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18/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Stephan's Quintet from Webb, Hubble, and Subaru

 2022 July 18

The featured image shows a grouping of four galaxies, some 
interacting, combining images from Webb, Hubble, and the Subaru telescope.
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

Stephan's Quintet from Webb, Hubble, and Subaru
Image Credit: WebbHubbleSubaruNASAESACSANOAJSTScIProcessing & Copyright: Robert Gendler

Explanation: OK, but why can't you combine images from Webb and Hubble? You can, and today's featured image shows one impressive result. Although the recently launched James Webb Space Telescope (Webb) has a larger mirror than Hubble, it specializes in infrared light and can't see blue -- only up to about orange. Conversely, the Hubble Space Telescope (Hubble) has a smaller mirror than Webb and can't see as far into the infrared as Webb, but can image not only blue light but even ultraviolet. Therefore, Webb and Hubble data can be combined to create images across a wider variety of colors. The featured image of four galaxies from Stephan's Quintet shows Webb images as red and also includes images taken by Japan's ground-based Subaru telescope in Hawaii. Because image data for WebbHubble, and Subaru are made freely available, anyone around the world can process it themselves, and even create intriguing and scientifically useful multi-observatory montages.

17/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Europa and Jupiter from Voyager 1

 2022 July 17

The featured image shows Jupiter's moon Europa in front
of Jupiter with many of Jupiter's clouds, including the Great
Red Spot, visible. 
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

Europa and Jupiter from Voyager 1
Image Credit: NASAVoyager 1, JPL, CaltechProcessing & LicenseAlexis Tranchandon / Solaris

Explanation: What are those spots on Jupiter? Largest and furthest, just right of center, is the Great Red Spot -- a huge storm system that has been raging on Jupiter possibly since Giovanni Cassini's likely notation of it 357 years ago. It is not yet known why this Great Spot is red. The spot toward the lower left is one of Jupiter's largest moons: Europa. Images from Voyager in 1979 bolster the modern hypothesis that Europa has an underground ocean and is therefore a good place to look for extraterrestrial life. But what about the dark spot on the upper right? That is a shadow of another of Jupiter's large moons: Io. Voyager 1 discovered Io to be so volcanic that no impact craters could be found. Sixteen frames from Voyager 1's flyby of Jupiter in 1979 were recently reprocessed and merged to create the featured imageForty-five years ago this August, Voyager 1 launched from Earth and started one of the greatest explorations of the Solar System ever.

16/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Tycho and Clavius at Dawn

 2022 July 16

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Tycho and Clavius at Dawn
Image Credit & Copyright: Eduardo Schaberger Poupeau

Explanation: South is up in this dramatic telescopic view of the lunar terminator and the Moon's rugged southern highlands. The lunar landscape was captured on July 7 with the moon at its first quarter phase. The Sun shines at a low angle from the right as dawn comes to the region's young and old craters Tycho and Clavius. About 100 million years young, Tycho is the sharp-walled 85 kilometer diameter crater below and left of center. Its 2 kilometer tall central peak and far crater wall reflect bright sunlight, Its smooth floor lies in dark shadow. Debris ejected during the impact that created Tycho make it the stand out lunar crater when the Moon is near full though. They produce a highly visible radiating system of light streaks or rays that extend across much of the lunar near side. In fact, some of the material collected at the Apollo 17 landing site, about 2,000 kilometers away, likely originated from the Tycho impact. One of the oldest and largest craters on the Moon's near side, 225 kilometer diameter Clavius is due south (above) of Tycho. Clavius crater's own ray system resulting from its original impact event would have faded long ago. The old crater's worn walls and smooth floor are now overlayed by newer smaller craters from impacts that occurred after Clavius was formed. Reaching above the older crater, tops of the newer crater walls reflect this dawn's early light to create narrow shining arcs within a shadowed Clavius.

15/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Lubovna Full Moon

 2022 July 15

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Lubovna Full Moon
Petr Horalek / Institute of Physics in Opava

Explanation: On July 13 this well-planned telephoto view recorded a Full Moon rising over Lubovna Castle in eastern Slovakia. The photographer was about 3 kilometers from the castle walls and about 357,000 kilometers from this Full Moon near perigee, the closest point in its elliptical orbit. Known to some as supermoons, full moons near perigee are a little brighter and larger in planet Earth's sky when compared to full moons that occur near the average lunar distance of around 384,000 kilometers. Of course any Full Moon near the horizon can show the effects of refraction over a long sight-line through dense clear atmosphere. In this image, atmospheric refraction creates the slight green flash framed by thin clouds near the top, with a ragged red rim along the bottom edge of July's perigee Full Moon.

14/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Webb's Southern Ring Nebula

 2022 July 14

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Webb's Southern Ring Nebula
Image Credit: NASAESACSASTScINIRCam

Explanation: Cataloged as NGC 3132 the Southern Ring Nebula is a planetary nebula, the death shroud of a dying sun-like star some 2,500 light-years from Earth. Composed of gas and dust the stunning cosmic landscape is nearly half a light-year in diameter, explored in unprecedented detail by the James Webb Space Telescope. In this NIRCam image the bright star near center is a companion of the dying star. In mutual orbit, the star whose transformation has ejected the nebula's gas and dust shells over thousands of years is the fainter stellar partner. Evolving to become a white dwarf, the faint star appears along the diffraction spike extending toward the 8 o'clock position. This stellar pair's orbital motion has resulted the complex structures within the Southern Ring Nebula.

13/07/2022

MERVEILLEUX MONDE SOUS-MARIN - Le doris dalmatien, un drôle de nudibranche


Méditerranée - Doris dalmatien (Peltodoris atromaculata) sur doris dalmatien : difficile de voir qu'ils sont deux !

© Alexis Rosenfeld
FuturaSciences

ASTRONOMY - Webb's First Deep Field

 2022 July 13

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Webb's First Deep Field
Image Credit: NASAESACSASTScINIRCam

Explanation: This is the deepest, sharpest infrared image of the cosmos so far. The view of the early Universe toward the southern constellation Volans was achieved in 12.5 hours of exposure with the NIRCam instrument on the James Webb Space Telescope. Of course the stars with six visible spikes are well within our own Milky Way. That diffraction pattern is characteristic of Webb's 18 hexagonal mirror segments operating together as a single 6.5 meter diameter primary mirror. The thousands of galaxies flooding the field of view are members of the distant galaxy cluster SMACS0723-73, some 4.6 billion light-years away. Luminous arcs that seem to infest the deep field are even more distant galaxies though. Their images are distorted and magnified by the dark matter dominated mass of the galaxy cluster, an effect known as gravitational lensing. Analyzing light from two separate arcs below the bright spiky star, Webb's NIRISS instrument indicates the arcs are both images of the same background galaxy. And that galaxy's light took about 9.5 billion years to reach the James Webb Space Telescope.

12/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Noctilucent Clouds over Paris

 2022 July 12

The featured image shows the Eiffel tower in Paris, France
below a wide display of glowing noctilucent clouds. 
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

Noctilucent Clouds over Paris
Credit & Copyright: Bertrand Kulik

Explanation: It's northern noctilucent cloud season. Composed of small ice crystals forming only during specific conditions in the upper atmosphere, noctilucent clouds may become visible at sunset during late summer when illuminated by sunlight from below. Noctilucent clouds are the highest clouds known and now established to be polar mesospheric clouds observed from the ground. Although observed with NASA's AIM satellite since 2007, much about noctilucent clouds remains unknown and so a topic of active research. The featured image shows expansive and rippled noctilucent clouds wafting over ParisFrance. This year, several northern locations are already reporting especially vivid displays of noctilucent clouds.

11/07/2022

ASTRONOMY - Andromeda over the Sahara Desert

 2022 July 11

The featured image shows a zoom into the Andromeda Galaxy
over dunes in the Sahara Desert. Two people are barely visible 
at the top of one of the dunes.
Please see the explanation for more detailed information.

Andromeda over the Sahara Desert
Credit & Copyright: Jordi Coy

Explanation: What is the oldest thing you can see? At 2.5 million light years distant, the answer for the unaided eye is the Andromeda galaxy, because its photons are 2.5 million years old when they reach you. Most other apparent denizens of the night sky -- stars, clusters, and nebulae -- appear as they were only a few hundred to a few thousand years ago, as they lie well within our own Milky Way Galaxy. Given its distance, light from Andromeda is likely also the farthest object that you can see. Also known as M31, the Andromeda Galaxy dominates the center of the featured zoomed image, taken from the Sahara Desert in Morocco last month. The featured image is a combination of three background and one foreground exposure -- all taken with the same camera and from the same location and on the same calendar day -- with the foreground image taken during the evening blue hourM110, a satellite galaxy of Andromenda is visible just above and to the left of M31's core. As cool as it may be to see this neighboring galaxy to our Milky Way with your own eyes, long duration camera exposures can pick up many faint and breathtaking details. Recent data indicates that our Milky Way Galaxy will collide and combine with the similarly-sized Andromeda galaxy in a few billion years.

MACROPHOTOGRAPHIE - Un mariage au naturel


La photographe japonaise Miki Asai a imaginé ce cliché comme le symbole d'un mariage. Une fleur -- blanche, il va sans dire -- qui prend racine et qui se noie dans l'eau en guise d'arche de cérémonie romantique. Et deux autres petites fleurs, toutes en innocence, pour figurer les époux, prêts à se promettre le meilleur. Le tout se reflétant comme par enchantement dans une étendue d'eau calme.

Quitte à briser un peu la magie, sachez que pour obtenir un résultat aussi gracieux, il suffit à Miki Asai de poser les protagonistes de la scène sur un plateau de couleur sombre, peu profond et rempli d'eau. Pourquoi de couleur sombre ? Pour qu'un simple papier coloré puisse offrir sa couleur à l'arrière-plan. 

© Miki Asai
FuturaSciences

SANTé/MEDECINE - Procédé révolutionnaire dans la lutte contre le cancer - 2/6 : Une découverte qui change tout

Jusqu’à présent, la lutte contre le cancer reposait principalement sur la chimiothérapie, la radiothérapie ou la chirurgie. Ces traitements,...