Date: 30/06/2016 05:14:21
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 915245
Subject: Dawn at Ceres update.

Larger image, and other Ceres Close-ups, at http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/ceres.html

The right hand side shows contours of carbonate content in stripes next to stripes from a visual image of the same area. The colour shows that areas of high carbonate concentration match the location of Ceres’ brightest spot.

The center of Ceres’ mysterious Occator Crater is the brightest area on the dwarf planet. The inset perspective view is overlaid with data concerning the composition of this feature: Red signifies a high abundance of carbonates, while gray indicates a low carbonate abundance.

Dawn’s visible and infrared mapping spectrometer (VIR) was used to examine the composition of the bright material in the center of Occator. Using VIR data, researchers found that the dominant constituent of this bright area is sodium carbonate, a kind of salt found on Earth in hydrothermal environments. Scientists determined that Occator represents the highest concentration of carbonate minerals ever seen outside Earth.

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Date: 30/06/2016 05:32:21
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 915248
Subject: re: Dawn at Ceres update.

In other space news:
(By the way, the well known “Tadpole Galaxy” is NOT an example of a tadpole galaxy).

This new image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope shows a cosmic tadpole, with its bright head and elongated tail, wriggling through the inky black pool of space. Tadpole galaxies are rare and difficult to find in the local Universe. This striking example, named LEDA 36252, was explored as part of a Hubble study into their mysterious properties — with interesting results.

The Universe is a swirling pool of galaxies moving through the emptiness of space. Whilst spiral galaxies and ellipticals are the two main galaxy types in the Universe, there are also other, odder types — as shown in this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, taken with the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3).

The galaxy LEDA 36252 — also known as Kiso 5639 — is an example of what is known as a tadpole galaxy because of their bright, compact heads and elongated tails. Tadpole galaxies are unusual, and rare in the local Universe — in a sample of 10 000 galaxies within the local Universe, only 20 would be tadpoles — but they are more common in the early Universe.

This image of LEDA 36252 was obtained as part of a scientific study into the galaxy’s properties. It is an ideal cosmic laboratory for astronomers to study the accretion of cosmic gas, starburst activity, and the formation of globular star clusters.

The stars in tadpole galaxies are generally very old — living fossils from the early Universe and from the time when these galaxies formed. LEDA 36252 is in general no exception to that.

However, studying LEDA 36252 has led also to some unexpected results: its head contains a mass of surprisingly young stars with a total mass equivalent to some 10 000 Suns. These stars are grouped into large clusters and appear to consist mainly of hydrogen and helium with hardly any other elements. Astronomers think that this new burst of star formation was triggered when the galaxy accreted primordial gas — gas which was only very slightly enriched by other elements created by stellar fusion processes in the past — from its surroundings.

Also the elongated tail, seen stretching away from the head and scattered with bright blue stars, contains at least four distinct star-forming regions. These appear to be older than the one in the head.

The observations also showed signs of strong stellar winds and supernova explosions, which have blasted holes through LEDA 36252’s head and created multiple cavities. Wispy filaments, comprising gas and some stars, extend away from the main body of the cosmic tadpole.

The WFC3 observations comprising this image cover a wide portion of the spectrum, including ultraviolet, optical, H-alpha, and infrared emission. Together, they paint a beautifully detailed picture of LEDA 36252.

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Date: 30/06/2016 05:46:43
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 915249
Subject: re: Dawn at Ceres update.

In other space news:
You owe it to yourself to have a look at Rosetta’s “Image of the day” archive
https://planetgate.mps.mpg.de:8114/Image_of_the_Day/public/IofD_archive.html

Zoom in on full resolution on any of the images, it almost looks like you can see individual grains of sand, spectacular.

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Date: 30/06/2016 06:02:34
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 915250
Subject: re: Dawn at Ceres update.

In other space news:

Cassini has been taken some rather spectacular photos of Saturn and its moons lately. Check out the “Featured images” on
http://saturnraw.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/raw/#featured-359141

For example, is this the closest we’ve ever come to viewing the individual particles that make up Saturn’s rings?
Full size image at http://saturnraw.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/raw/detail/?imageid=358740
I think I can make out ten moonlets.

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