Friday 2 May 2014

Carl Sagan - Pale Blue Dot Poster

Here's a great poster featuring a beautiful image from deep space


tagged with: carl, sagan, earth, science, astronomy, space, exploration, cosmos

This poster has Carl Sagan holding a globe with the Pale Blue Dot picture and his famous quote.

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What are the health risks of obesity?

Science Focus

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How could carrying excess weight affect your health? 
#science 
 » see original post http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/0/21702372
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Nearly wireless wires

Science Focus

original post »
Nearly wireless wires
Can they possibly get any thinner? Not until they come up with ways of driving electrons to their destinations using, say, a controlled version of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle.
 #science

 » see original post https://plus.google.com/116000959328274308893/posts/Tr4xZYhYVEt
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Happy Birthday, Purple Agapanthus, African Lily Gift Wrapping Paper

Get your out-of-this-world gift wrap here! Perfect for Christmas gifts for anyone who is fascinated by what the universe holds in store for us!


tagged with: happy birthday message, flora, fineart, hrflo25, purple agapanthus, floral designs, flower photography, african lily, love of flowers, nile lily

Elegance series Elegant wrapping paper featuring a beautiful agapanthus - which literally means the love of flowers - this makes a perfect design for anyone who appreciates the floral beauty of nature.
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image code: hrflo25

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Emission Nebula NGC 2467 in Constellation Puppis Stickers

Here's a great sheet of stickers featuring a beautiful image from deep space


tagged with: peel off, galaxies and stars, sculptured gas clouds, enebicp, constellation puppis, ngc 2467, the stern, hot young stars, star incubator

Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series A colourful star-forming region is featured in this stunning image of NGC 2467 located in the southern constellation of Puppis (The Stern). Looking like a roiling cauldron of some exotic cosmic brew, huge clouds of gas and dust are sprinkled with bright blue, hot young stars. Strangely shaped dust clouds, resembling spilled liquids, are silhouetted against a colourful background of glowing gas. Like the familiar Orion Nebula, NGC 2467 is a huge cloud of gas, mostly hydrogen, that serves as an incubator for new stars. Some of these youthful stars have emerged from the dense clouds where they were born and now shine brightly, hot and blue in this picture, but many others remain hidden.

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image code: enebicp

Image credit: NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.

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That Night over Half Dome

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Captured one night last May this eight frame mosaic starts on the left, down Northside Drive through Yosemite National Park. It ends thousands of light-years away though, as the arc of the Milky Way tracks toward the center of our galaxy on the right, far beyond the park's rugged skyline. That night was still moonless when the storm clouds retreated, so the rocky faces of the surrounding mountains are lit by campfires and artifical lights. Yosemite Falls is at the left. The granite face of Half Dome juts above the far horizon, near the center of the view. The remarkable flash above it is a bright meteor. Part of the annual Eta Aquarid meteor shower the colorful streak is moving up, its trail pointing directly back to the shower's radiant, low in Aquarius. This year's Eta Aquarids should peak in the moonless early morning hours of May 6 as the Earth sweeps through dust from the tail of Comet Halley.

Zazzle Space Gifts for young and old

Hipster Purple Nebula Cross Modern Faux Leather Room Graphic

Here's a great wall decal featuring a beautiful image from deep space


tagged with: cross, nebula, crucifix, leather, purple nebula, outer space, galaxy, modern cross, inverted cross, fashion, nebula cross, astronomy, white leather, stitch, stars, glitter nebula, milky way, cool nebula, hipster, decorative, decorative cross, cross trend, fashion cross, fashion nebula, nebulae, pink nebula, cool cross, religious, inverted nebula cross, chic, elegant leather, purple space, pink space, modern leather, faux leather, hipster nebula, hipster cross, galaxy cross, modern design, glitter stars

A modern, cool religious inverted crucifix cross featuring a purple, pink nebula and outer space photography featuring stars and milky way on a faux elegant and chic white leather background with black stitch effect. Get this hipster and trendy galaxy cross design. Perfect original gift for anyone who love astronomy, cross trend and fashion. Girly Road is a collaboration between Girly Trend and Railton Road

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Repeated self-healing now possible in composite materials

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(a) X-ray computed micro-tomographic image reconstructions of “herringbone” (top) and “parallel” (bottom) vascular networks; (b) Fluorescent images of resin (red) and hardener (green) healing agent distributions across a delamination surface showing increased mixing (orange-yellow) effectiveness of the interpenetrating herringbone design. Credit: Jason Patrick Internal damage in fiber-reinforced composites, materials used in structures of modern airplanes and automobiles, is difficult to detect and nearly impossible to repair by conventional methods. A small, internal crack can quickly develop into irreversible damage from delamination, a process in which the layers separate. This remains one of the most significant factors limiting more widespread use of composite materials. However, fiber-composite materials can now heal autonomously through a new self-healing system, developed by researchers in the Beckman Institute’s Autonomous Materials Systems (AMS) Group at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, led by professors Nancy Sottos, Scott White, and Jeff Moore. Sottos, White, Moore, and their team created 3D vascular networks—patterns of microchannels filled with healing chemistries—that thread through a fiber-reinforced composite. When damage occurs, the networks within the material break apart and allow the healing chemistries to mix and polymerize, autonomously healing the material, over multiple cycles. Read more at: Phys.org

The post Repeated self-healing now possible in composite materials has been published on Technology Org.

 
#materials 
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Cosmic Calendar Poster

Here's a great poster featuring a beautiful image from deep space


tagged with: cosmic calendar, science, educational, classroom, school, biology, astronomy, history, evolution, cosmos

The 13.8 billion year history of the universe scaled down to a single year. The time scale helps put cosmology, evolution, and written history in context. Perfect for any classroom!

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Name, Stephans Quintet deep space star galaxies Gift Wrap Paper

Get your out-of-this-world gift wrap here! Perfect for Christmas gifts for anyone who is fascinated by what the universe holds in store for us!


tagged with: star galaxies, outer space picture, deep space astronomy, galaxy cluster, galaxy quintet, hicksons compact group, spiral galaxy, eliptical galaxy, stkcg, stephans quintet

Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series A clash among members of a famous galaxy quintet reveals an assortment of stars across a wide color range, from young, blue stars to aging, red stars.
This portrait of Stephan's Quintet, also known as Hickson Compact Group 92, was taken by the new Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) aboard NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. Stephan's Quintet, as the name implies, is a group of five galaxies. The name, however, is a bit of a misnomer. Studies have shown that group member NGC 7320, at upper left, is actually a foreground galaxy about seven times closer to Earth than the rest of the group.
Three of the galaxies have distorted shapes, elongated spiral arms, and long, gaseous tidal tails containing myriad star clusters, proof of their close encounters. These interactions have sparked a frenzy of star birth in the central pair of galaxies. This drama is being played out against a rich backdrop of faraway galaxies.
The image, taken in visible and near-infrared light, showcases WFC3's broad wavelength range.
The colors trace the ages of the stellar populations, showing that star birth occurred at different epochs, stretching over hundreds of millions of years. The camera's infrared vision also peers through curtains of dust to see groupings of stars that cannot be seen in visible light.
NGC 7319, at top right, is a barred spiral with distinct spiral arms that follow nearly 180 degrees back to the bar. The blue specks in the spiral arm at the top of NGC 7319 and the red dots just above and to the right of the core are clusters of many thousands of stars. Most of the quintet is too far away even for Hubble to resolve individual stars.
Continuing clockwise, the next galaxy appears to have two cores, but it is actually two galaxies, NGC 7318A and NGC 7318B. Encircling the galaxies are young, bright blue star clusters and pinkish clouds of glowing hydrogen where infant stars are being born. These stars are less than 10 million years old and have not yet blown away their natal cloud. Far away from the galaxies, at right, is a patch of intergalactic space where many star clusters are forming.
NGC 7317, at bottom left, is a normal-looking elliptical galaxy that is less affected by the interactions.
Sharply contrasting with these galaxies is the dwarf galaxy NGC 7320 at upper left. Bursts of star formation are occurring in the galaxy's disk, as seen by the blue and pink dots. In this galaxy, Hubble can resolve individual stars, evidence that NGC 7320 is closer to Earth.
NGC 7320 is 40 million light-years from Earth. The other members of the quintet reside 290 million light-years away in the constellation Pegasus.
These farther members are markedly redder than the foreground galaxy, suggesting that older stars reside in their cores. The stars' light also may be further reddened by dust stirred up in the encounters.
Spied by Edouard M. Stephan in 1877, Stephan's Quintet is the first compact group ever discovered.
WFC3 observed the quintet in July and August 2009. The composite image was made by using filters that isolate light from the blue, green, and infrared portions of the spectrum, as well as emission from ionized hydrogen.
These Hubble observations are part of the Hubble Servicing Mission 4 Early Release Observations. NASA astronauts installed the WFC3 camera during a servicing mission in May to upgrade and repair the 19-year-old Hubble telescope.
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image code: stkcg

Image credit: ASA, ESA, and the Hubble SM4 ERO Team

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Grumpy Birthday, Horned, Clawed, Grumpy Grotesque Gift Wrap

Get your out-of-this-world gift wrap here! Perfect for Christmas gifts for anyone who is fascinated by what the universe holds in store for us!


tagged with: happy birthday message, gothic, hrcol129, horned grotesques, beast horns, clawed gargoyles, little devils, fun creatures, grumpy dads, grumpy brothers

Gothic series Way cool gift wrap for grumpy dads and brothers! It features a grotesque sat on its haunches and showing its stubby, clawed toes. With small horns, a ring through its squashed nose and resting its hands on a shield, it seems to be dozing. But with one eye closed and the other open grumpily, it's watching its surroundings, ready to be grumpy about anything.
It's a fun, grumpy character that everyone will love!
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image code: hrcol129

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Monogram - Emission Nebula NGC 2467 in Puppis Round Stickers

Here's a great sheet of stickers featuring a beautiful image from deep space


tagged with: envelope sealers, galaxies and stars, sculptured gas clouds, enebicp, constellation puppis, ngc 2467, the stern, hot young stars, star incubator, monogram initials

Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series A colourful star-forming region is featured in this stunning image of NGC 2467 located in the southern constellation of Puppis (The Stern). Looking like a roiling cauldron of some exotic cosmic brew, huge clouds of gas and dust are sprinkled with bright blue, hot young stars. Strangely shaped dust clouds, resembling spilled liquids, are silhouetted against a colourful background of glowing gas. Like the familiar Orion Nebula, NGC 2467 is a huge cloud of gas, mostly hydrogen, that serves as an incubator for new stars. Some of these youthful stars have emerged from the dense clouds where they were born and now shine brightly, hot and blue in this picture, but many others remain hidden.

more items with this image
more items in the Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series

image code: enebicp

Image credit: NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.

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via Zazzle Astronomy market place

Nanoelectronics: Edgy look at 2-D molybdenum disulfide

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Researchers have recorded the first observations of a strong nonlinear optical resonance along the edges of single layers of molybdenum disulfide that could be key to the use of this and similar 2-D semiconductors in future nanoelectronic devices.

via Science Daily

New rapid synthesis developed for bilayer graphene and high-performance transistors

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A research team has demonstrated a rapid synthesis technique for large-area Bernal -- or AB -- stacked bilayer graphene films that can open up new pathways for digital electronics and transparent conductor applications.

via Science Daily

Playing pool with carbon atoms: How to change the crystal structure of graphene

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A discovery brings graphene -- thin layers of pencil 'lead' -- one step closer to replacing silicon in future technologies such as faster and smaller microprocessors. Graphene consists of extremely thin sheets of graphite: when writing with a pencil, graphene sheets slough off the pencil's graphite core and stick to the page. If placed under a high-powered electron microscope, graphene reveals its sheet-like structure of cross-linked carbon atoms, resembling chicken wire.

via Science Daily

Jupiter's moon Ganymede may harbor 'club sandwich' of oceans and ice

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The largest moon in our solar system, a companion to Jupiter named Ganymede, might have ice and oceans stacked up in several layers like a club sandwich, according to new NASA-funded research that models the moon's makeup.

via Science Daily

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Nearby galaxy is a 'fossil' from the early universe

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Scientists analyzed the chemical elements in the faintest known galaxy, called Segue 1, and determined that it is effectively a fossil galaxy left over from the early universe. Stars form from gas clouds and their composition mirrors the chemical composition of the galactic gas from which they were born.

via Science Daily

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First ever gravitationally lensed Type Ia supernovae discovered

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Astronomers have discovered three distant exploding stars that have been magnified by the immense gravity of foreground galaxy clusters, which act like 'cosmic lenses.' These supernovae are the first of their type ever to be observed magnified in this way and they offer astronomers a powerful tool to check the prescription of these massive lenses.

via Science Daily

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Trendy Pastel Pink Blue Nebula Girly Stars Galaxy Room Decals

Here's a great wall decal featuring a beautiful image from deep space


tagged with: pink, blue, nebula, space, galaxy, nebulae, stellar, outer space, unique, hipster nebula, cosmos, girly nebula, nebula trend, fashion nebula, pink nebula, blue nebula, purple nebula, purple, vibrant, electric blue, cool, geek, modern, glitter, stars, original, astronomy, hipster, hip, sky, universe, star, science, galaxies, nebulas, nature, photo, photos

A bright, girly and stunning blue, pink and purple nebula and galaxy outer space photograph featuring glitter stars in the center with vibrant shade of electric blues, pastel ink , hot pink, deep blue and purple. Get this hipster and modern nebulae and space design. Perfect unique gift for any one, for the geek who loves astronomy and cosmos. Girly Road is a collaboration between Girly Trend and Railton Road

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