DISCOVER Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future
Current Issue
Subscribe Today »
  • Renew
  • Give a Gift
  • Archives
  • Customer Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • Video
  • Photos
  • Podcast
  • RSS
Bad Astronomy

The staring eye of a crescent moon

Sometimes, the images from the Cassini Saturn probe are so cool it’s tempting just to post them and say, "Look at THAT!"

See what I mean? [Click to gigantesenate.]

But of course, I can’t just leave it at that. This image, taken on January 4, 2012, is a bit different than most. Sure, we see Saturn’s magnificent rings, nearly edge on from this perspective. And we’ve seen this icy moon Enceladus many, many times (see Related Posts below for tons more pictures). Look at the bottom of the moon: see those fuzzy streaks? Those are geysers of water spewing from cracks in the moon’s south pole! Cassini has been studying them intently ever since they were discovered; they are proof that liquid water exists under the surface of Enceladus, though it’s still being argued over whether it’s in pockets, like lakes, or the whole moon has an ocean of water under the surface.

Despite all that, I keep getting drawn to the crescent shape itself. We can never see that from Earth. Saturn is much farther out from the Sun than we are, and geometry demands that from home we always see these worlds nearly fully lit by the Sun. The only way to see them like this is to go there.

But also, that giant circular feature is really interesting. It’s big, maybe 200 km (over 100 miles) across, and a bit darker than the surrounding surface. I tried locating it on an atlas of Enceladus, but it wasn’t obvious at all. I thought it might be an impact basin, but a little scrounging online led me to a paper by Cassini imaging team leader Carolyn Porco, which says there are no large impact basins on Enceladus! So what is it?

Well, why not go to Dr. Porco herself? I sent her a note, and she kindly replied. That region is called Diyar Planitia, and it stands out among the surrounding terrain because it’s much smoother. It does have narrow surface features, but they’re too small to be seen at this resolution. At the low angle at which we’re seeing it here, it looks a little bit darker than the rougher terrain around it, so it’s easier to see (which is why on an atlas it’s harder to find). It is roughly circular, but that may simply be coincidence. Enceladus has been massively resurfaced, with some areas much older than others, due to various forces under the surface — looking this all up I learned a new one, called diapirism, where lower density material underneath higher density material can rise up and break through. That’s one process that’s helped change the surface of Enceladus over the eons.

That’s pretty nifty. And think about that! Today I learned of what is to me a new region of the solar system, one that has an interesting and complicated history, molded by vast forces over long-stretched times, one of which was also new to me. How wonderful to get all that from what’s otherwise just a pretty picture!

But of course, in science, there’s no such thing as just a pretty picture. Science is a tapestry, a vast complex fabric interwoven with countless threads. Each of those threads is amazing, each important, and each leads to another. And that’s where the true beauty of science lies.


Related posts:

- Enceladus sprays anew!
- Enceladus fires on Alderaan
- Saturn weather forecast: rings, with light rain from Enceladus
- Icy moon and distant rings

Share

February 10th, 2012 10:39 AM Tags: Carolyn Porco, Cassini, diapirism, Diyar Planitia, Enceladus, Saturn
by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Piece of mind, Pretty pictures, Science | 7 Comments »

A hoopy frood

I caught this video on Geekologie, and it made me laugh. This is a brilliant idea: a woman put a camera on a hula hoop, and then, well, hula’ed:

[WARNING: some folks might feel ill watching this. I will not be blamed if you have to wipe vomit off your keyboard.]

[Note: at the end of the video there are links to other videos like it.]

I found this fascinating. For one thing, the motion is slower than I would’ve expected. I suspect that may be due to an illusion when you watch from the outside as a hula hoop being used; humans are notoriously poor at judging rotating reference frames. After all people, still try to argue with me that centrifugal force isn’t real, when it it quite clearly is.

Even more amazing to me was that I didn’t get ill watching that video. I tend to get a seasick on a kid’s swing or when reading in a car, so the fact I was fine watching this is weird. But I have pretty good 3D spatial reasoning, and have a lot of practice swapping reference frames — trying to figure out when the Moon rises, what configuration planets are in, and how to point a telescope give you a lot of practice there — so maybe that helped. Beats me.

But I wonder what other weird change-of-frames would benefit from using this camera technique? That might make a fun series of videos.


Related posts:

- When I say centrifugal, I mean centrifugal!
- Space station gives physics a boost
- You spin me right round baby right round
- xkcd, wherein Randall Munroe and I agree

Share

February 10th, 2012 7:00 AM Tags: centrifugal force, hula hoop, reference frames
by Phil Plait in Cool stuff, Science | 36 Comments »

When the Moon hits your apse in a way-cool time lapse

Photographer Maik Thomas posted this time lapse video on Google+, and it made me chuckle. The bright object is the Moon, and as it sets it turns red, looking like a missile from space curving right into a church.

I love the star trails effect. It’s just a way of adding the individual frames together to show motion, but it does give the video an oddly other-world feel to it. And in this case it really makes the Moon look like some sort of re-entering rocket!


Related posts:

- Star Light, People Bright
- Alps lapse
- The stars above, the luminescence below
- The lines in the sky are stars

Share

February 9th, 2012 11:00 AM Tags: Maik Thomas, Moon, time lapse
by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Humor | 16 Comments »

Volcano in taupe

It’s been a while since I posted a cool image of a volcano from space! So here’s one that’s simply lovely: Puyehue Cordón Caulle in Chile, which has been continuously erupting for several months now:

This was taken by NASA Earth Observing-1 satellite on January 26, 2012. The ash has been falling for so long it’s covered the entire complex in a finely ground layer, coloring this area taupe (or ecru, or, as I like to call it, tan). You really should click to haphaestenate that picture; the full-sized shot is amazing. There’s so much to see, like the ash cloud streaming away from that vent, the detail in the big caldera… but my favorite part I think are the sharply-colored lakes in the region, which are such a contrast to the dull brown everywhere else (you can see one of those lakes in the bottom left corner of the picture above — look for the blue spot). For scale, the caldera’s bowl is about 2 km (1.2 miles) across.

Unfortunately, as pretty as this is, the implications are not so good: the forest in that area is suffering due to all that ash. Volcanic ash is not like some small-grained powder: under a microscope you can see it looks far more like ground glass, each grain festooned with dozens of sharp corners and edges. Breathing that stuff in is not good for your lungs. And, of course, it’s heavy — it’s rock, after all — so when it falls in large amounts it can do a lot of damage, especially if it rains.

Satellite imagery of active volcanoes is critically important: some small-minded politicians might mock it, but monitoring them saves lives. And, of course, there’s all the amazing science we learn as well.

Credit: NASA/EO-1


I love these satellite views of volcanoes from space, and I’ve collected quite a few into a gallery slideshow. Click the thumbnail picture to get a bigger picture and more information, and scroll through the gallery using the left and right arrows.]

There are a handful of volcanoes in the world that evoke an immediate  recognition, dormant or not. Vesuvius, Krakatoa, Mt. St. Helens.  Certainly, Sicily's Mt. Etna is another. At 3300 meters in elevation,  it's the largest active volcano in Italy... and by active, I do mean <em>active</em>.<br /><br />In 2002, Etna erupted in a relatively large display of lava and ash. <a href="http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/station/crew-5/html/iss005e19024.html">This view</a> was taken by Expedition 5 about the International Space Station,  looking southeast at a low angle. This eruption let loose a river of  lava down the flank of the volcano which set fire to pine trees there;  the dark plume is from the eruption, but the whiter ones are from  burning pine trees. The plume from this eruption blew south and was  reported as far away as Libya, nearly 600 km distant.<br /><br />Unlike Earth observing satellites, which point straight down, astronauts on the ISS have the luxury of seeing things at an angle, providing a more natural - and in this case, more spectacular - view to our human eyes and brain.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em>Etna continues to show its might, recently letting everyone know it's still very much alive. <a href="http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=48612" target="_blank">NASA's Terra satellite </a>captured the plume from the summit as it passed overhead on January 11, 2011. This eruption was spectacular from the ground (as you can see <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_kmXEtjkfjA" target="_blank">in this video of the lava fountains</a>), but seems almost serene and gentle from orbit. <br /><br />Don't be fooled. The plume shut down a nearby airport (volcanic ash is composed of very spiky and sharp-edged glass and silicates which can be dangerous to breathe and can damage plane engines in flight) and causes many other snarls in the lives of Sicilians.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center</em>This really is an image from space: it's a 3D map of Italy's Mt. Etna taken using radar from space! Two satellites fly in close formation, taking turns sending down pulses of radar. The reflected signal is picked up by both satellites, creating very high-resolution data. <br /><br />By precisely measuring the time it takes the pulses to hit the ground and reflect back, a map of the topography of the region can be assembled. This can then be used to make a model of the volcano in three dimensions, which can be viewed from any angle, even one mimicking the view from the ground.<br /><a href="http://www.planetary.org/blog/article/00002881/" target="_blank"><br />Emily Lakdawalla at The Planetary Society Blog has the details on this amazing image</a>, as well as a much larger version.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: DLR</em>In the southern part of Kamchatka, Russia (known to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_%28game%29" target="_blank">Risk</a> fans everywhere) sits the stratovolcano Kizimen. It's something like 12,000 years old, and in those millennia has covered the nearby mountains with ash. For at least the past 70 - 80 years it has been active, with one large eruption in the late 1920s. <br /><br /><a href="http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/imagerecords/48000/48451/kizimen_ali_2011006_lrg.jpg" target="_blank">In this image taken by NASA's Earth Observing-1 satellite</a>, taken on January 6, 2011, you can see a long plume of ash and water vapor stretching to the east. The volcano has been rather gently erupting since New Year's Eve, so observations like this one are important in understanding the extent and nature of the activity. <br /><br />I love the look and feel of this image; the terrain there is incredibly hostile, mountainous and remote. That's accentuated by the sunlight casting shadows across the region. This image was captured in mid-morning, just a few hours after local sunrise - you can tell by the shadows pointing north and west, so the Sun must have been south and east when this was snapped.<br /><br />That whole area is lousy with incredible volcanoes... scan through this gallery and you'll see plenty more.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em><br />One of the advantages of having astronauts taking pictures from the International Space Station is that they can see objects from an angle. Earth-observing satellites point straight down, so oblique views are rare to non-existant. <br /><br /><a href="http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=47514" target="_blank">In this stunning shot</a> (taken on November 19, 2010) the volcanoes of eastern Kamchatka, Russia, are seen to the northwest from a distance of about 1000 km (600 miles). You can even see the shadows of the volcanoes from the morning Sun.<br /><br />Many of these volcanoes erupted in the 20th century, though for some it's been a few centuries since they were active. The large body of water is Lake Kronotsky, formed when lava from the Kronotsky volcano (the large symmetric cone in the center) dammed a river.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em>A lot of volcanoes are in tropical locales... but not all of them! I love pictures of simmering calderas surrounded by snow and ice, like this one of Klyuchevskaya <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/10/14/satellite-view-of-a-volcanic-pressure-valve/" target="_blank">taken by the Terra satellite</a>. The volcano is in Kamchatka, Russia (well-known to players of the game Risk).<br /><br />Klyuchevskaya erupts calmly and steadily, releasing the pressure underneath it continuously, instead of in a more dramatic explosion. That whole region is lousy with craggy mountains and volcanoes; click the link to get access to a huge version of this image and get an overview of this forbidding landscape.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em><br />When the Earth has pressure leaks from its interior, it sometimes isn't confined to one spot. Klyuchevskaya, seen in the previous gallery image, is one of many volcanoes in Kamchatka, Russia. <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/02/19/volcano-on-volcano-action/" target="_blank">This image</a> shows it leaking out gases and ash along with its little brother Bezymianny 10 km (6 miles) to its south. <br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em><br />The Philippine volcano Mayon sits just a few kilometers northwest of the town of Laezgapi, which is home to 200,000 people. Recently it has been rumbling, so vulcanologists <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2009/12/21/mayon-volcano-ready-to-blow" target="_blank">having been keeping a close eye on it</a>. <br /><br />Mayon has a history of violence - in December 2009 and January 2010, just after this image was taken, it had a series of minor ash eruptions - and has been the cause of many, many deaths. Scientists studying volcanoes like Mayon learn how to predict their eruptions, and can save countless lives... just in case you were wondering what science has ever done to help people.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em>The island of Montserrat in the Caribbean is home to the volcano Soufriere, which has erupted violently in recent years. On February 11, 2010, <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/02/16/montserrat-volcanic-dome-collapse-seen-from-space/" target="_blank">the growing dome partially collapsed</a>, sending a cloud of ash 15 km (8 miles) into the air! <br /><br />NASA's Aqua satellite caught the collapse and subsequent eruption in this incredible picture. You can see the shadow of plume, and get a feel for the scale of this event. <br /><br />The 1997 eruption of Soufriere killed 19 people on an island of 4000... showing that scientists predicting eruptions do in fact save many, many lives.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em>Taken on May 6, 2010, <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/05/07/dramatic-image-of-eyjafjallajokull-ash-cloud/" target="_blank">this image</a> of the plume of Eyjafjallajokull from NASA's Terra satellite shows the thickness and reach of the volcano's ash cloud. While the plume did throw a monkeywrench into air travel in Europe, amazingly it doesn't affect the climate globally as other volcanoes can do. At its northerly latitude, the ash doesn't mix into the global air patterns like the eruptions from more equatorial volcanoes can.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em>In April 2010, just three weeks after the initial eruption, the ash cloud from Eyjafjallajokull reaches across the north Atlantic to fall on the UK and Europe. NASA satellite imagery like this helped scientists track the volcano eruption, but also provided information to ground engineers and governments, so they could keep an eye on just what the volcano was doing to disrupt their lives.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em><br />The Krakatoa eruption of 1883 was one of the most violent events in modern history. The volcano, located in Indonesia, tore itself apart in a series of catastrophic explosions that affected the entire planet, including cooling average temperatures by over a degree.<br /><br />Over the past century, the volcano has been building itself back up, as you can see <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/11/24/remnants-of-a-violent-past/" target="_blank">in this picture</a> taken by the Earth Observing-1 satellite. It's over 2 km (1.2 miles) across now. It may be decades or centuries before another catastrophic eruption occurs, and in the meantime NASA keeps an eye on this sleeping giant. <br /><br /><em>Image credit: Jesse Allen/NASA EO-1 team</em>In May 2006, Cleveland Volcano in the Alaskan Aleutian Islands <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2006/06/03/hello-cleveland-rock-and-ash-and-lava-and-roll/" target="_blank">had a minor eruption of ash</a>. The plume stretched southwest into the Pacific, and was caught in the act by astronaut Jeff Williams on board the International Space Station. He was actually the person to <em>discover</em> the eruption, seeing it as it happened while the ISS flew hundreds of kilometers overhead.<br /><em><br />Image credit: NASA</em>In Papua, New Guinea, lies the circular island volcano Manam, which is about 10 km (6 miles) across. It's a mildly active volcano, as you can see in this image from NASA's Earth Observing-1 satellite, <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2009/07/27/holy-haleakala-i-mean-manam/" target="_blank">taken in June 2009</a>.<br /><br />This is one of my favorite pictures of volcanoes from space, because it's almost seen straight down, the island is so nearly symmetric, and the plume so well-centered. It's exactly how I imagine these things should look from orbit!<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em>In early 2010, the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull started an epic eruption that would continue for months and disrupt the lives of millions of people across Europe and the world. The ash plume extended for hundreds of kilometers west and southwest, creating chaos by closing airports in London and other major cities.<br /><br />This image, <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/05/11/plume-and-ash/" target="_blank">taken by NASA's Aqua satellite in May 2010</a>, shows the plume reaching south toward England.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em><br /><br />Chile is home to the nearly 3 km (9300 foot) high <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/06/15/the-one-dimensional-volcano/" target="_blank"> Volcán Villarrica</a>, seen in this image by the Earth Observing-1 satellite. Remarkably, this isn't <em>actually</em> a photograph, at least as people usually think of them: it was built up line by line instead of all at once like a normal digital camera. <br /><br />The detector on the camera is a single row of pixels. As the satellite moves around the Earth, the detector sweeps over the landscape, and the one-dimensional row of pixels can be stacked up to create a continuous picture of what's going on below. It's just one more way scientists can observe our home planet and learn how it behaves. Sometimes learning about Earth isn't obvious, and stepping away - and using unusual methods - is the best way to do it.<br /><br /><em>Image credit: NASA</em><br /><span><a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2010/11/16/volcano-study-in-red/" target="_blank">Mount Merapi</a> is an active volcano in Indonesia. This unusual photo from NASA's Terra satellite uses infrared to map out vegetation, where leaves and other flora are highly reflective. This is colored red in the image, so that's where all the plants  are. You can see where recent ash and mud flows have wiped out the plant life on the slopes. <br /><br />Just outside the field of view of this picture is the city of Yogyakarta, which has a population of 400,000. As you can imagine, satellite tracking of volcanoes like this are critical when major population centers lie so close to them.<br /><em><br />Image credit: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and the U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team</em></span>

Share

February 9th, 2012 7:00 AM Tags: Earth Observing-1, Puyehue Cordón Caulle, volcanoes
by Phil Plait in Pretty pictures | 18 Comments »

I’m giving a talk at Eastern Michigan University Feb. 15

Hey, guess where I’ll be?

Yeah, there. Well, a little to the left of that big blob. Ypsilanti, Michigan, to be exact. On February 15th I’m giving my "Death from the Skies!" talk at Eastern Michigan University at 7:00 p.m. It’s free, so if you’re in the area drop on by! I lived in Ann Arbor for three years, so it’ll be cool to head back there.

And if you live in the Bethlehem PA area, I’ll be at Geroge Hrab’s concert a few days later! And then the live Nerdist podcast in Boulder March 2, and then SXSW on March 12th, and more stuff coming too.

Geez, I need to post a calendar. OK, I’ll put that on my list. If only I had a calendar to remind me…

Tip o’ the spacesuit visor to Fragile Oasis for the picture, which was taken on the ISS on January 30, 2012, because I assume the astronauts were excited that I’d be there. Credit: Image Science and Analysis Laboratory, NASA-Johnson Space Center. "The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth."

Share

February 8th, 2012 11:08 AM Tags: Eastern Michigan University, International Space Station, lecture, Michigan, Nerdist, SXSW
by Phil Plait in About this blog, Pretty pictures | 21 Comments »

Funhouse galaxy

Sometimes, I like to think of a photon of light as a car on a road. As the road dips and curves, a car has to follow that path, dipping and curving as well. It might be weird to think of space as curving, but it does. Gravity from massive objects warps space, and a beam of light moving through that curved space curves along with it.

This is the principle behind what’s called gravitational lensing. A beam of light passing by an object — a big galaxy, say, or a cluster of galaxies — bends one way. A beam headed in a slightly different direction bends a slightly different way. This can really mess with what we see… which I can prove! Check this out: a Hubble image of the galaxy RCSGA 032727-13260.

What a mess! All those arcs and blue smudges are images of that one galaxy. The light from that galaxy traveled nearly 10 billion light years to get here! But when it was halfway here, that light passed by the big cluster of galaxies — the red fuzzballs — in the middle of the image. As it did, the curvature of space distorted and warped the light from the galaxy, and by the time it reached us here at Earth the image looks like this. The outstretched, smeared-out arc is amazing; I’ve never seen one that long and well-defined before.

Not only that, but the image gets broken up into several separate images. There are no fewer than four different repetitions of the background galaxy in the big image. To show that, I put three of them together here. It’s goofed up, to be sure, but you can kinda sorta see they are the same galaxy, flipped over and/or smudged out.

The cool thing about this is we can learn about the more distant galaxy by examining these images. Read the rest of this entry »

Share

February 8th, 2012 7:00 AM Tags: galaxy, galaxy cluster, gravitational lens, Hubble Space Telescope
by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Pretty pictures | 24 Comments »

Science Getaways: Update

I love science. OK, duh, but I really do. And when I go on vacation, I can’t help but see science everywhere, and in every case it makes the trip more fun for me. Seeing local geology, biology, how the stars might look different at a different latitude… it adds to the vacations, makes it better.

That’s why my wife and I started a company called Science Getaways. We figured there are lots of other folks out there like us who would really enjoy taking a vacation that has bonus science added in. Our first planned trip is to a gorgeous Colorado dude ranch called C Lazy U. Besides the usual amenities of such a place — horseback riding, great food, spectacular views of the Rocky Mountains — we’re adding SCIENCE! And scientists: we have a geologist, a biologist, and an astronomer — hey, me! — who will be on hand to give talks about the local nature scene, and then we’ll take hikes to put that new-found knowledge to practical use. I’ll be running a stargazing session every evening with my new 8" Celestron telescope, and I’m hoping to do some solar observing during the day as well.

IMPORTANT NOTE: We’ve negotiated a special rate — the price we’re offering is actually less than the usual ranch rate. We’re hoping to have the entire ranch for our group, but if we don’t have enough reservations by March 1 we can’t guarantee it. Space is limited, so please book now if you plan to come.

By the way, we’re also on Facebook and Google+ if you’d like to add us.

I hope to see lots of BABloggees there!


Related posts:

- Science Getaways

Share

February 7th, 2012 9:36 AM Tags: C Lazy U, Colorado, dude ranch, Science Getaways
by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Miscellaneous, Science | 32 Comments »

« Older Entries




    • About Bad Astronomy


      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's written two books, dozens of magazine articles, and 12 bazillion blog articles. He is a skeptic and fights the abuse of science, but his true love is praising the wonders of real science.


      The original BA site (with the Moon Hoax debunking, movie reviews, and all that) can be found here.


      Contact me: The Bad Astronomer "at" gmail "dot" com


       
      Keep Libel Laws out of Science
       
       Bad Astronomy was chosen as one of Time.com's Best Blogs of 2009.


    • Science Getaways


      Science Getaways: Vacation with your brain!


    • Subscribe to BA


      Subscribe to Bad Astronomy using RSS! RSS feed button


    • Death from the Skies!


      Order a copy of Death from the Skies! from Amazon, or Barnes and Noble.

      "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


    • Recent Posts

      • The staring eye of a crescent moon
      • A hoopy frood
      • When the Moon hits your apse in a way-cool time lapse
      • Volcano in taupe
      • I’m giving a talk at Eastern Michigan University Feb. 15
    • Social/Networking/Cool Stuff


      Google+


       Twitter




       Facebook


    • Post Categories

    • Archives

    • Blogroll

      • Bad Astronomy (old site)
      • Bad Astronomy and Universe Today Forum
      • BAFacts Archive
      • Commenting Policy
      • Computer Support
      • Contact Information
      • DM: 80 Beats
      • DM: Cosmic Variance
      • DM: Discoblog
      • DM: Gene Expression
      • DM: NERS
      • DM: Science Not Fiction
      • DM: The Intersection
      • DM: The Loom
      • James Randi Educational Foundation
      • My use of the word "denier"
      • Planetary Society Blog
      • Politics and Religion posts
      • Press Kit
      • Q&BA Archive
      • The Antivax Bible
      • Universe Today
    • RSS DISCOVERmagazine.com: Latest Articles on Space

      • The staring eye of a crescent moon | Bad Astronomy
      • When the Moon hits your apse in a way-cool time lapse | Bad Astronomy
      • Funhouse galaxy | Bad Astronomy
      • Science Getaways: Update | Bad Astronomy
      • Exoplanet in a triple star system smack dab in the habitable zone | Bad Astronomy
    • RSS DISCOVER Blogs: The Loom

      • Animal Friendships: My cover story for Time magazine
      • The Future of E-books–podcast of my interview on Wisconsin Public Radio
      • Thursday, February 16: Science and social media panel in New York
      • A Scientific Jonah: My profile of Joy Reidenberg in tomorrow’s New York Times
      • Ebooks on the radio: 6 pm ET tonight


  • Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Copyright © 2012, Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Privacy - Terms - Reader Services - Subscribe Today - Advertise - About Us