Anonymous ID: 291f16 Sept. 24, 2024, 6:54 a.m. No.21649298   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9302

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

September 24, 2024

 

NGC 6727: The Rampaging Baboon Nebula

 

This dusty region is forming stars. Part of a sprawling molecular cloud complex that resembles, to some, a rampaging baboon, the region is a relatively close by 500 light-years away toward the constellation Corona Australis. That's about one third the distance of the more famous stellar nursery known as the Orion Nebula. Mixed with bright nebulosities, the brown dust clouds effectively block light from more distant background stars in the Milky Way and obscure from view embedded stars still in the process of formation. The eyes of the dust creature in the featured image are actually blue reflection nebulas cataloged as NGC 6726, 6727, 6729, and IC 4812, while the red mouth glows with light emitted by hydrogen gas. Just to the upper left of the baboon's head is NGC 6723, a whole globular cluster of stars nearly 30,000 light years in the distance.

 

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

Anonymous ID: 291f16 Sept. 24, 2024, 7:17 a.m. No.21649391   🗄️.is 🔗kun

A Striped Surprise

Sep 23, 2024

 

Last week, team scientists and the internet alike were amazed when Perseverance spotted a black-and-white striped rock unlike any seen on Mars before. Is this a sign of exciting discoveries to come?

 

It has now nearly been a month since the rover began its climb up the steep slopes leading to the crater rim, on the hunt for ancient rocks that could teach us about early Martian history.

While these tricky slopes made for a slow initial ascent, drive progress has improved greatly in recent days, as Perseverance has cruised along a flatter stretch.

From this overlook, the rover can now spot landmarks from earlier in the mission like the iconic ‘Kodiak’ butte on the hazy horizon, thick with dust from nearby dust storms.

 

While driving across unremarkable pebbly terrain, beady-eyed team members spotted a cobble in the distance with hints of an unusual texture in low resolution Navcam images, and gave it the name ‘Freya Castle’.

The team planned a multispectral observation using the Mastcam-Z camera in order to get a closer look before driving away.

When these data were downlinked a couple days later, after Perseverance had already left the area, it became clear just how unusual it was!

‘Freya Castle’ is around 20 cm across, and has a striking pattern with alternating black and white stripes.

The internet immediately lit up with speculation about what this “zebra rock” might be, and we’ve enjoyed reading your theories!

 

The science team thinks that this rock has a texture unlike any seen in Jezero Crater before, and perhaps all of Mars.

Our knowledge of its chemical composition is limited, but early interpretations are that igneous and/or metamorphic processes could have created its stripes.

Since Freya Castle is a loose stone that is clearly different from the underlying bedrock, it has likely arrived here from someplace else, perhaps having rolled downhill from a source higher up.

This possibility has us excited, and we hope that as we continue to drive uphill, Perseverance will encounter an outcrop of this new rock type so that more detailed measurements can be acquired.

 

‘Freya Castle’ is merely the latest in a series of intriguing rocks found recently; ever since arriving in the vicinity of the crater rim, the team has noticed an increased variety of rocks, such as the diverse collection of boulders at ‘Mount Washburn’.

Could these be our first glimpses at ancient rocks uplifted from depth by the Jezero impact, now exposed on the crater rim? Only time will tell…

 

https://science.nasa.gov/blog/a-striped-surprise/

Anonymous ID: 291f16 Sept. 24, 2024, 7:31 a.m. No.21649444   🗄️.is 🔗kun

REAL AMERICA – Dan Ball W/ Kevin Sorbo, How Deep Does The Diddy Scandal Go?, 9/23/24

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rdj_EgJfUAE