May 10

Posted by John on Sunday, May 10th, 2009 at 8:35 pm

I enjoy this discovery because it reminds me of a concept I learned while studying music. Playing very high notes or very low notes (especially on wind instruments) is difficult. Players spend years trying to stretch that one half-step further or gain the ability to play just a little louder or keep control at the very softest tone. Stretching your ability that far, though, has more value than just being able to finally hit that high C. The benefit also lies in the fact that all the notes you play in between—the notes you have played for years—become stronger as you expand your total range.

PhotobucketThis gamma ray burst is like that high C, and understanding it will bring the benefit of better understanding all the galaxies, stars, and other celestial objects in between that we have been “playing” for years. Our understanding of physics will become more refined as scientists may now have a glimpse into the very first generation of stars (with undoubtedly different properties from stars we commonly study today). For a more detailed description of this event and its implications, view the NewScience article here.

Please comment what this discovery means to you (even if you don’t see why a little yellow smudge could get people so excited)!

Feb 28

Posted by Nathan on Thursday, February 28th, 2008 at 11:32 pm

See Update to this story Below

Science Educator Roy Gould and Curtis Wong from Microsoft give an amazing preview of the Worldwide Telescope. Think of it as a Google Maps for the entire Universe. Set to debut this spring, the worldwide telescope will take images from many different telescopes and stitch them into one comprehensive view of the universe. This is a revolutionary idea, for the first time normal everyday people will get to see what until now only astronomers and astronauts have had access to. What’s the cost for all this amazingness? Nothing!


Update - Here is another great video from fastcompany.tv


Here are some highlights from the www.worldwidetelescope.org frequently asked questions page (FAQ):

Q. What is WorldWide Telescope?
A. The WorldWide Telescope (WWT) is a rich visualization environment that functions as a virtual telescope, bringing together imagery from the best ground- and space telescopes to enable seamless, guided explorations of the universe. WorldWide Telescope, created with Microsoft®’s high-performance Visual Experience Engine™, enables seamless panning and zooming across the night sky blending terabytes of images, data, and stories from multiple sources over the Internet into a media-rich, immersive experience.

Q. What are some of the most compelling features of WWT?
A. WorldWide Telescope is an observatory on your desktop, allowing you to see the sky in a way you have never seen before; individual exploration, multi-wavelength views, stars and planets within context to each other, zoom in/out, and a capability for anyone to create and share a tour of the universe.

The Visual Experience Engine delivers seamless panning zooming around the night sky.

WWT delivers seamless integration of science:-relevant information including multi-wavelength, multiple telescope distributed image and data sets, and one-click contextual access to distributed Web information and data sources.

You can also download this video in High Definition from the TED website (highly recommended).

Feb 28

Posted by Nathan on Thursday, February 28th, 2008 at 10:58 pm

Here is a 3 year old explaining Star Wars… it’s pretty interesting what she focuses on in her summary of Episode IV (the original Star Wars). Enjoy!

Found on Amber Mac’s Blog