A Much-Needed Skills, Contributions, And Direction

A Much-Needed Skills, Contributions, and Direction

There are many times I ask myself, why didn’t I start a trade skill from the get-go? We can never underestimate how much it is that the people who are dedicated in these professions are a large part of that which brings a higher quality of life to all of us in one form or another. No matter what we do, if kindness and well-being are parts of our central or internal value system, humanity might…

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More Posts from Matthewjopdyke and Others

5 years ago
The Pinwheel Galaxy Has Around A Trillion Stars, Twice The Number In The Milky Way. [6000 × 4690]

The Pinwheel Galaxy has around a trillion stars, twice the number in the Milky Way. [6000 × 4690]

7 years ago

Meet Fermi: Our Eyes on the Gamma-Ray Sky

Black holes, cosmic rays, neutron stars and even new kinds of physics — for 10 years, data from our Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope have helped unravel some of the biggest mysteries of the cosmos. And Fermi is far from finished!

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On June 11, 2008, at Cape Canaveral in Florida, the countdown started for Fermi, which was called the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) at the time. 

The telescope was renamed after launch to honor Enrico Fermi, an Italian-American pioneer in high-energy physics who also helped develop the first nuclear reactor. 

Fermi has had many other things named after him, like Fermi’s Paradox, the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, the Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station, the Enrico Fermi Institute, and the synthetic element fermium.

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Photo courtesy of Argonne National Laboratory

The Fermi telescope measures some of the highest energy bursts of light in the universe; watching the sky to help scientists answer all sorts of questions about some of the most powerful objects in the universe. 

Its main instrument is the Large Area Telescope (LAT), which can view 20% of the sky at a time and makes a new image of the whole gamma-ray sky every three hours. Fermi’s other instrument is the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor. It sees even more of the sky at lower energies and is designed to detect brief flashes of gamma-rays from the cosmos and Earth.

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This sky map below is from 2013 and shows all of the high energy gamma rays observed by the LAT during Fermi’s first five years in space.  The bright glowing band along the map’s center is our own Milky Way galaxy!

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So what are gamma rays? 

Well, they’re a form of light. But light with so much energy and with such short wavelengths that we can’t see them with the naked eye. Gamma rays require a ton of energy to produce — from things like subatomic particles (such as protons) smashing into each other. 

Here on Earth, you can get them in nuclear reactors and lightning strikes. Here’s a glimpse of the Seattle skyline if you could pop on a pair of gamma-ray goggles. That purple streak? That’s still the Milky Way, which is consistently the brightest source of gamma rays in our sky.

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In space, you find that kind of energy in places like black holes and neutron stars. The raindrop-looking animation below shows a big flare of gamma rays that Fermi spotted coming from something called a blazar, which is a kind of quasar, which is different from a pulsar… actually, let’s back this up a little bit.

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One of the sources of gamma rays that Fermi spots are pulsars. Pulsars are a kind of neutron star, which is a kind of star that used to be a lot bigger, but collapsed into something that’s smaller and a lot denser. Pulsars send out beams of gamma rays. But the thing about pulsars is that they rotate. 

So Fermi only sees a beam of gamma rays from a pulsar when it’s pointed towards Earth. Kind of like how you only periodically see the beam from a lighthouse. These flashes of light are very regular. You could almost set your watch by them!

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Quasars are supermassive black holes surrounded by disks of gas. As the gas falls into the black hole, it releases massive amount of energy, including — you guessed it — gamma rays. Blazars are quasars that send out beams of gamma rays and other forms of light — right in our direction. 

When Fermi sees them, it’s basically looking straight down this tunnel of light, almost all the way back to the black hole. This means we can learn about the kinds of conditions in that environment when the rays were emitted. Fermi has found about 5,500 individual sources of gamma rays, and the bulk of them have been blazars, which is pretty nifty.

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But gamma rays also have many other sources. We’ve seen them coming from supernovas where stars die and from star factories where stars are born. They’re created in lightning storms here on Earth, and our own Sun can toss them out in solar flares. 

Gamma rays were in the news last year because of something Fermi spotted at almost the same time as the National Science Foundation (NSF)’s Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and European Gravitational Observatory’s Virgo on August 17, 2017. Fermi, LIGO, Virgo, and numerous other observatories spotted the merger of two neutron stars. It was the first time that gravitational waves and light were confirmed to come from the same source.

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Fermi has been looking at the sky for almost 10 years now, and it’s helped scientists advance our understanding of the universe in many ways. And the longer it looks, the more we’ll learn. Discover more about how we’ll be celebrating Fermi’s achievements all year.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

7 years ago

Great brief and wonderful pic!

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope Image Is Chock-full Of Galaxies. Each Glowing Speck Is A Different

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image is chock-full of galaxies. Each glowing speck is a different galaxy, except the bright flash in the middle of the image which is actually a star lying within our own galaxy that just happened to be in the way. At the center of the image lies something especially interesting, the center of the massive galaxy cluster called WHL J24.3324-8.477, including the brightest galaxy of the cluster.

The Universe contains structures on various scales — planets collect around stars, stars collect into galaxies, galaxies collect into groups, and galaxy groups collect into clusters. Galaxy clusters contain hundreds to thousands of galaxies bound together by gravity. Dark matter and dark energy play key roles in the formation and evolution of these clusters, so studying massive galaxy clusters can help scientists to unravel the mysteries of these elusive phenomena.

Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

7 years ago
Be Grateful For Our Amazing Planet, Earth, And Where We Are In This Grand Universe ☺ #oxygen #water

Be grateful for our amazing planet, Earth, and where we are in this grand Universe ☺ #oxygen #water #earth #universe #gratitude


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5 years ago

Pathway to the Stars: Part 12, Alpha Andromedae

“Throughout this Universe, we’re all part of the same team. We need each other to succeed as a universal civilization. We need to do due diligence by recognizing the good in others and by doing our part to cause a positive shift in focus to resolutions to issues met with action while seeking the well-being of each of the individuals involved." ~ Vesha Celeste

The time has arrived! The Intergalactic Mission Contingency is awaiting orders from the United Allied States (UAS) President, Eliza Williams, to take off into distant regions beyond our Solar System! With their Q-Drive and a phenomenal lineup of command staff and crew, the journey to explore the Universe has become imminent and real. Each of the Spacecraft Commanders and their Vice Commanders brief all of civilization throughout Sol, going into intriguing detail about where they plan to go in each of their zones and regions.

Will there be parties after their first jump? Or, will the IMC crews look at the Universe in terror facing their impending doom? Read and find out!

LCCN: 2019918961 ISBN: 978-1-951321-13-0 eBook: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B081XNKNRW Paperback: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/1951321138

#ScienceFiction #Scifi #SpaceOpera #Fantasy #Author #MatthewJOpdyke #eBook #Paperback #Spacecraft #AI #SpaceExploration #Astronomy #GalacticScience #UnitedAlliedStates #UAS #Wellbeing #ClarityofMind #Physiology #Biology #Nanotech #Longevity

6 years ago

Pathway to the Stars: Part 6.1, Trilogy - For more information check out https://www.ftb-pathway-publications.com//product-page/pathway-to-the-stars-part-6-1-trilogy-paperback Announcing the Second Space Opera Trilogy! Enjoy the journey! #spaceopera #sciencefiction #scifibooks #spaceoperabooks #politicalscifi https://www.instagram.com/p/BvoAxVyAEpJ/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=87lp2ukuniko


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5 years ago
New Audiobook Out! Pathway to the Stars: Part 1, Vesha Celeste (Extended Promo)
THE SPACE OPERA JOURNEY BEGINS! "As she drifted into her dreams, there was Sky, her dream angel, heralding her along, engaging in heroic acts of daring-do, a...
8 years ago

Black-Hole Powered Jets Forge Fuel for Star Formation

Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have discovered a surprising connection between a supermassive black hole and the galaxy where it resides. 

Black-Hole Powered Jets Forge Fuel For Star Formation

Powerful radio jets from the black hole – which normally suppress star formation – are stimulating the production of cold gas in the galaxy’s extended halo of hot gas. This newly identified supply of cold, dense gas could eventually fuel future star birth as well as feed the black hole itself.

Black-Hole Powered Jets Forge Fuel For Star Formation

The researchers used ALMA to study a galaxy at the heart of the Phoenix Cluster, an uncommonly crowded collection of galaxies about 5.7 billion light-years from Earth.

The central galaxy in this cluster harbors a supermassive black hole that is in the process of devouring star-forming gas, which fuels a pair of powerful jets that erupt from the black hole in opposite directions into intergalactic space. Astronomers refer to this type of black-hole powered system as an active galactic nucleus (AGN).

Read more ~ AlmaObservatory.org

Video: Video explaining the complex relationship between a supermassive black hole and its host galaxy.     Credit: NRAO/AUI/NSF; ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO); Animations: NASA/GSFC/CI Lab, ESO; Science Images: NASA/ESA Hubble; Chandra X-Ray Observatory/NASA/MIT, M. McDonald; Music, Comfortable Mystery 4 - Film Noire by Kevin MacLeod

Images: Left: Composite image showing how powerful radio jets from the supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy in the Phoenix Cluster inflated huge “bubbles” in the hot, ionized gas surrounding the galaxy (the cavities inside the blue region imaged by NASA’s Chandra X-ray observatory). Hugging the outside of these bubbles, ALMA discovered an unexpected trove of cold gas, the fuel for star formation (red). The background image is from the Hubble Space Telescope.     Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO) H.Russell, et al.; NASA/ESA Hubble; NASA/CXC/MIT/M.McDonald et al.; B. Saxton (NRAO/AUI/NSF) Right: ALMA image of cold molecular gas at the heart of the Phoenix Cluster. The filaments extending from the center hug enormous radio bubbles created by jets from a supermassive black hole. This discovery sheds light on the complex relationship between a supermassive black hole and its host galaxy.     Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO), H. Russell et al.; B. Saxton (NRAO/AUI/NSF) Bottom: Artist impression of galaxy at the center of the Phoenix Cluster. Powerful radio jets from the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy are creating giant radio bubbles (blue) in the ionized gas surrounding the galaxy. ALMA has detected cold molecular gas (red) hugging the outside of the bubbles. This material could eventually fall into the galaxy where it could fuel future star birth and feed the supermassive black hole.     Credit: B. Saxton (NRAO/AUI/NSF)

6 years ago

Excellent Time to Cozy Up to Preparation for a Grand Space Adventure!

Excellent Time to Cozy Up to Preparation for a Grand Space Adventure!

Excellent Time To Cozy Up To Preparation For A Grand Space Adventure!

  It takes a lot to travel beyond the limits of our Solar System. As such, the Christmas Edition of the two-novel literary masterpiece, with a side dish series going a little deeper in smaller portions of each major aspect of the two-novel series, Pathway to the Stars, despite being ridden with indie goofs, pauper challenges toward perfection, and ever-so-constantly updating text to improve the…

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6 years ago
Dive... (Trancend Your Limits!) Https://youtu.be/05LG-Fnq6lI Https://www.instagram.com/p/BsPgWaJnTQr/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=hp1xikiusa5z

Dive... (Trancend your limits!) https://youtu.be/05LG-Fnq6lI https://www.instagram.com/p/BsPgWaJnTQr/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=hp1xikiusa5z

matthewjopdyke - Matthew J. Opdyke
Matthew J. Opdyke

Author Matthew J. Opdyke, Science Fiction and Fantasy

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