study co-author Simone Cesca, a seismologist at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, told Live Science.

“Normally, these processes occur over geologic time scales,” as opposed to over the course of a few months, Cesca said. “So in a way, we are lucky to see this.”

The scientists used a variety of methods to track the swarm and its geophysical effects, including analyzing data from seismic stations in the region and satellites orbiting the Earth.

This data shed light on the potential causes of the huge swarm. According to the researchers, the movement of magma into the crust could explain the seismic activity.

The human contributions to “climate change” are dwarfed by volcanoes. The scale of the Antarctic volcanoes is not fully known, given the challenges of studying at that latitude. However, there is a strong possibility that a super-volcano could be under the massive ice sheets.

It’s not easy to see what’s going on below Antarctica’s ice sheet.

On average the ice is 2.6km thick. At its deepest, it is 4.7km down.

So NASA has taken all we know — from satellite and airborne observations through to every piece of applicable physics they could think of — and bundled it all together in a new simulation.

The end product of the calculations which reproduced the processes of friction, heat transport and liquid water behaviour revealed there has to be another source of energy down there.

A mantle plume fits the bill.

This mantle plume — some of which are known as supervolcanos — pumps out some 200 milliwatts of energy per square meter.

The background heating from beneath the Earth in non-geologically active areas is about 40 to 60 milliwatts.

The one under Antarctica appears to be roughly in the same league, at up to 150 milliwatts.

Any hotter and the simulations show the ice sheet melting too much to fit observations — except for one spot near the Ross Sea.

Intense flows of water have been seen here. The simulations needed up to 180 milliwatts of energy to produce similar results.

And those worried about climate extinction might like to reflect on the fact that the last time a super-volcano erupted, it almost wiped-out our species.

Professor Danisik and colleagues have studied Lake Toba in Sumatra, an apparently idyllic body of water that actually occupies the caldera of a supervolcano, measuring about 100km by 30km (62 by 19 miles) across.

This supervolcano is believed to have erupted roughly 74,000 years ago, and some researchers believe the eruption released six billion tons of sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, leading global temperatures to plummet by 15C (59F) for three years afterwards.

While this scientific analysis of the impact of the eruption is disputed, scientists have suggested that the eruption caused a genetic bottleneck in human evolution.

The hypothesis is that between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago, human populations rapidly shrunk to just 3,000-10,000 individuals, a claim for which there is some genetic evidence.

Given the rock-hard science behind volcanic impact on the Earth’s climate, I find I cannot get worked-up about SUVs and cow farts.

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Read original article here

The first solar eclipse of 2022 has begun and here’s the view!

It’s the moment skywatchers have been waiting for: The year’s first solar eclipse has begun.

The partial solar eclipse of April 30 began at about 2:45 p.m. EDT (1845 GMT), according to Timeanddate.com, which is livestreaming views from Argentina and Chile. However, the eclipse was first visible over the Southern Ocean off the coast of Antarctica, where few skywatchers could enjoy the solar eclipse. 

The moon’s shadow took about an hour to reach the southern tip of South America and become more accessible to skywatchers. Timeanddate.com’s broadcast from El Colorado, Chile, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) away from Santiago, showed the first views of the sun with the characteristic missing “bite” clearly visible a little after 4:30 p.m. EDT (2030 GMT). You can watch the eclipse live on Space.com, courtesy of Timeanddate.com.

Related: How to watch the April 2022 solar eclipse online

Solar Eclipse Photography Guide:

The moon’s shadow, and in turn the partial eclipse, will continue traveling on a northeasterly path until fading into the sunset over South America, ending at 6:37 p.m. EDT (2237 GMT).

Before that moment comes, however, the eclipse has some more beautiful views to offer. The moment of greatest eclipse will occur at 4:41 p.m. EDT (2041 GMT) over the Southern Ocean. In addition to the feed from El Colorado, Timeanddate.com is also offering views from Santa Eufemia, Argentina, during the ongoing broadcast.

A view of the early stages of a partial solar eclipse on April 30, 2022, as seen from El Colorado outside of Santiago, Chile. (Image credit: TimeandDate.com)

If you miss today’s eclipse or just want more skywatching in your life, the next eclipse will be a total lunar eclipse that begins on May 15; the next solar eclipse will occur on Oct. 25.

You can prepare for the next solar eclipse with our guide on how to photograph a solar eclipse safely. Our guides on the best cameras for astrophotography and the best lenses for astrophotography can help you find the camera gear you need to capture your own snapshots.

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her on Twitter @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 



Read original article here

NASA confirms fireball streaked across multiple states this week

Authorities this week confirmed that a large fireball streaked its way across the skies of multiple states, a sight that was reportedly accompanied by a loud booming noise as well.

As many as several dozen people reported witnessing the fireball in Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana on Wednesday, with many reporting an explosive noise accompanying it. 

The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency reported shortly after the incident that NASA had confirmed the fireball in the skies above the states. 

“After multiple reports of a loud sound this morning across a portion of our state, MEMA has confirmed with NASA it was a fireball that caused the noise,” the agency reported via Twitter. 

“No injuries or property damage have been reported,” it continued, adding: “We are told the meteor ran parallel to the Mississippi River.”

At least one resident captured what appeared to be footage of the fireball:

Bill Cooke, the lead of NASA’s Meteoroid Environments Office at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., told the Independent that it was “unusual … how few eyewitness reports we had given the skies were so clear.”

“More people heard it than saw it,” he said.

Read original article here

4 planets line up like ducks in a row in gorgeous night-sky image

From his balcony in Rome, Gianluca Masi captured this night-sky image of Jupiter, Venus, Mars and Saturn (plus the moon) lined up.  (Image credit: Gianluca Masi/Virtual Telescope Project)

The moon led a parade of planets across the predawn sky last week. And Italian astrophysicist Gianluca Masi captured the celestial show in a gorgeous image shot from his balcony in Rome. 

In advance of an unusual alignment of the five visible planets in the solar system this summer, four planets lined up behind the moon like ducks in a row. Beginning April 23, Saturn, Mars, Venus and Jupiter were all been visible above the horizon in the early morning hours in the Northern Hemisphere. 

“This morning [April 26] I could enjoy the planetary parade involving Jupiter, Venus, Mars and Saturn, plus the moon. It was an amazing sight, all the four planets were very easy to see,” Masi told Live Science in an email.

The night-sky photo is a precursor to a bigger planetary parade this summer, as Mercury will join the line-up in mid-June. 

When the planets align

Planetary alignments occur when the planets’ orbits bring them to the same region of the sky, when viewed from Earth. These planetary alignments are not rare, but they’re not regularly occurring, either: The last time five planets aligned in the night sky was in 2020, preceded by alignments in 2016 and 2005. 

These alignments take time to develop. Venus, Mars, and Saturn have been night-sky neighbors since late March. On April 4 and 5, they came so close together, when viewed from Earth, that Mars and Saturn appeared less far apart than the width of the full moon in the southeast early morning sky. 

Photos: Magnificent views of the nighttime heavens in America’s ‘Dark Sky’ parks

Jupiter turned the trio into a foursome in mid-April. Then the moon appeared in its last quarter phase to Saturn’s right on April 23. Mars looks like an orange dot below and to the left of Saturn, while Venus is a brighter light below and to the left of Mars. Jupiter is the lowest and leftmost in the sky.

The way to tell the planets from the stars in the sky is by the light, said Michelle Nichols, the director of public observing at Chicago’s Adler Planetarium.

“Stars twinkle,” Nichols told Live Science. “Planets don’t.”

Watching the planetary alignment

The four planets will remain in their cosmic line until early July. Mercury will appear in the line as early as June 10 in places with a flat, eastern horizon (think Denver or the coast of North Carolina, looking out over the ocean), leading to the final five-planet alignment. The planets will appear to march from the east to the south, Nichols said. Late June will provide the best viewing conditions for the alignment. 

Uranus and Neptune will also be in the field of view in the Northern Hemisphere during the alignment. Uranus will be between Mercury and Mars and will be visible in areas without much light pollution. It might be possible to see it with the naked eye in a dark-enough sky, but binoculars will aid in observing it, Nichols said. Neptune will require a telescope to view. 

“It’s just a great time to go out and see the planets,” Nichols said. 

Originally published on Live Science.

Editor’s note: This article was first published on April 20, 2022, and updated on April 26.

Read original article here

How do you get ready for bed in space? This astronaut video reveals all.

Even astronauts have bedtime routines.

In a new video, European Space Agency astronaut Matthias Maurer shares what it’s like getting ready for bed while living in space aboard the International Space Station. And, as you can see in the video, without gravity, things get tricky pretty fast. 

Even brushing your teeth in space comes with a whole host of strange steps that we wouldn’t need to do here on Earth, where gravity keeps our feet on the ground and our water from floating away.

In pictures: Amazing launch photos of SpaceX’s Crew-4 launch

ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer shows off his bedtime routine aboard the International Space Station. (Image credit: ESA)

As you can watch in the video, which ESA released on YouTube this week, Maurer’s routine begins like many people’s, with brushing his teeth. But, with a lack of gravity, Maurer can’t just run water over a toothbrush with toothpaste on it and spit into a sink; he would have spit and toothpaste and water flying all over the place. To make do, he squirts water directly into his mouth from a small pouch and spits into what looks like a paper towel.

Stowing his jacket and headphones so they won’t float around while he sleeps, Maurer moves on to washing his face — another challenge, as astronauts don’t want globs of water floating all over the station, Maurer again uses a small water pouch. By squirting small bits of water out at a time and using a washcloth, Maurer gets the job done. 

Throughout these steps, however, Maurer also has to contend with towels floating off and his own body floating around. So every step is coupled with readjustments to keep himself upright and the items nearby. 

Popping his headphones and hoodie back on, Maurer switches off the lights, grabs a “glass” of water (it’s another pouch), and cruises through the orbiting lab, gently pushing himself along. 

Inside the dark lab, Maurer closes his laptop, hangs up his headphones and stows his hoodie for the night. He lifts himself into a little nook above his computer, which he covers with a panel, tucked away to sleep.

Maurer is a rookie astronaut on his first space mission, which he dubbed “Cosmic Kiss,” as ESA astronauts choose their own mission names and logos. Maurer launched in November 2021 as part of the SpaceX Crew-3 mission to the station. 

The Crew-3 astronauts are set to come home in just a few days, with an undocking planned for May 4 and a possible splashdown anticipated the next day. 

Email Chelsea Gohd at cgohd@space.com or follow her on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



Read original article here

Solar eclipse: 2022’s first solar eclipse will appear in the sky today

A solar eclipse occurs when the moon moves between the sun and the earth, blocking part of the sun’s light from our view and casting its own shadow on the Earth.

The eclipse will be visible in Chile, Argentina, most of Uruguay, western Paraguay, southwestern Bolivia, southeastern Peru, and a small area of southwestern Brazil, according to NASA, as well as the northwestern coastline of Antarctica and parts of the Atlantic, South Pacific, and Southern oceans.

If you happen to be in one of the areas where the eclipse is visible, be careful. NASA advises that onlookers wear solar viewing or eclipse glasses — which offer more eye protection than standard sunglasses — to look at the eclipse.

And if you’re not in the path of the eclipse, you can still check out the astronomical marvel online. Timeanddate.com will be live streaming the eclipse from its start at around 2:45 p.m. EDT to its end at 6:37 p.m. EDT.
There will be another partial solar eclipse in October, says NASA. The next eclipse will be visible in Europe, northeast Africa, the Middle East, and western Asia.

Read original article here

See a behemoth black hole, spiral galaxy from Hubble telescope

A monstrous black hole lies at the center of a distant galaxy photographed by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. 

The galaxy, called M91, is located approximately 55 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Coma Berenices. It is a barred spiral galaxy, boasting a prominent central bar-shaped structure composed of bright stars. 

However, behind the galaxy’s central bar lies a behemoth black hole that weighs somewhere between 9.6 and 38 million times as much as the sun, according to a statement from the European Space Agency (ESA), which is a partner on the Hubble Space Telescope. 

Related: The best Hubble Space Telescope images of all time!

“While M91’s prominent bar makes for a spectacular galactic portrait, it also hides an astronomical monstrosity,” according to the ESA statement. “Like our own galaxy, M91 contains a supermassive black hole at its center.” 

The photo of M91 was captured using Wide Field Camera 3 on the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Researchers were able to weigh the galaxy’s central black hole using archived Hubble data, originally collected during a 2009 study. 

The recent image, which the ESA shared on April 11, was captured as part of an initiative to study the connection between young stars and the clouds of cold gas in which they form. The team used Hubble observations, captured in ultraviolet and visible light, combined with data from the ground-based Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), which observes galaxies at radio wavelengths. This combination provided a detailed view of the galaxy. 

You can see the latest updates and observations from the Hubble Space Telescope online. 

Follow Samantha Mathewson @Sam_Ashley13. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



Read original article here