Author Archives: Chompsky

Joe Dolan.

Big Tom.

Cassiopeia A.

Yes, big stars shine bright and their legacies abide long after they die. To wit:

 Massive stars in our Milky Way Galaxy live spectacular lives. Collapsing from vast cosmic clouds, their nuclear furnaces ignite and create heavy elements in their cores. After a few million years, the enriched material is blasted back into interstellar space where star formation can begin anew. The expanding debris cloud known as Cassiopeia A is an example of this final phase of the stellar life cycle. Light from the explosion which created this supernova remnant would have been first seen in planet Earth’s sky about 350 years ago, although it took that light about 11,000 years to reach us. This false-colour image, composed of X-ray and optical image data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope, shows the still hot filaments and knots in the remnant. It spans about 30 light-years at the estimated distance of Cassiopeia A. High-energy X-ray emission from specific elements has been colour coded, silicon in red, sulphur in yellow, calcium in green and iron in purple, to help astronomers explore the recycling of our galaxy’s star stuff. Still expanding, the outer blast wave is seen in blue hues. The bright speck near the centre is a neutron star, the incredibly dense, collapsed remains of the massive stellar core.

(Image : X-ray – NASACXC, SAO; Optical – NASA,STScI)

apod

Behold: the Lamborghini Sián Coupe (or a reasonable facsimile thereof). The name means ‘flash’ or ‘lightning’ in Bolognese dialect – a reference to the elemental power of its 819bhp V12 power plant, 2.8s 0-100km/h acceleration time and 350km/h top speed.

Given such earth-scorching stats, it seems churlish to mention that the Sián is also a ‘hybrid’ vehicle with a  34bhp electric motor for parking and reverse.

Only 63 will be made (a nod to the founding year of Automobili Ferruccio Lamborghini S.p.A.) and every last one of them has been spoken for.

uncrate