Tue 9 Oct 2007

More Space

Filed under: THE UNIVERSE — Alec @ 0954AM

Iapetus 

Via NASA

Mon 11 Jun 2007

Volcano in Space!

Filed under: THE UNIVERSE, YIKES — Alec @ 1021AM

 

 

From NASA, regarding the space-mission to non-planet Pluto:

This five-frame sequence of New Horizons images captures the giant
plume from Io’s Tvashtar volcano. Snapped by the probe’s Long Range
Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) as the spacecraft flew past Jupiter
earlier this year, this first-ever “movie” of an Io plume clearly shows
motion in the cloud of volcanic debris, which extends 330 kilometers
(200 miles) above the moon’s surface. Only the upper part of the plume
is visible from this vantage point – the plume’s source is 130
kilometers (80 miles) below the edge of Io’s disk, on the far side of
the moon.

The appearance and motion of
the plume is remarkably similar to an ornamental fountain on Earth,
replicated on a gigantic scale. The knots and filaments that allow us
to track the plume’s motion are still mysterious, but this movie is
likely to help scientists understand their origin, as well as provide
unique information on the plume dynamics.

VIA NEW HORIZONS
 

Fri 27 Apr 2007

How Psyched is Stephen Hawking

Filed under: MOMENTOUS OCCASIONS, NERDS, SCI-FI, THE UNIVERSE — Alec @ 1123AM

So Psyched

SO psyched.

 Via Fox News Photo Essay
 

Fri 6 Apr 2007

Sci-Fi Art: David A Hardy

Filed under: ART, NERDS, SCI-FI, THE UNIVERSE — Alec @ 1534PM

Space

"Orbital Space Station" 

 

Lunar Base

"Lunar Base"

 

Saturn from Rhea 

"Saturn from Rhea" 

 

 Uh Oh

Asteroid

 

And, my favorite - I remember this one from when I was a kid:

War of the Worlds 

 "War of the Worlds", from New Challenge
of the Stars
.

 

VIA David A. Hardy’s homepage 

Tue 27 Mar 2007

Sci-Fi Art: Barlowe’s Extraterrestrials

Filed under: MONSTERS, NERDS, SCI-FI, THE UNIVERSE — Alec @ 1237PM

Martian

From Barlowe’s Guide to Extraterrestrials. I loved this book when I was a kid. It was publised in 1979 - I was a fetus - it’s some talented nerds’ depiction of martians from various sci fi books. I like the HP Lovecraft guy from The Mountains of Madness (see above) the most because it’s exactly how I pictured the monsters when I first read the story. The scenes when the explorers are wandering through the ancient city are really amazing, and it’s too bad thy never made any sort of good movie from it, since it’s all so cinematic. In reality, though, the movie would be a bunch of guys in parkas wandering around saying "Wow" in a really expensive set with very little happening.

Giant Skull

Furthering the "nerdy science fiction books I liked as a kid" topic is Expedition, also by Barlowe, being a bunch of really nice paintings of martian landscapes. I really loved the bizarro expansiveness of this book. I remember buying it at the weird toy store across the street from the Natural History Museum as a kid, and some of the images really reminded me of the dioramas in the museum:

Thing

This one is pretty much cribbed straight from the African wing, but we’ll let that go. Also strange that my favorite images are essentially depictions of space-livestock in their natural habitat, not the more outlandish ones of the crazy flying green elephants carrying stalagtites, or oceans made of Jell-o, etc. The boring ones jst seemed more plausable, I guess.

I think everyone gets a little nerdy for stuff like this. Let’s hear it for really lush weird sci fi paintings!

Barlowe’s website

Gallery of GtE images

A good Barlowe gallery

Another Martian

Tue 13 Mar 2007

Space is the Place

Filed under: MOMENTOUS OCCASIONS, SCI-FI, THE UNIVERSE, YIKES — Alec @ 1727PM

For VOLCANOES, that is.

AWESOME SPACE VOLCANOES.

From the planet volcanic region of Jupiter’s moon Io TVASHTAR.

space volcano

It may look like this planet is wearing a tiny, cheap toupeé, but that’s actually a picture of a Giant Space Volcano on Io. According to Spacemongers Extrordinaire NASA,

This processed image provides the best view yet of the enormous 290-kilometer (180-mile) high plume from the volcano Tvashtar, in the 11 o’clock direction near Io’s north pole […] The remarkable filamentary structure in the Tvashtar plume is similar to details glimpsed faintly in 1979 Voyager images of a similar plume produced by Io’s volcano Pele. However, no previous image by any spacecraft has shown these mysterious structures so clearly.

The image also shows the much smaller symmetrical fountain of the plume, about 60 kilometers (or 40 miles) high, from the Prometheus volcano in the 9 o’clock direction. The top of a third volcanic plume, from the volcano Masubi, erupts high enough to catch the setting Sun on the night side near the bottom of the image, appearing as an irregular bright patch against Io’s Jupiter-lit surface. Several Everest-sized mountains are highlighted by the setting Sun along the terminator, the line between day and night.

More at the New Horizons mission webpage. The mission being to go to Pluto. That is all.