Tag Archive for NASA

Mickey Mouse Spotted on Mercury (NASA Photo)

Featured Photo: Color Photo of Planet MercuryCREDIT NASA

Featured picture star

This is a featured picture, which means that members of the community have identified it as one of the finest images on the English Wikipedia, adding significantly to its accompanying article. 

 

NOTE: No comparison photo of Mickey Mouse can be shown because the elitist controllers at Disney are too money hungry to release any illustrations of the best know comic character in the world so regular people like us can use it. Obviously those who control  the Disney Corporation are not user friendly folks.  But there is more than one way to trap a mouse – Compare at Flickr.

And anyway, what do you expect out of a company who has banned the re-release of the best classic animated movie ever made, “The Song of the South.” because of some misguided “politically correct” beliefs. They are afraid some tight ass might protest and they might lose a few Federal Reserve Notes I guess . . . EDITOR

from Flickr

Mickey Mouse Spotted on Mercury!

NASA image acquired: June 03, 2012

This scene is to the northwest of the recently named crater Magritte, in Mercury’s south. The image is not map projected; the larger crater actually sits to the north of the two smaller ones. The shadowing helps define the striking “Mickey Mouse” resemblance, created by the accumulation of craters over Mercury’s long geologic history.

This image was acquired as part of MDIS’s high-incidence-angle base map. The high-incidence-angle base map is a major mapping activity in MESSENGER’s extended mission and complements the surface morphology base map of MESSENGER’s primary mission that was acquired under generally more moderate incidence angles. High incidence angles, achieved when the Sun is near the horizon, result in long shadows that accentuate the small-scale topography of geologic features. The high-incidence-angle base map is being acquired with an average resolution of 200 meters/pixel.

The MESSENGER spacecraft is the first ever to orbit the planet Mercury, and the spacecraft’s seven scientific instruments and radio science investigation are unraveling the history and evolution of the Solar System’s innermost planet. Visit the Why Mercury? section of this website to learn more about the key science questions that the MESSENGER mission is addressing. During the one-year primary mission, MESSENGER acquired 88,746 images and extensive other data sets. MESSENGER is now in a yearlong extended mission, during which plans call for the acquisition of more than 80,000 additional images to support MESSENGER’s science goals.

Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington

NASA image use policy.

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

Photo: Mickey Mouse on Mercury. CREDIT NASA

 

U.S. Spy Satellite Agency Gives NASA 2 Space Telescopes

from Yahoo News

By Tariq Malik | SPACE.com – Mon, Jun 4, 2012

The United States’ spy satellite agency is giving NASA two spare space telescopes free of charge, each potentially more powerful than the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA officials announced today (June 4).

The two spy satellite telescopes were originally built to fly space-based surveillance missions for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), but will be repurposed by NASA for astronomical research instead. Their donation to NASA was revealed in a surprise announcement. . . . Read Complete Report

Russia’s Mysterious Space Program

from E.T. Updates

By   /   June 5, 2012

You are looking at an actual photograph from the surface of the planet Venus. Though obtained from a NASA web page, this is not a NASA photo. It is a Soviet era photo. Try as you may, you cannot find such a photo made by a NASA spacecraft. Why? Because NASA has never made a successful landing on Venus with a craft capable of taking photos and transmitting them back to Earth. They did make an accidental landing of a probe (Pioneer Venus 1). It was accidental because the Pioneer Venus 1 dropped off 4 probes that were not designed to survive all the way down to the surface—but one did. The others were destroyed by the immense heat and pressure of the atmosphere. So, NASA accidentally dropped something on Venus, but the Russians actually landed there.

Not only did the Russians successfully land on Venus, they did it 10 times! And that, my friends, is a gigantic mystery. . . . Read Complete Report

NASA’s Edgar Mitchell “Aliens Exist & Government Cover Up is Real” – Fox News (video)

from Fox News via youtube

Published on Jun 2, 2012 by

Fox News: Edgar Mitchell tells FOX News he knows people who were involved in the Roswell incident and knows for a fact that aliens are real and there is a government cover up.

Keep Out: NASA Asks Future Moon Visitors to Respect Its Stuff

from Wired.com

By Adam Mann

May 25, 2012

The moon is about to become crowded.

In the next few years a slew of countries, including China, India, and Japan, are looking to put unmanned probes on the lunar surface. But more unprecedented are the 26 teams currently racing to win the Google Lunar X Prize – a contest that will award $20 million to the first private company to land a robot on the lunar surface, travel a third of a mile, and send back a high-definition image before 2015.

With all this activity, NASA is somewhat nervous about its own lunar history. The agency recently released a set of guidelines that aim to preserve important heritage locations such as the Apollo landing and Ranger impact sites. The report, available since 2011 to members of the private spaceflight community, was publicly posted at NASA’s website and officially accepted by the X Prize foundation on May 24. . . . Read Complete Report

NASA Study: Chemistry of Thunderstorms

Photo: NASA’s DC-8 Earth Science laboratory sports numerous probes for collecting atmospheric samples. The aircraft, based at the Dryden Aircraft Operations Facility in Palmdale, Calif., is ready to participate in the DC3 campaign. Credit: NASA/Tom Tschida

Now that NASA is not the only ball in the game and privatization is the future of space travel  I guess they have to have something to spend money on. But thunderstorms? It’s common knowledge that we know enough about the weather to manipulate it.  But then I guess we need to catch up with China. . . .EDITOR

from NASA

05.08.12
NASA researchers are about to fly off on a campaign that will take them into the heart of thunderstorm country.

The Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) field campaign will use an airport in Salina, Kan., as a base to explore the impact of large thunderstorms on the concentration of ozone and other substances in the upper troposphere. The campaign is being led by the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and NASA. . . . Read Complete Report

ANONYMOUS MESSAGE TO NASA ABOUT ETS (Video Message)

from Disclose TV


Disclose.tvANONYMOUS MESSAGE TO NASA ABOUT ETS

Space Station’s Robotic Crew Member Designed to Look, Move and Work Like a Human

from Space Travel

by Lori Keith for Johnson Space Center
Houston TX (SPX) May 01, 2012

NASA’s first dexterous humanoid robot, has successfully hitched a ride to the International Space Station. Built for the specific purpose of working on the space station, its robotic hands work like human hands with the ability to use human tools to assist astronauts with tasks that are simple, repetitive or potentially dangerous.

The technology development demonstration will serve as a springboard to help explore and evolve new robotic capabilities in space and on Earth. . . . Read Complete Story

Astronomy Picture of the Day, March 11 2012

from NASA

2012 March 11

Astronomy Picture Of the Day

Explanation: This floating ring is the size of a galaxy. In fact, it is part of the photogenic Sombrero Galaxy, one of the largest galaxies in the nearby Virgo Cluster of Galaxies. The dark band of dust that obscures the mid-section of the Sombrero Galaxy in optical light actually glows brightly in infrared light. The . . .  image, digitally sharpened, shows the infrared glow, recently recorded by the orbiting Spitzer Space Telescope, superposed in false-color on an existing image taken by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope in optical light. The Sombrero Galaxy, also known as M104, spans about 50,000 light years across and lies 28 million light years away. M104 can be seen with a small telescope in the direction of the constellation Virgo. . .SOURCE: NASA

The Sombrero Galaxy in Infrared
Credit: R. Kennicutt (Steward Obs.) et al., SSC, JPL, Caltech, NASA

NASA Urges Vigilance For Weird Fireballs

from Discovery New

Fri Feb 24, 2012 07:00 AM ET
Content provided by SPACE.com Staff

Slow-moving meteors during February are a well-known phenomenon but astronomers are mystified as to where they come from.

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THE GIST

  • The strange deep-diving, slow-moving fireballs started falling on Feb. 1.
  • They range in size from basketballs to buses and some are thought to have dropped meteorites.
  • Astronomers know the objects originate in the asteroid belt, but little else is know

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A strange breed of fireball is streaking through the skies this month, and NASA is urging folks on the ground to take notice.

February’s fireballs — a term that describes meteors that appear brighter in the sky than Venus — aren’t more numerous than normal, but their appearance and trajectory are odd, experts say.

“These fireballs are particularly slow and penetrating,” meteor expert Peter Brown, a physics professor at the University of Western Ontario, said in a statement. “They hit the top of the atmosphere moving slower than 15 kilometers per second (33,500 mph), decelerate rapidly and make it to within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of Earth’s surface.” . . . Read Complete report