Tag Archives: cloaked

Hours After Liberating Malevelon Creek, Helldivers 2 Players Spot Enormous Cloaked Ships Over Automaton Worlds – IGN

  1. Hours After Liberating Malevelon Creek, Helldivers 2 Players Spot Enormous Cloaked Ships Over Automaton Worlds IGN
  2. We celebrated too soon: Helldivers 2 players spot massive cloaked gunships in the skies above Automaton planets PC Gamer
  3. Uh oh: Helldivers 2 players glimpse cloaked warships over Automaton planets, and I’m not convinced it’s an April Fools’ thing Windows Central
  4. Hours after claiming Malevelon Creek, Helldivers 2 players spot massive cloaked gunships above Automaton worlds, which seems bad Gamesradar
  5. “Only a traitor is curious about alien artifacts”: What Exactly is Helldivers 2 Cooking Up Now? FandomWire

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New photo reveals a NASA spacecraft cloaked in Martian dust

Enlarge / Planetary scientist Paul Byrne created this compilation of NASA images showing the InSight spacecraft on its 10th day on Mars, and the lander 1,201 days later.

Paul Byrne/Twitter/NASA

Anyone planning to move to Mars should probably account for dust. Lots of dust.

Earlier this month NASA announced that it would soon have to cease science operations on its Mars InSight lander due to diminishing power levels from the vehicle’s dust-cloaked solar panels. The spacecraft, which landed on the red planet in November 2018 to study seismic activity, simply cannot produce enough power to operate normally.

InSight has detected more than 1,300 marsquakes, NASA scientists say, including a relatively powerful magnitude 5 quake on May 4. This was the largest marsquake detected to date, and at the upper limit of what scientists hoped to observe. This seismic activity has allowed scientists to tease out details about the inner structure of the red planet.

But scientists say they expect InSight to become completely inoperable by December of this year, so they plan to conclude the vehicle’s science operations this summer. This is because InSight’s solar panels, which produced 5,000 watt-hours of power each day after it landed, can now only generate about 500 watt-hours. And the amount of daily power continues to decrease due to dust accumulations on its solar panels over the last three and a half years.

For some NASA missions to Mars, passing whirlwinds have helped to clear dust from a spacecraft’s solar panels, such as happened with the Spirit and Opportunity rovers. But unfortunately that has not happened for the seismic lander.

The first step toward shutting down InSight involves putting the spacecraft’s robotic arm into a stowed position. This arm was initially used to deploy InSight’s seismometer, and later for several tasks including the removal of dust from InSight’s solar panels. But now there simply is not enough power to move it regularly, and scientists want to conserve what remains to operate the seismometer a little while longer.

Before its stowage, however, the robotic arm snapped one final selfie of InSight, and the dramatic result shows just how dusty the spacecraft has become. The entirety of InSight is now cloaked in cold, dry, reddish dust.

The death of spacecraft on distant worlds always feels melancholy. Humanity sends these metal machines into hostile environments, where they struggle to survive and provide us with new knowledge about the unknown. Eventually, they succumb to the cold or the radiation or the dust, and we can no longer communicate with them.

But InSight was a good spacecraft, outliving its design lifetime of two years and producing a bonanza of science, including the discovery that the Martian core is much smaller than expected.

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New Hubble photo shows galaxy’s bright supermassive black hole cloaked in dust

NASA’s venerable space telescope has captured a stunning new view of a galaxy with an active black hole obscured by tendrils of dark dust.

The spiral galaxy, known as NGC 7172, is located about 110 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Piscis Austrinus. The image combines two sets of images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys and Wide Field Camera 3.

The new image, which NASA shared on April 1, highlights tendrils of dark dust threaded across the heart of the galaxy. That dust obscures the bright central region of the galaxy. 

Related: Hubble telescope shows the sparkling side of a spiral galaxy

When viewed from the side, the dusty tendrils make NGC 7172 look like a normal spiral galaxy. However, NGC 7172 actually has an incredibly bright, active galactic nucleus, according to a NASA statement. 

“When astronomers inspected NGC 7172 across the electromagnetic spectrum they quickly discovered that there was more to it than meets the eye,” NASA officials said in the statement. “NGC 7172 is a Seyfert galaxy — a type of galaxy with an intensely luminous active galactic nucleus powered by matter accreting onto a supermassive black hole.”

As dust and gas falls into the galaxy’s central supermassive black hole, it emits bright rays of light. In fact, a galaxy with an active galactic nucleus is able to produce more radiation than the entire rest of the galaxy. 

The recent Hubble observations were collected as part of a study of nearby active galactic nuclei. Hubble has been observing the universe since its launch in April 1990; its Advanced Camera for Surveys recently marked 20 years in space.

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