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  • Recommended: Queen of SETI retires from research
  • Recommended: Solar eclipse goes social and global
  • Recommended: Eclipse Day! Get set for 'Ring of Fire'
  • Recommended: How to see the eclipse anywhere
Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, msnbc.com science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.
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  • 2
    days
    ago

    Solar eclipse goes social and global

    Wally Santana / AP

    An annular solar eclipse is seen briefly during a break in clouds over Taipei, Taiwan.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle


    The sun, moon and Earth lined up today for a spectacular "Ring of Fire" annular eclipse that sparked social rites as ancient as Stonehenge and as modern as the Twitterverse.

    Eclipse fans gathered in locales ranging from Japan's Mount Fuji, to the alien-hunting Allen Telescope Array in California, to the ancient Petroglyph National Monument in New Mexico. But they gathered online as well, to share the wonders of the event via webcasts and chatrooms and Twitter feeds.

    "Is it bad that instead of just going outside I'm watching photo updates of the eclipse on Instagram?" one tweeter asked.

    • PhotoBlog: Must-see eclipse views from around the world
    • Your photos of the eclipse ... it's not too late to share!
    • Explore an eclipse panorama from California's Lassen Peak

    This event held special significance for American skywatchers: It marked the first time in 18 years that an annular solar eclipse could be seen from the United States. Such eclipses occur when the moon is too far away in its elliptical orbit to cover the sun's disk completely, as seen from Earth. As a result, a little ring of the sun remains visible around the moon's dark disk, even at the height of the eclipse. (The term "annular" comes from "annulus," a Latin word meaning "little ring.")

    Centuries ago, priests may have celebrated eclipses at Stonehenge with religious rites. But today, the residents of Redding, Calif., celebrated with barbecue parties. "It's become a very social event," said Tim Young, a physics professor from the University of North Dakota who helped organize an eclipse webcast from Shasta College in Redding.

    MSNBC's Thomas Roberts reports that the western U.S. and eastern Asia are seeing a rare type of solar eclipse.

    The event began in Asia, where the edge of the moon's shadow touched down at dawn on Monday (on the other side of the International Date Line). A camera crew atop Mount Fuji battled inclement weather that partially obscured the annular phase, but their live Internet stream still managed to catch a few glimpses through the clouds. More than 275,000 viewers tuned in to the webcast, the project's organizers said.

    Eclipse tours were arranged in Japan, China and Taiwan to take skywatchers to the central part of the moon's shadow, where the annular "Ring of Fire" effect was visible. Tokyo residents had a ringside seat, so to speak. "It was a very mysterious sight," Kaori Sasaki, who joined a crowd in downtown Tokyo, told The Associated Press. "I've never seen anything like it." 

    The moon's shadow raced eastward at a speed of more than 2,000 miles per hour. The annular phase could be seen only from locations along a roughly 200-mile-wide, 8,500-mile-long track, for just a few minutes in any one location. In contrast, the partial eclipse rose and receded over the course of a couple of hours, and was visible over a much wider swath of the world.

    The first hints of the partial eclipse didn't show up on the U.S. West Coast until around 5 p.m. PT (6 p.m. MT, 7 p.m. CT, 8 p.m. ET). The annular phase reached its peak for Americans after 9 p.m. ET, along a line stretching from the Oregon-California coast to around Lubbock, Texas.

    Astronomers and amateurs gathered to witness the annular eclipse at the Allen Telescope Array, 70 miles northeast of Redding. Guests walked among the facility's 20-foot-wide radio antennas, which monitor the skies for signals from extraterrestrial civilizations, listened to talks from SETI researchers, and then watched the eclipse through safety glasses or specially designed solar telescopes.

    One of the guests, William Phelps, peered intently through his 80mm H-alpha telescope, looking for the first signs of the moon poking into the sun's disk. He's a veteran of 16 previous eclipse-viewing sessions, but he still let out a yelp when he spotted the moon's edge through the telescope.

    "Yahoo! That's No. 17!" he cried. Then he let the other guests take their own peeks.

    As the moon covered more and more of the sun, the California afternoon seemed to get a bit cooler and dimmer, as if a tinted window had materialized in front of the mountain landscape. The sunbeams filtering through the trees threw crescent-shaped patterns on the ground. At the appointed time, the dark moon was completely ringed by sunlight, and the crescents on the ground turned into tiny O's. A cheer went up from the little crowd.

    "God, that's beautiful!" Phelps said. After a few minutes, the moon began its slow exit from the sun's disk. "I'm seeing beads," Phelps reported, referring to the "Baily's Beads" effect that occurs when bits of sunlight leak out through the valleys of the moon. 

    Slideshow: Greatest solar eclipse hits

    Roger Ressmeyer / Corbis

    See stunning images from past solar eclipses going back to the 1920s.

    Launch slideshow

    Elsewhere, more than 5,000 people gathered at the University of Colorado's Folsom Field in Boulder for a mass eclipse-watching party. "We got several really long, good views, especially right close to sunset," university spokeswoman Erin Frazier told me. A full house attended an eclipse teach-in at Petroglyph National Monument in New Mexico, a sacred site for the Pueblo people and one of the prime viewing spots for the "Ring of Fire."

    Would-be watchers heeded the warnings about eye safety, and snapped up thousands upon thousands of eclipse-viewing glasses in the days leading up to the event. The University of Nevada at Reno reported that it sold 17,000 of the glasses at $2 each last week, and had to order 10,000 more. Young said he brought 600 of the special spectacles with him to Redding. His supply quickly dwindled. "It's become a mad grab for resources," he said.

    Young, who has been involved in more than a dozen webcasts since 2004, said interest in today's eclipse picked up surprisingly quickly. "Three days ago, it was not that big a deal, but as the news started playing it up, people got excited," he said.

    Decades ago, before the rise of sun-watching satellites, eclipses provided the best opportunities for astronomers to learn about the sun's structure — and they're still of scientific interest. This weekend, for example, Williams College astronomer Jay Pasachoff organized an expedition to the Jansky Very Large Array in New Mexico to monitor the sun's radio emissions during the eclipse. But experts say the phenomenon's main appeal nowadays has more to do with the human psyche than with scientific studies.

    "This can get people to look up from their little anthill lives, and maybe get a sense of the bigger cosmic cycles that are going on all the time over our heads," said Alan MacRobert, a senior editor at Sky & Telescope magazine.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    The eclipse experience can have a long-lasting effect, said Seth Shostak, an astronomer at the California-based SETI Institute who conducted a tutorial at the Allen Telescope Array. "Eclipses are like potato chips, notable for the fact that in all recorded history nobody has eaten only one," he joked. "Be warned."

    More about the eclipse:

    • Eclipse Day! Your guide to the 'Ring of Fire'
    • Get ready to chase the eclipse
    • Where and how to see the eclipse
    • How to see the eclipse online
    • How to safely observe the solar eclipse
    • How to photograph the eclipse safely
    • World's largest solar eclipse party? Game on!
    • Why the 'Ring of Fire' will be a rare sight
    • See the solar eclipse at a national park
    • Satellite to watch solar eclipse from space
    • Five myths about the sun
    • Slideshow: Greatest eclipse hits
    • Share your eclipse photos with PhotoBlog 

    Ready for another "potato chip"? The next sky spectacular is a partial lunar eclipse, visible from Pacific locales on June 4. That'll be followed by a rare transit of Venus on June 5. The year's other big target will be a total solar eclipse, visible from Australia and the Pacific on Nov. 13. Stay tuned for coverage of all those astronomical events.

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    Last updated 11:59 p.m. ET May 20.

    115 comments

    Truly some amazing, stunning photos of a really cool astronomical event. Wow! I'm living overseas in SE Asia now, so no totality here... well, it's nighttime, so I guess you could argue that it's REALLY total. Ha ha. Hey, "openmindedperson" -- when you can show me the value of having "faith" in some …

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  • 7
    days
    ago

    Astronaut shares groovy space trip

    Don Pettit / NASA

    This is a composite of 18 time-exposure images photographed from a mounted camera on the International Space Station, from approximately 240 miles above Earth. The image is filled with star trails and spiraling reflections from the space station's solar arrays.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Flying on the International Space Station is the world's biggest high, and a series of psychedelic time-exposure images engineered by NASA astronaut Don Pettit proves it.

    This picture, showing the station's truss structure in the foreground and Earth's airglow in the background, is actually a composite of 18 different exposures. A couple of other pictures in the series step things up a notch by putting together 47 exposures. Here's Pettit's explanation of the process, as laid out in the NASA Twitter gallery:


    "My star trail images are made by taking a time exposure of about 10 to 15 minutes. However, with modern digital cameras, 30 seconds is about the longest exposure possible, due to electronic detector noise effectively snowing out the image. To achieve the longer exposures, I do what many amateur astronomers do. I take multiple 30-second exposures, then 'stack' them using imaging software, thus producing the longer exposure."

    Follow @CosmicLog

    This isn't the only experiment Pettit has been conducting during his stint on the space station. A wide variety of scientific tests are under way in orbit, ranging from studies of human health in zero-G to the chemistry of Scotch whisky in weightlessness. Pettit has shown off some pretty trippy experiments in a couple of space station videos, including the creation of antibubbles within bubbles and the sight of sonic water droplets rockin' out to the sounds of ZZ Top. As Pettit says in one of the videos: "Oh, wow!" Check out the full "Science Off the Sphere" series, presented in cooperation with the American Physical Society.

    NASA astronaut Don Pettit injects bubbles inside bubbles in microgravity.

    Don Pettit demonstrates water oscillations on a speaker in microgravity.

    More about the space station:

    • Video: Russian rocket blasts off for space station
    • New life science experiments sought for space station
    • Space zucchini's life blogged by astronaut

    Tip o' the Log to Phil Plait at the Bad Astronomy blog.

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    6 comments

    This is great! Thanks, Don Pettit, for the fun demonstrations!

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  • 11
    May
    2012
    8:54pm, EDT

    The verdict is in on that sea monster video: It's a jellyfish

    Experts say the "Cascade Creature" is a jellyfish that's been turned inside-out.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Marine biologists say the spooky "Cascade Creature" seen drifting through the deep sea in a viral video isn't a whale placenta, a parachute, a plastic bag or an alien visitor: It's a type of jellyfish known as a Deepstaria enigmatica.

    The video, which was apparently captured by a remotely operated vehicle near an underwater drilling site, caused a bit of a stir over the past couple of weeks among weird-science fans. Now it looks as if the truth is out there, thanks to assessments from experts such as Steven Haddock at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute and Craig McClain at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center.

    "This bag-like jelly is not that rare, but is large, so rarely seen intact," Haddock and his colleagues write on the JellyWatch Facebook page. "In the video, the swirling from the sub makes the medusa appear to undulate, and it even turns inside-out." They provide a helpful picture of a more typical specimen.


    McClain is even more helpful in his posting at Deep Sea News. He provides citations on previous sightings of the beast, including explanations for the jellyfish's weirdly collapsed shape. And he shows through photographs and drawings that the strange appendage and whitish lumps seen in the video are D. enigmatica's gonads. TMI, Craig ... TMI.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    For a third opinion, look no further than Australia's Nine News, which quotes Daniel Bucher, a marine biologist at Southern Cross University, as saying that the gonads were the giveaway.

    Now that we've settled that, bring on the next sea monster.

    More sea monsters:

    • Iceland's monster unmasked
    • Monster bug? It's no joke!
    • Nessie-like monster filmed in Alaska
    • Why giant squid have basketball eyes
    • Fishermen pick up dying giant squid

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    53 comments

    Scoreboard: Superstition: Zero points. Wah-wah Science: All of the points. Science wins again.

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  • 6
    May
    2012
    1:17pm, EDT

    Your views of the supermoon

    Skywatchers were treated to a "supermoon" on Saturday night. NBC's Charles Hadlock reports.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    The supermoon of 2012 is over, but the joys of moongazing are not. Even though Saturday night's lunar showing was the biggest and brightest of the year, the views are nearly as good anytime around the full moon — tonight, for example.

    Photographs of the supermoon sight streamed out over online channels, including Twitter feeds, Facebook updates, blog postings and slick slideshows (such as our own roundup). They also streamed into msnbc.com's FirstPerson in-box. I've put together a selection of 10 submissions here.


    The kind of supermoon we saw last night isn't exactly a once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. The phenomenon, also known as a perigee moon, can be seen whenever the full moon occurs while it's near the closest point of its elliptical orbit around Earth. Last night, the moon was just 221,802 miles away from Earth, or about 15,000 miles closer than average. The moon's angular size was 14 percent wider than it is at maximum distance, and it was 30 percent brighter than minimum moonshine.

    If we define a supermoon as the biggest, brightest full moon of a given year, next year's supermoon will be almost as good as this year's, on June 23, 2013. The supermoon of 2014 will be brighter, and the 2016 supermoon will outdo last year's, which got the moongazing fad started. EarthSky News has the schedule for the next few years. Some rightly note that the moon is worth watching on every night of the year, and that the full moon isn't necessarily the best time to see all the detail the lunar disk can offer. But there's nothing wrong in having an annual holiday devoted to moongazing, is there?

    The next big sky event is coming up on May 20, when the new moon blots out most of the sun to create an annular solar eclipse. A wide swath of the Asia-Pacific region and North America will see a partial eclipse, while folks situated along a narrow track of territory extending from China across to the Oregon-California coast and down to Texas can witness a "Ring of Fire," in which the moon's disk covers all but the thin rim of the sun's disk. That'll be an amazing thing to see, but make sure you use proper eye protection. You can get the details from my eclipse viewing guide, and learn more about the appeal of an annular eclipse.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    There's an astronomical connection between this weekend's supermoon and this month's "Ring of Fire": Because the moon was nearly as close as it can come for the full-moon phase, it's nearly as far out as it can go for the new-moon phase. Thus, the moon's apparent size is significantly smaller than usual when it tries to covers up the sun — and that's why we have a ring of fire rather than the fully blacked-out sun of a total eclipse. For that, we'll have to wait until November. Stay tuned in the weeks and months ahead for more about all these astronomical phenomena, plus June's last-in-a-lifetime transit of Venus.

    Submitted by Isaiah Blount / Smooth Images / UGC

    Florida photographer Isaiah Blount of Smooth Images submitted this picture of an airplane crossing the disk of the supermoon on Saturday night.

    Submitted by Penny Wainwright / UGC

    The supermoon looms in the skies of Louisiana, outside Farmerville.

    Submitted by Campbell McCubbin / UGC

    Campbell McCubbin says this is the "first glimpse of the 'supermoon' from my deck overlooking Semiahmoo Bay, White Rock, B.C., Canada."

    Submitted by Prashanti Pasupuleti / UGC

    Prashanti Pasupuleti of New Delhi, India, says the supermoon is "within my reach."

    Submitted by Angie Lucero / UGC

    Wisps of clouds waft over the supermoon in this view from Albuquerque, N.M.

    Submitted by Maria Johnson / UGC

    Maria Johnson took this picture of the moon around 1 a.m. ET on Sunday in Sarasota, Fla.

    Submitted by Larry Shiflett / UGC

    The supermoon rises over a sailboat in the waters near Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

    Submitted by Bianca Fister / UGC

    Spring flowers are silhouetted against the supermoon in this picture from Bianca Fister of Hilton, N.Y.

    Submitted by Joe Leonard / UGC

    The supermoon peeks over the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in a picture from Joe Leonard of Taos, N.M..

    Submitted by Justine Daniel / UGC

    The supermoon is partly hidden by clouds in the skies above St. Augustine on the island of Trinidad.

    More about the supermoon:

    • Slideshow: Greatest hits from the supermoon
    • How big is that supermoon anyway?
    • Wonders of sun, moon and sky
    • Five moon mysteries
    • Five moon myths

    Many thanks to all our FirstPerson photographers, including Lynn Schneider, John McNamara, Josh Warner and Mitzi Easley.

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    51 comments

    Psalm 8:33 When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place,Psalm 108:1919 He made the moon to mark the seasons, and the sun knows when to go down.Psalm 148:33 Praise him, sun and moon; praise him, all you shining stars.

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  • 5
    May
    2012
    6:12pm, EDT

    How big is that supermoon anyway?

    Robert Michael / AFP - Getty Images

    A nearly full moon rises behind the cross of the Frauenkirche in the German city of Dresden in May 4.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Saturday night's "supermoon" is the biggest and brightest full moon of the year, due to the fact that the moon is near the closest point in its orbital path around Earth. But just how much bigger and brighter does it look? That's a tricky question.

    Most reports say the moon looks 14 percent bigger than usual, which is close to the truth but isn't quite right. They also say it's 30 percent brighter than usual, which isn't right, either. James Garvin, chief scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, ran the numbers to come up with an explanation that seems to make the most sense.


    First of all, it's important to note that the moon itself is not getting significantly bigger or smaller. There's a scientific debate over whether the moon is slowly shrinking or spreading out. But in either case, the change isn't noticeable on human time scales.

    The difference in the moon's apparent size is basically a function of how close it is to Earth in its elliptical orbit. That orbit isn't changing on human time scales, either. It just so happens that tonight, the moon is coming closest to Earth at the same time that it's going full. Because the moon and the sun are precisely opposite each other, relative to Earth, tonight's ocean tides may be a bit higher than typical — but again, the effect is nowhere near big enough to worry about.

    So how noticeable is the visual effect? Here what Garvin told me in an email today:

    • "The biggest predictable effect on the brightness of the full moon is how close the moon is to Earth.  With everything else the same, a full moon is about 30 percent brighter when the moon is closest to Earth in its orbit (called perigee) compared to a full moon when the moon is farthest from Earth in its orbit (called apogee).  Today’s full moon is at perigee."
    • "Also, when the moon is high in the sky (as it is now), we are closer to the moon by approximately the radius of Earth compared to when the moon is on the horizon. (Note: Earth’s radius is about 6,371 kilometers)."
    • "Since the distance from the center of Earth to the center of the moon is on average about 384,403 kilometers, the radius of the earth is about 6,371 kilometers, and brightness changes as the square of the distance, being closer to the moon by about the radius of the earth increases the brightness of the full moon by about 3 percent."  
    • "Thus the present supermoon is, at maximum, only about 9 to 10 percent larger in an angular (appearance) sense than a typical full moon and is also brighter (by a few percent), making it appear 'super.'"

    "Meanwhile, our intrepid Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter continues its remarkable mapping of our nearest celestial neighbor, coming up (in June) on its three-year anniversary of being in lunar orbit with its amazing array of 7 instruments," Garvin added.  "As of now, the data returned from LRO (over 300 trillion bytes) is larger than all of the rest of the data acquired for planets in the solar system combined (except for Earth, of course)."

    Which just goes to show that every day is a "super moon" day for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and its science team. Check out NASA's Web site for more wisdom from James Garvin.

    A NASA video explains the science behind the "supermoon."

    Geoff Chester, an astronomer at the U.S. Naval Observatory, says the moon appears 14 percent larger in angular size when it's at the closest point in its orbit, compared with its appearance when it's farthest away from Earth. That's not 14 percent larger than average. That's 14 percent larger than the minimum apparent size.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    "You'd be very hard-pressed to detect that with the unaided eye," Chester told The Associated Press. Seasoned skywatchers, however, say they can definitely tell the difference. Can you? Take a look at the moon tonight — before, during or after the moment of maximum fullness at 11:35 p.m. ET — and tell us what you see.

    Update for 6:45 p.m. ET May 5: Bad Astronomy's Phil Plait observes that the moon's angular size is roughly equivalent to that of a dime as seen from 6 feet away. You can bet I'll have a dime taped onto a south-facing window tonight to make the observations. Also, tonight's supermoon will be a little less super than last year's supermoon, because the moon is about 240 miles farther away at peak fullness than it was in March 2011. For what it's worth, next year's supermoon will be imperceptibly smaller than this year's. I wonder if there'll be perceptibly less hype.

    Update for 2:20 a.m. ET May 6: Yes, the weather was clear enough for supermoon-gazing in my Seattle-area neighborhood — and yes, I really did tape a dime onto a window to compare its angular size with the moon's. But it seemed to me that the sizes were about the same at a dime distance of 4 or 5 feet, rather than the 6-foot distance that Phil Plait suggested. Which just goes to show you: YMMV (your moon may vary). You can see what I saw by checking my Twitpic gallery.

    More about the supermoon:

    • How to see the supermoon — and meteors, too
    • How to plan your supermoon snapshot
    • Supermoon rises over Greek temple
    • Five moon mysteries
    • Five moon myths

    If you snap a great photo of the moon, feel free to upload it into msnbc.com's FirstPerson in-box.

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    46 comments

    It's cloudy here :( BTW, I *LOVE* the fact that they have to mention that the Moon isn't actually changing size. REALLY?

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  • 4
    May
    2012
    10:24pm, EDT

    Wonders of sun, moon and sky

    Monika Landy-Gyebnar

    Monika Landy-Gyebnar took this picture of the rising sun on May 1 from Veszprem, Hungary. "The image I saw when the sun appeared was incredible!" she said in a posting to SpaceWeather.com. "This was the strongest mirage effect on the sun I have ever seen!" In this image, the mirage makes the sunspot region known as AR 1471 look like three dots in a row, toward the lower left area of the sun's disk.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    The next month promises to be filled with astronomical wonders, including this weekend's "supermoon," an annular solar eclipse later this month, and a last-in-a-lifetime transit of Venus. Here are a few images to get you in the mood for those cosmic glories.


    Hungarian photographer Monika Landy-Gyebnar snapped an unusual picture of a solar mirage on May 1, showing the sun's distorted disk at the eastern horizon. She told SpaceWeather.com that she expected to see the mirage, because she lives in an area where morning fog usually collects in the valley, "so it is a location colder than its surroundings." The temperature difference often creates a shimmering mirage effect, but Landy-Gyebnar was amazed by the strength of the effect on that particular morning.

    "The distortion reached the region where the big sunspot 1471 is located as a visible dark dot," she wrote. "I saw the sunspot disappearing and appearing again, then its mirage appeared above the original spot higher on the solar disk, then a third mirage spot appeared. ... I was shivering with beauty!"

    For details, check out Landy-Gyebnar's gallery at SpaceWeather.com and her video clip on YouTube.

    The picture above served as today's "Where in the Cosmos" picture puzzle on the Cosmic Log Facebook page, and Brittany Pedersen was the first to figure out that the photo showed a sunspot mirage. To reward her sharp vision, I'm sending her a pair of solar viewing glasses from Astronomers Without Borders. Stay tuned for the next "Where in the Cosmos" quiz on Facebook in a week, and you might win some solar spectacles as well.

    Landy-Gyebnar's photographs, and the glasses, serve as good reminders that skywatchers should never gaze at the shining sun without proper eye protection, even during the annular solar eclipse coming up on May 20. To get ready for that rare event, check out my two-part series and "Virtually Speaking" podcast.

    Another big sky event is coming up this weekend, when the moon turns full during its closest approach to Earth. That means the moon will be 14 percent bigger and 30 percent brighter than the norm — leading many to call the sight a "supermoon." So much has been made of Saturday night's full moon that Bad Astronomy's Phil Plait is counseling rhetorical restraint (with an artistic assist from Sci-ence's Maki Naro). But even Phil says it's worth going out and looking at the moon, on Saturday night or on any night. "It's bright and silvery and lovely and you can see features with your naked eye and with a telescope you'll see tons more," he writes.

    If you have a great supermoon picture to share, please pass it along via msnbc.com's FirstPerson "Sky Highlights" upload page. We'll put together a gallery of our favorite moon views over the weekend.

    The moon is expected to appear 14 percent larger and 30 percent brighter than a regular full moon on Saturday. Astronomer Derrick Pitts joins NewsNation to discuss.

    The Hubble Space Telescope has been looking at the moon lately, in preparation for the transit of Venus on June 5. That's when the planet Venus makes a stately march across the disk of the sun over the course of six hours. The last time Venus did that was eight years ago, and it won't happen again until the year 2117. So the scientists behind Hubble, like many other astronomers, want to take a look.

    As explained in today's image advisory, the sun is too bright for Hubble to observe directly. Instead, Hubble's scientists will check the light rays that are reflected by the moon and see whether they can discern the faint signature of the light that passed through Venus' atmosphere.

    "Imprinted on that small amount of light are the fingerprints of the planet's atmospheric makeup," the Hubble team said in its advisory. "These observations will mimic a technique that is already being used to sample the atmospheres of giant planets outside our solar system passing in front of their stars. In the case of the Venus transit observations, astronomers already know the chemical makeup of Venus's atmosphere, and that it does not show signs of life on the planet. But the Venus transit will be used to test whether this technique will have a chance of detecting the very faint fingerprints of an Earthlike planet, even one that might be habitable for life, outside our solar system that similarly transits its own star."

    Hubble will observe the moon for seven hours on the day of the transit to get a good sampling of spectroscopic data. Here's a practice image of the impact crater Tycho, acquired on Jan. 11: 

    D. Ehrenreich / IPAG / CNRS / UJF / NASA / ESA

    This mottled landscape showing the impact crater Tycho is among the most violent-looking places on our Moon. Astronomers didn't aim NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to study Tycho, however. The image was taken in January as part of the preparation for observing the transit of Venus across the sun's face on June 5.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Finally, here are a couple of videos to end the week with: On one end of the time spectrum, there's an hourlong recap of this week's Space Hangout, in which several space scribes (including yours truly) review the far-out news of the week. On the other end, there's a six-minute mashup of cosmic images from NASA, titled "Pursuit of Light." The montage starts out with Earth imagery, then moves on to shots of the moon, the sun, Mars, Jupiter and its moons, the Saturnian system and asteroids. Then you'll see nebulas, the remnants of supernova blasts, and interacting galaxies. How much farther out can you get?

    The May 3 episode of the Weekly Space Hangout features space commentators Alan Boyle, Ian O'Neill, Emily Lakdawalla, Amy Shira Teitel, Sawyer Rosenstein, Jason Major, Fraser Cain, and Nicole Gugliucci.

    "Pursuit of Light" presents NASA imagery of Earth, the sun and moon, the planets and the universe beyond.

    More far-out imagery:

    • NASA probe captures close-ups of Saturnian moons
    • Earth's beauty dazzles in astronaut video from space
    • Slideshow: Month in Space Pictures for April 2012

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    15 comments

    Very nice Alan .... So much interesting content in one article .... Great NASA Pursuit Of Light video .... Captured sunspot in a mirage photo .... And nice of you to share your meeting with the Space Hangout group on video .... Thanks ....

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  • 4
    May
    2012
    5:08pm, EDT

    Cartoons visualize the Higgs boson

    Particle physicist Daniel Whiteson explains the Higgs boson in a cartoon created by PHD Comics' Jorge Cham.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    The prime target for the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider is discovery and study of the Higgs boson — but what the heck is the Higgs, and what's it supposed to do? PHD Comics' Jorge Cham explains the quest in an animated cartoon that draws upon the expertise of Daniel Whiteson, a particle physicist from the University of California at Irvine who's working at Europe's CERN research center.


    The Higgs boson, sometimes referred to as the "God Particle," is thought to be the force-carrier for a field that endows subatomic particles with varying values of mass. British physicist Peter Higgs and others theorized that it must exist to fill out a gap in physics' Standard Model of particle physics, but it hasn't yet been detected. Scientists expect it to turn up at the LHC, or else they might have to go back to the drawing boards and rework the Standard Model.

    Almost two decades ago, Britain's science minister challenged experts to come up with an everyday explanation for the way the Higgs worked, and physicist David Miller came up with a comparison to Margaret Thatcher making her way through a crowded cocktail party. Whiteson and Cham use the analogy of marbles rolling across a floor, which works, too. Check out the big-format animated version on the PHD Comics Web site or on Vimeo.

    If physicists at the LHC get their way, the discussion of the Higgs boson could get a lot less theoretical by the end of this year, thanks to the increase in power levels and data return from the LHC and its particle detectors. However, Nature's Geoff Brumfiel reports today that the readings from hundreds of trillions of collisions are piling up so fast that the computers are having a hard time keeping up with the analysis. He writes that all those collisions are growing into a "thick fog" that threatens to obscure the signature of the elusive Higgs. Researchers are using clever computational techniques to separate the wheat from the chaff, data-wise, and are prepared to dial back the collision rate if necessary.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    If it sounds as if the physicists have it rough, just imagine how the particles must feel. That's exactly what animator Karen Cheung, Oxford physicist Alan Barr and their colleagues did in a cartoon that was created for the Oxford Sparks Web portal. Enjoy!

    Oxford Sparks presents a visit to the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva.

    More about the Higgs and the LHC:

    • Higgs vs. hype: A mini-guide
    • Can physicists crack the big puzzle?
    • Flash graphic: Inside the Big Bang Machine
    • Flash graphic: Michio Kaku on LHC nightmares and dreams
    • Msnbc.com's special report on the Large Hadron Collider

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

     

    35 comments

    Actually Rick, we do not know that we live in a finite curved space.

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  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    2:19pm, EDT

    SpaceX fires Falcon's rocket engines

    SpaceX conducts a test firing of a Falcon 9 rocket's engines.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    SpaceX conducted a successful test firing of a Falcon 9 rocket's engines on its Cape Canaveral launch pad, one week before its precedent-setting launch to the International Space Station. But it took more than one try.

    The initial countdown was halted just 47 seconds before the nine engines were scheduled to start up. SpaceX fixed what it called a "limit that was improperly set" on the flight computer and quickly set up another countdown. The second countdown proceeded smoothly, and the rocket's nine engines fizzed to life for two seconds as expected, at 4:15 p.m. ET today.

    "Woohoo, rocket hold-down firing completed and all looks good!!" SpaceX's millionaire founder, Elon Musk, reported in a Twitter update. Meanwhile, company spokeswoman Kirstin Brost Grantham said "engineers will now review data as we continue preparations for the upcoming launch."


    This was a full dress rehearsal for SpaceX's second official demonstration flight for NASA. The first demo flight, back in December 2010, sent a gumdrop-shaped Dragon space capsule into orbit for the first time. The second flight, scheduled to lift off as early as May 7, could see the Dragon go all the way to the space station.

    The company has received more than $375 million so far from the space agency for the development of the Falcon 9 and the Dragon. SpaceX and another company, Orbital Sciences Corp., are getting the money to help NASA fill the gap in payload transportation capability left by last year's retirement of the space shuttle fleet.

    In addition, SpaceX is receiving tens of millions of dollars from NASA under a separate program to make the Falcon/Dragon launch system suitable for carrying astronauts as well as cargo. Musk founded the California-based company in 2002 with the long-range aim of flying people to Mars.

    The Falcon 9 didn't fly anywhere during today's test at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Launch Complex 40 in Florida, but if SpaceX and NASA stick to the current timeline, the rocket will send the robotically controlled Dragon capsule into orbit on May 7. A couple of days later, the spacecraft will catch up with the space station and go through a sequence of rendezvous maneuvers.

    If the Dragon performs those maneuvers correctly, NASA would give the go-ahead for the Dragon to approach a station docking port. The station's robotic arm would grab onto it and bring it in for berthing. There'll be some cargo riding aboard the Dragon — water, clothing, scientific gear and the like — and the astronauts would take a couple of weeks to take on those payloads and load up the Dragon with Earth-bound cargo. Then the Dragon would be unberthed and sent back down to a Pacific splashdown, marking the successful end of the first flight of a private-sector spaceship to the International Space Station..

    There are a lot of "ifs" on that list of contingencies. This launch has been delayed repeatedly due to software glitches, and if a snag like the one that occurred today happened to crop up on May 7, liftoff would have to be postponed for three days. To reach the space station, the Falcon has to lift off right on the dot. The orbital mechanics will not allow for same-day do-overs. But that's OK. Last month, SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said "we may have to have a couple of attempts, but we're certainly looking forward to getting that flight off."

    If the Falcon 9 and the Dragon pass their tests, that would put SpaceX in a position to ship supplies to the space station in earnest, under the terms of a $1.6 billion NASA contract.

    Will SpaceX get 'er done? Feel free to weigh in with your comments below.

    SpaceX founder Elon Musk links the aims of his various companies together and explains why he'd rather be engineering than lobbying in Washington.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    More about SpaceX and the commercial space race:

    • Private spaceship launch set for May 7 
    • SpaceX has a lofty goal: Help save humanity
    • Next steps in the new space race

    Last updated 4:27 p.m. ET.

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    38 comments

    Space exploration will be the future market, expect jobs creation. There are not enough humans on this planet to to explore what is out in space.

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  • 26
    Apr
    2012
    6:40pm, EDT

    Verdict on asteroid mining: 'No bull!'

    The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
    Get More: Daily Show Full Episodes,Political Humor & Satire Blog,The Daily Show on Facebook


    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Follow @CosmicLog

    Mining asteroids for water and precious metals may sound like a sci-fi boondoggle, especially the way Jon Stewart described it Wednesday night on "The Daily Show" on Comedy Central. When Planetary Resources co-founder Eric Anderson says water would be worth $20,000 to $50,000 a pound in space, Stewart quips, "Who amongst us wouldn't pay $50,000 for a pound of space water ... at the space convenience store?" To cut through the orbital debris, Stewart brought astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson on stage to weigh in during a segment called "Bulls#*t or No Bulls#*t." In just one minute, Tyson rendered his decision — while solving a Rubik's Cube puzzle and ribbing Stewart about the reverse-rotating Earth in his show's opening credits. Watch how it went down in the video clip above, and get the straight story from MSNBC's Dylan Ratigan in the clip below.

    X Prize creator Peter Diamandis and Space Adventures' Eric Anderson launched a new company with lofty ambitions: mining asteroids. MSNBC's Dylan Ratigan reports.



    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto,"my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.


     

    18 comments

    Holy Bean Counters: What exactly is the problem with understanding that anything launched into space from Earth's gravity well costs $20,000/pound. It means that of one pound of water were found in an icy asteroid it would save $20K, 10 lbs. saves $200K, 100 labs $2,000K ... The fuel used by the Sat …

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  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    11:38pm, EDT

    Northern lights blaze again on video

    Fresh solar winds made for a spectacular light show on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Skywatchers as far south as Colorado and Kansas witnessed a quick flare-up of the northern lights this week, which called to mind the brilliant, beautiful displays that northerners saw earlier this year. The skies have settled down — for now — but developments on the sun suggest we could be in for another wave of auroral glories.

    The greenish glow over Lake Superior, recorded from Michigan's Upper Peninsula at 2 o'clock in the morning by Shawn Malone of LakeSuperiorPhoto.com, was impressive enough to make NBC's "Nightly News" on Tuesday night. In an email, Malone told me that the "intensity caught me off guard."


    "Check out the passing freighter for scale," Malone said in his comments on the Vimeo version of the video. "What a view those sailors must have had!"

    Mark Riutta had a similar view from Copper Harbor Cabins on the Upper Peninsula, as the time-lapse video below illustrates. Riutta told me over the phone that he and his girlfriend were getting the cabins ready for the summer season and were surprised by how bright Tuesday's display turned out to be. "We were just about to go to sleep, when we looked out and wondered, 'Why is it so light out there?' he said.

    Aurora Borealis over Copper Harbor - April 24th, 2012 from Defined Visuals on Vimeo.

    SpaceWeather.com provides a roundup of auroral images from a dozen U.S. states, mostly in the Midwest but also including the top state for the northern lights, Alaska. And speaking of Alaska, here's an unconventional view of the aurora that was recorded from a height of 90,000 feet during "Project Aether: Aurora," a scientific experiment that took place this month:

     

    A GoPro HD Hero2 camera captured this view of the northern lights, set against a backdrop of the curving Earth and the glow of sunlight at the horizon. A second Hero2 camera was placed in the frame and illuminated to serve as a reference point for the camera exposure (as well as a plug for GoPro).

    Project Aether, led by University of Houston physicist Ben Longmier, sent up almost two dozen weather balloons laden with high-definition cameras and scientific instruments to monitor auroral activity near Fairbanks. Most of the payloads have been recovered, but the student researchers are still on the lookout for a few that haven't yet been located. If you happen to be in the Fairbanks area and find one of them, you could win a prize.

    More prizes could be in store for aurora-watchers: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Weather Prediction Center reports that we're currently in the midst of a minor geomagnetic storm, which could spark another wave of northern lights. What's more, an active region of the sun known as AR1465 has developed the type of magnetic field that's associated with stronger X-class outbursts.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    To keep tabs on the solar weather report, check in with SpaceWeather.com as well as the Space Weather Prediction Center's website and Facebook page. And to watch some classic auroral videos, check out the gallery offered by NASA's Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth.

    More auroral glories:

    • Awesome auroras on Uranus ... and Earth
    • Farewell to the northern lights
    • Northern lights make for must-see TV
    • Southern exposure for auroral lights
    • Slideshow: The best of the northern lights
    • Cosmic Log's auroral archive

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto,"my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    3 comments

    I have been having the worst luck. Everyone of these latest series fo great auroras its been too cloudy. Haven't seen a one of them. :( At least I get to see them a little bit in these stories and on the TV, but it just aint the same.

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  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    9:01am, EDT

    Follow Discovery's final flight

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Today I'm following the final flight of the shuttle Discovery.

    For updates, check our running story about the Discovery's final flight on msnbc.com, watch NASA's live TV coverage above, and please do follow me on Twitter throughout the day. I'm happy to take your questions. To get my attention, just send your question or comment to @b0yle, or use the hashtag #msnbcspace. 

    The most flown spacecraft in history, Discovery is heading from its old home base at NASA's Kennedy Space Center to its new home base at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum's Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia.

    First stop was Dulles International Airport, where the shuttle and its carrier plane touched down this morning. Over the next day or so, Discovery will be lifted off the jet and brought over to the adjacent Udvar-Hazy Center for display on Thursday alongside the prototype shuttle Enterprise, which has been at the museum since 1985. Next week, Enterprise will be flown from Dulles to New York, where it will go on exhibit at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

     

     

    12 comments

    We used to manufacture great things in the USA. Now they are in museums. We need to get our country back in gear - building great things and doing great things !!

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  • 13
    Apr
    2012
    8:40pm, EDT

    Awesome auroras spotted on Uranus ... and on Earth

    Laurent Lamy

    These composite images show Uranian auroras as bright spots on the planet's disk on Nov 16, 2011 (left), and on Nov. 29 (right). The images from the Hubble Space Telescope have been processed to bring out details in Uranus' faint ring system.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Thanks to the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have caught a rare display of auroras on Uranus, which ranks among the solar system's oddest planets.

    Unlike the beautiful, rippling curtains of greenish light we've been seeing in earthly skies over the past few months, the Uranian auroras are short-lived bright spots sitting on top of the ice giant's bluish cloud tops. But they're caused by a similar mechanism, involving the interaction of electrically charged particles with atoms and ions in the planet's upper atmosphere.


    NASA's Voyager 2 probe picked up the first evidence of Uranus' auroras in 1986. "Since then, we've had no opportunities to get new observations of this very unusual magnetosphere," Laurent Lamy, an astronomer at the Observatoire de Paris, said today in a news release. There have been a few hints of auroral observations, but Hubble's views from last November rank as the best views yet. Lamy and his colleagues provide the details in a paper published by Geophysical Research Letters.

    The team took advantage of a lucky break and a favorable planetary alignment: Last year, Earth, Jupiter and Uranus were lined up so that energetic solar emissions could flow past each planet in turn. When the sun produced several outbursts in September, the astronomers timed the flow of the particle storm past Earth a couple of days later, and then detected the flow past Jupiter two weeks after that. On the basis of those readings, they calculated that the outburst would reach Uranus in mid-November, and scrambled to schedule observing time on the Hubble Space Telescope.

    Uranus is an oddity because it basically rotates on its side as it orbits the sun. The orientation of its magnetosphere is tilted 60 degrees with respect to its rotational axis. As a result, during the current season, each of the planet's magnetic poles turns to face the sun in the course of a Uranian day. "This configuration is unique in the solar system," Lamy said.

    Hubble was well-placed to catch the auroral flashes on the sunlit side, near Uranus' north magnetic pole. Each flash appeared to last only a couple of minutes, the astronomers said.

    These new findings solidify Uranus' place on the list of planets flashing with auroral lights. Jupiter and Saturn are also on the list. Mars is thought to be capable of localized auroral effects, even though it doesn't have a global magnetic field. (In fact, some observers suspect we saw evidence of those effects last month.) Earlier this month, astronomers reported seeing auroral-type activity on Venus as well.

    Lights on Earth
    And then there's Earth. Last October, a solar outburst sparked northern lights that could be seen as far south as the state of Mississippi, and over the past month, higher-latitude residents have been treated to almost as many fireworks displays as Disneyland tourists typically get to see. Although the approach of summer is starting to cut down on the opportunities to see auroras in the Northern Hemisphere, some folks got great views as recently as last night. Here are a few of the highlights:

    This time-lapse video shows the aurora as seen from Michigan's McLain State Park on April 13, courtesy of Defined Visuals on Vimeo.

    Shawn Malone of Marquette, Mich., snapped pictures of the aurora from the shores of Lake Superior. "The sky was ablaze in light," Malone told SpaceWeather.com. "Northern lights were so bright they lit up the beach!" For more from Malone, check out LakeSuperiorPhoto.com and his Vimeo video gallery.

    This video showing the southern lights was taken by the crew of the International Space Station on March 10, during a pass from the Indian Ocean, southwest of Australia, to southern New Zealand. The video was released this week.

    Brian Larmay

    Here's a different angle on the aurora and the International Space Station, captured by Brian Larmay of Beecher, Wis. The long streak in this time-lapse photograph is the space station, sailing across the sky. To see more of Larmay's pictures, check out his SmugMug gallery.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    'Where in the Cosmos'
    Today's picture of auroral displays on Uranus served as this week's "Where in the Cosmos" picture puzzle on the Cosmic Log Facebook page. It took only a couple of minutes for Shirley Beningo to blurt out which celestial body was shown in the picture, and what the bright spots were. To reward her for her quick cosmic vision, I'm sending her a pair of cardboard 3-D glasses, wrapped up in a 3-D picture of yours truly. Ashley Nicole and Gerry Marien came in as the runners-up, and are eligible for 3-D glasses as well. Be sure to click the "like" button on the Cosmic Log Facebook page so you're ready for next Friday's "Where in the Cosmos" contest.

    Earlier stories of auroral glories:

    • Farewell to the northern lights
    • Northern lights make for must-see TV
    • Southern exposure for auroral lights
    • Sky lights go wild, north and south
    • Solar storm lights up northern skies
    • Slideshow: The best of the northern lights
    • Cosmic Log's auroral archive

    In addition to Lamy, the authors of "Earth-Based Detection of Uranus' Aurorae" include R. Prange, K.C. Hansen, J.T. Clarke, P. Zarka, B. Cecconi, J. Aboudarham, N. Andre, G. Branduardi-Raymont, R. Gladstone, M. Barthelemy, N. Achilleos, P. Guio, M.K. Dougherty, H. Melin, S.W.H. Cowley, T.S. Stallard, J.D. Nichols and G. Ballester.

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto,"my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    62 comments

    That lead pic has an obvious couple of balls, but I can't quite make out Uranus in all the surrounding darkness. BTW, didn't Prof. Farnsworth change the planet's name to Urectum? Oh, wait... that's still a thousand years from now.

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Alan Boyle

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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The Case for Pluto
Alan Boyle's first book tells the story of Pluto's ups and downs as well as the discoveries of other dwarf planets in our own solar system and even more alien worlds beyond. Buy "The Case for Pluto" ...

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