Build Your Own Moon: Online Lunar Game Nabs Honors

by Nola Taylor Redd, SPACE.com Contributor

An online game that allows players to build their own moon and sculpt its features has won big praise in science art competition.

The game, called “Selene: A Lunar Construction GaME,” measures how and when players learn as they discover more about how the Earth’s moon formed and, by extension, the solar system. It received an honorable mention in the 2012 International Science & Engineering Visualization Challenge, the journal Science announced today (Jan. 31).

As players experiment with the game, they learn more about one of the easiest heavenly bodies they can study, Selene developers said.

Andromeda mon amour

By Caleb A. Schar

There is something beautiful yet ominous about our nearest large galactic neighbor.

The Andromeda galaxy is a trillion star behemoth that spans some six times the diameter of the full Moon when seen through a telescope. At only 2.5 million light years away from the Milky Way it’s barely an intergalactic stone’s throw from us, and the gravitational might of our two galaxies is pulling them together against the stretching expansion of the cosmos. Every year we get closer by about 2 billion miles. And, as I’ve written about before, in some 4 billion years or so we’ll begin a process of merger, a grand slow-motion galactic collision.

The outcome of this will most likely be a new system, our merged components perhaps dissolving into a giant elliptical galaxy, with stellar orbits thrown into a vast puff. No more Milky Way, no more Andromeda, just distant memories.

But until then we get to observe this beautiful spiral object. Andromeda seems to be producing stars at a slightly slower rate than the Milky Way, but this doesn’t mean it’s devoid of stellar birth. New images from the ESA/NASA space observatory Herschel allow us to map out the cooler interstellar dust and dense regions of star and planet formation by sensing far infrared and submillimeter wavelength radiation from this matter. At these wavebands photons are less attenuated by gas and dust and less confused with starlight, allowing astronomers to peer deep into Andromeda’s nurseries.

 

 

NASA Joins European Dark Energy Mission

NASA will provide 16 infrared detectors and four spares for one of the Euclid space telescope’s planned science instruments. The mission is set to launch in 2020

ByMike WallandSPACE.com

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 Image: ESA

NASA has officially joined the European Space Agency’s Euclid mission, a space telescope that will launch in 2020 to study the mysterious dark matter and dark energy pervading the universe.

NASA will contribute 16 infrared detectors and four spares for one of the Euclid telescope‘s two planned science instruments, agency officials announced today (Jan. 24). NASA has also nominated 40 new members for the Euclid Consortium, an international body of 1,000 scientists that will oversee the mission and its development.

“NASA is very proud to contribute to ESA’s mission to understand one of the greatest science mysteries of our time,” John Grunsfeld, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, said in a statement.

Astronomers think the “normal” matter we can see and touch makes up just 4 percent of the universe. The rest is comprised of dark matter and dark energy — strange stuff whose existence scientists infer from its influence on the 4 percent.

Dark energy is especially intriguing, since many researchers believe it to be the strange force responsible for the accelerating expansion of the universe. But just what it is remains a mystery.