Anonymous ID: d4815d Jan. 18, 2023, 2:11 p.m. No.18170233   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0398 >>0578 >>0734 >>0737 >>0749

CSO releases Lines of Effort

Published January 18, 2023

 

Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman released the force's three lines of effort.

 

LOE 1 - Fielding Combat-Ready Forces

LOE 2 - Amplifying the Guardian Spirit

LOE 3 - Partnering to Win

 

https://www.spaceforce.mil/News/Article/3270867/cso-releases-lines-of-effort/

Anonymous ID: d4815d Jan. 18, 2023, 2:41 p.m. No.18170474   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0476 >>0489 >>0578 >>0737 >>0749

NASA Wants You to Help Study Planets Around Other Stars

Jan. 10, 2023

 

The Exoplanet Watch project invites you to use your smartphone or personal telescope to help track worlds outside our solar system.

 

More than 5,000 planets have been confirmed to exist outside our solar system, featuring a wide array of characteristics like clouds made of glass and twin suns. Scientists estimate there could be millions more exoplanets in our home galaxy alone, which means professional astronomers could use your help tracking and studying them.

 

This is where Exoplanet Watch comes in. Participants in the program can use their own telescopes to detect planets outside our solar system, or they can look for exoplanets in data from other telescopes using a computer or smartphone.

 

Exoplanet Watch began in 2018 under NASA’s Universe of Learning, one of the agency’s Science Activation programs that enables anyone to experience how science is done and discover the universe for themselves. Until recently there were limits on how many people could help look through the data collected by other telescopes, but now this program is easily available to anyone. By following the site’s instructions, participants can download data to their device or access it via the cloud, and then assess it using a custom data analysis tool.

 

“With Exoplanet Watch you can learn how to observe exoplanets and do data analysis using software that actual NASA scientists use,” said Rob Zellem, the creator of Exoplanet Watch and an astrophysicist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “We’re excited to show more people how exoplanet science is really done.”

 

Helping Without a Telescope

Participants without telescopes can help astronomers comb through data that’s already been taken. The project has 10 years of exoplanet observations, collected by a small ground-based telescope south of Tucson, Arizona. This year, the project will start collecting additional data from two other telescopes at the Table Mountain facility in Southern California, which JPL manages.

 

These telescopes look at nearby stars and search for what scientists call exoplanet transits: regular dips in a star’s brightness caused by a planet passing between the star and Earth. Essentially, a transit is an observation of a planet’s silhouette against the bright glare of its star.

 

Multiple NASA telescopes look for exoplanet transits as a way to discover new planets, but Exoplanet Watch participants primarily observe transits by planets that have already been discovered to gain more information about their orbits. The time between exoplanet transits reveals how long it takes an exoplanet to orbit its parent star; the more transits that are measured, the more precisely the length of the orbit is known. If the timing of the orbit isn’t measured precisely, scientists who want to study those planets in more detail with large ground-based or space-based telescopes can lose valuable observing time while they wait for the planet to appear. Having volunteers sort through the data will save significant computing and processing time.

 

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Anonymous ID: d4815d Jan. 18, 2023, 2:42 p.m. No.18170476   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0578 >>0737 >>0749

>>18170474

Exoplanet Watch participants will also look for variations in the apparent brightness of stars – changes caused by features such as flares (outbursts of light) and star spots (dark spots on a star’s surface). In transit measurements, these changes make a planet appear smaller or larger than it actually is. This work will help scientists anticipate the variability of a particular star before they study its exoplanets with large, sensitive telescopes like NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope.

 

Helping With Your Own Telescope

Want to take your own data? Although the number of targets you can see increases with the size of the telescope used, there’s no minimum size requirement. For example, Exoplanet Watch can help you detect exoplanet transits for hundreds of nearby stars with just a 6-inch (15-centimeter) telescope.

 

Exoplanet Watch combines observations of the same target by multiple sky watchers in order to get a higher-fidelity measurement. Combining observations is also useful if the planet’s transit lasts longer than the time a star is visible in the sky for a single observer: Multiple participants at different locations around the globe can collectively watch the duration of a long transit.

 

That was the case with a planet called HD 80606 b, which Webb will observe this year. A recent study of this planet led by Kyle Pearson, the Exoplanet Watch deputy science lead at JPL, combined observations from more than 20 Exoplanet Watch participants.

 

The volunteer effort on HD 80606 b will free up almost two hours of time on Webb for other observations. And on missions that aim to observe hundreds or thousands of exoplanets, the number of minutes saved by refining planet transit measurements can add up and free a significant amount of observing time, according to Zellem.

 

One of the program’s policies requires that the first paper to make use of the observations or analysis done by volunteers will list those volunteers as co-authors, which was the case with the study led by Pearson. “I hope this program lowers barriers to science for a lot of people and inspires the next generation of astronomers to join our field,” said Zellem.

 

https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasa-wants-you-to-help-study-planets-around-other-stars

https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/exoplanet-watch/exotic/welcome/

 

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Anonymous ID: d4815d Jan. 18, 2023, 3:17 p.m. No.18170664   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Project Veritas - Quintin Bostic part 2

'SCAM LAB’: ‘Evil Salesman’ Claims His Employer is ‘Running a Non-Profit but it’s for Profit’ … ‘Is that Legal?’ … Teaching Lab Employees Allegedly ‘Hate Kids’ and ‘Have Never Taught Before but Know Sales’

JANUARY 18, 2023

 

  • Dr. Quintin Bostic, Content Manager, The Teaching Lab: “It [Teaching Lab] is like a scam lab.”

  • Dr. Bostic: “My boss [Teaching Lab CEO Sarah Johnson] is a freaking psychopath…She’s running a non-profit but it’s for profit.”

  • Dr. Bostic: “I said, ‘So, hypothetically these people [Gates Foundation] are funding you to build a program. Once the grant is over, you take the program, and you sell it to people – for money.’ I was like, ‘Is that legal?’ She [Sarah Johnson] was like, ‘It has nothing to do with me.’ She said, ‘The grant ended, we fulfilled the grant.’ And I’m like, ‘But we’re selling a product of the grant.’ She’s like, ‘It’s not my problem.’ And I’m like, ‘Wow.’ She’s like, ‘It’s non-profit work. People do it all the time.’ I’m like, ‘Sarah, is that legal?’”

  • Dr. Bostic: “I have people on my team who have never taught before but know sales…literally [they say] like, ‘I hate kids.’ I’m like, ‘Don’t say that in front of a partner, just keep it to yourself.’”

 

[ATLANTA – Jan. 18, 2023] Project Veritas released a second video today exposing Teaching Lab’s questionable activities and objectives.

 

Dr. Quintin Bostic, who works there as a Content Manager, revealed he struggles with his organization’s business practices. He even referred to it as a “scam lab.”

 

“My boss [Teaching Lab CEO Sarah Johnson] is a freaking psychopath…She’s running a non-profit but it’s for profit,” Dr. Bostic said.

 

“I said, ‘So, hypothetically these people [Gates Foundation] are funding you to build a program. Once the grant is over, you take the program, and you sell it to people – for money,’” he said.

 

“I was like, ‘Is that legal?’ She [Teaching Lab CEO Sarah Johnson] was like, ‘It has nothing to do with me.’ She said, ‘The grant ended, we fulfilled the grant.’ And I’m like, ‘But we’re selling a product of the grant,’” he said.

 

“She’s like, ‘It’s not my problem.’ And I’m like, ‘Wow.’ She’s like, ‘It’s non-profit work. People do it all the time.’ I’m like, ‘Sarah, is that legal?’”

 

Dr. Bostic stated that several of his colleagues work at Teaching Lab because they care about making money. Teaching experience is not a requirement to get a sales job there for some on Dr. Bostic’s team.

 

The school children, according to what Dr. Bostic said, are not the priority.

 

“I have people on my team who have never taught before but know sales…literally [they say] like, ‘I hate kids.’ I’m like, ‘Don’t say that in front of a partner, just keep it to yourself.’”

 

https://www.projectveritas.com/news/scam-lab-evil-salesman-claims-his-employer-is-running-a-non-profit-but-its/

https://youtu.be/NDAMgwrP6x4

https://rumble.com/user/ProjectVeritas