Planck Satellite Reveals Star Formation Processes 29
An anonymous reader writes "New images from the Planck Space Observatory reveal the gas and dust between the stars and isolate the physical processes at work in our galaxy. The new images are an eye-catching by-product of a spacecraft designed to look back at the earliest light in the universe. ... When observed at much longer wavelengths, where the cosmic microwave background can be seen, the picture is very different, as clearly demonstrated in new images from ESA's Planck mission. The dust is no longer a dark shroud, but shines out in its own right, and new aspects of our galaxy are revealed."
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Re:the motherfucking universe (Score:5, Funny)
Hmph. By whose standards of measurement? By my estimation, any universe in which I don’t have a smoking-hot girlfriend and a fancy car is pretty much a failure as far as universes go.
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Actually, in quite a few of those universes (an infinite number, actually) I do have a hot girlfriend. Nobody asked me if I wanted to live in this one...
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Sorry dude Even with an infinite number of dice rolls, you can never roll a 7.
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I beg to differ! [wikipedia.org]
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Which brings us to the reason for your lack of a hot girlfriend in this universe...
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I'm going to organize an angry mob to protest against the Universe. Who's with me!
OK, the crickets have answered - I take the chirping to be an affirmative. What about you guys?
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To reach the stars (Score:1, Funny)
Just walk the Planck
Awe (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, I'm in awe of these pictures and how much is out there. Between these and the new hubble images, it really drives home two things:
1) I miss living in the country. The night skies on clear nights were awesome.
2) I regret that I will not live long enough to see faster then light travel. Perhaps my son will see it.
Re:Awe (Score:4, Interesting)
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2) I regret that I will not live long enough to see faster then light travel. Perhaps my son will see it.
Alas not. But perhaps he'll see an a in 'than'.
Hoep fully he'al liv longe enuf two sea da fynal dee-feet ov da grammer NAZI's.
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I'm impressed that you can see microwaves. Warming up leftover should be very interesting.
Unfortunately, I only saw the milky way on rare occasion. It is difficult to be far from civilization in Europe. Which may explain why I prefer satellite observation than looking at the sky directly.
My wife made a Planck shaped cake with sugar mirror and marzipan detector. Unfortunately the talks were too long and the biscuit got soggy. At the same occasion, someone made ALMA.
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If in 2) by "son" you mean, well, perhaps not biological species per se, but beings which undoubtedly are descendants of humanity...then (very) perhaps. Otherwise - I'm afraid you shouldn't count on it. We haven't really seen anything which might be an indication of FTL anywhere in the Universe, apart from inflation period, in a way (but if you are a being which can & wants to use that, I'm not sure we can notice any traces of humanity in you anymore). Our view of the world seems essentially correct, ev
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We haven't really seen anything which might be an indication of FTL anywhere in the Universe
You're forgetting about quantum entanglement.
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Seriously, I'm in awe of these pictures and how much is out there. Between these and the new hubble images, it really drives home two things:
1) I miss living in the country. The night skies on clear nights were awesome. 2) I regret that I will not live long enough to see faster then light travel. Perhaps my son will see it.
I certainly hope that my children will get the chance to travel our of orbit. I'm still holding out that i'll step foot on the moon or another planet before I leave this beautiful
First black holes... (Score:1)
In other news, I have a feeling this article isn't going to last very long. I already got a MySQL error of "Too many connections" going to the article.
Summary plagiarism (Score:1)
The summary is a verbatim copy of the article's first section. Shouldn't you give credit to the article's author rather than to "Anonymous"? Aren't reader-submitted summaries also supposed to be summarized by the reader?
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You’re obviously not very new here, so you just must not have been paying attention.
See inside Planck (Score:3, Informative)
Mysterious tracks? Image glitch? (Score:1)
What are those tracks in the Perseus view linked in the article? An intergalactic dust-swept highway? A slash and a dot?
http://www.uploadgeek.com/share-8FEE_4BD68D73.html [uploadgeek.com]