Good news from the Stars
9.0K views | +0 today
Follow
 
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
onto Good news from the Stars
Scoop.it!

Elon Musk: We Need To Leave Earth Or Risk Extinction

Elon Musk: We Need To Leave Earth Or Risk Extinction | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it

"Either we spread earth to other planets, or we risk going extinct. An extinction event is inevitable and we’re increasingly doing ourselves in."

Guillaume Decugis's insight:

We can't blame Musk for not being visionary. I wonder whether dramatizing the topic like he did will have an impact. 

No comment yet.
Good news from the Stars
To boldly go where only Astrophysicians have gone before. What I find interesting (and can roughly understand) in Astronomy & Space exploration these days.
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Hubble's 1995 image of a star nursery was amazing. Take a look at NASA's new version

Hubble's 1995 image of a star nursery was amazing. Take a look at NASA's new version | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured NASA's most detailed image of the Pillars of Creation that is helping scientists better understand how stars form.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Simply amazing pictures. 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

In a NASA simulation of an asteroid impact, scientists concluded they couldn't stop a space rock from decimating Europe

In a NASA simulation of an asteroid impact, scientists concluded they couldn't stop a space rock from decimating Europe | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Space agencies around the world took part in a NASA simulation of an asteroid-impact scenario.
The participating experts learned about
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Wake-up call? 

meddevices's comment, September 2, 2022 9:14 PM
good
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

What happens when a sun like ours runs out of fuel

What happens when a sun like ours runs out of fuel | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero...
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Your free end-of-the-world survival (nor not) guide.

meddevices's comment, September 2, 2022 9:15 PM
good
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Black hole picture captured for first time in space breakthrough

Black hole picture captured for first time in space breakthrough | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Network of eight radio telescopes around the world records revolutionary image
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
6.5 billion suns in the size of our solar system.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

NASA’s new planet-hunting spacecraft TESS has found its third distant world

NASA’s new planet-hunting spacecraft TESS has found its third distant world | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
NASA’s newest planet-hunting spacecraft has already spied and confirmed a third world outside our Solar System — just three months into the vehicle’s science operations. This newly discovered planet, or exoplanet, is relatively close by, orbiting a small star just 53 light-years away.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
How NASA changed its approach to discovering exoplanets by transitioning from Kepler to TESS, looking at stars near ours so we can study them in greater details.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Meet the first interstellar visitor observed in our solar system

Meet the first interstellar visitor observed in our solar system | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Last month, the Pan-STARRS 1 telescope in Hawaii spotted something strange zooming through our solar system. It turned out to be a visitor from beyond, unlike anything astronomers have seen before.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Unlike what CNN suggests in its title it's not the first to pass through but the first we ever observed. I hadn't realized there are 8 to 10 a year doing so - debris from other, remote solar systems.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Anywhere on earth in less than an hour?

Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Cool demo of what reusable rocket technology could mean outside of space travel. And a way to pay back for the space program through the huge impact it could have on the economy.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Some of the best images Cassini took of Saturn and its moons.

Some of the best images Cassini took of Saturn and its moons. | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
NASA's Cassini probe is plunging to its death. The nuclear-powered spacecraft has orbited Saturn for 13 years, and sent back hundreds of thousands of images. The photos include close-ups of the gaseous giant, its famous rings, and its enigmatic moons - including Titan, which has its own atmosphere, and icy Enceladus, which has a subsurface ocean that could conceivably harbour microbial life.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Beautiful worlds.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

SpaceX plans to send two people around the Moon

SpaceX plans to send two people around the Moon | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
SpaceX has plans to send two private citizens around the Moon, CEO Elon Musk announced today.
It will be a private mission with two paying customers, not NASA astronauts, who approache
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Not sure if this will happen or be on time but great way to capture imagination.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Water Found On One Of The First Exoplanets We Ever Discovered

Water Found On One Of The First Exoplanets We Ever Discovered | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Back in 1995, astronomers found the first exoplanet orbiting a star like our Sun. Now, using a novel technique, we’ve detected water in its atmosphere.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

This is on a gas planet the type of Jupiter. So unlikely to be a second home but I was fascinated to learn our detection method can now spot that.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

We probably just heard a message from aliens, scientists say

We probably just heard a message from aliens, scientists say | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Scientists have heard hugely unusual messages from deep in space that they think are coming from aliens.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

PR stunt or hard science? Too early to say but fascinating to see if we'll be able to prove that in the next future. Let alone translate what they say.

No comment yet.
Rescooped by Guillaume Decugis from The NewSpace Daily
Scoop.it!

A Few Things I Learned While Attempting To “Skate” In Zero Gravity

A Few Things I Learned While Attempting To “Skate” In Zero Gravity | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it

Simulated Moon and Martian gravity is way more fun for skating than no gravity at all. But you only get to experience those three times for 30 seconds each on the “Vomit Comet.” The rest of the flight is 12 zer0-gravity parabolas — each 30 seconds in duration. I did my first boneless backflip on our last martian gravity experience, and I was just starting to get the hang of doing ollies in slow motion.


Via Stratocumulus
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
0-g sports: a new era.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

A 3' Video To Understand The Discovery Of Gravitational Waves

A landmark day for Einstein and our understanding of the universe: the detection of gravitational waves. Brian Greene explains the discovery. Subscribe to ou...
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Very nice and simple video by Brian Greene who explains why the discovery of gravitational waves last week is such a big deal.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

NASA’s Asteroid Defense Mission to Smash Probe into Distant Space Rock

NASA’s Asteroid Defense Mission to Smash Probe into Distant Space Rock | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
NASA is set to launch a space probe designed to deflect a distant asteroid in a test of technology that might one day save the world.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
A project that might one day save the world. ‘For the first time, humanity will change the motion of a natural celestial body in space.’
meddevices's comment, September 2, 2022 9:14 PM
nice
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

NASA’s bold bet on Starship for the Moon may change spaceflight forever

NASA’s bold bet on Starship for the Moon may change spaceflight forever | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
"It is transformational to degrees no one today can understand."
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Bold and interesting move from NASA.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

How to take a picture of a black hole | Katie Bouman

At the heart of the Milky Way, there's a supermassive black hole that feeds off a spinning disk of hot gas, sucking up anything that ventures too close -
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Katie Bouman predicting what happened last week back in 2017.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Starship, the bleeding heavy-metal rocket ship of Elon Musk

Starship, the bleeding heavy-metal rocket ship of Elon Musk | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
SpaceX is building a steel launch system called Starship for the moon and Mars, but some aerospace experts say Elon Musk's new design won't be easy.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Rocket of steel. 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Three Theories of Infinite Earths

Three Theories of Infinite Earths | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
What if there was another Earth? And on that Earth was another you? And that other you, despite being genetically identical, turned out to be quite different? That’s the premise for the new STARZ series, Counterpart.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
A good recap of the different theories on how there could be universes parallel to ours.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Ion Thruster Prototype Breaks Records in Tests, Could Send Humans to Mars

Ion Thruster Prototype Breaks Records in Tests, Could Send Humans to Mars | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
A thruster being developed for a future crewed mission to Mars broke several records during a recent testing campaign.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Ion thrusters only operate in space but they're much more efficient than chemical rockets.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

The International Space Station just pulled off the photobomb of a lifetime

The International Space Station just pulled off the photobomb of a lifetime | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
The hotly anticipated total solar eclipse passed over the United States on Monday (Aug 21). Heading southeast, it passed over a narrow and long swath of the country. Also making an appearance—as it often does for astrophotographers—was the International Space Station. Captured by NASA photographer Joel Kowsky while looking up from Banner, Wyoming, perfectl
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Nice timing.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

We're About To Get Our First Ever Image Of A Black Hole

We're About To Get Our First Ever Image Of A Black Hole | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Yesterday, scientists “switched on” a global array of telescopes with the goal of imaging the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy, the Even
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
It's not a small logistic and we're not sure what there is to see - black? Nothingness? But it's fascinating to me that these objects which have been predicted by theory are now close to being observed.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

NASA just discovered a new solar system with 7 rocky, earth-size planets

NASA just discovered a new solar system with 7 rocky, earth-size planets | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
The planets orbit a dwarf star named Trappist-1, about 40 light-years, or 235 trillion miles, from Earth. That is quite close in cosmic terms, and by happy accident, the orientation of the orbits of the seven planets allows them to be studied in great detail.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:
Fantastic discovery by NASA. These planets are not gas giants but rocky planets like our own and some of them are in the habitable zone where water can exist in liquid form.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

Elon Musk apparently wants to rebuild the internet from space providing global 1Gbps coverage

Elon Musk apparently wants to rebuild the internet from space providing global 1Gbps coverage | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it
Elon Musk's aerospace company just made a big move to envelop the planet in high-speed internet coverage.
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

With a fleet of 4,425 satellites. No less. Which means more than the total number of satellites currently in Space. 

 

Ambitious program but great goal that would provide 200x more speed than what connected internet users get on average and perhaps more importantly internet access to areas that are not covered and potentially to the 4.2 billion of people who are not online yet. 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Guillaume Decugis
Scoop.it!

A platform (rather than a plan) to colonize Mars

Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Elon Musk's proposal is probably super ambitious to some but his speech this week has the merit of making things pretty simple and straightforward in terms of what's at stake and how we can address the opportunity. 

 

The scope of his own plan is limited to transportation so he doesn't describe what Mars colonies will look like nor what people will do there. But that's the very interesting take-away to me: rather than attempting to plan everything in a typical government (or soviet-style?) way, he's proposing a platform for other entrepreneurs to build on and leverage the opportunities.

 

He's not saying "I've planned everything and you should all do what I say". He's focusing on solving the biggest hurdle (affordable transportation) and leaves the rest open. He makes the point that in the 1850's, no one lived in California but that the smart decision made was precisely to build a railroad to California... which became the most populous states a few decades later and economic leadership in technology and entertainment.

 

So in the same spirit, he's proposing a plan to reduce transportation cost to Mars to $100k/person with enough bandwidth to ship 1M people there over 40-100 years. 

 

What happens next is up to us. 

No comment yet.
Rescooped by Guillaume Decugis from Amazing Science
Scoop.it!

Searching for aliens who already know we are here

Searching for aliens who already know we are here | Good news from the Stars | Scoop.it

Are we alone in the universe? To answer this question, astronomers have been using a variety of methods in the past decades to search for habitable planets and for the signals from extraterrestrial observers.

The first part of this venture has been highly successful: More than 2,000 planets around distant stars — so called exoplanets — have been found so far. The second part, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), has not yet been successful.


Via Dr. Stefan Gruenwald
Guillaume Decugis's insight:

Learning the lessons from exoplanet search to transform the SETI program could lead to a much more focused search. And therefore more successful. Looking at the limited area of the sky where aliens are the most likely to be listening to us already... as they might track us the way we track exoplanets. 

Stéphanie Guillaume's curator insight, March 21, 2016 9:50 AM

A la recherche d'extra terrestres qui savent déjà que nous sommes là...