*** The Official Astronomy & Universe Thread ***

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So we have images of Enceladus:

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NASA's Cassini spacecraft zoomed by Saturn's icy moon Enceladus on Oct. 14, 2015, capturing this stunning image of the moon's north pole. A companion view from the wide-angle camera (PIA20010) shows a zoomed out view of the same region for context.


Scientists expected the north polar region of Enceladus to be heavily cratered, based on low-resolution images from the Voyager mission, but high-resolution Cassini images show a landscape of stark contrasts. Thin cracks cross over the pole -- the northernmost extent of a global system of such fractures. Before this Cassini flyby, scientists did not know if the fractures extended so far north on Enceladus.


North on Enceladus is up. The image was taken in visible green light with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera.


The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 4,000 miles (6,000 kilometers) from Enceladus and at a Sun-Enceladus-spacecraft, or phase, angle of 9 degrees. Image scale is 115 feet (35 meters) per pixel.

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

More:

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/closest-ever-views-of-saturns-moon-enceladus
 
Been getting a urge to get into astronomy. Its something that I’ve wanted to get into for a while.

Been prodding around the net and the Nexstar 6SE looks like a safe starter kit; some good deals on the bay too. Anyone recommend something for 600-700 that will last?
 
New findings about a star shredded by a black hole:


When a star wanders too close to a black hole, intense tidal forces rip the star apart. In these events, called “tidal disruptions,” some of the stellar debris is flung outward at high speed while the rest falls toward the black hole. This causes a distinct X-ray flare that can last for a few years. NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, Swift Gamma-ray Burst Explorer, and ESA/NASA’s XMM-Newton collected different pieces of this astronomical puzzle in a tidal disruption event called ASASSN-14li, which was found in an optical search by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) in November 2014. The event occurred near a supermassive black hole estimated to weigh a few million times the mass of the sun in the center of PGC 043234, a galaxy that lies about 290 million light-years away. Astronomers hope to find more events like ASASSN-14li to test theoretical models about how black holes affect their environments.
During the tidal disruption event, filaments containing much of the star's mass fall toward the black hole. Eventually these gaseous filaments merge into a smooth, hot disk glowing brightly in X-rays. As the disk forms, its central region heats up tremendously, which drives a flow of material, called a wind, away from the disk.
 
Maybe slightly off topic but just listening to astronaut's guide to life on earth. Is there any other good documentary, films or books people would recommend?
Love space stuff but looking for a nice easy way in to some more depth
 
Maybe slightly off topic but just listening to astronaut's guide to life on earth. Is there any other good documentary, films or books people would recommend?
Love space stuff but looking for a nice easy way in to some more depth

Here:

My "NASA" collection:

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The History Channel one is "Beyond the Moon:Failure is not an Option 2". The remastered and restored Carl Sagan's Cosmos is not shown but is a must. The BBC "Space Race" is very good covering the period from WW2 to the moon landings. :)

and here:

http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18350656

and finally Neil deGrasse Tyson's Cosmos.
 
New Horizons sends back images of Pluto’s tiny moon Kerberos:

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Kerberos Revealed. This image of Kerberos was created by combining four individual Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) pictures taken on July 14, approximately seven hours before New Horizons’ closest approach to Pluto, at a range of 245,600 miles (396,100 km) from Kerberos. The image was deconvolved to recover the highest possible spatial resolution and oversampled by a factor of eight to reduce pixilation effects. Kerberos appears to have a double-lobed shape, approximately 7.4 miles (12 kilometers) across in its long dimension and 2.8 miles (4.5 kilometers) in its shortest dimension.

Credits: NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI

The family portrait of Pluto’s moons is now complete:

http://www.nasa.gov/feature/last-of-pluto-s-moons-mysterious-kerberos-revealed-by-new-horizons
 
Astronomers at Germany's Ruhr-Universitat Bochum have unveiled the largest space map ever compiled:

Comprising 268 individual images taken over five years, the photo shows the entire ribbon of the Milky Way in a mind-boggling 46 billion pixels. The complete image measures 855,000 by 54,000 pixels -- about 2,000 times the size of a picture taken with a 20-megapixel digital camera.

"If you would want to display this in full resolution on full HD TV screens, you would need more than 22,000 screens," Moritz Hackstein, a PhD candidate who conducted the space survey, told CBS News.

At a whopping 194 gigabytes, the image file is about four orders of magitude larger than a high-res picture on your computer, or about the size of a 20,000-song mp3 library.

The viewing tool and press release are here:

http://astro.vm.rub.de/

http://aktuell.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/pm2015/pm00143.html.en
 
James Webb Space Telescope's Integrated Science Instrument Module goes into the Space Environment Simulator, a giant thermal vacuum and cryogenic testing chamber for a final test:

 
The James Webb Space Telescope needs to be kept as cold as possible in order to detect infrared light from faint and very distant objects. A key component of this is the observatory’s tennis court-sized sunshield, which obstructs the warmth of the Sun:

 
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