Archive for July 31st, 2007

Full Moon effect debunked again

An article just came out over the wire discussing a study which shows — yet again — that the phase of the Moon has no effect on humanly efforts.

Nurses, cops, doctors — they all swear that things get crazy around a full Moon. However, study after study shows that is simply not the case… yet the swearing continues.

(more…)

July 31st, 2007 4:08 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Debunking, Science, Skepticism | 53 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

In which I am speechless

I wasn’t planning on posting about this. Honestly; it was too self-serving, even for me. Not to mention embarrassing. But PZ, that neckless cephalopod, outed me. So here I am.

Before you click on the video below, please bear in mind that I know the guy who made it; we’ve met at Randi’s Amaz!ng Meeting and have talked many times on various boards and such. He’s a good guy… in fact, after watching the video, I would say his greatest flaw is that he’s not Scarlett Johannson.

But if that were the case, then I certainly wouldn’t be posting the video.

I have no further comments.

July 31st, 2007 3:44 PM by Phil Plait in About this blog, Cool stuff, Humor | 31 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Phoenix launch delayed

The Phoenix mission to Mars was due to launch on Friday, but nasty weather in Florida has postponed it. The earliest it will launch is Saturday; check the Phoenix site for details.

July 31st, 2007 12:52 PM by Phil Plait in NASA | 3 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

“White Dwarf”

I like to think I have seen pretty much every science fiction ever made, so I’m shocked when I find one I haven’t.

While searching for something else entirely (I love that Series Of Tubes) I found this:


Has anyone ever seen this? Is it any good? I may have to find a copy.

July 31st, 2007 12:24 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff | 36 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

Revealing the Veil

No one knows exactly when — maybe it was 5000 years ago, maybe 10,000 — a young star exploded.

It suffered through a fitful life. Born with something like 40 times the mass of the Sun, it led its life a thousand times faster than our more modest star. Hydrogen fused to helium in its core, and then helium to carbon, and carbon to neon… while the vast interplay of light and force drove wave after wave of dense shells of matters off its surface.

Eventually, time ran out. The fuel in the core gone, it collapsed, sending out a fleet of ghostly neutrinos and a shock wave so gigantic that it crushes the human mind to dust. Septillions of tons of matter exploded outward, and a supernova was born.

The gas that was once the core of a sun screamed out at a fraction of light, but something was in the way– the octillions of tons of gas shed earlier by the star, as well as gas and dust left over from its birth just a million or two years before. The two collided, and countless shock waves were generated. The matter surrounding the exploded star was compressed, rammed, and sculpted into thin shells and ribbons. This material, even compressed, is ethereally thin by human standards; seen face-on, the sheets of gas are faint and diffuse, but when they present their edges to us, we see them as sharp filaments, like a soap bubble’s edge. The material glows with the same basic physical principles as a neon sign: sulfur, oxygen, and hydrogen contribute their own unique fingerprints to the eerie luminescence of the gas.

And so we see the aftermath of the cosmic catastrophe that is the Veil Nebula, an arcing structure that has, since the explosion, expanded to a diameter a full six times larger than the Moon in the sky, even though it is something like 36 billion times farther away. It’s located in the constellation of Cygnus, the Swan, high in the summer sky for northern hemisphere observers– but you’ll never see it with the naked eye. Millennia have faded its glory, even though it probably shone almost as bright as the Moon when its light first touched Earth. Now, though, you need a big telescope and dark skies to see it at all.

The image above is newly released from the Hubble Space Telescope, which can resolve fine details in the nebular structure. We understand a huge amount about how stars explode, and what happens in the subsequent centuries, but there is also much we don’t know. Images like this one and the others released with it give us a forensic insight on the event that destroyed an entire star. We learn more about the nuclear fires at its heart, the subsequent alchemy of the expanding debris, and the effects of depositing unimaginable energies into its environment.

But it’s also very pretty. There’s a lot to be said for that as well.

July 31st, 2007 9:43 AM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Pretty pictures | 30 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >