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

Archive for February, 2008

« Older Entries
Newer Entries »

Who news: Tate interviews Tennant

I just found out Catherine Tate — Donna on Doctor Who — interviewed David Tennant on BBC 4 radio, and it’s online.

I’m not sure this link will work but if you poke around the BBC 4 site for the show Chain Reaction you’ll find it.

The interview is pretty funny, as you’d expect. There’s a lot of Doctor in him, and a lot of him in the Doctor. She’s very funny, too. I’d love to hang out with the two of them for a while…

Oh! 19 minutes in they talk astrology. He’s the greatest man in the history of history.

Share

February 22nd, 2008 1:30 PM by Phil Plait in Time Sink | 12 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

An alternate view on the spy satellite

Evidently my use of dumb toys to model satellites has inspired at least one young man.

My sense of humor baffles me. I have seen a lot of videos in this genre that made me want to hunt down the maker and slap them, but this one cracked me up.

Share

February 22nd, 2008 11:30 AM by Phil Plait in Humor | 37 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Venus on acid

Some people call Venus our sister planet, but if it is, it’s the sister that went very, very bad.

The atmospheric pressure at the surface is a crushing 90 atmospheres. The surface temperature is 470 Celsius (about 900 F). The atmosphere is almost entirely carbon dioxide, and it rains sulphuric acid. To paraphrase Chekov, it’s not exactly a garden spot.*

Through a telescope (and by eye for that matter) Venus is beautiful and bright, but featureless. In visible light, the best you can see are very subtle patches on the disk of the planet. The atmosphere is far too thick to see the surface.

But there’s still a lot to learn from the planet. The European Space Agency’s Venus Express orbiter arrived at the hellish planet in April 2006 and set up shop. It’s equipped with an ultraviolet camera, and when viewed in UV Venus is a whole ‘nuther place. The chemicals in the atmosphere reflect or absorb UV from the Sun ,creating beautiful global weather patterns reminiscent of Earth’s. Here’s a recent UV shot:

As you can see, the story is different in UV than in visible. Things is, scientists aren’t exactly sure what they’re seeing. The bright stripes are due to sulphuric acid droplets in the air (yikes… I mean seriously, yikes). But they’re not sure what’s causing the darker regions; something is absorbing UV, but it’s unknown exactly what it is.

And the weather on Venus is weird, too. The science team was recently amazed to see a bright haze form over the south pole of Venus, then, over the course of several days, grow to cover the southern half of the planet. Then, just as quickly, it receded. What could cause such a thing? No one knows. There are very small amounts of water vapor and sulphur dioxide in Venus’s atmosphere, located deeper down (below 70 km in height). If this wells up, the ultraviolet from the Sun can break the molecules apart, which would reform into sulphuric acid, creating the haze. But why would those two molecules suddenly well up to the top of the atmosphere in the first place? Again, no one knows.

The only thing to do is keep looking. Venus Express has been orbiting the planet for nearly two years now, and that allows the long view, so to speak. By examining the data taken over long periods of time, scientists can investigate global properties of the planet and look for trends, connections, cause and effect. Venus has the same mass, size, and density of Earth, but at some point in its past it took a very different path than we did. Studying it carefully will reveal more about the Earth and why things turned out so well for us.

Sure, when you look into the abyss, sometimes it looks back into you. But that can be pretty helpful when you want to learn more about the abyss as well as yourself.


*What, you thought I meant Anton Chekov?

Share

February 22nd, 2008 9:35 AM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Pretty pictures, Science | 36 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Science = free coffee

So I’m at Peet’s coffee a while back — Pirillo loves it, and talked me into it — and I want to buy some beans. They look good, oily and dark. I move over to the counter, and the barrista looks up at me and asks if she can help me.

As I’m about to open my mouth, I notice she’s wearing an unusual necklace. It’s a simple thing, wire with small beads on it. The shape is odd, though. The wire has been bent into a pattern, a hexagon with some radial bits coming out at the vertices.

It’s obviously a molecule. It looks familiar, but I can’t place it. Suddenly, though, I get a flash of insight.

Where am I standing?

I smile. I already know the answer… "Is that a caffeine molecule?" I ask.

Over the course of two seconds her expression changes from open and helpful to one of surprise and amazement.

"That’s right!" she exclaims. "You’re the first person to get it!"

Just like that, we bonded. Turns out she’s a biochem major, and working at Peet’s to make ends meet. We chatted for a while — we scientists tend to stick together — and she told me she made the necklace herself, which is cool.

Finally, though, I have to leave. As I turn to go, she tells me to wait. She reaches down and grabs something. Smiling broadly, she passes it to me.

It’s a coupon for a free cup of coffee, next time I come in.

Science, babies. It pays.

Share

February 22nd, 2008 7:00 AM by Phil Plait in Humor | 56 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Mercury just needs some rest

The Mercury MESSENGER probe folks just released a new cool image, and this one shows one fo the larger craters on the planet that has a dark ring around it. Emily has lots of details, of course, with an explanation… but I know the real cause of these rings. You’d have dark circles around your eyes too if the Sun were constantly shining in your face.

P.S. My buddy Chris Lintott is hosting the Carnival of Space this week, too.

Share

February 21st, 2008 3:00 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Humor, Pretty pictures | 13 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Killer spam

I hate spam.

Well, duh.

But despite the failings of my anatomy, the need to finance Nigerian princes, or my desperate lack of V!0XX, I have yet to see spam that threatens to kill me.

Until recently, that is.

Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2008 01:39:41 H0200
Return email address redacted
Subject: LISTEN UP AND BE VERY VERY CARE !!!

Hello .

I am very sorry for you , is a pity that this is how your life is going to end as soon as you don’t comply. As you can see there is no need of introducing myself to you because I don’t have any business with you, my
duty as I am mailing you now is just to KILL you and I have to do it as I have already been paid for that.

Someone you call a friend wants you Dead by all means, and the person have spent a lot of money on this, the person also came to us and told me that he wanted you dead and he provided us with your name ,picture and other necessary information’s we needed about you. So I sent my boys to track you down and they have carried out the necessary investigation needed for the operation on you, and they have done that but I told them not to kill you that I will like to contact you and see if your life is Important to you or not since their findings shows that you are innocent.

I called my client back and ask him of your email address which I didn’t tell him what I wanted to do with it and he gave it to me and I am using it to contact you now. As I am writing to you now my men are monitoring you and they are telling me everything about you.

Now do you want to LIVE OR DIE? As someone has paid us to kill you. Get back to me now if you are ready to pay some fees to spare your life, $20,000 is all you need to spend You will first of all pay $8,000 then I will send a tape to you which i recorded every discusion i had with the person who wanted you dead and as soon as you get the tape, you will pay the remaining $12,000. If you are not ready for my help, then I will carry on with my job straight-up.

WARNING: DO NOT THINK OF CONTACTING THE POLICE OR EVEN TELLING ANYONE BECAUSE I WILL KNOW.REMEMBER, SOMEONE WHO KNOWS YOU VERY WELL WANT YOU DEAD! I WILL EXTEND IT TO YOUR FAMILY, INCASE I NOTICE SOMETHING FUNNY. DO NOT COME OUT ONCE IT IS 7:PM UNTIL I MAKE OUT TIME TO SEE YOU AND GIVE YOU THE TAPE OF MY DISCUSSION WITH THE PERSON WHO WANT YOU DEAD THEN YOU CAN USE IT TO TAKE ANY LEGAL ACTION. GOOD LUCK AS I AWAIT YOUR REPLY.

I have several comments. One is that I don’t think I’m terribly scared of an assassin who can’t spell.

Second is that I have loads of enemies who wish I would go away, but I doubt even they have the wherewithal to do anything this nefarious. My friends know that if I’m dead, they’ll never get any more cookies from Mrs. BA, so right away that’s a giveaway that this isn’t for realz.

But third, I have to give the author some credit. I wonder how many people would reply, fearful of their lives?

I don’t have the time to do anything about this, though. I just found out I am NOMINATED FOR THE MBA, which I’m hoping with help me REDUCE MY CREDIT CARD DEBT, which is important so I can afford to INCREASE MY GIRTH.

Party on, Girth.

Share

February 21st, 2008 12:30 PM by Phil Plait in Humor | 90 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

SpySat stuff

As expected, the blogosphere is exploding (haha) with news about the SpySat getting hit by a Navy missile last night.

First, here is video of the satellite getting hit:

So what happened? At 10:26 p.m. Eastern time last night, the USS Lake Erie, an Aegis warship, shot a Standard Missile 3 (SM3) at the satellite, and a direct hit was recorded 247 kilometers (150 miles) above the Pacific ocean. It’s not completely clear at this time that the hydrazine tank was hit or disrupted, but it seems likely since a spectral analysis showed hydrazine int he expanding debris cloud. The bulk of the debris will re-enter Earth’s atmosphere over the next two days, but it will take more than a month for the last of it to fall.

The missile was not equipped with an explosive warhead; just the impact is enough to destroy a satellite. Orbital speeds are very high — the missile impacted the satellite at over 10 kilometers per second (6 miles per second). Impact speeds like that generate enough heat from the kinetic energy of motion to do a huge amount of damage. Just ask the dinosaurs.

The DoD has pictures from the launch, which are amazing. This is one of their launch shots.

I would imagine that we’ll be seeing video of the debris coming down very soon; if you happen to see any, let me know in the comments.

Share

February 21st, 2008 9:46 AM by Phil Plait in Cool stuff | 41 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

« Older Entries
Newer 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

      • Maiden flight for ESA’s Vega rocket tonight
      • Another interactive way to scale the Universe
      • An ear to the ocean
      • The staring eye of a crescent moon
      • A hoopy frood
    • 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

      • Maiden flight for ESA’s Vega rocket tonight | Bad Astronomy
      • Another interactive way to scale the Universe | Bad Astronomy
      • 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
    • RSS DISCOVER Blogs: The Loom

      • A Planet of Viruses: Autographed Book Sale
      • 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


  • Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Copyright © 2012, Kalmbach Publishing Co.

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