Tag Archives: solar system

2 planets may lurk in solar system beyond Pluto, study says

planet-neptunian.jpg

March 26, 2014: A newly discovered planet-like object, dubbed “Sedna” is seen in this artist’s concept released by NASA. (AP)

There is evidence of at least two planets larger than Earth lurking in our solar system beyond Pluto, a new analysis of “extreme trans-Neptunian objects” reveals.

After studying 13 of these “extreme trans-Neptunian objects,” or ETNOs, the obits of these objects are different from a theory that predicts the orbits.

“The exact number is uncertain, given that the data that we have is limited, but our calculations suggest that there are at least two planets, and probably more, within the confines of our solar system,” Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, scientist at the UCM and co-author of the study, said in a statement Friday.

Theory says these objects should have an average distance to the sun of 150 astronomical units. These orbits should also have an inclination of 0 degrees, Space.com says.

However, the orbits of the ETNOs have semi-major axes ranging from 150-525 astronomical units and inclinations of about 20 degrees.

These potential worlds would be bigger than Earth and would lie nearly 200 astronomical units from the sun. Earth is one astronomical unit from the sun.

The new results may give way to evidence of the existence of Planet X, which is a rumored object as far away as 250 astronomical units from the sun and 10 times larger than Earth.

With the current instruments available to scientists, it is nearly impossible to spot these objects.

Click for more from Space.com.

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Mars was once covered in water

Ancient Mars was once covered in water — and MAVEN will find out where it went

Published November 14, 2013

FoxNews.com

Where did all the water go?

Billions of years ago when the Red Planet was young, it likely had a thick atmosphere that was warm enough to support oceans of liquid water, a critical ingredient for life, NASA believes. Mars today is a barren desert however — so what happened?

NASA aims to solve a piece of that puzzle with the launch of the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission, which is set to blast off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s Complex 41 on Monday, Nov. 18 at 1:28 p.m.

The newest Mars explorer will study the thinning of the planet’s atmosphere and the disappearance of surface water over time to possibly explain the discrepancy between then and now.

There are currently several competing theories to explain how Mars was stripped of its thick atmosphere some 4 billion years ago, the space agency said.

“The leading theory is that Mars lost its intrinsic magnetic field that was protecting the atmosphere from direct erosion by the impact of the solar wind,” said Joseph Grebowsky of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

The solar wind is a thin stream of electrically charged particles or plasma blowing continuously from the sun into space at about a million miles per hour.

“Studies of the remnant magnetic field distributions measured by NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor mission set the disappearance of the planet’s convection-produced global magnetic field at about 3.7 billion years ago, leaving the Red Planet vulnerable to the solar wind,” Grebowsky said.

MAVEN was designed to help study and possibly verify that theory. Ahead of its launch, NASA’s Goddard Conceptual Image Lab created a stunning video showcasing what a water-filled Mars would have looked like. After all, if liquid surface water existed billions of years ago, then the planet’s atmosphere had to have had a different climate that was warmer and a pressure near or greater than it currently is.

The video shows how the surface of Mars might have appeared during this ancient warm period, beginning with a flyover of a Martian lake. It ends with an illustration of NASA’s MAVEN mission in orbit around present-day Mars.

The spacecraft will arrive at the Red Planet on Sept. 22, 2014, and slip into an elliptical orbit ranging from a low of 93 miles above the surface to a high of 3,728 miles. It also will take five “deep dips” during the course of the mission, flying as low as 77 miles in altitude and providing a cross-section of the top of the atmosphere.

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Details of 1st private manned Mars mission revealed

Details of 1st private manned Mars mission revealed

By Mike Wall

Published November 21, 2013

  • inspiration-mars-spacecraft

    An artist’s illustration of the Inspiration Mars Foundation’s spacecraft for a 2018 mission to Mars by a two-person crew. The private Mars mission would be a flyby trip around the Red Planet. (INSPIRATION MARS FOUNDATION)

  • inspiration-mars-spacecraft-concept

    An artist’s depiction of the planned Inspiration Mars spacecraft to send a married couple on a flyby mission around Mars.(INSPIRATION MARS)

  • inspiration-mars-mission-concept

    This image from an Inspiration Mars fact sheet shows the nonprofit space exploration group’s vision for its planned two-person Mars flyby mission, which it hopes to launch between 2017 and 2018. (INSPIRATION MARS)

  • inspiration-mars-mission-spacecraft-concept

    An artist’s illustration of the manned spacecraft for the Inspiration Mars mission to send two astronauts on a Mars flyby mission in 2017-2018. (INSPIRATION MARS)

A nonprofit space exploration group revealed exactly how it plans to launch two married astronauts on an ambitious manned flyby mission to the Red Planet by early 2018, a scenario that would involve NASA and federal funding along with a healthy dose of the pioneering spirit.

The Inspiration Mars project — which is led by multimillionaire Dennis Tito, the world’s first space tourist — hopes to partner with NASA, using much of the space agency’s equipment and expertise as well as an infusion of federal money to get off the launch pad by early January 2018.

“Perhaps several hundred million dollars in new federal spending can make this mission happen,” Inspiration Mars officials wrote in a report, released Wednesday, that outlines the mission’s proposed architecture. “We now call on our nation’s leaders to seize this singular opportunity to begin human exploration of the solar system and affirm America’s leadership throughout the world.” [Private Mission to Mars Explained (Infographic)]

‘Perhaps several hundred million dollars in new federal spending can make this mission happen.’

– Inspiration Mars officials

The proposed “Mission for America” would launch a married couple toward the Red Planet sometime between Dec. 25, 2017 and Jan. 5, 2018, to take advantage of a rare favorable alignment of Mars and Earth.

The two astronauts would not land on the Red Planet but would cruise within 100 miles of its surface before heading back home, eventually touching down on Earth in May 2019 after spending 501 days in space.

The flyby mission will help inspire the next generation of researchers and engineers, preserving America’s competitive edge in science and technology, Inspiration Mars officials say. It should also lay the foundation for even more ambitious manned exploration of the solar system, they add.

“There’ll be a lot of science return and techology return,” Taber MacCallum, Inspiration Mars’ chief technology officer, told reporters during a teleconference today. “We will, I think, sort of break the sound barrier for going to Mars and back, enabling a range of missions to occur in the future.”

The current mission plan, as outlined in the report, calls for using NASA’s Space Launch System mega-rocket (SLS), which is in development with a first flight slated for late 2017.

The flyby mission would require two launches in quick succession. In the first liftoff, an SLS would loft four payloads to Earth orbit: an SLS upper-stage rocket; a 600-cubic-foot habitat module derived from Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus cargo vessel; a service module that would support the habitat module with power, propulsion and communications systems; and an Earth re-entry pod, which would be based on NASA’s Orion capsule.

The second launch — this one likely using a commercial rocket — would deliver the two astronauts to orbit aboard a yet-to-be-selected private spaceship. The crewmembers would then transfer to the habitat module, and the SLS upper stage would propel them on toward Mars.

The married couple would spend virtually the entire mission in the habitat module, transferring to the re-entry pod in the last few hours of the mission.

Inspiration Mars officials acknowledge that making all of this happen will be challenging. The re-entry pod, for example, will have to protect the astronauts from the blazing heat generated when it slams into Earth’s atmosphere at about 32,000 mph.

But it can be done, and the current plan — which emphasizes the use of technology already proven or in development whenever possible — gives the mission the best chance of success, Inspiration Mars officials say.

“We submit this report with unreserved faith in the men and women of NASA, with a singleminded commitment to surmounting every obstacle, and with complete confidence that this mission can be done,” they write in the report.

Leave a comment

Filed under Humor and Observations

Calculate Your Age on Other Planets

Calculate Your Age on Other Planets

To calculate your age on other planets, go here:

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1qn2IT/:MCPwjZdf:Z2eCLwS_/www.exploratorium.edu/ronh/age/

Below is a partial listing of the link to give you an idea of how it works.  Enjoy!

 

Want to melt those years away? Travel to an outer planet!


  • Fill in your birthdate below in the space indicated. (Note you must enter the year as a 4-digit number!)
  • Click on the “Calculate” button.
  • Notice that your age on other worlds will automatically fill in. Notice that Your age is different on the different worlds. Notice that your age in “days” varies wildly.
  • Notice when your next birthday on each world will be. The date given is an “earth date”.
  • You can click on the images of the planets to get more information about them from Bill Arnett’s incredible Nine Planets web site.

MM DD YYYY

 


 

MERCURY

Your age is  Mercurian days
 Mercurian years
 

Next Birthday 

VENUS

Your age is  Venusian days
 Venusian years
 

Next Birthday 

EARTH

Your age is Earth days
 Earth years
 

Next Birthday 

 


 

MARS

Your age is Martian days
 Martian years
 

Next Birthday 

JUPITER

Your age is Jovian days
 Jovian years
 

Next Birthday 

SATURN

Your age is Saturnian days
 Saturnian years
 

Next Birthday 

 


 

URANUS

Your age is Uranian days
 Uranian years
 

Next Birthday 

NEPTUNE

Your age is Neptunian days
 Neptunian years
 

Next Birthday 

PLUTO

Your age is Plutonian days
 Plutonian years
 

Next Birthday 

 


 

 

The Days (And Years) Of Our Lives

Looking at the numbers above, you’ll immediately notice that you are different ages on the different planets. This brings up the question of how we define the time intervals we measure. What is a day? What is a year?The earth is in motion. Actually, several different motions all at once. There are two that specifically interest us. First, the earthrotates on its axis, like a spinning top. Second, the earthrevolves around the sun, like a tetherball at the end of a string going around the center pole.

The top-like rotation of the earth on its axis is how we define the day. The time it takes the earth to rotate from noon until the next noon we define as one day. We further divide this period of time into 24 hours, each of which is divided into 60 minutes, each of which is broken into 60 seconds. There are no rules that govern the rotation rates of the planets, it all depends on how much “spin” was in the original material that went into forming each one. Giant Jupiter has lots of spin, turning once on its axis every 10 hours, while Venus takes 243 days to spin once.

The revolution of the earth around the sun is how we define the year. A year is the time it takes the earth to make one revolution – a little over 365 days.

We all learn in grade school that the planets move at differing rates around the sun. While earth takes 365 days to make one circuit, the closest planet, Mercury, takes only 88 days. Poor, ponderous, and distant Pluto takes a whopping 248 years for one revolution. Below is a table with the rotation rates and revolution rates of all the planets.

 

Planet Rotation Period Revolution Period
Mercury 58.6 days 87.97 days
Venus 243 days 224.7 days
Earth 0.99 days 365.26 days
Mars 1.03 days 1.88 years
Jupiter 0.41 days 11.86 years
Saturn 0.45 days 29.46 years
Uranus 0.72 days 84.01 years
Neptune 0.67 days 164.79 years
Pluto 6.39 days 248.59 years

1 Comment

Filed under Humor and Observations