Friday, May 28, 2010
Major Breakthrough: Fourth Photo of Planet Around Other Stars
Major Breakthrough: Third Photos of Planets Around Other Stars
Second Major Breakthrough: Photos of Planets Around Other Stars
Major Breakthrough: First Photos of Planets Around Other Stars
Breakthrough technology
Until now, scientists have inferred the presence of planets mainly by detecting an unseen world's gravitational tug on its host star or waiting for the planet to transit in front of its star and then detecting a dip in the star's light. While these methods have helped to identify more than 300 extrasolar planets to date, astronomers have struggled to actually directly image and see such inferred planets.
The four photographed exoplanets are discussed in two research papers published online today by the journal Science.
"Every extrasolar planet detected so far has been a wobble on a graph. These are the first pictures of an entire system," said Bruce Macintosh, an astrophysicist from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, and part of the team that photographed the multi-planet system in infrared light. "We've been trying to image planets for eight years with no luck and now we have pictures of three planets at once."
Astronomers have claimed previously to have directly imaged a planet, with at least two such objects, though not everybody agreed the objects were planets. Instead, they may be dim, failed stars known as brown dwarfs.
Parrot Talk More than Just Squawking
Elephants Do Forget, but They're Not Dumb
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Giraffes Compensate for Height with Unique Blood Flow
It's a mistake to think of evolution as producing selfish animals concerned only with their own survival. Altruism abounds in cases where a helping ha
Baby Chicks and Brotherhood
Mole-Rats aren't Blind
For Beavers, Days Get Longer in Winter
For Beavers, Days Get Longer in Winter
Birds Use Landmarks to Navigate Long Journeys
Whale Milk Not On Low-Fat Diets
Crocodiles Swallow Stones for Swimming
Crocodiles Swallow Stones for Swimming
Furthest Eyeball Popper
Most Pierced Woman
Longest Hair
tallest man in the world in last century
biggest cockroach in the world
The Australian burrowing cockroach can grow up to three and half inches long, and they weigh about the same as a parakeet. These insects are becoming popular pets both inside and outside of Australia.
Recycling Roaches
They’re not garbage scavengers; they eat dry Eucalyptus leaves. In doing so, they serve an important function in Australian ecology; they recycle nutrients from the dry Eucalyptus leaves back into the earth.
Though wingless and slow moving, they can live for up to ten years. And unlike the cockroaches you’re used to, these creatures bear live young.
biggest lizard in the world
Giant Lizards
You pause from hiking down the mountain to enjoy the sunset. Below lies a serene tropical beach and above a cloud forest. Around you are hills covered with savanna. In the ravines between the hills are monsoon forests. An amazing range of environments, you think to yourself, for an island only twenty miles long and ten miles wide.
Suddenly from the thick grass nearby a buck bolts and runs across your path. You are startled, but soon recover. After all, it is only a deer, and in a few seconds your heart rate drops back to normal. Still, something is not right. You have the feeling you are being watched. A feeling of dread. The hairs on the back of your neck suddenly stand on end. But you don't see anything.
Then you notice a smell. Unpleasant. Very unpleasant. You hear a sound in the nearby grass. You turn to look, and then it happens. The grass flies apart and something comes at you. Reptilian with cold, dead eyes. It's big. Very big. Twice your size from its ugly head to its massive tail and more than your weight. The creature's jaws open to display a set of inch-long serrated teeth dripping with deadly, infectious saliva.
The speed of this monster is incredible. Before you can even move it is upon you, its wide mouth biting down on your thigh...
world,s biggest tree
Hyperion, a Coast Redwood in California, at 115.5 m tall the tallest tree in the world, found in 2006. Hyperion is the name of a coast redwood tree in Northern California that has been confirmed to measure 115.55 m (379.1 feet), which ranks it as the world’s tallest known living tree. Despite its great height, Hyperion is not the largest known coast redwood; that distinction belongs to the Lost Monarch tree.