“As the centuries unfold, millions of artists will live on the moon and paint the moon and Mars as we go out into the universe.”
Today we remember the fourth man to walk on the moon. Astronaut Alan Bean passed away in Houston, at the age of 86.
Bean was the lunar module pilot for Apollo 12 in November 1969, and was commander of Skylab 3 in June 1973. He retired from NASA in 1981 to devote his time to painting.
Planet 55 Cancri e is basically a giant diamond. like the planet is a diamond. and it would be worth $26.9 nonillion
Planet Gliese 436 b is an ice planet that is constantly on fire do to its close proximity to its parent star. the ice doesn’t melt bc the planet’s gravity is so strong it physically prevents the ice from melting
Planet HD 189733b rains sideways glass…. constantly
Planet J1407-B has planetary rings that are 200x the size of saturn. if saturn’s ring were as big as J1407-B’s we’d be able to see them with our naked eye from earth AND they would dominate our sky and look larger than a full moon
Planet Wasp-12b rotates so close to its parent star that its slowly being consumed by the it
Planet Gliese 581c is one of the candidates for a planet that can support life however it orbits a tiny dwarf star and is tidally locked so one side is constantly subject to immense sunlight while the other is constantly in darkness. there’s a small area of the planet however, that is just the right temp to support life. u just can’t step out of said area. the skies are red and the plants would have be a black color instead of a green bc they would use infrared light for photosynthesis. (a message was actually sent to the planet in 2008 in hopes that there’s life on the planet but the message wont reach the planet until 2029).
Planet GJ 1214b is a water planet nicknamed “water world” is has no land at all and the water is so deep it goes down miles all the way to the planet’s core.
Planet Wasp-17b is the largest planet discovered thus far. its so large its existence contradicts our understanding of how planets are formed. and it has a retrograde orbit, so it orbits in the opposite direction of its parent star.
Planet HD 188753 has 3 suns you should have triple shadows and there would be almost daily eclipses. and no matter which direction u face on the planet u would always see a sunset
Planet HD106906b is the loneliest planet discovered thus far. its known as “super jupiter” bc its 11x bigger than jupiter. it orbits its parent star at a distance of 60 billion miles (which is v strange) hence why its the loneliest planet.
Planet Tres 2b is the darkest planet known. it reflects less than 1% of light (it reflects less light than coal and black acrylic paint). the tiny part of the planet that does reflect light is red making the planet glow a dim red.
On Tuesday, April 4 at 3 p.m. EDT (noon PDT), At Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Cassini team host a news briefing to discuss the mission’s Grand Finale.
Tune in Tuesday: youtube.com/nasajpl/live
Cassini left Earth with less than 1/30th of the propellant needed to power all her adventures at Saturn. The navigation team used the gravity of Saturn’s giant moon Titan to change course and extend the spacecraft’s exploration of Saturn. Titan also provides the gravity assist to push Cassini into its final orbits.
More on Cassini’s navigation: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft/navigation/
Cassini is an orbiter that was named for 18th century astronomer Giovanni Domenico Cassini. She was designed to be captured by Saturn’s gravity and then explore it in detail with a suite of 12 powerful science instruments.
More on the Spacecraft: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft/cassini-orbiter/
Cassini carried the European Space Agency’s Huygens Probe, which in 2005 descended through Titan’s thick, perpetual clouds and made the most distant landing to date in our solar system.
More on Huygens: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft/huygens-probe/
Your mobile phone likely captures dozens of megapixels in images. Cassini, using 1990s technology closer to one megapixel cameras, has returned some of the most stunning images in the history of solar system exploration.
Cassini Hall of Fame Images: go.nasa.gov/2oec6H2 More on Cassini’s Cameras: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/imaging-science-subsystem/
Those great images have inspired artist’s and amateur image processors to create truly fantastic imagery inspired by the beauty of Saturn. Feeling inspired? There’s still time to share your Cassini-inspired art with us.
Cassini Inspires Campaign: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/cassiniinspires/
Two decades is a long time to live in the harsh environment of outer space (respect to the fast-approaching 40-year-old twin Voyager spacecraft). Launched in 1997, Cassini logged a lot of milestones over the years.
Explore the Cassini Timeline: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/the-journey/timeline/
And, you can read it. Week after week going back to 1997, Cassini’s adventures, discoveries and status have been chronicled in the mission’s weekly significant events report.
Read It: https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/?topic=121
Cassini was the prototype for NASA’s Eyes on the Solar System 3-D visualization software, so it’s fitting the latest Cassini module in the free, downloadable software is the most detailed, elaborate visualization of any mission to date.
Fly the Mission - Start to Finish: http://eyes.nasa.gov/cassini
In addition to all the new information from 22 orbits in unexplored space, Cassini’s engineers reprogrammed the spacecraft to send back details about Saturn’s atmosphere to the very last second before the giant planet swallows her up on Sept. 15, 2017.
More on the Grand Finale: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/grandfinale
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
Haaaaaay I’m on iTunes now! Slightly more convenient to download maybe!
Shooting for an April first post date! I just started researching and hooboy, I am going to go way way way way down the rabbit hole of tangents. I think everything is interesting and cool.
February is Black History Month, and it’s been the perfect excuse to research all of the African-American people who have contributed to space research and exploration! I talk about seven astronomers and nine astronauts who have delved into outer space because it was just so dang amazing, nothing could stop them from learning about it; astrophiles, if you will. Space-lovers.
Below the cut, I have the transcript, sources, music credits, and timeline of people I talked about! Maybe you have something you want to hear me talk about that’s related to space. I’m kind of set for topics for the next few months but I’ll take suggestions here or you can tweet at me on Twitter at @HDandtheVoid, or you can ask me to my face if you know me. Please subscribe on iTunes, rate my humble podcast and maybe review it, and tell friends if you think they’d like to hear it!
(My thoughts on the next episode are the SOFIA observatory, Chuck Yaeger, the transit of Venus, or quasars and blasars. The next episode will go up March 19th, unfortunately; I have a work retreat the day I’d usually post and I don’t trust the wifi out there. See you then!)
Benjamin Banneker, American (1731-1806)
Dorothy Vaughan, American (1910-2008)
Katherine Johnson, American (1918- )
Mary Jackson, American (1921-2005)
Ed Dwight, American (1933- )
Robert Henry Lawrence, American (1935-1967)
Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II, American (1936-2001)
Frederick Gregory, American (1941- )
Guion "Guy" Bluford, American (1942- )
Doctor Ronald E. McNair, American (1950-1986)
Ilan Ramon, Israeli, American (1954-2003)
Doctor Bernard Harris, Jr., American (1956- )
Doctor Mae Jemison, American (1956- )
Neil DeGrasse Tyson, American (1958- )
Michael P. Anderson, American (1959-2003)
Leland Melvin, American (1964- )
Doctor Beth A. Brown, American (1969-2008)
African Americans in Astronomy and Space via ThoughtCo (Mar 2017)
Benjamin Banneker via Encyclopedia Britannica
Benjamin Banneker via PBS
Benjamin Banneker via America’s Library
Benjamin Banneker via Brookhaven National Laboratory
Hidden Figures (2016)
Katherine Johnson via NASA
Mary Jackson via NASA
Dorothy Vaughan via NASA
Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II via Encyclopedia Britannica
Doctor Arthur Bertram Cuthbert Walker II obituary via the American Astronomical Society
Ed Dwight via The History Makers
Robert Henry Lawrence via Black Past
Robert Henry Lawrence via PBS
Robert Henry Lawrence via Hill Air Force Base
Guion "Guy" Bluford via Space.com (Feb 2017)
Guion Bluford: “I mean, I laughed and giggled all the way up. It was such a fun ride.”
Guion "Guy" Bluford via NASA
Guion "Guy" Bluford via Encyclopedia Britannica
Doctor Ronald E. McNair via NASA
Doctor Ronald E. McNair via Black Past
Doctor Ronald E. McNair via New Jersey Institute of Technology
Frederick “Fred” Gregory via NASA
Frederick “Fred” Gregory via Black Past
The Harris Foundation website
“empower individuals, in particular minorities and others who are economically and/or socially disadvantaged, to recognize their potential and pursue their dreams.”
Doctor Mae Jemison via NASA
Doctor Mae Jemison via NASA
Doctor Mae Jemison via the U.S. National Library of Medicine
Mae Jemison: “I followed the Gemini, the Mercury, and the Apollo programs, I had books about them and I always assumed I would go into space. Not necessarily as an astronaut; I thought because we were on the moon when I was 11 or 12 years old, that we would be going to Mars—I'd be going to work on Mars as a scientist. And that's despite the fact that there were no women, and it was all white males—and in fact, I thought that was one of the dumbest things in the world, because I used to always worry, believe it or not as a little girl, I was like: What would aliens think of humans? You know, these are the only humans?”
Michael P. Anderson via NASA
Michael P. Anderson via Black Past
Ilan Ramon via NASA
Leland Melvin via Space.com (Nov 2017)
Leland Melvin as Makers Men via Space.com (May 2017)
Leland Melvin via NASA
Leland Melvin via Pioneer Works
Doctor Beth A. Brown via the American Physical Society
Doctor Beth A. Brown via the American Astronomical Society
Doctor Beth A. Brown via NASA
Neil DeGrasse Tyson via Hayden Planetarium
Neil DeGrasse Tyson via the New Yorker
StarTalk Radio via Apple Podcasts
Intro Music: ‘Better Times Will Come’ by No Luck Club off their album Prosperity
Filler Music: ‘Dorothy Dandridge Eyes (feat. Esperanza Spalding)’ by Janelle Monáe off her album The Electric Lady.
Outro Music: ‘Fields of Russia’ by Mutefish off their album On Draught
The Yutu rover suffered a mysterious “abnormality” over the weekend. And the robot’s microblogged death note may make you cry.
oh gosh!
Binary star systems have come up a lot in the past 18 podcasts, and here is a perfect example of them!
As promised, here is a comic about the brightest star in the northern Hemisphere: Sirius! Sirius B will be shown in future comics as 2018 is year of the dog and since Sirius is the dog star, it is year of the Sirius!
Enjoy!
https://www.space.com/21702-sirius-brightest-star.html
Will NASA send astronauts to the moon again or any other planet within the next ten years?
@nasaorion spacecraft will launch on the Space Launch system (the largest spacecraft every built, even bigger than the Saturn V rocket!). Both are under construction @nasa currently, and this is the spacecraft that will take us beyond the low earth orbit of the International Space Station, whether that be the Moon, Mars, or beyond. We will conduct test missions with astronauts on Orion in the early 2020s, and a first mission will take us 40,000 miles beyond the Moon!
Oh my gosh this is incredibly exciting! Imagine combining them with a Star Wars LEGO set...
A podcast project to fill the space in my heart and my time that used to be filled with academic research. In 2018, that space gets filled with... MORE SPACE! Cheerfully researched, painstakingly edited, informal as hell, definitely worth everyone's time.
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