NuSTAR Takes Beautiful X-ray Image of Sol 44
New submitter swell points out a new image release from NASA, the first taken of the Sun by its Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR). It's the most sensitive shot ever taken in the high-energy X-ray range of the spectrum. Direct image link.
While the sun is too bright for other telescopes such as NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, NuSTAR can safely look at it without the risk of damaging its detectors. The sun is not as bright in the higher-energy X-rays detected by NuSTAR, a factor that depends on the temperature of the sun's atmosphere. ... With NuSTAR's high-energy views, it has the potential to capture hypothesized nanoflares -- smaller versions of the sun's giant flares that erupt with charged particles and high-energy radiation. Nanoflares, should they exist, may explain why the sun's outer atmosphere, called the corona, is sizzling hot, a mystery called the "coronal heating problem." The corona is, on average, 1.8 million degrees Fahrenheit (1 million degrees Celsius), while the surface of the sun is relatively cooler at 10,800 Fahrenheit (6,000 degrees Celsius). It is like a flame coming out of an ice cube. Nanoflares, in combination with flares, may be sources of the intense heat.
oh wow (Score:3)
PIA18906 just became my new wallpaper. Forget the technical stuff, that is just beautiful.
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The really trippy thing is, comets pass through it successfully. (Don't try this at home folks)
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pa... [nasa.gov]
Not exactly "pass through it" (Score:1)
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strangely, I did post a submission on this very event, alas the phase of Kim Kardashian's arse took centre stage and pushed my submission out to the realms of "not important enough science to warrant even a sideline story on Slashdot".
http://slashdot.org/submission... [slashdot.org]
Fuck you, Slashdot.
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"Sol" is simply Latin for "Sun". It is not some official sceintific designator for our star, despite what the ghey community thinks.
I'm surprised Slashdot still referrs to the moon as "the moon", instead of the Latin, "Luna".
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If we start doing major exploration of deep space we're gonna need to use less ambiguous names for the sun and moon, as other planets may have a sun and moon.
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We can go back to calling them Atum and Iah again.
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If we start doing major exploration of deep space we're gonna need to use less ambiguous names for the sun and moon, as other planets may have a sun and moon.
We will never do major exploration of deep space where we get closer to another star than to this one. If we do, humanity can define two constants in file headers.
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"Sol" is simply Latin for "Sun". It is not some official sceintific designator for our star, despite what the ghey community thinks.
I'm surprised Slashdot still referrs to the moon as "the moon", instead of the Latin, "Luna".
Yeah, really.
I mean, just how dumb would we have to be to start using Latin to designate official scientific designa...what's that? The medical community you say? And the entire animal kingdom? Botany too?
Well, yeah, I do know where we got the word science from. Gee, it's like there's some kind of weird pattern here that some Homo sapien created a long time ago...
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Just because everyone does it, doesn't mean it's not stupid.
Probably the best argument for the metric system ever.
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t using Latin to designate official scientific designa...what's that?
But being in Latin doesn't make it "official", even if a lot of official names are in Latin (or Greek, or German in physics). Notice the original NASA article doesn't use the name at all. Or more relevant, the name is rarely used in astronomy and astrophysics journals, especially ones that try to enforce any consistency in nomenclature. Sol and Luna usage comes from science fiction, not from regular use in science literature. Maybe some day that will change, but for now, astronomy uses whatever "the Sun
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The animal kingdom does not use Latin. In fact, they're generally not very talkative at all, and their scientific exploration is TERRIBLE.
F'ing apes.
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Most of the Latin terms are the scientific terminology for an object.
They chose a language for scientific terminology so you don't get it confused across languages.
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Sol
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That's why our star system is the "solar" system.
Plenty of words drift or even start out meaning things much more general or abstract than their root components. Geyser used to refer to a very specific spring in Iceland, and now refers to any similar one regardless of location for example.
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NuSTAR has 4x imaging planes sensitive to the ~3keV to 78keV spectrum, each of those 4 sensors only has a resolution of 32x32 pixels (64x64 pixels combined).
Feel lucky they bothered to spend the time they did scanning as much of the sun that they did, at the resolution they did.
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Indeed--given that x-rays are not the easiest thing in the world to focus and image, that this exists at all is pretty amazing.