So the doorbell rings. It’s the postman. He has a big box! What could it be?
Hmmmm. "Penguin Group Inc", it says. It’s heavy. Could it be…?
Why, yes, it could be. It’s a carton full of my books!
W00t!
Hot off the press, too. They’ve been shipping to books stores across this great land of ours, just in time for no one to be able to afford them. Oh well, people love to read about imminent destruction during a recession, right?
Right?
These ones are going to my contributors (advisors in the book) and family. 10 days to go before they’re available to the public. Better get them now, before they get eaten up.
Just yesterday, the Cassini spacecraft passed an incredible 25 kilometers (16 miles) off the surface of Saturn’s weird moon Enceladus. This icy ball has plumes of water jetting up from its south pole region, emanating from a series of parallel cracks nicknamed tiger stripes. Cassini flew right through these plumes! The images taken have not been fully processed yet, but the Cassini folks have released a few of the raw images. Here’s one:
Wow. The surface of Enceladus is entirely covered with ice; see how few craters there are? That means the surface is "new"; if it were older there would be lots more craters. That means the moon is recently (or continuously) resurfaced, which in turn means a dynamic process almost certainly involving water and a liquid interior. The cracks and plates look to be due to ice floes. We see the same sort of thing here on Earth and on Jupiter’s frozen moon Europa.
This flyby was not designed to get great images, but to use other sensors to directly sample and investigate the composition of the plumes. Another flyby will happen on Halloween, October 31, and that one will focus — so to speak — on imaging. So stay tuned! There is a lot more coolness to come.
So a few months ago I stumbled on a series of critical thinking videos by superhero of skepticism Captain Disillusion. They’re funny, and extremely well done (the guy has video skillz), and I’ve been meaning to pimp them for a long time.
Then Skepchick Rebecca Watson drops the dime, saying he was at TAM 6! Arg! I missed him there!
Wanna see the coolest video set to music from a webcam attached to the very first privately owned company rocket that made it into orbit that you’ll see… well, ever?*
Yes. Yes, you do.
Space X took the webcam video from their successful launch of the Falcon-1 rocket and set it to music. The result is made of awesome. The editing is a thing of wonder.
Well, nuts. I totally forgot to mention that I’ll be interviewed on the radio show The Inner Side tonight at around 10:30 Central (US) time. They stream the show live, so go to the KPFT website and click the "Listen Live" picture in the upper right.
We’ll be dissing McCain over his dumb "overhead projector" nonsense.
Kirbuk: So what else do they do in Kentucky?
Floyd: Let’s see. They have a big, big horse race, play very good basketball, have babies like everywhere else.
Kirbuk: Sounds like a nice place.
Floyd: Never been there.
Next year marks the International Year of Astronomy, celebrating the 400th anniversary of Galileo turning his telescope to the sky and revolutionizing the way we think of the Universe, and our place in it.
There are many things IYA is doing to celebrate, but one of my favorites is the 365 Days of Astronomy effort. Starting January 1, this site will feature one podcast about astronomy per day for the whole year. I’m excited for lots of reasons, not the least of which is the people involved: Pamela Gay, Fraser Cain, Michael Koppelman, and, why, I might even drop in a ‘cast or two.
And this means you too! We want people to contribute, including making your own podcast and submitting it. That’s right; you can contribute your own voice to the choir in an international effort to teach people about the wonders of the sky. Don’t just leave all the heavy lifting to us, folks: take a turn at it. Who knows? You might just like it, too.
If you went to BadAstronomy.com and found yourself here, never fear: the BA Blog has moved to its new home at Discover Blogs. The original BA site (with the Moon Hoax debunking and all that) is still online, too.
Phil Plait, the creator of Bad Astronomy, is an astronomer, lecturer, and author. After ten years working on Hubble Space Telescope and six more working on astronomy education, he struck out on his own as a writer. He has written two books, dozens of magazine articles, and 12 bazillion blog articles. He is a skeptic, and fights misuses of science as well as praising the wonder of real science.
"If things worked the way I wanted them to, any reporter about to do another 'sensational' story on deadly meteors would consult this volume, and bang! common sense would find its way into the news. How strange would that world be?" -- Adam Savage, Mythbusters
Reading this book is like getting punched in the face by Carl Sagan. Frightening, but oddly exhilarating." -- Daniel H. Wilson, author of How to Survive a Robot Uprising
Disclaimer
The opinions and ideas expressed in this blog are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect those of Discover Magazine and/or the James Randi Educational Foundation, of which Dr. Plait serves as President.