Anonymous ID: 7e415b Jan. 8, 2024, 7:33 a.m. No.20206269   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6453 >>6774 >>6984 >>7034

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Jan 8, 2024

 

The Phases of Venus

 

Venus goes through phases. Just like our Moon, Venus can appear as a full circular disk, a thin crescent, or anything in between. Venus, frequently the brightest object in the post-sunset or pre-sunrise sky, appears so small, however, that it usually requires binoculars or a small telescope to clearly see its current phase. The featured time-lapse sequence was taken over the course of six months in 2015 from Surgères, Charente-Maritime, France, and shows not only how Venus changes phase, but changes angular size as well. When Venus is on the far side of the Sun from the Earth, it appears angularly smallest and nearest to full phase, while when Venus and Earth are on the same side of the Sun, Venus appears larger, but as a crescent. This month Venus rises before dawn in waxing gibbous phases.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html?

Anonymous ID: 7e415b Jan. 8, 2024, 8:02 a.m. No.20206425   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6427 >>6453 >>6774 >>6984 >>7034

https://www.spoc.spaceforce.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/3633138/lt-gen-stephen-n-whitings-final-salute-to-space-operations-command

 

Lt. Gen. Stephen N. Whiting’s Final Salute to Space Operations Command

Jan. 8, 2024

 

As I bid farewell to the exceptional men and women of SpOC, I am reminded of the proud history that has brought us to this moment. We owe our existence to space pioneers like General Bernard Schriever and General Jay Raymond, whose contributions led to the establishment of the Space Force. General Schriever played a central role to advance the U.S. Air Force's ballistic missile capabilities and extended his vision to the realm of space by developing many of our nation’s first satellite systems, setting the foundation for the U.S. military's space programs. Gen Raymond served as the final Air Force Space Command commander, while simultaneously standing U.S. Space Command back up, and then assumed leadership of our new Service when it was stood up on short notice just over 4 years ago. Their legacy, and that of thousands upon thousands of military space professionals who went before us, has propelled the United States to preserve freedom of action in the space domain and to use space to enable Joint lethality and effectiveness.

 

As a new year unfolds, I’m filled with a sense of gratitude for the extraordinary journey we’ve taken in SpOC together over the past three years, celebrating the exceptional accomplishments and successes we’ve collectively achieved. We've witnessed the unique role of SpOC unfold within the United States Space Force, our nation’s sixth and newest Armed Service. In space, when a star comes to the end of its life, it can explode and create a nebula, a giant cloud of dust and gas in space from which new stars are birthed. Similarly, when Air Force Space Command ceased to exist, from its remnants, a new Service was birthed, and a new Field Command, Space Operations Command, was created that would ultimately give birth to additional commands as new mission areas matured.

 

As the Space Force’s fight-tonight force, SpOC generated, presented, and sustained Space Deltas, adopted a Deputy Commanding General structure, laid the groundwork for Space Training and Readiness Command (STARCOM) by way of STARCOM Delta (Provisional), transferred the DoD’s operational launch enterprise to Space Systems Command, and stood up numerous new Deltas, Squadrons, and Detachments as missions were created, matured, or transferred from other Services. Up until last month, SpOC also served at the nexus between the Space Force and U.S. Space Command, a role now assumed by United States Space Forces-Space (S4S), the Service’s newest Component Field Command.

 

These organizational achievements represent a small fraction of the extensive list of our successes, which included executing our vital missions during a consequential time in world history as Russia invaded Ukraine in the heart of Europe and Israel was attacked by terrorists. At all times, you executed intelligence-led, cyber-secure, space and installation operations that supported the Joint Force, our Nation, and our Allies. When asked what I'll miss most as the SpOC Commander, the answer is clear – our people.

 

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Anonymous ID: 7e415b Jan. 8, 2024, 8:03 a.m. No.20206427   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6453 >>6774 >>6984 >>7034

>>20206425

Without our Guardians and Airmen, we would never be the Space Force our Nation needs. I’m reminded of my trip to Europe just over a year ago, where I witnessed the remarkable members of Space Deltas 3 and 7 in their deployed environment; all committed to the mission and supporting one another while integrating, synchronizing, and executing operations for U.S., Allied, and coalition forces. I’ve also seen our ranks strengthened by more than 600 Guardians who began their careers in Services other than the Air Force, bringing a wealth of skills acquired from their unique and varied backgrounds while improving our combat credibility.

 

We could not conduct space operations without our Airmen, Allies, and partners. Professional Airmen assigned to HQ SpOC and our Space Deltas, as well as Space Base Deltas 1 and 2, are foundational members of the SpOC team, 365 days a year, supporting operations from inside our mission units and on our power projection platforms—the installations from which the Space Force conducts our vital missions. Space is inherently a collaborative effort, and our partnerships extended across Joint, coalition, international, interagency, academia, and commercial organizations, constituting one of our most significant advantages. International partnerships, such as those within numerous squadrons across many of our Deltas in which Allied personnel work actively side by side with our Guardians on our Ops floors, ensure we are able to protect America and our Allies in, from, and to space…now and into the future. Certainly, our most vital asset is our people. Thank you to all the Guardians and Airmen, military and civilian alike, for all you have done to promote SpOC’s no-fail mission. Tammy and I extend our heartfelt thanks to each one of you and your families for your unwavering commitment, sacrifice, and service. Serving with you has been a privilege and honor.

 

SpOC’s future is bright, and I look forward to witnessing the amazing things you will continue to do under the leadership of Lieutenant General Miller and Chief Master Sergeant Lloyd.

 

Via Vincimus and God bless the men and women of Space Operations Command.

 

Semper Supra!

 

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Anonymous ID: 7e415b Jan. 8, 2024, 8:19 a.m. No.20206537   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6774 >>6984 >>7034

2,000-year-old 'celestial calendar' discovered in ancient Chinese tomb

Jan 7, 2024

 

Archaeologists in China have unearthed a mysterious set of rectangular wooden pieces linked to an ancient astronomical calendar. The artifacts were discovered inside an exceptionally well-preserved 2,000-year-old tomb in the southwest of the country.

 

Each of the 23 wooden slips is about an inch (2.5 centimeters) wide and 4 inches (10 cm) long and displays a Chinese character related to the Tiangan Dizhi, or "Ten Heavenly Stems and 12 Earthly Branches" — a traditional Chinese astronomical calendar established during the Shang dynasty, which ruled from about 1600 B.C. to about 1045 B.C.

 

Archaeologists think one of the slips may have represented whatever was the current year and that the other 22 slips could have been used to specify any particular year in the ancient calendar, according to a translation of a story on the China News website, an agency run by the Chinese government.

 

Circular perforations at the edges of each slip suggest they were once tied together.

 

However, it's not yet clear how the set of calendrical wooden slips would have functioned, an expert told Live Science.

 

This is the first time such objects have been found in an ancient tomb, although the practice of writing characters on strips of wood or bamboo was common in China before the invention of paper.

 

The wooden slips and many other artifacts were discovered earlier this year in a tomb in the Wulong district, about 870 miles (1,400 kilometers) southwest of Beijing, archaeologists from the Chongqing municipal government told the Global Times — which is also run by the Chinese government.

 

The tomb contains a written list of all the burial items, which also states that it was built in 193 B.C. That places the tomb during the time of the Western Han dynasty, which ruled much of China from 206 B.C. to A.D. 9; it was followed by the Eastern Han dynasty, which ruled until A.D. 220, and together they are considered a "golden age" when many Chinese traditions were established.

 

Archaeologist Wang Meng said the tomb was the best-preserved wooden-chamber tomb ever found in China's southwest.

 

Project leader Huang Wei told the Global Times that the tomb also contained more than 600 cultural artifacts, including lacquerware bowls, boxes, jars and plates. It also held bamboo utensils and musical pipes, spears and cooking tripods made from copper, wooden figurines, as well as pottery and bronze objects.

 

Astronomer Ed Krupp, the director of the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles and author of "Echoes of the Ancient Skies: The Astronomy of Lost Civilizations" (Dover, 2003), who was not involved in the Wulong discovery, told Live Science that while the Tiangan Dizhi calendar is mainstream — it is used in Chinese astrology, for example — the wooden slips found in the Wulong tomb were unusual.

 

"The wooden slips with calendric notations are significant as the first and only known example of that kind of inscription on that kind of object," he said in an email.

 

But it doesn't appear that the set of wooden slips could have functioned as a calendar; instead, it seems they could have been used to reference any year of the 60-year calendrical cycle, he said.

 

"If so, they are not 'books,' but objects used to highlight a particular year," he said. He noted the similarity to a practice followed at a Taoist temple in the Chinese city of Suzhou, where each year in the cycle is represented by a statue that is specially marked when it becomes current.

 

Krupp said that the finds from the Wulong tomb showed that a person of high status had been buried there. "The artifacts interred with the deceased are numerous and very, very fine," he said. "This is rich, expensive material."

 

https://www.space.com/2000-year-old-celestial-calendar-discovered-in-ancient-chinese-tomb

Anonymous ID: 7e415b Jan. 8, 2024, 9:35 a.m. No.20206926   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6938

Former member of British Ministry of Defence claims seagulls could be 'alien spies'

January 8, 2024 at 2:03 PM

 

Were the swarm of seagulls you encountered at the beach last summer actually intergalactic double agents? It's a laughing matter, but according to a former member of the British Ministry of Defence, seagull double-dealing is a possibility.

 

Nick Pope is a ufologist, just like you'd see on a TV series. On his Twitter account, he points out that the media often see him as a kind of Fox Mulder (the main character in X-Files, for those who don't get the reference).

 

But you won't come across him wearing a tinfoil hat, spouting conspiracy theories: this Brit really did work for the government, and his job was to investigate UFO reports. While his department never made the connection between a UFO sighting and the presence of extraterrestrials on our planet, he did make a rather interesting remark about their potential allies, during an interview with the Mirror.

 

Nick Pope explains:

 

If aliens want to parasitize and control a living organism, or build a drone that would be a perfect copy of an existing organism, it would be better for them to choose something ordinary and present everywhere, like a seagull or a fly.

True, spies taking the form of an object or species with which a planet's dominant species (i.e. us) interacts a lot could arouse suspicion. Designing drones that look banal and harmless would be a good way to obtain images and information about Earth with impunity.

 

Assuming that the existence of extraterrestrials is probable, and that other civilizations are more advanced than we are (well, that's a lot), Nick Pope's statement isn't all that fanciful. He takes as an example the futuristic weapons and vehicles developed by the army, which remained secret for years before being unveiled. The expert concludes:

 

The military and intelligence agencies have things that look like they came out of a science fiction movie or a James Bond film. There are Qs in real life, that's for sure, so imagine what an alien Q could do!

Will you think twice before taking off your swimsuit in front of a laughing seagull?

 

https://www.ohmymag.co.uk/explore/stories/former-member-of-british-ministry-of-defence-claims-seagulls-are-alien-spies_art20680.html