Mosaic of Saturn seen in eclipse in September 2006. Earth is the bright dot just inside the F ring at upper left. (CICLOPS/NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI)

Mosaic of Saturn seen in eclipse in September 2006. Earth is the bright dot just inside the F ring at upper left. (CICLOPS/NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI)

Citizens of Earth, get ready for your Cassini close-up: once again the spacecraft is preparing to capture images of Saturn positioned between it and the Sun, allowing for incredible views of the ring system and its atmosphere — and also a tiny “pale blue dot” in the distance we call home.

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Book Review: The Milky Way, An Insider’s Guide

by Elizabeth Howell on June 18, 2013

milky_way_insiders_guide

About 70 pages into The Milky Way, An Insider’s Guide, a strange craving for hamburgers overtook me.

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Venus’ Winds Are Mysteriously Speeding Up

by Jason Major on June 18, 2013

Over the past six years wind speeds in Venus' atmosphere have been steadily rising (ESA)

Over the past six years wind speeds in Venus’ southern atmosphere have been steadily rising (ESA)

High-altitude winds on neighboring Venus have long been known to be quite speedy, whipping sulfuric-acid-laden clouds around the superheated planet at speeds well over 300 km/h (180 mph). And after over six years collecting data from orbit, ESA’s Venus Express has found that the winds there are steadily getting faster… and scientists really don’t know why.

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Will Comet ISON Dazzle our Skies? An Expert Weighs In

by David Dickinson on June 18, 2013

ISON as seen by Hubble earlier this spring. (Credit: NASA/ESA/Z. Levay/STScl).

ISON as seen by Hubble earlier this spring. (Credit: NASA/ESA/Z. Levay/STScl).

Comets are the big “question marks” of observational astronomy. Some, such as Comet Hyakutake and the Great Daylight Comet of 1910 present themselves seemingly without warning and put on memorable displays. Others, such as the infamous Comet Kohoutek or Comet Elenin, fizzle and fail to perform up to expectations after a much anticipated round of media hype.

And then there’s the case of Comet C/2012 S1 ISON. [click to continue…]

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Uranus Is Being Chased By Asteroids!

by Elizabeth Howell on June 18, 2013

A Sharper View Of Uranus

Image Credit: Lawrence Sromovsky, (Univ. Wisconsin-Madison), Keck Observatory

As Uranus speeds in its orbit in the solar system, there are three large space rocks that are in lockstep with the gas giant, according to new simulations. Two of them are wobbling in unstable “horseshoe” orbits near Uranus, while the third is in a more reliable Trojan orbit that is always 60 degrees in front of the planet.

The largest of this small group is the asteroid Crantor, which is 44 miles (70 kilometers) wide. Its horseshoe orbit, and that of companion 2010 EU65, means the space rocks seesaw between being close to Uranus and further away. They should stay in that configuration for a few million years.

The last of the group is 2011 QF99, in a Trojan orbit near one of Uranus’ Lagrangian points — sort of like a celestial parking spot where an object can hang out without undue influence from the balanced gravitational forces.

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