amnhnyc:

A key unknown in lunar science is to what extent the Moon is a melted, radially layered planet like Earth or a primordial unmelted relic of the early solar system, like many asteroids. A new era of lunar exploration is underway, offering major new insights into this decades-old question.
In this week’s podcast, planetary scientist Ben Weiss of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reviews current understanding of the lunar interior and shares new results from spacecraft observations and studies of Apollo samples. 
Image: NASA/JPL/Galileo Spacecraft

amnhnyc:

A key unknown in lunar science is to what extent the Moon is a melted, radially layered planet like Earth or a primordial unmelted relic of the early solar system, like many asteroids. A new era of lunar exploration is underway, offering major new insights into this decades-old question.

In this week’s podcast, planetary scientist Ben Weiss of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reviews current understanding of the lunar interior and shares new results from spacecraft observations and studies of Apollo samples. 

Image: NASA/JPL/Galileo Spacecraft

mothernaturenetwork:

U.S. won’t head up new manned moon landings
NASA’s focus is on human missions to asteroids and to Mars

mothernaturenetwork:

U.S. won’t head up new manned moon landings

NASA’s focus is on human missions to asteroids and to Mars

(via itsfullofstars)

smithsonianlibraries:

In 1836, Richard E. Locke, writing for the New York Sun, published an account of life discovered on the moon by noted British astronomer Sir John Herschel. Here, in a portfolio of images from Leopoldo Galluzzo’s Altre scoverte fatte nella luna dal Sigr. Herschel , (1836) winged moon men (or “Moon Yetis” as we call them today) hunt moon bison and braid their girlfriend’s hair.
More from this publication.
More about the discovery.

smithsonianlibraries:

In 1836, Richard E. Locke, writing for the New York Sun, published an account of life discovered on the moon by noted British astronomer Sir John Herschel. Here, in a portfolio of images from Leopoldo Galluzzo’s Altre scoverte fatte nella luna dal Sigr. Herschel , (1836) winged moon men (or “Moon Yetis” as we call them today) hunt moon bison and braid their girlfriend’s hair.

More from this publication.

More about the discovery.

(via scientificillustration)

the-science-llama:

Comet Pan-Starrs Moonset
A time lapse video of Comet Pan-STARRS at sunset with the crescent moon setting together.
Taken from Altadena, California — Dan Finnerty

the-science-llama:

Comet Pan-Starrs Moonset

A time lapse video of Comet Pan-STARRS at sunset with the crescent moon setting together.

Taken from Altadena, California — Dan Finnerty

the-science-llama:

sagansense:

Comet Pan-STARRS Near the Moon Tonight: How to See It

Many stargazers attempting to view the Comet Pan-STARRS on recent nights have been thwarted by the comet’s low position in the western sky. But tonight (March 12), the thin crescent moon will lend a hand.

Over the past weekend countless observers across in North America and Europe tried — and for the most part failed — to see Comet Pan-STARRS, in part due to its low altitude above the west-northwest horizon. The bright glare of the evening twilight sky just is also a hurdle, since it can as make the comet harder to see just after sunset.

But fret not, comet lovers! Weather permitting, observing conditions will improve by this evening, since Comet Pan-STARR’s position above the horizon will be noticeably higher and the moon can be used as a benchmark to point your way.

Clear western view essential
The best suggestion I can make is for your Tuesday night comet watch is to first find an observing site with the least amount of any obstructions in the direction of the western part of the sky. [How to see the comet]

If you end up successfully catching a glimpse of them, the moon and the comet will not be any higher than 10 degrees above the horizon. That is about the size of your clenched held out at arm’s length.

If you have a house or some trees in your line of sight, then you’re going to have to find some other viewing site.

Step 1: Find the moon
In order to boost your chances of seeing Comet Pan-STARRS, be sure to arrive at your viewing site in time to see the sunset. Take note of where on the horizon the sun sets.

Now wait about 30 minutes as the sky slowly begins to darken. Truthfully, it will still be rather bright looking toward the west a half hour after the sunset … this was one of the main problems people have had in recent days in trying to see the comet.

However, first things first: Let’s locate the moon. Take your clenched fist and measure off 10 degrees up from that point on the horizon where the sun disappeared about a half hour before. Now look a bit to the right from the top of your fist. That’s where the crescent moon will be.

Seeing the moon will be a bit of a challenge in itself because it will be very narrow, appearing only about 28 hours after passing its new phase. Because of this, the lunar disk will be only 1-percent illuminated. It will be oriented with its bright sliver down, resembling a cup or a thin smile on the sky.

If you can’t see the moon with your unaided eye, then use binoculars. Once you pick it up with binoculars you should be able to find it without optical aid.

Finding Comet Pan-STARRS
With the moon found in the evening sky, it is time to use it as a guide to spot Comet Pan-STARRS.

The comet will be located about 5 degrees to the left of the moon. Once again, you might not initially see it with your eyes, so use binoculars if you need to. Five degrees measures roughly “half a fist” in length.

You’ll know Comet Pan-STARRS when you see it. It will appear as a bright, star-like “head” with a short, stubby tail extending from the head upwards and slightly to the left from the bright end. Like the moon, once you find it with binoculars, you should, with time, be able to make it out against the bright twilight sky.

Comet Pan-STARRS and the moon should be visible for about a half hour before they disappear into the murky haze always located near the horizon.

Not so ‘Great Comet’?
Comet Pan-STARRS was discovered in June 2011 by a team of astronomers using the Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System (or PAN-STARRS), a telescope in Hawaii. The comet is officially designated as C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS) and is thought to take more than 100 million years to make a single orbit around the sun.

Right now the brightness of Comet Pan-STARRS, according to viewers who spotted it in the Southern Hemisphere, ranks at about first-magnitude on the astronomy brightness scale. That is about as bright as the brightest stars.

Normally, a comet as bright as this would be categorized as a “Great Comet “, but most observers feel that Pan-STARRS does not fall into this category because it’s not visible against a fully dark sky. The bright twilight background is working against making it a prominent eye-catching sight.

And the comet’s dust tail is not breathtakingly long, but rather, short and rather stubby. To the naked eye, not much of the may be visible at all, though in big binoculars or small telescopes, some say that Pan-STARRS is a rather impressive sight.

Comet Pan-STARRS is one of at least three comets in the night sky currently thrilling stargazers. Another comet (the Comet Lemmon) is currently visible to observers in Southern Hemisphere, while the third object is Comet ISON.

Comet ISON is a promising celestial object that was discovered by amateur astronomers in 2012 and is expected to make its closest approach to the sun in late November. The comet will be only 800,000 miles (1.2 million km)from the sun at its closest point, and could put on a dazzling night sky spectacle. But it could also fizzle out, NASA scientists have said.

NASA astronomers and stargazers around the world are regularly tracking Comet ISON, as well as comets Pan-STARRS and Lemmon as they shine in the night sky.

Keep Looking Up: How To Spot Comet Pan-STARRS in March 2013

Catching Comet Pan-STARRS: Photos & Sky Maps For Stargazers

Stay Curious! | Know Your Comet/Astronomy History, Read ‘Comet’ by Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan | ‘Comet’ Audio Reading Snippet for Audible.com

image

Aaawww yeeeeeeeaaa!!

thescienceofreality:

Traces of water have been detected within the crystalline structure of mineral samples from the lunar highland upper crust obtained during the Apollo missions, according to a University of Michigan researcher and his colleagues.”

image 

(Credit: Photo courtesy of NASA/Johnson Space Center)

The results seem to contradict the predominant lunar formation theory — that the moon was formed from debris generated during a giant impact between Earth and another planetary body, approximately the size of Mars, according to U-M’s Youxue Zhang and his colleagues.

“Because these are some of the oldest rocks from the moon, the water is inferred to have been in the moon when it formed,” Zhang said. “That is somewhat difficult to explain with the current popular moon-formation model, in which the moon formed by collecting the hot ejecta as the result of a super-giant impact of a martian-size body with the proto-Earth.

“Under that model, the hot ejecta should have been degassed almost completely, eliminating all water.”

A paper titled “Water in lunar anorthosites and evidence for a wet early moon” was published online Feb. 17 in the journal Nature Geoscience. The first author is Hejiu Hui, postdoctoral research associate of civil and environmental engineering and earth sciences at the University of Notre Dame. Hui received a doctorate at U-M under Zhang, a professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and one of three co-authors of the Nature Geoscience paper.

Over the last five years, spacecraft observations and new lab measurements of Apollo lunar samples have overturned the long-held belief that the moon is bone-dry.”

Read more…

laughingsquid:

The Family Photo That Was Left on the Moon in 1972
thesciencellama:

Jupiter Moon Conjunction— January 21 @ 8 p.m. PT / 11 p.m. ET
A waxing gibbous moon (78% illuminated) will pass within less than a degree to the south of Jupiter high in the evening sky. For reference, your closed fist held out at arms length covers 10 degrees. These two won’t get that close again until 2026.
Those of you in South America will be able to see the occultation or Jupiter pass behind the moon completely. Video from JPLnews

thesciencellama:

Jupiter Moon Conjunction
— January 21 @ 8 p.m. PT / 11 p.m. ET

A waxing gibbous moon (78% illuminated) will pass within less than a degree to the south of Jupiter high in the evening sky. For reference, your closed fist held out at arms length covers 10 degrees. These two won’t get that close again until 2026.

Those of you in South America will be able to see the occultation or Jupiter pass behind the moon completely.
image 
Video from JPLnews

(Source: the-science-llama, via thescienceofreality)

livelymorgue:

A suit built in 1960 by the Republic Aviation Corporation solved the problem of what “the well-dressed man” would “wear for a stroll over the airless moonscape.” The Oct. 16 photo spread promised that the outfit would have its own oxygen supply and that its tripod legs would “enable its wearer to rest by sitting on a perch inside.” The wrench hands were presumably for securing loose screws. Photo: Sam Falk/The New York Times

(via laughingsquid)

thescienceofreality:

NASA’s GRAIL Creates Most Accurate Moon Gravity Map.


Twin NASA probes orbiting Earth’s moon have generated the highest resolution gravity field map of any celestial body. 

The new map, created by the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission, is allowing scientists to learn about the moon’s internal structure and composition in unprecedented detail. Data from the two washing machine-sized spacecraft also will provide a better understanding of how Earth and other rocky planets in the solar system formed and evolved. 

The gravity field map reveals an abundance of features never before seen in detail, such as tectonic structures, volcanic landforms, basin rings, crater central peaks and numerous simple, bowl-shaped craters. Data also show the moon’s gravity field is unlike that of any terrestrial planet in our solar system. 

“What this map tells us is that more than any other celestial body we know of, the moon wears its gravity field on its sleeve,” said GRAIL Principal Investigator Maria Zuber of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. “When we see a notable change in the gravity field, we can sync up this change with surface topography features such as craters, rilles or mountains.” 



Go here to continue reading the article and learn more about the images …

cnet:

Curious report of the day:
Report: U.S. Planned On Blowing Up Moon With Nuke Detonating a Nuke on the Moon During Cold War In 1950s

The secret project dubbed, “A Study of Lunar Research Flights” and nicknamed “Project A119,” was seriously being considered until it was scrapped because military officials were worried it would hurt the people on Earth.

Phew?

One for our Stuff They Don’t Want You to Know listeners. There’s a slightly more reputable version of the story on Reuters.

cnet:

Curious report of the day:

Report: U.S. Planned On Blowing Up Moon With Nuke Detonating a Nuke on the Moon During Cold War In 1950s

The secret project dubbed, “A Study of Lunar Research Flights” and nicknamed “Project A119,” was seriously being considered until it was scrapped because military officials were worried it would hurt the people on Earth.

Phew?

One for our Stuff They Don’t Want You to Know listeners. There’s a slightly more reputable version of the story on Reuters.

inothernews:

MOON SLIVER  On the morning of November 14, the Moon’s umbral shadow tracked across northern Australia before heading into the southern Pacific. Captured from a hilltop some 30 miles west of the outback town of Mount Carbine, Queensland, a series of exposures follows the progress of the total solar eclipse in this dramatic composite image. (Photo: Ben Cooper / Launch Photography via NASA APOD)

inothernews:

MOON SLIVER  On the morning of November 14, the Moon’s umbral shadow tracked across northern Australia before heading into the southern Pacific. Captured from a hilltop some 30 miles west of the outback town of Mount Carbine, Queensland, a series of exposures follows the progress of the total solar eclipse in this dramatic composite image. (Photo: Ben Cooper / Launch Photography via NASA APOD)

(via reuters)