SETI@home, BOINC, and Volunteer Distributed Computing
22 days ago
SETI@home, BOINC, and Volunteer Distributed Computing - Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 40(1):69
astronomy
dataanalysis
22 days ago
Hubble Captures First Pictures of Auroras on Uranus | Wired Science | Wired.com
5 weeks ago
from Wired Science http://www.wired.com/wiredscience
NASA’s Hubble space telescope has captured the first images of auroras on the ice giant Uranus.
Uranus, the seventh planet from the sun, is an oddball world. At some point in its past, the planet appears to have been knocked on its side, so now its “North Pole” sits where the equator on most planets is located.
The newly observed auroras — seen as tiny white dots in the image above — underscore just how strange Uranus really is.
Auroras, also known as the Northern Lights, appear on Earth when the solar wind – a stream of charged particles emanating from the sun — interacts with our planet’s magnetic field. While terrestrial auroras appear as giant green curtains of light and may last hours, the auroras seen recently on Uranus were relatively small and stuck around only a few minutes.
Scientists don’t know much about Uranus’ magnetic field because it has only been investigated in detail once, 25 years ago when the Voyager 2 satellite zoomed by. At that time, Voyager detected auroras but Earth-based attempts to reexamine the atmospheric phenomenon on Uranus have all failed since.
Conditions on Uranus were very different when Voyager flew past. The planet’s magnetic north pole was then facing straight into the solar wind, producing auroras that lasted longer and were mainly located on the night side, similar to observations of earthly Northern Lights.
Now, Uranus has entered its spring equinox season, and its axis is perpendicular to the flow of charged particles from the sun. Astronomers suspect this weird orientation is responsible for the peculiar auroras Hubble spotted.
A paper on the Uranian aurora observation will appear Apr. 14 in Geophysical Research Letters.
Image: Laurent Lamy
ifttt
googlereader
astronomy
NASA’s Hubble space telescope has captured the first images of auroras on the ice giant Uranus.
Uranus, the seventh planet from the sun, is an oddball world. At some point in its past, the planet appears to have been knocked on its side, so now its “North Pole” sits where the equator on most planets is located.
The newly observed auroras — seen as tiny white dots in the image above — underscore just how strange Uranus really is.
Auroras, also known as the Northern Lights, appear on Earth when the solar wind – a stream of charged particles emanating from the sun — interacts with our planet’s magnetic field. While terrestrial auroras appear as giant green curtains of light and may last hours, the auroras seen recently on Uranus were relatively small and stuck around only a few minutes.
Scientists don’t know much about Uranus’ magnetic field because it has only been investigated in detail once, 25 years ago when the Voyager 2 satellite zoomed by. At that time, Voyager detected auroras but Earth-based attempts to reexamine the atmospheric phenomenon on Uranus have all failed since.
Conditions on Uranus were very different when Voyager flew past. The planet’s magnetic north pole was then facing straight into the solar wind, producing auroras that lasted longer and were mainly located on the night side, similar to observations of earthly Northern Lights.
Now, Uranus has entered its spring equinox season, and its axis is perpendicular to the flow of charged particles from the sun. Astronomers suspect this weird orientation is responsible for the peculiar auroras Hubble spotted.
A paper on the Uranian aurora observation will appear Apr. 14 in Geophysical Research Letters.
Image: Laurent Lamy
5 weeks ago
Stacey, The Lightweight Content Management System
february 2012
Stacey is a lightweight content management system.
No database setup or installation files, simply drop the application on a server and it runs. Your content is managed by creating folders and editing text files. No login screens, no admin interface.
webmaster
php
writing
No database setup or installation files, simply drop the application on a server and it runs. Your content is managed by creating folders and editing text files. No login screens, no admin interface.
february 2012
noReplies - twitter stream without any @replies
january 2012
noReplies will show you the recent tweets for a user without any @replies in the timeline (but you still get the @mentions).
twitter
rss
january 2012
Guess What? You're Wasting Your Time If You Organize
january 2012
How much time do you spend each day getting better organized? Cut it in half.
Read more: http://blogs.hbr.org/schrage/2012/01/tip-for-getting-more-organized.html#ixzz1jv6JNeDY
productivity
procrastination
Read more: http://blogs.hbr.org/schrage/2012/01/tip-for-getting-more-organized.html#ixzz1jv6JNeDY
january 2012
Matteo Villa - Epistle
january 2012
Epistle is a clean and simple text editor that can sync all your notes with Dropbox.
android
writing
text
january 2012
openmeta - OpenMeta is an OS X standard for adding tags, ratings, and other metadata to files. - Google Project Hosting
january 2012
Project includes a nice OpenMeta command line tool
productivity
mac
tagging
january 2012
Clive Thompson on the Problem With Online Ads | Magazine
january 2012
Why I want to pay for the software & online services that I use.
internet
advertising
january 2012
Earth Impact Database
december 2011
The Earth Impact Database (EID) comprises a list of confirmed impact structures from around the world. To date, there are 182 confirmed impact structures in the database. The database was conceived in its earliest form when a systematic search for impact craters was initiated in 1955 by the Dominion Observatory, Ottawa, under the direction of Dr. Carlyle S. Beals.
astronomy
december 2011
Define for me - Quick Definitions
december 2011
Nice & simple site for looking up definitions. Use it with duckduckgo's !define bang
dictionary
reference
december 2011
Time to ditch astronomical time - space - 20 December 2011 - New Scientist
december 2011
Should atomic time and astronomical time be disconnected?
science
astronomy
december 2011
vimcolorschemetest - Vim Color Scheme Test - Google Project Hosting
november 2011
Overview of a lot of VIM color schemes. Be patient: loading time may be long!
unix
mac
november 2011
Asciiflow - ASCII Flow Diagram Tool
november 2011
Ok, so maybe there _is_ a place for [plain text in brainstorming](http://brettterpstra.com/when-plain-text-is-wrong/) after all.
via:ttscoff
art
november 2011
Astronomie.nl - Herinneringspaneel Radio Kootwijk onthuld
may 2011
Een mooi stukje Nederlandse wetenschapsgeschiedenis
astronomy
history
from twitter
may 2011
See this user's network
advertising
android
art
astronomy
automation
dataanalysis
dictionary
ebooks
facebook
forum
gait
gimmebar
gmail
googlereader
history
ifttt
internet
language
mac
markdown
matlab
photography
php
procrastination
productivity
programming
reading
recipe
reference
rss
science
search
tagging
tekst
text
textmate
twitter
unix
via:popular
via:ttscoff
vu
webmaster
writing