Category Archives: Space

Life Destroying Comet Misses Earth By less than 200 Miles!

CometOK, so it was way back in 1883 but an interesting story never the less…

On 12th and 13th August 1883, an astronomer at a small observatory in Zacatecas in Mexico made an extraordinary observation. José Bonilla counted some 450 objects, each surrounded by a kind of mist, passing across the face of the Sun.

Bonilla published his account of this event in a French journal called L’Astronomie in 1886. Unable to account for the phenomenon, the editor of the journal suggested, rather incredulously, that it must have been caused by birds, insects or dust passing front of the Bonilla’s telescope. (Since then, others have adopted Bonilla’s observations as the first evidence of UFOs.)

Today, Hector Manterola at the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City, and a couple of pals, give a different interpretation. They think that Bonilla must have been seeing fragments of a comet that had recently broken up. This explains the ‘misty’ appearance of the pieces and why they were so close together.

Read the rest at Technology Review.

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How Big Are Solar Flares?

Very cool video that shows just how small and insignificant we really are.

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NASA Spacecraft Snaps 1st Photo of Mercury from Orbit | Space.com

Messenger Mercury Photo

The first spacecraft ever to circle Mercury has beamed home the first-ever photo taken of the small rocky planet from orbit, showing a stark landscape peppered with craters.

NASA’s Messenger spacecraft snapped the new Mercury photo today (March 29) at 5:20 a.m. EDT (0920 GMT). The photo shows the stark gray landscape of southern Mercury, a view that is dominated by a huge impact crater.

Read More: Space.com

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Major Solar Flare Erupts, May Make Auroras Visible in Northern U.S. | Space.com

northern-lights-aurora-alas The sun unleashed another major solar flare Wednesday (March 9), a solar storm so powerful it could spawn dazzling northern lights displays that could be visible from even New York City.

The solar flare erupted at 6:23 p.m. EST (2323 GMT), letting loose a wave of charged particles that is aimed straight at Earth and should arrive in the next few days.

When it does, it could super charge the Earth’s aurora borealis – also known as the Northern Lights – when the particles interact with the planet’s magnetic field and atmosphere.

Read More: Space.com

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Solar System ‘Nemesis’: Nearby Stars Could Pose Threat | Space.com

Red DwarfThis looks like the updated post from the previous one. :)

Astronomical detectives have assembled a stellar lineup, identifying a handful of nearby stars that may come close enough to disturb our solar system in the next billion years or so.

Researchers calculated the orbits of 40,000 low-mass M-dwarf stars and found 18 that may come dangerously close to our cosmic neighborhood in the next billion years. While the chances of this actually happening are probably slim, researchers said, the results could be dramatic.

Read More: Space.com

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