Recent comments in /f/space
dram3 t1_j6dj3h9 wrote
First time I saw starling was on a boat off the north island, from memory they were headed south west? Not sure on that. They were mostly in line but there were a few out of line, might look like an arrow.
suarezd1 t1_j6dirp5 wrote
Reply to The Apollo EVA suit system, with the inner cooling garment at left featuring micropiping hand-sewn into it, a drink bladder, and vitals monitoring belt (all shown.) Fun fact: the astronauts choose their own "regular" underwear to wear beneath that garment. by DweadPiwateWoberts
Kinda like wearing underwear with swim trunks, I get it.
[deleted] t1_j6dio5k wrote
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desucca t1_j6dint9 wrote
Reply to comment by SuppressiveFire in Comet ZTF over Mount Etna by Dario Giannobile by SuppressiveFire
Beautiful! How many exposures were required? I'm wondering if an amateur can get out and see some results with some basic long exposures? Is it similar to neowise as far as brightness?
Thanks for sharing
[deleted] t1_j6dhnrn wrote
Reply to comment by Zero7CO in Spotted strange cluster of objects traveling across the sky this evening by hawkz40
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[deleted] t1_j6dh8zu wrote
Reply to comment by PerryODonnel in What if our sun was a part of another constellation on another planet? by smilingpike31
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mcarterphoto t1_j6dh1xr wrote
Reply to comment by MindForeverWandering in In the event of a fatal manned mission (example Artemis 2), would exploration stop in this period? by damarisu
Doh, good catch! I think I shaved a year off!
[deleted] t1_j6dgzvs wrote
Reply to comment by Waddensky in What if our sun was a part of another constellation on another planet? by smilingpike31
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firefly-metaverse OP t1_j6dgwgc wrote
Reposting this again according to the rule for images on Sunday. The source and all the data is here:
https://spacestatsonline.com/launches/manned
and another relate chart with the number of astronauts launched by year:
[deleted] t1_j6dguwp wrote
Reply to comment by nhpcguy in Asteroids sudden flyby shows blind spot in planetary threat detection by coinfanking
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PerryODonnel t1_j6dg6rz wrote
If a sun falls in the constellation and nobody is there to see it, does it even make a point?
[deleted] t1_j6dfgmq wrote
Reply to comment by ManikArcanik in What if our sun was a part of another constellation on another planet? by smilingpike31
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ManikArcanik t1_j6df996 wrote
Reply to comment by smilingpike31 in What if our sun was a part of another constellation on another planet? by smilingpike31
Translated: mothership is on its way, soon WE become the master!
[deleted] t1_j6ddmqy wrote
Reply to comment by SavageRat in Asteroids sudden flyby shows blind spot in planetary threat detection by coinfanking
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Marchello_E t1_j6dcfb1 wrote
Reply to comment by nhpcguy in Asteroids sudden flyby shows blind spot in planetary threat detection by coinfanking
Apparently we need a swarm of defender rockets out there and hope it stays in friendly control.
AJerk2SomeButtNotAll t1_j6dcb4g wrote
Am I horrible because when reading “beautiful new Hubble photo shows hot young variable stars-“ my finished it up with “in your area.”
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[deleted] t1_j6dbiii wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in In the event of a fatal manned mission (example Artemis 2), would exploration stop in this period? by damarisu
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AstronomicVerse OP t1_j6dbieh wrote
This is Aldebaran, the iconic and brightest star in the constellation Taurus. Aldebaran is a transliteration of the Arabic name الدبران, meaning "The Follower", which the nomads of Arabia called because it seemed to follow the Pleiades star cluster across the sky.
Did you know that there are over 200 stars in the sky that have a similar Arabic origin to their name?
In the golden age of the Islamic empire, rulers emphasized and rewarded the pursuit of knowledge. There was an concentrated effort to search far and wide for books and to translate them back to Arabic (Translation Movement). This accomplished two critical things -- it preserved knowledge from previous civilizations that would have otherwise been lost forever, and it enabled Muslim scholars to build upon previous works. In the case of the famous Muslim astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi, he reviewed, revised, and expanded on Ptolemy's work. In his famous "Book of Fixed Stars" (كتاب صور الكواكب الثَّابِتَةِ), we see Al-Sufi use the Greek constellation drawings while using Arabic star names for the first time. Al-Sufi's book became a critical record of stars and constellation observations that was later translated for other astronomers to continue their work.
This scholarly effort to seek knowledge, preserve it, expand on it, can be traced back to the first word, verse, and principle revealed in the Quran:
"ٱقْرَأْ بِٱسْمِ رَبِّكَ ٱلَّذِى خَلَقَ"
"Read! In the Name of your Lord Who has created (all that exists)."
(Quran:Al-Alaq 96:1)
---
I'm a beginner amateur astrophotographer sharing my own faith-inspired reflections on my acquisitions. I'm on instagram here for anyone wishing to follow me on my journey.
Equipment:
- TS-Optics Photoline 80mm + flattener
- Skywatcher HEQ5 Pro
- Canon 850D
- Optolong L-Pro
Acquisition:
- 20 x 30" lights @ ISO 800
- 10 darks
- 20 bias
- 50 flats
- Unguided from Bortle 8/9 zone
SavageRat t1_j6dbgjf wrote
Reply to comment by nhpcguy in Asteroids sudden flyby shows blind spot in planetary threat detection by coinfanking
If you pick it up from far enough away, it wouldn't take much to knock an asteroid off course. Pop a nuke next to it and knock it off course by a degree, and it would miss us by 1000's of Km.
[deleted] t1_j6db7po wrote
Reply to comment by FlyingBike in What if our sun was a part of another constellation on another planet? by smilingpike31
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pippinator1984 t1_j6db1eq wrote
Reply to comment by Zippydodah2022 in In the event of a fatal manned mission (example Artemis 2), would exploration stop in this period? by damarisu
Neil Armstrong almost died practicing with the landing or the ability to control the moon buggy here.prototype? Have seen video clips. Dangerous then and now. IMO
[deleted] t1_j6db09w wrote
Reply to comment by idktheyarealltaken in In the event of a fatal manned mission (example Artemis 2), would exploration stop in this period? by damarisu
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Generalitary t1_j6dalwh wrote
Reply to In the event of a fatal manned mission (example Artemis 2), would exploration stop in this period? by damarisu
Now, as in the previous space race, our ambitions are fueled by international political tension. No one wants to lose because that means being in some way under the thumb of the country that wins. So they're going to put lives on the line. Having people die would be a huge setback in the race, so they'll take huge efforts to prevent it, but it's not going to stop the race entirely.
riefpirate t1_j6dj6zm wrote
Reply to In the event of a fatal manned mission (example Artemis 2), would exploration stop in this period? by damarisu
I don't think anything would stop the space program now and I hope nothing ever will.