Trebuchet
Penultimate Amazing
Worse would be if it stuck in between settings.How bad is this news? Not sure, but if that wheel lost function I think it would mean that camera would be stuck in one of it's three wavelength settings.
Worse would be if it stuck in between settings.How bad is this news? Not sure, but if that wheel lost function I think it would mean that camera would be stuck in one of it's three wavelength settings.
Strikes me that deciding what criteria do and don't qualify a body for the label "planet" isn't actually science, so the matter of science's honesty doesn't arise.
Last time I checked, the reason Pluto was demoted was because if Pluto fits the definition, then potentially hundreds more objects would also be planets, and that's just too confusing and high effort for schoolteachers to keep up with.
Do anybody know why Ceres was demoted originally?
Originally considered a planet, it was reclassified as an asteroid in the 1850s after the discovery of dozens of other objects in similar orbits
This thread is about the JWST, the most expensive, advanced, powerful and incredible space telescope ever, yet there seems to be so little new images and information being published that this thread is relegated to debating what a planet is. Why such an apparent dearth of new images and information? Is it there but I’m missing it, or is it all just for the boffins now?
If they don’t keep the non-boffins in the loop some will start to make things up . . . “What are they hiding? Alien life? Big Bang/Expanding Universe models are wrong? Evidence of a god? The Earth is actually flat? Some reason we’re all doomed? etc?” . . . It’s a worry, I tells ya.
The actual science isn't being done by NASA per se.
The team that proposed a particular observation gets
some privileged time with the data. Then it goes public.
Do anybody know why Ceres was demoted originally?
On Sept. 21, 2022, the James Webb Space Telescope delivered the clearest view of Neptune’s rings in more than 30 years. Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) captured several bright, narrow rings as well as the planet’s fainter dust bands. Voyager 2 was the last to detect some of these rings during its flyby in 1989, but this is the first time we have an infrared image of them.
Just unbelievably surprising and beautiful.
TIL that Triton has an albedo of 0.76, which is pretty high. Earth has an albedo of 0.39.Triton is so bright it looks like a star.
Thanks for this in particular. I was hoping there was somewhere I could just flip through some pics.
Yeah I noticed that too.That is very cool. Although the gentleman conducting the interview doesn't seem to understand anything about astronomy, such as the difference between a planet and a star.