JohnWaterman's astronomy clipmarks

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    89
    POPS
    20 Most Popular Myths in Science
    haraya
    by haraya  1-8-2007    5
     No Remarks
    67
    POPS
    We are a tiny planet! Like this small.
    overture
    by overture  1-6-2007    11
     Makes me feel all humbled.
    67
    POPS
    Astronomy Pictures of the Year for 2007
    BartendingBear
    by BartendingBear  12-18-2007    10
     "Space... the final frontier"
    61
    POPS
    Awesome research/ Homework resource
    cosmic_kitten1
    by cosmic_kitten1  1-14-2007    3
     I only found this the other day and mostly I'm clipping it for my own uses; however, it's a great resource and I thought I'd share. The site itself has pretty cool info too. 'Hope you guys like the clip.
    61
    POPS
    Space Balls. An accurate model of Planets to Sun etc
    sohil
    by sohil  6-16-2006    20
     No Remarks
    51
    POPS
    100 Top Reference Sites
    skwirlinator
    by skwirlinator  9-10-2007    5
     No Remarks
    43
    POPS
    Diamond star thrills astronomers
    chriswwt
    by chriswwt  1-6-2007    7
     The greatest diamond mine found ever!!
    40
    POPS
    A wonderful new Hubble image
    JohnWaterman
    by JohnWaterman  10-2-2007    5
     No Remarks
    40
    POPS
    Thunderbolts of the Gods - Plasma Cosmology
    taksmaster
    by taksmaster  3-11-2007    2
     A lesser known theory of cosmology that challenges the the big bang theory.
    39
    POPS
    Saurn, the Sun, and Us
    CrazyRedHead
    by CrazyRedHead  10-10-2007    6
     No Remarks
    38
    POPS
    Big Chunk Of The Universe Is Missing -- Again
    Mohir
    by Mohir  11-5-2007    4
     No Remarks
    37
    POPS
    Breathtaking Galaxy Pics
    CrazyRedHead
    by CrazyRedHead  1-15-2007    7
     No Remarks
    34
    POPS
    Astronomers find largest hole in universe
    pokkets
    by pokkets  8-24-2007    7
     "We never expected to find a void this big" The Universe is full of surprises isn't it ? It would be disappointing if it wasn't.
    33
    POPS
    A Diamond Bigger than Earth Discovered
    Mohir
    by Mohir  11-19-2008    3
     The diamond is actually the crystallized interior of a white dwarf – or the hot core of a star that is left over after the star uses up its nuclear fuel and dies. It is made mostly of carbon and is coated by a thin layer of hydrogen and helium gases.
    33
    POPS
    The Size of our World
    This Little Bird
    by This Little Bird  8-17-2007    11
     No Remarks
    33
    POPS
    'Hundreds of worlds' in Milky Way
    invictus
    by invictus  2-17-2008    4
     No Remarks
    32
    POPS
    WOW! The Great Nebula in Orion [Amazing Picture]
    sohil
    by sohil  6-8-2007    7
     No Remarks
    32
    POPS
    ET too bored by Earth transmissions to respond
    wildcat
    by wildcat  12-19-2007    20
     No Remarks
    32
    POPS
    The Eye of God
    sohil
    by sohil  10-27-2006    17
     No Remarks
    32
    POPS
    Could Jupiter wreck the solar system?
    Aribeth
    by Aribeth  5-4-2008    3
     "So what's the likelihood Mercury could crash into the Earth? If it did, the asteroid that most likely wiped out the dinosaurs will seem like a drop in the ocean compared with a planet 4880 km in diameter slamming into us. There will be very little left after this wrecking ball impact. But here's the kicker: There is only a 1% chance that these gravitational instabilities of the inner Solar System are likely to cause any kind of chaos before the Sun turns into a Red Giant and swallows Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars in 7 billion years time. So, no need to look out for death-wish Mercury quite yet… there's a very low chance that any of this will happen. But some good news for Mars; the researchers have also found that if the chaos does ensue, the Red Planet may be flung out of the Solar System, possibly escaping our expanding Sun. So, let's get those Mars colonies started! Well, within the next few billions of years anyhow…" Good stuff for the next science-fiction movie :-)
    30
    POPS
    The most important telescopes in history
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  5-18-2009    2
     In celebration of the International Year of Astronomy in 2009, New Scientist takes you on an armchair tour of some of the most important telescopes ever built. For more information on these and other pioneering telescopes, read Eyes on the Skies: 400 Years of Telescopic Discovery by Govert Schilling and Lars Lindberg Christensen (Wiley-VCH, 2009). More interesting stuff on site
    29
    POPS
    Amazing Renderings of Mars
    Bluephoenix4
    by Bluephoenix4  8-6-2007    6
     No Remarks
    29
    POPS
    Apollo 14 astronaut claims aliens HAVE made contact
    arifsali
    by arifsali  7-23-2008    28
     Can you believe this? The guy is 77 years old now, could he be cooking things up?
    29
    POPS
    2000 Year Old Computer Rebooted
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  12-19-2008    3
     Amazing...
    29
    POPS
    50 Billion Suns! -The Biggest Single Object in the Universe
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  9-4-2008    5
     Based on this self-regulating maximum rate, scientists at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Massachusetts, and the European Southern Observatory, Chile, have calculated an upper limit for these mega-mammoth masses. Fifty billion suns, that's 100 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 kg, otherwise known as "ridiculously stupidly big" and triple the size of the largest observed black hole, OJ 287.
    29
    POPS
    Astronomy Photo of the Day --The Universe Nearby
    dorine
    by dorine  12-11-2007    6
      Credit & Copyright: 2MASS, T. H. Jarrett, J. Carpenter, & R. Hurt
    29
    POPS
    The Winter Solstice
    carrerinyes
    by carrerinyes  12-20-2008    3
     ...and space travel. I haven't studied astronomy enough to understand fully how we came to know this. The axis is, after all, an imaginary line. But here's an eloquent perspective on that question from a Candlegrove visitor. Solstice means... standing-still-sun Such precision we have about it now! Winter solstice is when... ...because of the earth's tilt, your hemisphere is leaning farthest away from the sun, and therefore: The daylight is the shortest. The sun has its lowest arc in the sky.
    28
    POPS
    The Milky way black hole
    killer_bunny
    by killer_bunny  8-9-2007    1
     No Remarks
    28
    POPS
    Biggest Full Moon of the Year: Take 2
    tabsey
    by tabsey  1-9-2009    15
     Another chance if, like me, you were clouded over.
    27
    POPS
    How the Earth will look in 250 million years
    abstrict
    by abstrict  9-23-2007    11
     No Remarks
    26
    POPS
    Creationism is bunk
    JohnWaterman
    by JohnWaterman  11-9-2008    16
     The science:
    26
    POPS
    A True Image from False Kiva
    Mohir
    by Mohir  9-29-2008    12
     No Remarks
    26
    POPS
    The Best of The Best Astronomy Pictures of 2008
    JohnWaterman
    by JohnWaterman  1-2-2009    7
     No Remarks
    26
    POPS
    What Created the Mythical "Star of Bethlehem"?
    wildcat
    by wildcat  12-18-2007    14
     No Remarks
    25
    POPS
    Bio-Earth: Are Planets Living Super-Organisms?
    Mohir
    by Mohir  7-11-2008    3
     He believes that expanding the study of life sciences to the core of our world and the depths of outer space will help us find distant relatives of our own Earth -- planets that could also sustain life. To explain why contintental plates drift on the surface of the Earth's molten mantle, Maruyama argues that continents actually have life cycles. Old, cold plates on continental fringes sink to “plate graveyards” deep in the Earth’s mantle, and then rise again, creating volcanoes fueled by three-dimensional convection movements deep below the surface.
    24
    POPS
    Massive New Object Discovered at Edge of the Solar System
    Mohir
    by Mohir  8-19-2008    1
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    Celestial show begins this weekend
    invictus
    by invictus  8-10-2007    10
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    Hubble Unveils a Mystery 1.2 Billion Light Years Distant
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-10-2008    1
     Nothing is too far to study....
    24
    POPS
    Close Encounter with Mars
    invictus
    by invictus  12-17-2007    8
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    Hubble's great catches
    janekl
    by janekl  3-29-2009    6
     No Remarks
    — end of the list —

    JohnWaterman astronomy

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