1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
planned-planethood
antikythera-astronomy:
“Juno Arrives at Jupiter Today!
Today on the 4th of July, 2016 (barring any tragic occurrence with the engine firing) NASA’s Juno spacecraft will enter into orbit around Jupiter.
It’s been traveling since 2011 and carries thick...
antikythera-astronomy

Juno Arrives at Jupiter Today!

Today on the 4th of July, 2016 (barring any tragic occurrence with the engine firing) NASA’s Juno spacecraft will enter into orbit around Jupiter.

It’s been traveling since 2011 and carries thick shielding to protect its instruments from the dangerous fields of radiation surrounding the planet.

Juno’s not the first spacecraft to go to Jupiter, but it will be the closest. I like to imagine that Juno will look like a scene from Alien: Isolation where you get to look out the window and see that massive gas giant below you.

The goals of this mission are essentially thus: investigate the weather, atmosphere and magnetosphere on Jupiter.

Moving into a grander context, as answers start to come in and we learn more about Jupiter’s nature we hope to learn more about the questions we must be asking in order to investigate the formation of our very solar system on a deeper level.

Of course with any luck and a lot of hard work, we will be able to build a more harmonious theory of how a star system forms, and the things that go into the construct of a massive gas giant.

(Image credit: NASA and JPL)

nasa

What’s Up for June 2016?

nasa

image

What’s Up for June? Saturn at its best! Plus, good views of Mars, Jupiter and Jupiter’s moons continue from dusk to dawn.

image

You don’t have to stay up late to see Jupiter, Mars and Saturn this month, because they’re all visible soon after sunset. Jupiter is the brightest of the three, visible in the western sky all evening. 

image

The four Galilean moons are easily visible in binoculars or telescopes. If you think you’re seeing 5 moons on June 10th, you’re not. One of them is a distant star in the constellation Leo.

image

For telescope viewers, the time near Mars’ closest approach to Earth, May 30th this year, is the best time to try to see the two moons of Mars: Phobos and Deimos. It takes patience, very steady skies and good charts! Mars is still large and bright in early June, but it fades as speedy Earth, in its shorter orbit around the sun, passes it.

image

Saturn has been close to Mars recently. This month Saturn reaches opposition, when Saturn, Earth and the sun are in a straight line with Earth in the middle, providing the best and closest views of the ringed beauty and several of its moons. You’ll be able to make out cloud bands on Saturn, in delicate shades of cream and butterscotch. They’re fainter than the bands of Jupiter. Through a telescope you’ll see Saturn’s rings tilted about as wide as they get: 26 degrees.

image

You’ll also have a ring-side view of the Cassini division, discovered by Giovanni Domenico Cassini, namesake of our Cassini spacecraft, orbiting Saturn since 2004 and continuing through September 2017. When you look at Saturn through a telescope, you can’t help but see several of its 4 brightest moons, and maybe more. If you just see one, that’s Titan, 50% larger than our own moon. A telescope can also reveal more moons, like Saturn’s two-colored moon Iapetus. It takes 3 months to orbit Saturn, and it’s fairly easy to see.

image

There’s a bright comet visible this month, Comet PanSTARRS. It’s best seen from the southern hemisphere, but it’s also visible from the U.S. low in the morning sky. Comet PanSTARRS can be seen through a telescope near the beautiful Helix Nebula on June 4, but it is visible all month.

image

Watch the full June “What’s Up” video for more: https://youtu.be/M7RtIa9zBYA

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

space-bot

NASA’s asteroid-bound spacecraft arrives at Kennedy Space Center - Orlando Sentinel

space-bot

May 21, 2016 at 02:28AM


Orlando Sentinel

NASA’s asteroid-bound spacecraft arrives at Kennedy Space Center
Orlando Sentinel
The asteroid is considered potentially hazardous to Earth because it could one day threaten the planet, but not for another 160 years, said Humberto Campins, University of Central Florida physics and astronomy professors and a member of OSIRIS-REx's …
NASA probe that will make round trip to asteroid and back sent to launch baseSpaceflight Now
NASA announces Sept. 8 date for asteroid mission OSIRIS-RExFlorida Politics (blog)
NASA’s OSIRIS-REx asteroid mission en route to KSCFlorida Today

all 4 news articles »
space-bot

ISS Astronauts Will Watch New Star Wars Movie in Space - TIME

space-bot

December 13, 2015 at 08:28PM


TIME

ISS Astronauts Will Watch New Star Wars Movie in Space
TIME
International Space Station crew members will be watching the much-anticipated new movie, The Force Awakens, from space, British astronaut Tim Peake said on Twitter. “We have a projector & screen onboard & I’m told that @starwars will be waiting for
UK to be European space flight hub: Tim Peake to be sent to ISS as space Express.co.uk
Soyuz rocket that will launch Tim Peake into space is rolled to launch pad at Telegraph.co.uk
Tim Peake’s Soyuz space craft moved to launch siteBBC News
The Guardian -Irish Examiner
all 194 news articles »