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Did Life Begin In Space? New Evidence From Comets
Recent probes inside comets show it is
overwhelmingly likely that life began in space, according to a new paper by Cardiff University scientists.
Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe and colleagues at the University’s Centre for Astrobiology have
long argued the case for panspermia - the theory that life began inside comets and then spread to
habitable planets across the galaxy...
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Astronomers Map Out Planetary Danger Zone
"Scientists report the first maps of so-called planetary "danger zones." These are areas where
winds and radiation from super hot stars can strip other young, cooler stars like our sun of their
planet-forming materials. The results show that cooler stars are safe as long as they lie beyond
about 1.6 light-years..."
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Spectacular Sombrero Galaxy - Messier 104
"It resembles a shining UFO or a wide-brimmed hat but... this isn't what it looks like. Its marked
central bulge and its lane of dark interstellar dust give the galaxy its unusual resemblance.
This is a very beautiful compiled image of the Sombrero Galaxy hovering in space. Three separate
observatory images of the galaxy, photographed by NASA's... (wonderful images!)
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"New Horizons" Spacecraft Reveals Secrets On Its Way To Pluto
"NASA's New Horizons spacecraft will reach Pluto in 2015. In the meantime it has provided
new data on the planet Jupiter's atmosphere, rings, magnetosphere and its moons.
On its long way to Pluto and its moon Charon...
The spacecraft is working hard, testing its instruments before the primary goal - Pluto!"
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RECOMMEND OUR SITE
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'Lego-block' Galaxies Discovered In Early Universe
ESA/Hubble Information Centre
September 8, 2007
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The conventional model for galaxy evolution predicts that small galaxies in the early Universe evolved into the massive
galaxies of today by coalescing. Nine Lego-like "building block" galaxies initially detected by Hubble likely contributed
to the construction of the Universe as we know it. "These are among the lowest
mass galaxies ever directly observed in the early Universe" says Nor Pirzkal of the European Space Agency/STScI.
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Pirzkal was surprised to find that the galaxies' estimated masses were so small. Hubble's cousin observatory, NASA's
Spitzer Space Telescope was called upon to make precise determinations of their masses. The Spitzer observations confirmed
that these galaxies are some of the smallest building blocks of the Universe.
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In this image of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, several objects are identified as the faintest, most compact galaxies ever
observed in the distant Universe. They are so far away that we see them as they looked less than one billion years after
the Big Bang. Blazing with the brilliance of millions of stars, each of the newly discovered galaxies is a hundred to a
thousand times smaller than our Milky Way Galaxy. The bottom row of pictures shows several of these clumps (distance
expressed in redshift value). Three of the galaxies appear to be slightly disrupted. Rather than being shaped like
rounded blobs, they appear stretched into tadpole-like shapes. This is a sign that they may be interacting and merging
with neighboring galaxies to form larger structures. The detection required joint observations between Hubble and NASA's
Spitzer Space Telescope. Blue light seen by Hubble shows the presence of young stars. The absence of red light from
Spitzer observations conclusively shows that these are truly young
galaxies without an earlier generation of stars.
(Credit: NASA, ESA, and N. Pirzkal (European Space Agency/STScI))
These young galaxies offer important new insights into the Universe's formative years, just one billion years after the
Big Bang. Hubble detected sapphire blue stars residing within the nine pristine galaxies. The youthful stars are just a
few million years old and are in the process of turning Big Bang elements (hydrogen and helium) into heavier elements.
The stars have probably not yet begun to pollute the surrounding space with elemental products forged within their cores.
"While blue light seen by Hubble shows the presence of young stars, it is the absence of infrared light in the sensitive
Spitzer images that was conclusive in showing that these are truly young galaxies without an earlier generation of stars,"
says Sangeeta Malhotra of Arizona State University in Tempe, USA, one of the investigators.
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The galaxies were first identified by James Rhoads of Arizona State University, USA, and Chun Xu of the Shanghai
Institute of Technical Physics in Shanghai, China. Three of the galaxies appear to be slightly disrupted -- rather than
being shaped like rounded blobs, they appear stretched into tadpole-like shapes.
This is a sign that they may be interacting and merging with neighbouring galaxies to form larger, cohesive structures.
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The galaxies were observed in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) with Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys and the Near
Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer as well as Spitzer's Infrared Array Camera and the European Southern
Observatory's Infrared Spectrometer and Array Camera. Seeing and analysing such small galaxies at such a great distance
is at the very limit of the capabilities of the most powerful telescopes.
Images taken through different colour filters with the ACS were supplemented with exposures taken through a so-called
grism which spreads the different colours emitted by the galaxies into short "trails". The analysis of these trails
allows the detection of emission from glowing hydrogen gas, giving both the distance and an estimate of the rate of star
formation. These "grism spectra" - taken with Hubble and analysed with software developed at the Space Telescope-European
Coordinating Facility in Munich, Germany - can be obtained for objects that are significantly fainter than can be studied
spectroscopically with any other current telescope.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by ESA/Hubble Information Centre.
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SPECIAL REPORTS
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Only on UFOArea.com - Visit our new section and you will find special reports on ancient astronauts, ufos, space and paranormal.
All articles are written by the UFOArea team.
Read our Reports
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Distant Alien World That Could Be Similar to Ours
Using the 3.6-m telescope an international team of astronomers from France, Switzerland, and Portugal
working in the European Southern Observatory (ESO) has discovered the most Earth-like planet outside our
Solar System. The planet's radius is estimated to be only 1.5 times
that of Earth. An unknown world seems to be covered with liquid oceans but may also be a rocky body
similar to Earth..."
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Hubbe Space Telescope Reveals The Aftermath of "Star Wars"
"An Anglo-American team of astronomers have used the Advanced Camera for Surveys on the Hubble Space
Telescope (HST) to obtain the first direct optical
images of the aftermath of a recent titanic explosion that took place in a star system 5,000 light
years from Earth...."
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Strange Glowing Clouds Over The Polar Regions
"They are visible only at night, floating 50 miles above Earth around the polar regions. Their name is noctilucent ("night-shining" or "luminous at night") clouds. The clouds are wispy, thin and have grown brighter in recent years and they are definitely spreading. Their location is
an atmospheric layer known as "mesosphere" (middle sphere) extending between 50 and 85 km....
(wonderful images)..."
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NASA Predicts Nongreen Plants on Other Planets
"NASA scientists believe they have found a way to predict the color of plants on planets in other solar systems.
Green, yellow or even red-dominant plants may live on extra-solar planets..."
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