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    108
    POPS
    The size of our World
    drewrew
    by drewrew  10-30-2006    16
     Kida puts things into perspective
    61
    POPS
    Space Balls. An accurate model of Planets to Sun etc
    sohil
    by sohil  6-16-2006    20
     No Remarks
    35
    POPS
    Huge hidden biomass lives deep beneath the oceans
    Mohir
    by Mohir  5-25-2008    2
     They found simple organisms known as prokaryotes in every sample. Prokaryotes are organisms that often have just one cell. Their peculiarity is that, unlike any other form of life, their DNA is not neatly packed into a nucleus.
    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
    33
    POPS
    Five Reasons Why Aliens Will Make Contact with the Japanese First
    Mohir
    by Mohir  6-8-2008    6
     North Korea is rumored to have recently released a statement claiming that their nuclear reactor has the dual capability of communicating wirelessly with alien species up to 1,000 light years away in real time. Of course, we can't believe everything that the North Korean government says, but seriously, I wouldn't be surprised at all if they were already communicating with other planets. If that's the case, it should be relatively easy for Japan, a neighboring country, to intercept their signals with laser pulses and let the world know definitively what Kim Jong Il has known for decades—that there is life beyond Earth.
    32
    POPS
    Wow - Jupiter & Io
    skwirlinator
    by skwirlinator  1-8-2008    4
     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 :-)
    31
    POPS
    The Great Silence
    wildcat
    by wildcat  12-25-2007    10
     His question became famously known as the Fermi Paradox. The paradox is the contradiction between the high estimates of the probability of the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations and yet the lack of evidence for, or contact with, any such civilizations.
    31
    POPS
    Breakthroughs From 2007 Most Likely to Change the World
    mugofcoffee
    by mugofcoffee  1-25-2008    4
     very interesting...
    26
    POPS
    It rains in space.
    aculton
    by aculton  9-4-2007    1
     I wish it would rain at my house.
    26
    POPS
    What Created the Mythical "Star of Bethlehem"?
    wildcat
    by wildcat  12-18-2007    14
     No Remarks
    26
    POPS
    Ancient Domes Reveal 3.45-billion-year-old Life History on Earth
    chestnut501
    by chestnut501  7-18-2009    2
     No Remarks
    26
    POPS
    All Wet? Astronomers Claim Discovery of Earth-like Planet
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-20-2008    2
     I volunteer for an exploration mission... :-)
    25
    POPS
    Music Reduced to Beautiful Math
    wildcat
    by wildcat  5-8-2008    2
     "You can use these geometrical spaces to provide ways of visualizing musical pieces," Tymoczko told LiveScience. "These spaces give us a much better and comprehensive picture of the space of all possible chords."
    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.
    25
    POPS
    Astronomers find system with five planets
    invictus
    by invictus  11-6-2007    8
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    Massive New Object Discovered at Edge of the Solar System
    Mohir
    by Mohir  8-19-2008    1
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    Two moons, circling
    JohnWaterman
    by JohnWaterman  8-21-2009    1
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    How Isaac Newton Changed the World
    wildcat
    by wildcat  6-9-2008   
     No Remarks
    24
    POPS
    WoW, Now THAT'S a rainstorm
    skwirlinator
    by skwirlinator  8-30-2007    3
     NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope observed a fledgling solar system like the one depicted in this artist's concept, and discovered deep within it enough water vapor to fill the oceans on Earth five times. This water vapor starts out in the form of ice in a cloudy cocoon (not pictured) that surrounds the embryonic star, called NGC 1333-IRAS 4B (buried in center of image). Material from the cocoon, including ice, falls toward the center of the cloud. The ice then smacks down onto a dusty pre-planetary disk circling the stellar embryo (doughnut-shaped cloud) and vaporizes. Eventually, this water might make its way into developing planets.
    24
    POPS
    Close Encounter with Mars
    invictus
    by invictus  12-17-2007    8
     No Remarks
    23
    POPS
    NASA scientists want to move the Earth
    cakebelly
    by cakebelly  8-13-2009    6
     full at source: The plan put forward by Dr Laughlin, and his colleagues Don Korycansky and Fred Adams, involves carefully directing a comet or asteroid so that it sweeps close past our planet and transfers some of its gravitational energy to Earth. ‘Earth’s orbital speed would increase as a result and we would move to a higher orbit away from the Sun,’ Laughlin said. Engineers would then direct their comet so that it passed close to Jupiter or Saturn, where the reverse process would occur. It would pick up energy from one of these giant planets. Later its orbit would bring it back to Earth, and the process would be repeated.
    23
    POPS
    Humanity May Hold Key For Next Earth Evolution
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  12-1-2008   
     If we recognize humanity is an integral part of the planet and begin working for a healthy Earth, then planetary evolution could move forward to some unknown future. On the other hand, Langmuir said, if we continue to view the Earth as something that is separate, that we merely use, then the resulting practices could damage the environment enough to stall planetary evolution, even causing it to fall back to a level where it supports just microscopic life. “The story of the Earth is our story. We are intimately connected in every fiber of our being, in every breath we take. We’re inseparable from the Earth,” Langmuir said.
    23
    POPS
    What Makes Earth Special Compared to Other Planets
    wildcat
    by wildcat  7-9-2008    8
     "The most impressive attribute of the Earth is the existence and amount of liquid water on its surface,"
    23
    POPS
    NASA Plans to Visit the Sun
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-14-2008    4
     The two mysteries prompting this mission are the high temperature of the sun's corona and the puzzling acceleration of the solar wind: Mystery #1—the corona: If you stuck a thermometer in the surface of the sun, it would read about 6000o C. Intuition says the temperature should drop as you back away; instead, it rises. The sun's outer atmosphere, the corona, registers more than a million degrees Celsius, hundreds of times hotter than the star below. This high temperature remains a mystery more than 60 years after it was first measured. Mystery #2—the solar wind: The sun spews a hot, million mph wind of charged particles throughout the solar system. Planets, comets, asteroids—they all feel it. Curiously, there is no organized wind close to the sun's surface, yet out among the planets there blows a veritable gale. Somewhere in between, some unknown agent gives the solar wind its great velocity. The question is, what?
    23
    POPS
    Astronomy Picture of the Day: The Four Suns of HD 98800
    travislaborde
    by travislaborde  7-30-2007    2
     Wow, what a beautiful sight. I hope one of the things we can do once we're in Heaven is fly around and see all this stuff :)
    22
    POPS
    Mars will shine at it's brightest on XMAS eve
    dfiskey
    by dfiskey  12-23-2007    2
     i've been doing a solar system puzzle about 15 times a day with my daughter, so i'm into the planets these days...seems pretty cool!!!
    22
    POPS
    Size of Our Planet Compared to...
    axelsenzon
    by axelsenzon  6-6-2007    3
     No Remarks
    22
    POPS
    Top 10 New World-Changing Innovations of the Year
    einbar
    by einbar  10-21-2008   
     2008 Breakthrough Awards /// The Innovators The early 20th century produced a breathtaking succession of innovations—the Wright Flyer, the Model T, the Panama Canal. It was a golden age of engineering. A century hence, observers may well look back at our era in much the same way: Cars are being reimagined from the wheels up. Advances in solar energy show the way past fossil fuels. And space probes explore planets that could become our future homes. These pages salute the innovators who are inventing the future. Welcome to the new golden age.
    21
    POPS
    Pictures of the Universe
    amgumen
    by amgumen  4-15-2008    1
     No Remarks
    21
    POPS
    Plants on alien worlds may not be green
    dorine
    by dorine  4-11-2007    4
     Real good article.
    21
    POPS
    Dark matter clues in oldest stars
    arifsali
    by arifsali  9-14-2007    3
     No Remarks
    21
    POPS
    Out Of The Blue
    thisnamecantbetaken
    by thisnamecantbetaken  7-23-2007   
     I'm saving this for a lazy Sunday afternoon. (This movie was mentioned on Larry King)
    21
    POPS
    The future of science...is art
    einbar
    by einbar  7-29-2008    1
     "But before any of this can happen, our two existing cultures must modify their habits. First of all, the humanities must sincerely engage with the sciences. Henry James defined the writer as someone on whom nothing is lost; artists must heed his call, and not ignore science's inspiring descriptions of reality. At the same time, the sciences must recognize that their truths are not the only truths. No single area of knowledge has a monopoly on knowledge. As Karl Popper, an eminent defender of science wrote, "It is imperative that we give up the idea of ultimate sources of knowledge, and admit that all knowledge is human; that it is mixed with our errors, our prejudices, our dreams, and our hopes; that all we can do is to grope for truth even though it is beyond our reach." The struggle for scientific truth is long and hard and never ending. If we want to get an answer to our deepest questions—the questions of who we are and what everything is—we will need to draw from both science
    21
    POPS
    Stephen Hawking: "Humans Have Entered a New Stage of Evolution"
    chestnut501
    by chestnut501  7-3-2009    2
     We have entered a new phase of evolution. "At first, evolution proceeded by natural selection, from random mutations. This Darwinian phase, lasted about three and a half billion years, and produced us, beings who developed language, to exchange information." But what distinguishes us from our cave man ancestors is the knowledge that we have accumulated over the last ten thousand years, and particularly, Hawking points out, over the last three hundred.
    21
    POPS
    First extra-galactic planet spotted in Andromeda
    Mohir
    by Mohir  6-9-2009   
     The advantage of microlensing is that it works best for more distant objects so it's ideal for planet hunting in other galaxies. In theory, it should be possible to see Earth-sized objects in this way. The disadvantage is that microlensing is a relatively rapid, one-off event that lasts a few days at most. That makes observations difficult to verify. And today a new analysis from Ingrosso and co shows that this companion has a mass about 6 times that of Jupiter. That's heading into brown dwarf territory but it's also well within planetary territory too.
    20
    POPS
    Exploding Comet update - New images
    invictus
    by invictus  10-29-2007    3
     No Remarks
    20
    POPS
    Exoplanets: First ever pictures - sensational!
    JohnWaterman
    by JohnWaterman  11-13-2008    1
     No Remarks
    20
    POPS
    Your Age on Other Worlds
    bioplasmik
    by bioplasmik  9-6-2007    4
     Very interesting.
    — end of the list —

    Octane planets

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