Tag Archives: NASA

Love on the launch pad

It ain’t rocket science. It’s plain old adultery and attempted kidnapping and murder. I’m sure everyone and his cousin will have something to say about NASA astronaut and Navy Capt. Lisa Nowak, 43, before she finally fades from view–probably behind prison walls. Wonkette is already calling her a "diaper-clad nutbucket." And there’s this little irony. But really. I guess it just goes to show that not even a Naval Academy degree, pilot wings, an 0-6 rank, having three children and flying in Earth orbit can change the fundamentals. Among them: that the heart, to borrow the title of the Carson Mccullers’ tale, is a lonely hunter.

UPDATE  As NYTimes science writer John Tierney says, wow, people are finally talking about the space shuttle. Unfortunately, it’s about another tragic crash.

Metric moon

Put away your inches and miles, Americans, and start thinking along with the vast majority of the world in centimeters and kilometers. If, that is, you plan to go to the moon after 2020 when American space policy says we’ll have a base there. NASA has so decreed, deciding only the metric system will be in use on our portion of lunar soil. Set aside the fact of it being thirteen years in the future, far enough away that the current Congress won’t have to worry about justifying spending tax money for it, which suggests it may not, in fact, become reality. In which case maybe it won’t actually ever influence our continued stubborn use of English measurement (which not even the English officially use anymore, but only us, Liberia and Burma). Which might be a good thing when you think of all the vehicle mechanics and home handymen who would have to switch out their inch-based wrenches, nuts, screws and other devices for metric ones. But there’s already some betting that the residents of any future moon base may, in fact, be speaking Chinese, and they use the metric system, so maybe it’s a good time to start prepping for the inevitable. Me? I’m too old to worry about it.

Today’s pretty picture

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Can’t stop thinking about Orion. This is Orion’s Cradle, the area of new star formation in the Great Orion Nebula, 1,500 light years away/image by Tony Hallas for NASA 

Today’s pretty picture

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Orion again, my favorite. The deep field here, in the belt on the left, with the nebulae in the upper right. When the clouds of the last few days clear out, I’ll look for this winter companion again./NASA 

Dark matter mapped

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3D map by Hubble Space Telescope (in lower left corner) shows clumpy nature of cold, dark matter which is invisible but accounts for most of the Universe’s mass. Its gravitational attraction pulls normal matter–the stars in their galaxies–into the large-scale structures seen through telescopes.

Today’s pretty picture

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A closeup of the stars in the Belt of Orion the Hunter, my favorite constellation, and the only good thing about winter (for me), except for the fact that in Texas, at least, winter is rarely longer than six weeks. The worst part is in January, which is about to begin. Oh, well, it’s short./ NASA. 

Today’s pretty picture

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 The Andromeda Galaxy, about two million light years away, yet the closest major galaxy to our own Milky Way/NASA