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Aurora - A Pulsing Shimmering Glow
It may appear as colored lights in the sky or a motionless green arc that stretches across
the sky.
This is a light phenomenon, a glowing, shimmering pattern, known as the “Aurora Borealis”,
occurring in northern latitudes. Its name originates from "Aurora", the Roman goddess of dawn and the
Greek name for north wind.
There is also the same phenomenon known as the "Aurora Australis", occurring in southern
latitudes and ... (with images and video)
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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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China And ESA Launch Moon Mission - Chang'e-1
A bold new mission to the Moon was launched by the Chinese National Space Administration (CNSA). Chang’e-1 blasted off
from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre, Sichuan, atop a Long March 3A rocket on October 24, 2007.
Chang’e-1 represents the first step in the Chinese ambition to land robotic explorers on the Moon before 2020.
Chang’e-1 has four mission goals to accomplish. The first is to make three-dimensional images of many lunar
landforms and outline maps of major lunar geological structures ... (with video)
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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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Astronomers Discover Sun's Twin at McDonald Observatory
McDonald Observatory
November 11, 2007
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Peruvian astronomers Jorge Melendez of The Australian National University and Ivan Ramirez of The University of Texas at
Austin have discovered the best “solar twin” to date, using the 2.7-meter Harlan J. Smith Telescope at
McDonald Observatory.
Their findings suggest that the Sun’s chemical composition is not unique, as some previously thought.
The star, HIP 56948, is more like the Sun than any yet seen, and is 200 light-years
away in the constellation Draco, the dragon. The star may be a billion years older than the Sun.
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Only three solar twins were previously known: 18 Scorpius, HD 98618, and HIP 100963. But while they were all like
the Sun in many ways, there was one major difference: the amount of lithium they contained. They
all had several times more than the Sun. Astronomers wondered if the Sun was unique in its low amount of lithium.
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Solar Twin HIP 56948

HIP 56948 is more like the Sun than any known star. Located 200 light-years away in
Draco, the dragon, the star is too dim to see with the unaided eye. Credit: Tim Jones/McDonald Obs./UT-Austin
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The discovery of this new solar twin puts that question to rest: it has the same low lithium content
as the Sun. The study turned up another solar twin, HIP 73815, that contains a similarly low amount of lithium.
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The question of chemical peculiarities in the Sun is related to the “anthropic principle” — is there
something special about the Sun that has allowed life to spring up in our solar system? Their findings don’t
answer that completely,
but they do show that when it comes to the Sun’s chemical composition, the answer is an emphatic “no.”
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Melendez’ and Ramirez’ findings suggest the opposite, so-called “Copernican” view:
It is possible that life is common elsewhere in the universe.
They suggest
that stars like HIP 56948 would be good targets for SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) researchers.
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The star already has been studied by the McDonald Observatory Planet Search led by University of Texas at Austin
astronomer Bill Cochran. His team found that, like our Sun, HIP 56948 does not host any “hot Jupiter” planets, those
massive, short-period planets orbiting close to their parent stars, so common among the more than 200 stars found to
date that host one or more planets.
Searches for “solar twins” are important because astronomers use the Sun as a baseline for many other types of studies.
But they cannot study the Sun the same way they do the distant stars. It’s too close, and too bright.
The solar twins discovered at McDonald will be useful for many areas of astrophysics. In particular, they will help
astronomers who study the chemical compositions of stars, as well as validate theoretical models of stars’ interiors,
and theoretical models of stellar evolution.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by McDonald Observatory
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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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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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Watching Stars from the Past
On a clear night you can admire many wonderful starts shining bright in the heavens.
While gazing at the stars you might think about beautiful exotic, alien worlds and advanced extraterrestrial civilizations.
Where are they? What do they look like? When will we meet them? You suddenly realize that we have so
many questions and so
few answers. Perhaps you are wondering if somewhere in our Galaxy there is an alien being thinking and asking the same questions at
this particular moment... (with images)
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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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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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