The Little Red Spot

Below is a Juno spacecraft image of the northern part of Jupiter at just 16,000 km / 10,300 miles. The image was taken during the 11 December 2016 fly-by.

Juno is on a 53.4 day orbit and that makes the next close approach or perijove in just a few days on 02 February 2017.

All raw Juno images can be seen at the JunoCam site and the public is encouraged to download and process the images and even share your images back.

This particular image is from NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstaedt/John Rogers. Very nice work!

Here’s the NASA caption:
This stunning view of the high north temperate latitudes fortuitously shows NN-LRS-1, a giant storm known as a Little Red Spot (lower left). This storm is the third largest anticyclonic reddish oval on the planet, which Earth-based observers have tracked for the last 23 years. An anticyclone is a weather phenomenon with large-scale circulation of winds around a central region of high atmospheric pressure. They rotate clockwise in the northern hemisphere, and counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere. This Little Red Spot shows very little color, just a pale brown smudge in the center. The color is very similar to the surroundings, making it difficult to see as it blends in with the clouds nearby. Citizen scientists Gerald Eichstaedt and John Rogers processed the image and drafted the caption.

Tribute to Apollo 1

NASA opened a new tribute to the crew, astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White II and Roger Chaffee , of Apollo 1 who perished in a fire at the launch pad on Jan. 27, 1967, during training for the mission.

Add this to your tour of KSC when you go!

Hubble Used to Update Hubble Constant

Pretty cool.  The Hubble  Space Telescope have made an independent measurement of how fast the Universe is expanding. The newly measured expansion rate for the local Universe is very consistent with earlier findings.

Credits: NASA, ESA, Suyu (Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics), Auger (University of Cambridge)

Did I say there was cosmic (gravitational) lensing involved?  Here’s what NASA  has to say:

This research was presented in a series of papers to appear in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

The new measurement is completely independent of — but in excellent agreement with — other measurements of the Hubble constant in the local Universe that used Cepheid variable stars and supernovae as points of reference [heic1611].

However, the value measured by Suyu and her team, as well as those measured using Cepheids and supernovae, are different from the measurement made by the ESA Planck satellite. But there is an important distinction — Planck measured the Hubble constant for the early Universe by observing the cosmic microwave background.

While the value for the Hubble constant determined by Planck fits with our current understanding of the cosmos, the values obtained by the different groups of astronomers for the local Universe are in disagreement with our accepted theoretical model of the Universe. “The expansion rate of the Universe is now starting to be measured in different ways with such high precision that actual discrepancies may possibly point towards new physics beyond our current knowledge of the Universe,” elaborates Suyu.

The targets of the study were massive galaxies positioned between Earth and very distant quasars — incredibly luminous galaxy cores. The light from the more distant quasars is bent around the huge masses of the galaxies as a result of strong gravitational lensing. This creates multiple images of the background quasar, some smeared into extended arcs.

Because galaxies do not create perfectly spherical distortions in the fabric of space and the lensing galaxies and quasars are not perfectly aligned, the light from the different images of the background quasar follows paths which have slightly different lengths. Since the brightness of quasars changes over time, astronomers can see the different images flicker at different times, the delays between them depending on the lengths of the paths the light has taken. These delays are directly related to the value of the Hubble constant. “Our method is the most simple and direct way to measure the Hubble constant as it only uses geometry and General Relativity, no other assumptions,” explains co-lead Frédéric Courbin from the Laboratory of Astrophysics, Lastro (EPFL), Switzerland.

Using the accurate measurements of the time delays between the multiple images, as well as computer models, has allowed the team to determine the Hubble constant to an impressively high precision: 3.8 percent. “An accurate measurement of the Hubble constant is one of the most sought-after prizes in cosmological research today,” highlights team member Vivien Bonvin, from EPFL, Switzerland. And Suyu adds: “The Hubble constant is crucial for modern astronomy as it can help to confirm or refute whether our picture of the Universe — composed of dark energy, dark matter and normal matter — is actually correct, or if we are missing something fundamental.”

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.

A Teenager on Mars!

Just a couple of days ago  the Mars Rover Opportunity, Oppy for short became a teenager of sorts, 13 years on Mars!

Congrats Oppy!

GOES 16

This view of the Earth and Moon comes from the American weather satellite GOES-16. This image comes from the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) instrument, built by Harris Corporation and can provide an image every 15 minutes.

The (US) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) satellite will have company soon as the GOES-17 is in the works.

The NOAA press release – with more images, is located here.

Credit: NOAA

Tethys and Odysseus

Each time we get a picture of a moon from Cassini it’s hard to know if it will be the last, especially one that has such a good angle on a magnificent landmark like the crater Odysseus.

Original caption from the Cassini team:

Tethys, one of Saturn’s larger icy moons, vaguely resembles an eyeball staring off into space in this view from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft. The resemblance is due to the enormous crater, Odysseus, and its complex of central peaks.

Like any solar system moon, Tethys (660 miles or 1,062 kilometers across) has suffered many impacts. These impacts are a prime shaper of the appearance of a moon’s surface , especially when the moon has no active geological processes. In this case, a large impact not only created a crater known as Odysseus, but the rebound of the impact caused the mountainous peaks, named Scheria Montes, to form in the center of the crater.

This view looks toward the leading side of Tethys. North on Tethys is up and rotated 1 degree to the left. The image was taken in green light with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera on Nov. 10, 2016.

The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 228,000 miles (367,000 kilometers) from Tethys. Image scale is 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) per pixel.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

Martian Bedrock

Roadside bedrock outcrops are all too familiar for many who have taken a long road trip through mountainous areas on Earth. Martian craters provide what tectonic mountain building and man’s TNT cannot: crater-exposed bedrock outcrops.

Although crater and valley walls offer us roadside-like outcrops from just below the Martian surface, their geometry is not always conducive to orbital views. On the other hand, a crater central peak — a collection of mountainous rocks that have been brought up from depth, but also rotated and jumbled during the cratering process — produce some of the most spectacular views of bedrock from orbit.

This color composite cutout shows an example of such bedrock that may originate from as deep as 2 miles beneath the surface. The bedrock at this scale is does not appear to be layered or made up of grains, but has a massive appearance riddled with cross-cutting fractures, some of which have been filled by dark materials and rock fragments (impact melt and breccias) generated by the impact event. A close inspection of the image shows that these light-toned bedrock blocks are partially to fully covered by sand dunes and coated with impact melt bearing breccia flows.

This is a stereo pair with ESP_012367_1695.

Thanks to: The University of Arizona, Tucson, operates HiRISE, which was built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colo. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Project for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington.

Mission Control – Houston

Flight Director Mary Lawrence tells us “Everything About Mission Control Houston”.

Video – NASA 

SBIRS GEO Flight 3

A United Launch Alliance Atlas V 401 configuration rocket launched the Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS) GEO Flight 3 mission for the U.S. Air Force from Space Launch Complex (SLC)-41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

SciNews video

 

Sitting On The Edge

 

It looks like ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet is dangling his feet into the void. Actually he was on a spacewalk and together with NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough, he spent five hours and 58 minutes outside the Space Station to complete a battery upgrade to the outpost’s power system.

Thomas commented on this picture: “This is what a spacewalk is: 400 km of void under your feet”

Credit: ESA