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Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, NBC News Digital science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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  • 9
    May
    2013
    3:50pm, EDT

    Time-lapse map chronicles decades of global change as seen from space

    Google and Time magazine have stitched together satellite images collected by NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey, showcasing developments in our planet's landscape via time-lapse. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle


    Satellite imagery can serve as a time machine, revealing dramatic change in just a few seconds — but can you imagine documenting almost three decades' worth of all that change, across most of our planet's land mass? A team of imaging experts, computer scientists and journalists did. Now they've unveiled the result: a global database of zoomable, animated satellite views known as Timelapse.

    "We believe this is the most comprehensive picture of our changing planet ever made available to the public," Rebecca Moore, engineering manager for Google Earth Engine and Earth outreach, said Thursday in Google's blog announcement of the Timelapse project.


    Moore said the project began in 2009, when Google started working with the U.S. Geological Society to make its archive of Landsat imagery available online. The team sifted through more than 2 million satellite images, adding up to 909 terabytes of data, and selected cloudless, high-quality views for every year since 1984.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Carnegie Mellon University's CREATE Lab smoothed the views into seamless animations, and Time magazine built it all into a presentation that supplements the time-lapse animations with commentaries on climate change, urban growth and the other trends that are transforming the planet.

    "I've been chiseling away at this project over the last 11 months, and am in awe of the folks who helped this come together in ways I could never have conceived on my own. Some very bright minds figured out how to make the biggest video frames ever constructed, equivalent to 900,000 HD TVs next to one another," Jonathan Woods, the Time project's executive producer (and a former colleague at msnbc.com), said in an email.

    Google Earth is also hosting the Timelapse zoomable map. "Much like the iconic image of Earth from the Apollo 17 mission — which had a profound effect on many of us — this time-lapse map is not only fascinating to explore, but we also hope it can inform the global community's thinking about how we live on our planet and the policies that will guide us in the future," Moore said.

    When it comes to telling the story of our changing planet, one time-lapse animation is worth a thousand words. But there's more to tell. Find out more about the trends illustrated in the seven animated images you see here:

    Columbia Glacier: Alaska's retreating ice reveals how climate change is changing Earth's surface.

    Dubai coastal expansion: New islands are sprouting along Dubai's coastline as part of a $14 billion land reclamation effort, arguably the largest project of its kind.

    Irrigation in Saudi Arabia: Agriculture amid the deserts of Arabia? It's a growing concern, thanks to huge irrigation projects that take advantage of underground rivers and lakes. The water won't last, though: Hydrologists estimate that it'll be economical to pump water for only about 50 years. 

    Lake Urmia drying up: Iran's great salt lake is not as great as it was, and the reason for that is in dispute. The Iranian government blames climate change and drought, while critics blame the dams that have been built around the lake.

    Brazilian Amazon deforestation: Satellite imagery documents the loss of Amazonian forest land in Brazil due to road-building, logging and agricultural clearing.

    Las Vegas urban growth: What sprawls in Vegas doesn't stay in Vegas. Landsat pictures reveal how urban development has spread out around Nevada's biggest city over the decades.

    Wyoming coal mining: The Black Thunder mine in Wyoming's Powder River Basin ranks as the largest single coal mining complex in the world, according to Arch Coal, its operator. Satellite imagery shows how the mine has spread out over the decades.

    More time-lapse videos:

    • One World Trade Center rises
    • Shuttle Endeavour traverses L.A.
    • Time-lapse gallery from Photoblog

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the NBC News Science Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with NBCNews.com's stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    176 comments

    We are behaving like a virus or a bacteria...if we don't stop the Earth will inoculate itself

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  • 25
    Dec
    2012
    6:23am, EST

    Christmas morning, seen from space

    NOAA / NASA

    This visualization shows a hemisphere's worth of weather on Christmas morning as seen by the GOES East satellite. The weather data is overlaid on a "Blue Planet" image of the Americas.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle


    All calendars must end, whether we're talking about the Maya calendar's nearly 400-year baktun cycle — or our 25-day Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar. This final image for the 2012 calendar comes from the GOES East weather satellite, and shows how the weather is shaping up this Christmas morning in the Americas.

    The GOES satellites, East and West, are in geostationary orbits 22,300 miles above Earth. That allows them to monitor a whole hemisphere's weather 24/7 from a fixed position above the the planet. (GOES stands for Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite.) NASA takes the GOES satellites' readings on cloud cover and overlays them on a full-disk "Blue Planet" view of the oceans and land masses. The result is a hemisphere-wide snapshot of Earth like this one, produced every three hours.

    Although this picture marks the end of our Advent calendar, you can keep the satellite images coming throughout the next year with GeoEye's free desktop calendar. The calendar consists of a series of computer desktop wallpaper images, highlighting GeoEye satellite views from the past 13 years. DigitalGlobe also offers 2013 calendar packages with an Earth-from-space theme, for purchase through the company's online store.

    Seeing our planet from space tends to broaden a person's perspective on Earth's problems and preciousness: That's what Apollo 17's astronauts discovered 40 years ago this month when they snapped the first and most famous "Blue Planet" picture. Here's hoping that the past month's pictures of Earth as seen from outer space have broadened your perspective as well. Have you seen 'em all? If not, graze through the links below.

    Follow @CosmicLog
    • 2012 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar
    • Day 1: A fantastic Chinese fan
    • Day 2: Satellite shows a Grander Canyon
    • Day 3: Typhoon stirs awe — and alarm
    • Day 4: Glittering nighttime view of Riyadh
    • Day 5: Night lights shine on 'Black Marble'
    • Day 6: Holy sites seen at night
    • Day 7: Blue Marble still leaves its mark
    • Day 8: Satellites look into a volcano's hell
    • Day 9: Jack Frost nipping at Alaska's nose
    • Day 10: Cosmonaut looks down on peaks
    • Day 11: Earth looms above moonwalker
    • Day 12: Skytree casts shadow on Tokyo
    • Day 13: Aurora sets stage for meteor show
    • Day 14: Apollo's last look at Earthrise
    • Day 15: A sobering moment from space
    • Day 16: Middle Earth spotted from orbit
    • Day 17: Mount Etna erupts ... in 3-D!
    • Day 18: Gaze into the Great Blue Hole
    • Day 19: Mount Fuji goes fuzzy
    • Day 20: Look down on a ruined Maya city
    • Day 21: Pyramids have their day in the sun
    • Day 22: Outer-space views go festive
    • Day 23: Satellites check in on North Pole
    • Day 24: Past and future Christmas comets
    • 2011 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar
    • 2010 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar
    • The Atlantic: Hubble Advent Calendar
    • Zooniverse Advent Calendar

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other science and space news coverage, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered via email. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about dwarf planets and the search for new worlds.

    6 comments

    What a simply gorgeous view of our stunning planet.Though we have come so far in many areas of science and knowledge, we are no wiser in the ones that matter most.Learning to be more compassionate, peace loving, forgiving, tolerant, decent and personally responsible human beings.Last wise stewards o …

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  • 30
    Nov
    2012
    11:56pm, EST

    NASA

    A vast alluvial fan blossoms across the desolate landscape between the Kunlun and Altun Mountains in western China. The river appears electric blue as it runs out of the mountains at the bottom right corner of the scene and then fans out into scores of intricate, braided channels that disappear into the desert. Dry channels — the river's former paths? — appear as silvery etchings at lower right. This scene was acquired by NASA's Terra satellite on May 2, 2002.

    Holiday calendar: Satellite spies a fantastic fan

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    This picture may remind you of an alien landscape, but it's actually a look at our own planet from hundreds of miles above. NASA's Terra satellite captured this view of a 35-mile-wide (55-kilometer-wide) alluvial fan in China's Xinjiang Province in 2002.


    The geological feature spreads across the desolate landscape between the Kunlun and Altun mountain ranges that form the southern border of the Taklimakan Desert. Terra's color-coded view shows water flowing down from the mountains along the left side of the fan. Vegetation appears in shades of red in the upper left corner. NASA says the lumpy-looking terrain at the top of the image consists of sand dunes at the edge of the Taklimakan, one of the largest sandy deserts on Earth.

    This is one of the first images you'll see in "Earth as Art," a newly published 158-page book featuring satellite pictures of planet Earth. NASA is making the book freely available online in PDF format, but it can also be downloaded as an iPad app or purchased as a coffee-table book from the U.S. Government Printing Office's online store.

    "Earth as Art" serves as a great kickoff for this year's Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar, which highlights views of Earth from space. Every day from now until Dec. 25, we'll pass along a fresh image for you to enjoy. The idea takes its inspiration from a traditional Advent calendar, which lets kids count down to Christmas with a daily treat.

    If one cosmic treat a day just isn't enough, you're in luck: The Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar has just started up over at The Atlantic's In Focus photo gallery, and Zooniverse is offering a cosmic Advent calendar as well. Feel free to fill your eyes, and your imagination, with all these non-fattening holiday goodies over the next 25 days.

    More goodies from space:

    • Month in Space Pictures: November 2012
    • 2011 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar
    • 2010 Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other science and space news coverage, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered via email. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    3 comments

    Excellent Review

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  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    9:12pm, EDT

    Postage stamps celebrate the planet

    Slideshow: Stamps look down on our planet

    Click through imagery of our planet as seen from above in the U.S. Postal Service's "Earthscapes" stamp set.

    Launch slideshow

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle


    The only problem with putting out a set of stamps that celebrate America's landscapes, as seen from above, is that the postage-stamp size hardly does justice to the aerial vistas. That's why we're giving you the "Earthscapes" imagery in slideshow form.

    The 15-stamp set, which features pictures from aerial photographers and Earth-orbiting satellites, is available starting today from the U.S. Postal Service. The "Forever" stamps had their official unveiling at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

    "Once you've seen the world from above, you never look at it quite the same way again," Joseph Corbett, the Postal Service's chief financial officer and executive vice president, was quoted as saying in a NASA news release about the kickoff. "That's why the Postal Service is proud to offer these Earthscapes stamps, which invite us to take a bird's-eye view of the land we all share."


    Two of the images are from the Landsat 7 satellite, and one comes from GeoEye's Ikonos satellite. The other 12 were taken by aerial photographers. One photographer, 81-year-old Jim Wark, took five of the photos, showing Utah's Castle Butte, a railroad roundhouse in Pennsylvania, a barge operation in Houston, a skyscraper in Manhattan and a geothermal spring in Yellowstone.

    Wark spends hours in his plane looking for great shots. "I'm looking for the pictures that the other guy doesn't have," Shutterbug magazine quoted Wark as saying.

    The Landsat images serve as a fitting way to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the first Landsat launch. "NASA has been at the forefront of looking at Earth from the unique vantage point in space," Chris Scolese, director of Goddard Space Flight Center, said at today's ceremony. In case you're not content with just 15 pictures, here are more long-range views of Earth worth clicking through:

    Follow @CosmicLog
    • Slideshow: Earth as art
    • More 'Earth as art' from Landsat
    • See the world from the space station
    • Peace over Earth: 2011 holiday calendar

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    6 comments

    Beautiful pictures, thanks for sharing them Alan.

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  • 19
    Mar
    2012
    10:42pm, EDT

    App lets you take the planet's pulse

    NASA

    The "Earth Now" app puts the whole world in your hands.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    NASA's "Earth Now" app for the iPhone lets you check the planet's vital signs from the palm of your hand. The app features a spinnable, zoomable, smartphone-sized model of Earth that takes on different types of color coding, depending on which climate data set you're wanting to see.

    The data sets, drawn from NASA satellite observations, document surface air temperature; show you levels of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, ozone and water vapor; and indicate variations in the global gravity field and sea levels.

    "Earth Now is a great resource for students, teachers and anyone interested in Earth's changing climate," Michael Greene, manager for public engagement formulation and strategic alliances at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said today in a news release. "Since its debut last month, it's already been downloaded nearly 170,000 times. Plans are in place for development of an Android version and for the addition of new NASA Earth science data sets over time."

    Earth Now is closely integrated with NASA's Global Climate Change portal page. You can download the iPhone / iPad / iPod Touch app via iTunes, or get the full rundown of programs listed on JPL's mobile app portal, including programs that serve up pictures, video and data from Saturn, Mars, the moon and other NASA missions. Take a look at these other app reports as well:

    Follow @CosmicLog
    • NASA launches comet-hunting iPhone game
    • Put cosmic wonders on your screen
    • Exoplanet app keeps track of alien planets
    • Mars Images app delivers rover pictures

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    2 comments

    Boy have we gone a long way from the year 1900 Kinda spooky 75 years or so from now what it will be like "When I was a kid all we had was the internet to play with, and we had to use cars to get around" lol

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  • 2
    Feb
    2012
    6:43pm, EST

    NASA's 'Blue Marble' goes viral ... here's the flip side

    NASA scientists created this companion image to the wildly popular "Blue Marble" picture released last week. This image combines data acquired during six orbits by the Suomi NPP satellite to produce a view of the Eastern Hemisphere. The new "Blue Marble" pictures were taken using an instrument aboard Suomi NPP, known as the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite. The four vertical lines of "haze" seen in this image are caused by the reflection of sunlight off the ocean.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle




    A week after NASA released an updated version of its "Blue Marble" photo, the picture of our planet's Western Hemisphere has become such a hit that the space agency is coming out with a sequel.

    Today researchers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center unveiled the Eastern Hemisphere "Blue Marble 2012," assembled from imagery that was collected by the Suomi NPP climate-monitoring satellite during six orbits on Jan. 23. Both views of the Marble take advantage of the spacecraft's Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite, or VIIRS.

    You're looking at the Eastern Hemisphere as if you were seeing it in space from a distance of 7,918 miles (12,742 kilometers). NASA says the four vertical lines of "haze" visible in this image are due to the reflection of sunlight off the ocean during Suomi NPP's orbital passes.

    NASA spokeswoman Rebecca Roth said the folks at Goddard were tickled to find out that last week's "Blue Marble" picture was so quick to go viral on the space center's Flickr site. "We were curious about its popularity on Flickr compared to other images, and came across a number of articles on the 'Situation Room' photo ... and were surprised at our findings," she wrote in an email.

    Last year, TechCrunch reported that the "Situation Room" photo, which shows Obama administration officials gathered at the White House during the operation to hunt down Osama bin Laden, ranked as one of the most widely seen photos on Flickr — with 1.6 million views recorded during the first 38 hours it was on the site.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Roth checked with Flickr's Zack Sheppard, and today she quoted him as saying that "the Western Hemisphere Blue Marble 2012 image has rocketed up to over 3.1 million views, making it one of the all-time most viewed images on the site after only one week."

    It's always dicey to make claims about "first," "most" or "best," but Roth told me that "Blue Marble 2012" is getting far more views than the classic 2002 edition of the Blue Marble, which is perhaps best known nowadays as one of the default photos on iPhones. Right now, the Goddard hit parade is:

    • Blue Marble 2012 West at 3.2 million views.
    • "Bye Bye Comet" video at 681,000.
    • 2002 Blue Marble East at 551,000.
    • 2002 Blue Marble West at 391,000.
    • Earth from Mars (You Are Here) at 311,164.

    It shouldn't be long before 2012's Blue Marble East starts rising on the charts.

    How the Marble was made
    Suomi NPP, which was launched last October, isn't exactly designed to snap beauty shots of Earth. "NPP" stands for National Polar-orbiting Partnership, and reflects the fact that the $1.5 billion mission is a partnership between NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Department of Defense. The minivan-sized weather satellite was christened Suomi just last week as a tribute to University of Wisconsin's Verner Suomi (1915-1995), who is considered the "father of weather satellite systems."

    The next-generation spacecraft flies in a 512-mile-high polar orbit to conduct climate studies at the same time it's collecting weather data. So if the satellite is only 512 miles above the surface, how can it produce a picture that looks as if it's coming from deep space? NASA scientist Norman Kuring artfully combined six sets of data from Suomi's orbital passes to produce the "Blue Marble"views.

    NASA / NOAA

    This graphic shows how scientists combine imagery collected by the Suomi NPP satellite during multiple orbital passes to produce a Blue Marble view of Earth.

    Here's how NASA explains the perspective today in a "behind the scenes" feature:

    "Using a basketball you can get a good idea of how far away the Suomi NPP satellite is from Earth. Take a basketball that has a diameter of 10 inches (about 25 centimeters) and say that's 'Earth.' (For the record, Earth has a diameter of about 7,926 miles, or about 12,756 kilometers).

    "So to get the same view of Earth as the VIIRS instrument aboard the Suomi NPP satellite, hold the basketball five-eighth of an inch (about one-and-a-half centimeters) away from your face.

    "The actual swath width of the Earth's surface covered by each pass of VIIRS as the satellite orbits the Earth is about 1,865 miles (about 3,001 kilometers). On the basketball that's about two and one-third inches (about six centimeters)."

    More views of Earth from space:

    • From the moon to the earth
    • Japanese moon probe updates Earthrise
    • Comet probe takes snapshots of Earth

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    79 comments

    Seeing this impressive photograph reminds me of the words Carl Sagan wrote in Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space, when he contemplated our home as seen from the eye of the Voyager 1 spacecraft at the outer edge of our solar system:

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  • 25
    Dec
    2011
    2:02am, EST

    NASA

    This full-disk picture of Earth, provided early today by NASA, is based on archival data from imaging instruments aboard the Aqua and Terra satellites plus fresh imagery from NOAA's GOES-East weather satellite.

    Holiday calendar: Peace over Earth

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Woes may weigh heavy on the world at ground level, but from 22,000 miles up, even the strongest storm is a mere swirl of white on our beautiful blue planet.

    This is a view of Earth on Christmas morning, blending archival imagery of Earth's surface from the MODIS instruments on NASA's Aqua and Terra satellites with hot-off-the-spacecraft weather data from NOAA's GOES-East satellite. You can see clouds streaming over the southeastern U.S. That's the storm front that brought a white Christmas to the Southwest; now it's bringing a soggy holiday to a region from Texas to Georgia. (For updates on the weather in your area and around the globe, check out msnbc.com's Weather section as well as the Weather Channel's website.)

    NASA assembles the GOES-on-MODIS imagery automatically on a 24/7 basis and posts regular updates to its GOES Project Science website. You can even watch an animation that tracks weather systems as they sweep around the globe.

    The world looks so peaceful from orbital heights. In fact, there's a name for the positive change in perspective that comes over astronauts when they see Earth from far above: the Overview Effect. Here's how the effect is described by the Overview Institute:

    "It refers to the experience of seeing firsthand the reality of the Earth in space, which is immediately understood to be a tiny, fragile ball of life, hanging in the void, shielded and nourished by a paper-thin atmosphere. From space, the astronauts tell us, national boundaries vanish, the conflicts that divide us become less important and the need to create a planetary society with the united will to protect this 'pale blue dot' becomes both obvious and imperative. Even more so, many of them tell us that from the Overview perspective, all of this seems imminently achievable, if only more people could have the experience!"

    We wish you all the best for the holiday season and the new year. Here's hoping that over the past 25 days, the Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar has given you fresh perspectives on the world, a renewed sense of wonder ... and maybe even a little taste of the Overview Effect.

    The complete 2011 Space Advent Calendar and more:

    • Dec. 1: An ornament in outer space
    • Dec. 2: The masses in Mecca
    • Dec. 3: Santa's shrinking domain
    • Dec. 4: The monster of Madagascar
    • Dec. 5: Antarctica stripped naked
    • Dec. 6: Streaking for home
    • Dec. 7: Pearl Harbor from above, 1941-2011
    • Dec. 8: The rise and fall of the Dead Sea
    • Dec. 9: How an eclipse dims Earth
    • Dec. 10: Psychedelic storm
    • Dec. 11: Beauty of the Inland Sea
    • Dec. 12: Drone-spotting stirs up debate
    • Dec. 13: Light up your St. Lucy's Day
    • Dec. 14: Satellite spots Chinese aircraft carrier
    • Dec. 15: Hooray for Hollywood
    • Dec. 16: Olympics under construction
    • Dec. 17: Mystery in the Gobi Desert
    • Dec. 18: Glow over Miami
    • Dec. 19: North Korea's dark ages
    • Dec. 20: Happy Hanukkah from space
    • Dec. 21: Season's tiltings
    • Dec. 22: Circle of power
    • Dec. 23: North Pole revealed
    • Dec. 24: Sleigh ride in orbit
    • Dec. 25: Peace over Earth
    • Hubble calendar, from The Atlantic's In Focus
    • 2011 Zooniverse Advent calendar

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    47 comments

    A Quote From Carl Sagan Pale Blue Dot Look again at that dot. That's here, that's home, that's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions,  …

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  • 30
    Aug
    2011
    9:09pm, EDT

    NASA / JPL-Caltech

    Earth is on the left and the moon is on the right in this Aug. 26 photo from the Juno probe.

    Jupiter probe looks back at Earth

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Earth and the moon look like mere specks amid the blackness of outer space in a picture sent back by NASA's Juno probe during its trip to Jupiter. Maybe the view from 6 million miles (9.66 million kilometers) isn't as impressive as the close-ups we're accustomed to, but it does call to mind what the late astronomer Carl Sagan said about our pale blue dot almost two decades ago: "That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives."

    Juno's principal investigator, Scott Bolton of the Southwest Research Institute, echoed Sagan's comments in today's image advisory: "This is a remarkable sight people get to see all too rarely. This view of our planet shows how Earth looks from the outside, illustrating a special perspective of our role and place in the universe. We see a humbling yet beautiful view of ourselves."

    The $1.1 billion Juno mission was launched on Aug. 5 and won't enter Jovian orbit until 2016. But this won't be the last we'll see of Juno. The spacecraft is due for a slingshot close encounter with Earth in 2013, coming as close as 300 miles (500 kilometers). Until then, Godspeed, Juno....

    More views of Earth from deep space:

    • Deep Impact probe sends alien's-eye view of Earth
    • Japan's moon probe updates Earthrise picture
    • Rosetta comet probe takes Earth snapshot
    • Rover spots Earth amid Martian sunrise

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding me to your Google+ circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    26 comments

    We got to get off of this rock before the religious fanatics kill us all.

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  • 21
    Apr
    2011
    6:57pm, EDT

    See ancient Earth from space

    Earth during the Cambrian Period was relatively warm and without polar caps. Most of the continents resembled deserts and were clustered in the southern hemisphere. Life was small and simple mostly in the oceans. There were no land plants but fungi, algae, and lichens probably greened many land areas.

    Watch on YouTube
    By John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

    Over the past 750 million years, our blue marble has gone through remarkable changes — continents have shifted, ice ages have come and gone, sea levels have risen and fallen, and one-time deserts have turned green, allowing creatures to crawl out of the oceans and live off the land. 

    These changes are now being made visible by the Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo. The first set of the Visible Paleo Earth visualizations are being released today, on Earth Day, and more will be available in coming weeks. 

    "I think people looking at the whole period will realize how fragile our planet is, how it changes," Abel Mendez, who is leading the project, told me in advance of the public release.


    Visualization contruction
    Mendez constructed the visualizations by combing through color images of Earth from NASA's Next Generation Blue Marble project and blending them with the global paleoclimate reconstructions developed by Ronald Blakey from Northern Arizona University and Christopher Scotese from the University of Texas at Arlington.

    University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo

    The Americas 65 million years ago just before the extinction of dinosaurs after an impact in the Yucatan Peninsula (center). Our planet was warmer, had many more forests and almost no ice caps during the end of the Cretaceous Period.

    As he built the visualizations, Mendez said he was struck by the fact that the distribution of land mass among the continents has changed dramatically over the past 750 million years, but the total land area has stayed consistent – between about 10 and 30 percent of total surface area. "I was expecting to see more," he said.

    The color of the land area changes dramatically, especially beginning 500 million years ago, during an era known as the Cambrian Period. Life was small-sized back then, and mostly confined to the oceans. As a result, the continents were mostly deserts.

    From that point forward, terrestrial life began to flourish. In the years leading up to the extinction of the dinosaurs, he noted, the planet was even greener than it is today. "That is something nice to see in the pictures," he told me. "Today we have too many deserts. The dinosaurs had more food."

    Habitable exoplanets
    In addition to providing Earthlings with a voyeuristic view of the changes through time on their own planet, Mendez's project is part of a larger goal to understand the habitability of Earthlike planets around other stars.

    Today, very few exoplanets can be directly imaged, but that will change in coming years. Mendez hopes to learn how the light reflected by faraway terrestrial planets changes can vary, depending on how much ice or vegetation covers their landscapes.

    "If we can see that light, we will be able to have an idea of the continental distribution and how much vegetation" the planets have, Mendez said.

    For today, the focus is on our planet. These visualizations provide a view of Earth's ever-changing continents and climate from the past to the present. What's in store for the future? "There are people who have some ideas of how the planet will be in the future with climate and continental change," Mendez said. "Eventually, I will make images for those also."

    More about Earth's past, present and future:

    • Interactive: Earth's timeline
    • Ancient rocks contain climate forecast
    • Rock links Antarctica and North America
    • Rodents could rule the future animal kingdom

    John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by hitting the "like" button on the Cosmic Log Facebook page or following msnbc.com's science editor, Alan Boyle, on Twitter (@b0yle).

    89 comments

    OMG. The ice caps all MELTED and there wasn't anyone around to SAVE THE PLANET!!!!!!! So then, we must be living on a different planet since the other one couldn't be saved by Al Gore and his Nobel Whatever Prize. Oh, the humanity. "I think people looking at the whole period will realize how fragile …

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  • 21
    Apr
    2011
    12:52pm, EDT

    Satellites shed light on Earth Day

    NASA

    NASA's "Eyes of the Earth" Web-based viewer shows you the orbital locations of the space agency's Earth-observing satellites in real time.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    The planet celebrates its 42nd annual Earth Day on Friday, and a lot of the coolest gifts to mark the occasion are coming from places that are out of this world: the dozens of satellites that are keeping watch from orbit.

    Here are just a few of the goodies that NASA and other satellite operators are providing to mark the occasion:


    Chat with a satellite scientist: Today at 1 p.m. ET, Annmarie Elderling is the guest star for an online video chat that's being aired on UStream. Elderling is a research scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who specializes in the study of clouds, aerosols and trace gases in Earth's atmosphere. She's the deputy project scientist for Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2, a satellite mission now in development that will measure atmospheric carbon dioxide. (OCO-1 was lost in a launch mishap two years ago.)

    Chat with an Arctic explorer: On Earth Day, NASA presents an online chat with Lora Koenig, deputy project scientist for Operation IceBridge. This is an airborne science mission that is monitoring Greenland's ice sheet with a variety of instruments. She'll be logging on from Kangerslussuag, Greenland, at 3 p.m. ET on Friday. Tom Wagner, NASA's cryosphere program manager, will participate in the chat as well from NASA Headquarters in Washington.

    Enter a video contest: NASA is asking video mavens to put together short YouTube videos that celebrate Earth Day and the exploration of our home planet. The deadline for submissions is May 27, and the entry that's judged the best by NASA scientists and communicators will be featured on the space agency's home page. Check out the details on the "Home Frontier" contest Web page.

    Learn about Earth's endangered ice: DigitalGlobe, which operates a constellation of Earth-observing satellites, is featuring its collaboration with the Extreme Ice Survey to study what's happening to the world's glaciers. Researchers suggest that glaciers serve as something of a "canary in the coal mine" for climate trends, and the bird isn't looking all that great these days. DigitalGlobe's satellite imagery documents glacial shrinkage as seen from space, while the Extreme Ice Survey has deployed dozens of time-lapse cameras to monitor glaciers on the ground. 

    Track Earth-observing satellites ... and more: NASA's "Eyes of the Earth" Web page offers a smorgasbord of interactive graphics, including a 3-D satellite viewer that lets you track the space agency's Earth-observing satellites in real time (or speed up the timeline as much as you want). Check out the "My Big Fat Planet" blog, click through dramatic then-and-now imagery from Earth's environmental frontiers, and focus in on NASA's top five Earth images, based on Facebook and Twitter popularity.

    Explore the Earth Observatory: NASA's Earth Observatory is the go-to Web site for daily Earth imagery from satellites as well as from the International Space Station. "World of Change" is a feature that documents how natural and human-caused phenomena have transformed our planet over the years. 

    More out-of-this-world perspectives:

    • Slideshow: Earth as art
    • Holiday calendar: Our planet from space
    • Archived gallery: Earth as seen by space travelers
    • How satellites help save the world

    Check back later for additional pointers to out-of-this-world Earth Day resources. 

    Join the Cosmic Log community by clicking the "like" button on our Facebook page or by following msnbc.com science editor Alan Boyle as b0yle on Twitter. To learn more about my book on Pluto and the search for planets, check out the website for "The Case for Pluto."  

    5 comments

    You want us to read someone who uses half math and fuzzy science like Goddard? I don't think so. Or maybe that's half science and fuzzy math. One of those is right.

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  • 14
    Jan
    2011
    8:29pm, EST

    Scientific shifts go beyond the zodiac

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    It seems that the world was shocked to learn this week that astrology no longer reflects astronomical realities. But such shifts are merely part of the routine in a changing universe. They don't always come to our attention, but they can make more of a difference in your daily life than your horoscope.

    Parke Kunkle, an astronomer who teaches at Minneapolis Community and Technical College, set off an Internet-wide viral buzz when the Star-Tribune published his observation that the constellations don't match the traditional astrological signs. Back in the days of Babylonian soothsayers, the sun might have been in the constellation Capricorn at this time of year. But due to the changing tilt of Earth's axis, it's actually in Sagittarius right now.

    Today, Kunkle told MSNBC that his phone has been ringing off the hook — and he doesn't know why this has turned into such a big deal. "What we've been doing is just a standard astronomy lesson that we talk about in every astronomy class," he said.


    Over the course of thousands of years, Earth's axis wobbles like a top, and as a result the apparent position of the sun against the constellations varies. The boundaries of the constellations have become more sharply defined as well, which means the sun doesn't spend equal amounts of time in each of the zodiacal "signs." In fact, the sun passes through a 13th constellation — Ophiuchus the serpent bearer — which throws off the whole traditional 12-house system that astrologers swear by.

    Of course, most people don't give any credence to astrology, with or without Ophiuchus. A 2005 Gallup Poll found that only about a quarter of Americans believe that the position of stars or planets can affect their lives. And even if you are a believer, the planetary shift doesn't magically transform you from a Virgo to a Leo. "This doesn't change your chart at all," Shelly Ackerman, an astrologer and spokeswoman for the American Federation of Astrologers, told The Associated Press.

    The same advice holds for other astrological systems. For example, it's still the Chinese Year of the Tiger (well, at least until February). The fact is that the practice of astrology is separate from the modern science of astronomy, even though ancient cultures spent so much effort on astronomy mainly so that astrologers could do their job better.

    Earth's cosmic shifts have had other effects as well. Just for luck, here are seven examples:

    Changing pole star: Another effect of Earth's wobbling axis is that different stars have served as the guide star for our planet's geographical north pole throughout history. During the heyday of the Egyptian pharaohs, for example, other stars took on the role of the pole star, an "undying" star that never set. This is thought to be the reason why the Great Pyramid of Khufu was built with a passageway that pointed to the star Thuban in the constellation Draco, which was the star closest to the north pole when Khufu died, around 2566 B.C. Later on, the pole stars were  Kochab and Pherkad in the constellation Ursa Minor. Today it's Polaris, but the bright star Vega had its turn around 12,000 B.C. and will be the pole star once again in the year 13,727 or so.

    Changing magnetic poles: Last week's big geophysical story had to do with the gradual shift of Earth's magnetic north pole away from Canada and toward Russia. The poles move because of the changing flow of molten iron in Earth's core, which drives the planet's huge magnetic dynamo. This doesn't affect Earth's spin or geographical north, but it does cause the structure of the magnetic field to shift, which affects compasses. Although a lot of navigation nowadays is done using GPS systems, the Federal Aviation Administration wants to make sure that aviators can still find their way to a safe landing using magnetic compasses — and that's why it requires airports to revise their runway designations periodically to reflect the magnetic shift.

    Shifting continents: Earth's continents are on the move as well, and over the course of millions of years, that has affected the course of evolution. "The continents are drifting at about the same rate that your fingernails are growing," Phil Plait, the astronomer who presides over the Bad Astronomy blog, told me. If you go back 180 million years or so, nearly all of Earth's land mass was united in one large continent called Pangea, which meant land-based organisms could spread far and wide. Since then, the continents have drifted apart, separating populations and leading to the rise of new species. The breakup of Pangea helps explain why kangaroos thrived in Australia but not America.

    Uneven gravity: Just as Earth's magnetic field has its variations, so does Earth's gravitational field. Readings from the European Space Agency's GOCE satellite have plotted the subtle differences in our planet's mass distribution, on land and in the oceans. "You'd think gravity is the same everywhere, until you start delving really deep into it," said Alice Enevoldsen, planetarium supervisor at the Pacific Science Center in Seattle (and the blogger behind Alice's Astro Info). Variations in Earth's mass could help explain how ocean circulation works and lead to better climate prediction models.

    Inconstant sun: Speaking of climate, the variations in solar irradiance play a significant role in the warming and cooling trends experienced on our planet as well as on others. Some suggest that the sun is a bigger factor than human industrial activity when it comes to global climate change. Most climate scientists say greenhouse-gas emissions have been playing a more significant role lately, but variations in the amount of solar radiation hitting the planet are definitely a factor as well. Last year, one study found that the amount of solar energy reaching Earth increased even though the sun was at the low point in its 11-year activity cycle. And just today, scientists reported that the solar energy levels were actually lower than previously thought.

    Lengthening day: If it seems as if each day is longer than the last, you're right. But that's just because Earth is slowing down ever so slightly every day. Gravitational tugs from other celestial bodies (principally the moon and the sun) are causing the "great slowdown," as my colleague David Ropeik explained back in 2001. It's thought that when the moon formed, billions of years ago, a full day was six hours long, and that the day lasted less than 23 hours when dinosaurs ruled the earth. Nowadays, leap seconds are periodically added to keep atomic clocks in sync — most recently at the end of 2008.

    Galactic tides: Our solar system's path through the Milky Way galaxy is subject to shifts as well. Scientists have noted that Earth's biodiversity seems to dip every 60 million years or so, at just about the time when the solar system bobs up through the average plane of the Milky Way's disk. Last month, researchers suggested that the rise through the galactic plane exposed the solar system to a surge of cosmic rays, dealing a damaging blow to life on Earth. Some scientists have also wondered whether the solar system's galactic oscillations might periodically send more comets into the solar system (killing off, let's say, the dinosaurs). This definitely sounds like a bad thing, and depending on who's doing the talking, we're either "very close" to the next risky period, or 10 million years away.

    That puts this whole question over whether you're a Virgo or a Leo in perspective, doesn't it?

    Update for 2:30 p.m. ET Jan. 15: I initially wrote that astrology is "totally divorced" from modern astronomy, but that's an overstatement. Astrologers still depend on accurate determinations of celestial bodies' positions in the sky, as seen from Earth. They incorporate astronomical advances as well, such as the discovery of additional dwarf planets. But the way they interpret that information is different from how astronomers would interpret it.

    Take the constellations, for example: Some commenters have noted that when an astrologer says the sun is "in the house of Aries," that doesn't mean the sun is actually in the astronomical constellation of Aries. In astrology, the sun enters Aries at the time of the March equinox, as explained here by EarthSky. The sky is then divided into 12 houses (named after constellations) that take up equal amounts of angular distance around the celestial equator. Thus, the astrological signs do not correspond precisely with the astronomical constellations as they're defined today, and they never did.

    In ancient times, the "first point of Aries" occurred when the sun was actually in the astronomical constellation of Aries. No more. Now the sun is in the constellation of Pisces for the March equinox, and by the time Earth wobbles its way to the year 2600 it will be in Aquarius for the start of northern spring. For astronomers, that will be the true dawning of the age of Aquarius, although some astrologers (and songwriters) argue that the Aquarian age has already begun.

    Astrologers borrow quite a bit from astronomy, but generally speaking, the only professional interest that astronomers take in astrology is historical — since, as noted above, the roots of astronomy go back to ancient beliefs about the connections between the cosmos and our destinies. It's a natural human yearning. I'll bet that at least one or two young astronomers have checked their "love signs" at some point, even if they haven't written a research paper about it.

    More on scientific paradigm shifts:

    • Technolog: How Twitter snowballed the zodiac 
    • Vote: Has your opinion of astrology changed?
    • Scientists give the periodic table a makeover
    • Earth's timeline: How continents clashed
    • Scientists question fundamental laws

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" our Facebook page, or by following msnbc.com's science editor, Alan Boyle, on Twitter (@boyle).  

    64 comments

    Put more simply, Astronomy deals with facts, and Astrology is crap.

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  • 20
    Dec
    2010
    8:12pm, EST

    NASA

    NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft made this image of Earth -- the dot at center right -- when it was 4 billion miles away. The image was requested by Carl Sagan, who died on Dec. 20, 1996.

    Holiday calendar: Our pale blue dot

    By John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

    On Feb. 14, 1990, NASA controllers instructed the Voyager 1 spacecraft to turn around and take one last look at its home planet as it pushed on to the fringe of our solar system. Look closely at the resulting image. That tiny pinpoint of light in the center-right is us – you, me, and everyone else that calls Earth home.

    The request came from the late, great astronomer Carl Sagan, one of the world's greatest advocates for advancing the general public's appreciation and understanding of science. He passed away 14 years ago today after a two-year battle with bone-marrow disease.


    The image, called "A Pale Blue Dot," was made when Voyager 1 was about 4 billion miles away. It inspired Sagan's 1994 book "Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space." An excerpt puts the image's significance into context:

    "It has been said that astronomy is a humbling and character-building experience. There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world. It underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the only home we've ever known, the pale blue dot."

    We leave you to reflect on Sagan's thoughts as we head into the final days of our Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar. For more views of Earth from space, check out these past offerings. We've also included links to other online Advent calendars that have been serving up space images daily since the beginning of the month:

    • The Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar so far
    • Door 1 for Dec. 1: Shuttle in spotlight
    • Door 2 for Dec. 2: 'Alien' lake seen from space
    • Door 3 for Dec. 3: Egypt's river of light
    • Door 4 for Dec. 4: Tallest building reaches for the sky
    • Door 5 for Dec. 5: Russia's dazzling delta
    • Door 6 for Dec. 6: Space skipper vs. the world
    • Door 7 for Dec. 7: Pearl Harbor from the heavens
    • Door 8 for Dec. 8: Listening for E.T.
    • Door 9 for Dec. 9: Blast from the past
    • Door 10 for Dec. 10: Volcano caught in the act
    • Door 11 for Dec. 11: Chronicling climate change
    • Door 12 for Dec. 12: Happy St. Lucy's Day
    • Door 13 for Dec. 13: Viva Las Vegas
    • Door 14 for Dec. 14: Don't wake the volcanoes
    • Door 15 for Dec. 15: Stairways to heaven
    • Door 16 for Dec. 16: White Christmas in the Midwest
    • Door 17 for Dec. 17: Tracks in the sky
    • Door 18 for Dec. 18: Amelia Earhart's final resting place?
    • Door 19 for Dec. 19: Lunar eclipse as seen from space
    • The Big Picture at Boston.com: Hubble Advent calendar
    • Planetary Society: Solar system Advent calendar
    • Zooniverse Advent calendar

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by hitting the "like" button on the Cosmic Log Facebook page or following msnbc.com's science editor, Alan Boyle, on Twitter (@b0yle).

    33 comments

    For all of our accomplishments, our prizes, our developments, we have produced many a wonder. For all of our conceit, our arrogance, our ego, we have produced much destruct. We see this would as both big and small, it is the largest object we personally know, and yet its is but a speck compared to t …

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Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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The Case for Pluto
Alan Boyle's first book tells the story of Pluto's ups and downs as well as the discoveries of other dwarf planets in our own solar system and even more alien worlds beyond. Buy "The Case for Pluto" ...

John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News. From climate change and mass extinctions to human evolution and deep space, his writing explores life on Earth and its place in the universe. He was a staff writer at the Environmental News Network for several years and has contributed to National Geographic News for more than a decade.

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