Author Archives: Chompsky

An artist’s impression of a ‘hot Jupiter ‘ recently discovered to contain water vapour (much good it’ll do it) by NASA’s Spitzer space telescope. ‘Hot Jupiters’ are giant planets that orbit much closer to their sun than our own Mercury does. And this one – NGTS-10b – is a doozy. To wit:

NGTS-10b, illustrated generically, is the closest and fastest-orbiting giant planet yet discovered, circling its home star in only 18 hours. NGTS-10b is a little larger than Jupiter, but it orbits less than two times the diameter of its parent star away from the star’s surface. When a planet orbits this close, it is expected to spiral inward, pulled down by tidal forces to be eventually ripped apart by the star’s gravity. NGTS-10b, discovered by researchers at the University of Warwick, is named after the Next Generation Transit Survey, which detected the imperiled planet when it passed in front of its star, blocking some of the light. Although the violent demise of NGTS-10b will happen eventually, we don’t yet know when.

(Illustration: ESA, C. Carreau)

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Behold: the Polestar Precept – a concept electric car from Tesla-bothering Volvo subsidiary Polestar.

Low, wide, creased and planed to maximise aerodynamic efficiency, the glass-roofed Precept’s front grille contains sensors for autonomous driving and safety functions, including radar and LIDAR.

Instead of external mirrors there are slim rear facing cameras, the headlights are apparently designed to mimic the shape of Thor’s hammer Mjölnir and the interior is composed of materials woven from recycled plastics.

Due for release later this year, price tba.

uncrate

‘Dublin 1’, Mumbai last night.

(Thanks Colm Cronin)

Meanwhile…

Carloisfandango writes:

Following from your Mumbai on Moore Street post, this (above) is a little thing I was involved with in a previous life.

I’m rather proud of it and all of the amazing people that worked their asses off to get it made.

Perhaps a second showing might be timely.. but Jaysus I don’t miss the meeja business.

In fairness.

Behold: LDN 1622 – Lynd’s Dark Nebula – an intriguing cosmic silhouette visible (but only in long telescopic exposures like this one) against a faint background of glowing hydrogen gas. To wit: 

In contrast, the brighter reflection nebula vdB 62 is more easily seen, just above and right of center. LDN 1622 lies near the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy, close on the sky to Barnard’s Loop, a large cloud surrounding the rich complex of emission nebulae found in the Belt and Sword of Orion. With swept-back outlines, the obscuring dust of LDN 1622 is thought to lie at a similar distance, perhaps 1,500 light-years away. At that distance, this 1 degree wide field of view would span about 30 light-years. Young stars do lie hidden within the dark expanse and have been revealed in Spitzer Space telescope infrared images. 

(Image: Min Xie)

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