Echoes from Ancient Supernovae Found?
Scientists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory are claiming that they may have found echoes left over from ancient supernovae. From the article: "Just as a sound echo can occur when sound waves bounce off a distant surface and reflect back toward the listener, a light echo can be seen when light waves traveling through space are reflected back toward the viewer. The light echoes were discovered by comparing images of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) taken years apart. By precisely subtracting the common elements in each image and analyzing what variable objects remain, the team looked for evidence of dark matter that might distort the light of stars in a transitory way, as part of a second-generation sky survey called SuperMACHO. SuperMACHO builds on the discoveries of the MACHO project, which started at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in 1989."
The summary is a bit misleading. Light echoes are by no means a recent discovery. APOD viewers like me have seen them since at least 1997.
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap971023.html
We called the MPAA at first, but they couldn't stand up to the massive quantities of hard radiation put out by supernovae.
Unfortunately, the RIAA (being closely related to cockroaches) found themselves able to tolerate the radiation.
I hear their mutated spawn plan on getting into the TV business.
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
It should be illegal to name your own project, especially with acronyms. Everything should be called "the thing we're doing" until someone unrelated comes along and names it. It would save so many horrible fake acronyms.
http://www.google.com/search?q=define:Supernovae
http://www.google.com/search?q=define:Supernova
People should just stop trying to use latin plurals. First, they usually get them wrong (virii with two i's etc); second, once a foreign word becomes part of your language, you stop using its native plural, genitive if any, various cases etc.
You don't go around saying you see a supernovam or the light of a supernovae, so why do you insist in saying there are two supernova (or novae if you get it wrong)? Either use always the same form of the word, or use English plural formation rules.
Global warming is a cube.
Well, this sounds really fascinating. I'm afraid I don't have much to add to that, so - on a slightly-related tangent - (the Magellanic Clouds) - the Opportunity Mars rover recently took pictures of the Martian sky at night that shows the Magellanic clouds. Check out the amateur image processing at Unmanned Spaceflight. There have been some amazing pics from the rovers, but this one stands out for me for emotional impact. (Mind you, I'm a sucker for schmaltz and sentiment... Boing Boing linked to a public domain radio version of "It's a Wonderful Life" the other day, I had to keep pausing it stop from bawling like a 5 year old :)
"None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
What I'm sure the author meant to say is that the light from the original supernova explosion would have arrived here 600 years ago.
Brackets contain world's first nanosig, highly magnified:[.]