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Space Science

A Shocking Space Movie 29

MagnetarJones writes "Multiple observations made over several months with the Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope captured the spectacle of matter and antimatter propelled to nearly the speed of light by the Crab pulsar, a rapidly rotating neutron star the size of Manhattan. "Through this movie, the Crab Nebula has come to life," says Jeff Hester of Arizona State University."
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A Shocking Space Movie

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  • Try these links.. (Score:4, Informative)

    by molo ( 94384 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @12:11PM (#4298138) Journal
    These are the links you want:

    movies [harvard.edu]
    article/images [harvard.edu]
    more images [harvard.edu]

    Can someone mirror these?

  • (70's cartoon reference)
    Looks like another one of Spectra's plots to me.

    Watch the skies for incoming giant robots.
    (/70's cartoon reference)
  • by tswinzig ( 210999 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @01:40PM (#4298920) Journal
    ...no sound.
  • by jerde ( 23294 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @01:53PM (#4299033) Journal
    So in typical Slashdot fashion, they talk about the stream of anti-matter.

    It's only mentioned briefly in the actual article as well:

    "The jet looks like steam from a high-pressure boiler," said David Burrows of Penn State, another coauthor of the paper, "except when you realize you are looking at a stream of matter and anti-matter electrons moving at half the speed of light!"


    So how do they know that one of these streams is made up of anti-electrons?

    Ira Flatow is having a conversation about anti-matter on Science Friday [sciencefriday.com] as I'm typing this. It's a fascinating topic, so I always hate to see it just glossed over in press releases like this.

    - Peter
    • by Muad'Dave ( 255648 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @02:05PM (#4299115) Homepage

      Maybe because they're moving at identical speeds in opposite directions under the influence of a magnetic field?

      • Maybe because they're moving at identical speeds in opposite directions under the influence of a magnetic field?

        I'm not really sure. How do they know the magnetic configurstion around that N.S. ? and besides, these waves are supposed, AFAI understand, to be composed of electron-positron plasmas, I sincerely doubt they have the resolution required to plot single particles' trajectories ...

        My guess is that such a claim is probably based on spectroscopy :

        1) take a strong wavelength
        2) substruct (probably do some kind of reverse integral transform) doppler,
        3) get e+-e- anhilation energy
        4) 1+2+3 => e+-e- plasma portion.

        I can't reasonably think on any other plausible way, but then again, I'll be glad to find out ...
  • On the movies page there is a movie of the Chandra nebula. I guess that is where Gary stashed the body. Cool.
  • Truly spectacular! I remember watching the Jupiter "movie" for the first time and was amazed. Here's hoping for a sunrise/sunset film of the Martian sky when the Athena rovers get there in 2004.
  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Saturday September 21, 2002 @01:23AM (#4302075) Journal

    They did a poor job of packaging those moving images IMO.

    There appear to be only about half a dozen frames to each one. It does not take near 1+ meg to make an AVI or MPEG that has only 6 frames. Granted, they gave a "zoom" view and repeated it enough times to make movement clear, but this is not worth long download times for us poor modem users.

    They could have made some nice animated GIF's even with so few frames. Animated GIFs will do the repetition without having to store copies of the repeated frames. IOW, by-reference loops. I bet a roughly 300x300 pixel animated GIF would only take up about 100 to 400 meg for the same quality, since the colors tend to be monochromatic in those. (If they had a lot of colors, then GIF palletes tend to get ugly.)
  • Over at the Weekly World News, there's a shocking space movie [weeklyworldnews.com] of an altogether different kind

    GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - A family got the shock of their lives when lightning zapped their satellite dish and the TV turned from nice to nasty -- with XXX extraterrestrial porno flicks!

    "We were watching Touched by an Angel with the children when -- kaboom! -- there was a frightful thunderclap," said 31-year-old wife and mother of two, Sheila McCallum.

    "The lights flickered for a moment and the TV went blank. When it came back on, we saw a beastly new show that looked like an X-rated alien movie."

    The McCallums sat watching in mute horror and disbelief for nearly five minutes trying to decipher the bizarre pornographic images and sounds filling their family room. When they finally realized what they were being subjected to, Sheila took the children, Evan, 8, and Angela, 6, from the room while Angus worked the remote in a fruitless effort to change the channel.

    ...and so on

Mater artium necessitas. [Necessity is the mother of invention].

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