Night vision specialists: cats, bats, and owls

Face of a fierce-looking owl.

Owls’ large eyes help them see at night. Image via Flickr user Ignacio Ferre Pérez.

Have you ever stumbled around a dark house, straining to see what’s in front of you? Or maybe you’ve camped out in a dark forest, where nighttime navigation without a flashlight was impossible? Our human visual systems are not as well adapted to low light conditions as those of some other species including cats, bats, and owls.

Cats can see very well in the dark. Their night vision is enhanced by a special reflective structure in their eyes called the tapetum lucidum, located behind the retina. If light entering a cat’s eye misses the photoreceptors, it’ll fail to send sensory input to the brain. However, the tapetum lucidum acts like a mirror and sends the light back to the field of photoreceptors for a second chance at creating a visual image, according to Dr. Cynthia Powell, a veterinary ophthalmologist at Colorado State University.

This enables cats to see better than people at night, as people lack a tapetum lucidum in their eyes. The reflective tapetum lucidum is what causes a cat’s eyes to glow at night under the right conditions. Other animals that possess such a vision enhancing structure include deer and raccoons.

EarthSky’s 2020 lunar calendars are here! Get yours today. They make great gifts. Going fast.

Dark location with sitting striped cat with bright pale green glowing eyes.

A cat with glowing eyes. Image via Jon Feinstein/Flickr.

The phrase “blind as a bat” simply isn’t true. Bats can see quite well during the day, and their vision may be better than that of humans under low light conditions, according to Christopher Baird of West Texas A&M University.

Bats are skilled at preying on insects at dusk and dawn by using their ears and echolocation behaviors. Specifically, they can quickly hone in on the location of an insect by emitting a sound and hearing where it is being reflected back to them.

This ability also enables them to navigate in the dark. Perhaps it is their erratic motions in flight while hunting that led to the phrase “blind as a bat.” Just remember … bats do have good visual systems that are well adapted to low light conditions.

Front view of small furry animal with outspread black membranous wings.

A bat in flight. Image via Bernard Dupont/Flickr.

Owls are superb nighttime predators. That’s in part because they have very large eyes. The large lens close to the back of an owl’s eye acts to focus large amounts of light onto the retina.

Thus owls can see very well at night while they hunt for prey such as mice and insects.

Owls also are able to turn their heads almost completely around – up to 270 degrees – to track prey, and this trait makes them good visual hunters.

White owl in midair with outspread wings and legs reaching down.

Image via wiseGEEK.

Bottom line: Humans have excellent vision, but we do not see very well in the dark. Several animals can see better than people at night including cats, bats, and owls. Happy Halloween!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2N0asaz
Face of a fierce-looking owl.

Owls’ large eyes help them see at night. Image via Flickr user Ignacio Ferre Pérez.

Have you ever stumbled around a dark house, straining to see what’s in front of you? Or maybe you’ve camped out in a dark forest, where nighttime navigation without a flashlight was impossible? Our human visual systems are not as well adapted to low light conditions as those of some other species including cats, bats, and owls.

Cats can see very well in the dark. Their night vision is enhanced by a special reflective structure in their eyes called the tapetum lucidum, located behind the retina. If light entering a cat’s eye misses the photoreceptors, it’ll fail to send sensory input to the brain. However, the tapetum lucidum acts like a mirror and sends the light back to the field of photoreceptors for a second chance at creating a visual image, according to Dr. Cynthia Powell, a veterinary ophthalmologist at Colorado State University.

This enables cats to see better than people at night, as people lack a tapetum lucidum in their eyes. The reflective tapetum lucidum is what causes a cat’s eyes to glow at night under the right conditions. Other animals that possess such a vision enhancing structure include deer and raccoons.

EarthSky’s 2020 lunar calendars are here! Get yours today. They make great gifts. Going fast.

Dark location with sitting striped cat with bright pale green glowing eyes.

A cat with glowing eyes. Image via Jon Feinstein/Flickr.

The phrase “blind as a bat” simply isn’t true. Bats can see quite well during the day, and their vision may be better than that of humans under low light conditions, according to Christopher Baird of West Texas A&M University.

Bats are skilled at preying on insects at dusk and dawn by using their ears and echolocation behaviors. Specifically, they can quickly hone in on the location of an insect by emitting a sound and hearing where it is being reflected back to them.

This ability also enables them to navigate in the dark. Perhaps it is their erratic motions in flight while hunting that led to the phrase “blind as a bat.” Just remember … bats do have good visual systems that are well adapted to low light conditions.

Front view of small furry animal with outspread black membranous wings.

A bat in flight. Image via Bernard Dupont/Flickr.

Owls are superb nighttime predators. That’s in part because they have very large eyes. The large lens close to the back of an owl’s eye acts to focus large amounts of light onto the retina.

Thus owls can see very well at night while they hunt for prey such as mice and insects.

Owls also are able to turn their heads almost completely around – up to 270 degrees – to track prey, and this trait makes them good visual hunters.

White owl in midair with outspread wings and legs reaching down.

Image via wiseGEEK.

Bottom line: Humans have excellent vision, but we do not see very well in the dark. Several animals can see better than people at night including cats, bats, and owls. Happy Halloween!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2N0asaz

Algol is the Demon Star

The Gorgon Medusa had snakes in place of hair. Eek! Via Wikimedia and Caravaggio

The Gorgon Medusa had snakes in place of hair. Eek! Via Wikimedia and Caravaggio.

2020 EarthSky lunar calendars are here! Get yours now.

What’s the scariest star in the sky? If you were one of the early stargazers, you might have chosen Algol in the constellation Perseus. Early astronomers nicknamed Algol the Demon Star. Bwahaha!

Of course, looking at it, Algol isn’t any scarier that any other star. But it’s associated in skylore with a mythical scary monster – the Gorgon, Medusa – who had snakes instead of hair. It’s said that she was so horrifying in appearance that the sight of her would turn an onlooker to stone.

The star Algol takes its name from an Arabic word meaning “the Demon’s Head.” This star is said to depict the terrifying snaky head of the Medusa monster.

Antique star chart etching with Greek hero with sword in one hand and Medusa's head in the other.

Perseus and Medusa.

In the mythology of the skies, Perseus – a great hero often depicted mounted on Pegasus the Flying Horse – used Medusa’s head to his own advantage – to turn Cetus the Sea-monster into stone. Perhaps the ancients associated this star’s variable brightness with the evil, winking eye of the Medusa.

Winking? Yes. Algol is a known variable star, which waxes and wanes in brightness.

There are many variable stars known throughout the heavens, but Algol might well be the most famous variable star of them all. This star brightens and dims with clockwork regularity, completing one cycle in two days, 20 hours, and 49 minutes. Plus its entire cycle is visible to the eye alone.

The early stargazers surely knew about its changing brightness and must have smiled as they named variable Algol – a strangely behaving star in a sky full of steadily shining stars – for a mythological demon.

How can you see Algol? It’s easy to find. Our sky chart shows the northeastern sky for autumn evenings, especially around Halloween.

Star chart with constellations Andromeda and Perseus and six labeled stars.

How to find Algol.

The conspicuous W or M-shaped constellation Cassiopeia enables you to star-hop to Perseus. Draw an imaginary line from the star Gamma Cassiopeia through the star Ruchbah to locate Perseus and then Algol. At mid-northern latitudes, this star can be seen for at least part of the night all year round. But it’s best seen in the evening sky from autumn to spring. It’s visible in the northeast sky in autumn, shines high overhead in winter, and swings to the northwest sky by spring.

Larger and smaller star rotate around each other with graph of brightness.

Animation of eclipsing binary star via Wikimedia Commons

This variable star is easy to observe with just the unaided eye. At its brightest, Algol shines about three times more brightly than at its faintest. At maximum brilliance, Algol matches the brightness of the nearby second-magnitude star Almach. At minimum, Algol’s light output fades to that of the star Epsilon Persei.

Almach: Andromeda’s colorful double star

Modern-day astronomy has unlocked the secret of Algol’s mood swings. It’s an eclipsing binary star. This kind of binary is composed of two stars, with each star revolving around the other. From Earth, we see the orbital plane of this binary star almost exactly edge-on. Therefore, when the dimmer of the two stars swings in front of the brighter star, we see Algol at minimum brightness.

Bottom line: See Algol, a variable star named for a demon, in the Halloween night sky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2CaeqHz
The Gorgon Medusa had snakes in place of hair. Eek! Via Wikimedia and Caravaggio

The Gorgon Medusa had snakes in place of hair. Eek! Via Wikimedia and Caravaggio.

2020 EarthSky lunar calendars are here! Get yours now.

What’s the scariest star in the sky? If you were one of the early stargazers, you might have chosen Algol in the constellation Perseus. Early astronomers nicknamed Algol the Demon Star. Bwahaha!

Of course, looking at it, Algol isn’t any scarier that any other star. But it’s associated in skylore with a mythical scary monster – the Gorgon, Medusa – who had snakes instead of hair. It’s said that she was so horrifying in appearance that the sight of her would turn an onlooker to stone.

The star Algol takes its name from an Arabic word meaning “the Demon’s Head.” This star is said to depict the terrifying snaky head of the Medusa monster.

Antique star chart etching with Greek hero with sword in one hand and Medusa's head in the other.

Perseus and Medusa.

In the mythology of the skies, Perseus – a great hero often depicted mounted on Pegasus the Flying Horse – used Medusa’s head to his own advantage – to turn Cetus the Sea-monster into stone. Perhaps the ancients associated this star’s variable brightness with the evil, winking eye of the Medusa.

Winking? Yes. Algol is a known variable star, which waxes and wanes in brightness.

There are many variable stars known throughout the heavens, but Algol might well be the most famous variable star of them all. This star brightens and dims with clockwork regularity, completing one cycle in two days, 20 hours, and 49 minutes. Plus its entire cycle is visible to the eye alone.

The early stargazers surely knew about its changing brightness and must have smiled as they named variable Algol – a strangely behaving star in a sky full of steadily shining stars – for a mythological demon.

How can you see Algol? It’s easy to find. Our sky chart shows the northeastern sky for autumn evenings, especially around Halloween.

Star chart with constellations Andromeda and Perseus and six labeled stars.

How to find Algol.

The conspicuous W or M-shaped constellation Cassiopeia enables you to star-hop to Perseus. Draw an imaginary line from the star Gamma Cassiopeia through the star Ruchbah to locate Perseus and then Algol. At mid-northern latitudes, this star can be seen for at least part of the night all year round. But it’s best seen in the evening sky from autumn to spring. It’s visible in the northeast sky in autumn, shines high overhead in winter, and swings to the northwest sky by spring.

Larger and smaller star rotate around each other with graph of brightness.

Animation of eclipsing binary star via Wikimedia Commons

This variable star is easy to observe with just the unaided eye. At its brightest, Algol shines about three times more brightly than at its faintest. At maximum brilliance, Algol matches the brightness of the nearby second-magnitude star Almach. At minimum, Algol’s light output fades to that of the star Epsilon Persei.

Almach: Andromeda’s colorful double star

Modern-day astronomy has unlocked the secret of Algol’s mood swings. It’s an eclipsing binary star. This kind of binary is composed of two stars, with each star revolving around the other. From Earth, we see the orbital plane of this binary star almost exactly edge-on. Therefore, when the dimmer of the two stars swings in front of the brighter star, we see Algol at minimum brightness.

Bottom line: See Algol, a variable star named for a demon, in the Halloween night sky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2CaeqHz

Science Surgery: ‘How do cancer cells remain dormant for many years?’

Lung cancer cell image.

Our Science Surgery series answers your cancer science questions.

Chris asked: ‘How do cancer cells remain dormant for many years?’

It’s an unfortunate fact that, despite apparently successful treatment, cancer can sometimes come back many years after diagnosis. And this could be because some cancer cells enter into a hibernation-like state, called ‘dormancy’.

“What it means for a cell to be dormant is essentially that it’s not dividing,” says Dr Simon Buczacki, a bowel cancer expert who specialises in dormancy.

Buczacki says it can be strange to think of cancer cells behaving in this way, because they’re mostly known for their ability to rapidly grow and divide. But these sleeping cancer cells could help to explain why some cancers come back after treatment.

“Breast cancer is a very good example of where dormancy could be at play,” says Buczacki. Although many people are successfully treated by their initial surgery and chemotherapy, for an unfortunate few cancer can come back many years later. And Buczacki says this is likely due to dormant cells.

“If cells had departed the tumour and were continuing to divide somewhere in the body, even if they were dividing really slowly, they would grow into a tumour in the years following treatment,” he explains.

“But when someone’s cancer recurs five or 10 years after surgery, the most feasible explanation is that these cells have lain dormant, sitting for years without dividing before being coaxed out of their slumber.”

Read more: the scientists working to predict when breast cancer returns to help personalise treatment plans.

Dormant cancer cells can avoid being killed by the vast majority of cancer treatments, which target dividing cells. Scientists like Buczacki want to learn more about these elusive cells, including how to kill them.

How do cancer cells become dormant?

Buczacki says there are several explanations for why a cell might stop dividing, the first being it simply runs out of divisions.Thanks to years of evolution, normal cells have inbuilt checks that count and control the number of times they can multiply. It’s a safety mechanism that’s often disrupted in cancer cells but, if present, it can trigger a cell to become dormant.

Cancer cells can also be pushed into becoming more specialised cells – like breast or bowel cells – and become stuck in that state (a process known as terminal differentiation), stopping them from dividing.

Finally, cancer cells can also stop dividing for what Buczacki describes as “unknown mechanisms”. “It may be that the cell isn’t receiving specific cues from surrounding cells or the environment, which could affect its ability to divide,” he adds.

But however a cell becomes dormant, it doesn’t always stay that way. “Cancer cells can sometimes sit for many years somewhere in the body, not dividing and then, for sometimes unknown reasons, they can start to divide again, regenerating the tumour in distant sites.”

Buczacki says it’s these dormant cells that scientists are aiming to understand. But they’re proving to be a fairly elusive bunch.

Studying sleeping cells

To understand cell behaviour, scientists rely on tools that measure some sort of activity in the cells they’re studying. For cancer cells, that’s mainly been studying how they grow and divide.

The big question for researchers studying dormancy has been “how do you study cells if they’re not dividing?”

This conundrum has made it difficult for researchers to get to know dormant cancer cells, leaving some key questions unanswered.

“We still don’t know what drives cancer cells to become dormant and what makes this behaviour reversible,” says Buczacki.

Scientists also don’t have a clear idea of where dormant cells could be hiding in the body.

“Because the cells will have left the original tumour and they won’t be dividing, they’re very difficult to find,” he adds.

Scientists have two main ideas for where dormant cells may be hiding:

  1. They could be sitting in parts of the body where the immune system can’t target them, like in the bone marrow. Then, when they’re triggered to start dividing again, they could move to a different organ and begin to develop into a tumour.
  2. Or they could be hiding out in organ where they will eventually become a tumour, sitting in a dormant state until something happens to make them start dividing again.

“Studies have shown both events happen – but which is happening in which tumours and what’s driving these different behaviours, we don’t know.”

Buczacki said it’s key for scientists to develop better tools to study dormancy, which could mean a combination of studying cells in a dish, animal models and altering the behaviour of cells by manipulating their DNA. All of which will be vital to help scientists reach their ultimate goal – killing dormant cells.

Tackling dormancy

When it comes to targeting dormant cells, scientists are investigating a few different options. The first is to kill them while they sleep, by targeting something unique on the surface of dormant cancer cells.

The other option is to wake the cancer cells up. Buczacki says scientists have been trying to force dormant cells to divide again, which would mean they’d respond to traditional drugs like chemotherapy.

But although it’s a compelling idea, there’s a long way to go – and much more to learn – before this approach could be trialled in people with cancer. As Buczacki explains: “The danger of waking them up is that if your drug doesn’t work or you don’t eradicate all of them when you’ve woken them up, the patient is going to develop recurrent disease more rapidly.”

In other words, scientists have got to be sure they can kill all the cells once they start dividing for this strategy to work.

However you do it, dealing with dormancy is “absolutely fundamental” for Buczacki. He’s particularly excited about the potential impact for patients whose early stage cancer seems to be cured by treatment, but whose disease eventually comes back.

“If we can understand the routes to dormancy and how we can target dormancy, then the possibility of making significant improvements to those patient outcomes is huge.”

And it’s not just Buczacki whose focusing on this. We recently brought researchers together to share ideas about how best to tackle dormancy and map out a path for future research. Dormancy is a fundamental challenge for researchers in their quest for new ways to improve survival for people with cancer – but it’s a challenge they’re more than eager to accept.

Katie 

If you’d like to ask us something, post a comment below or email sciencesurgery@cancer.org.uk with your question and first name. If you would like to speak to one of our nurses please call them on freephone 0808 800 4040.



from Cancer Research UK – Science blog https://ift.tt/2qZEG4Y
Lung cancer cell image.

Our Science Surgery series answers your cancer science questions.

Chris asked: ‘How do cancer cells remain dormant for many years?’

It’s an unfortunate fact that, despite apparently successful treatment, cancer can sometimes come back many years after diagnosis. And this could be because some cancer cells enter into a hibernation-like state, called ‘dormancy’.

“What it means for a cell to be dormant is essentially that it’s not dividing,” says Dr Simon Buczacki, a bowel cancer expert who specialises in dormancy.

Buczacki says it can be strange to think of cancer cells behaving in this way, because they’re mostly known for their ability to rapidly grow and divide. But these sleeping cancer cells could help to explain why some cancers come back after treatment.

“Breast cancer is a very good example of where dormancy could be at play,” says Buczacki. Although many people are successfully treated by their initial surgery and chemotherapy, for an unfortunate few cancer can come back many years later. And Buczacki says this is likely due to dormant cells.

“If cells had departed the tumour and were continuing to divide somewhere in the body, even if they were dividing really slowly, they would grow into a tumour in the years following treatment,” he explains.

“But when someone’s cancer recurs five or 10 years after surgery, the most feasible explanation is that these cells have lain dormant, sitting for years without dividing before being coaxed out of their slumber.”

Read more: the scientists working to predict when breast cancer returns to help personalise treatment plans.

Dormant cancer cells can avoid being killed by the vast majority of cancer treatments, which target dividing cells. Scientists like Buczacki want to learn more about these elusive cells, including how to kill them.

How do cancer cells become dormant?

Buczacki says there are several explanations for why a cell might stop dividing, the first being it simply runs out of divisions.Thanks to years of evolution, normal cells have inbuilt checks that count and control the number of times they can multiply. It’s a safety mechanism that’s often disrupted in cancer cells but, if present, it can trigger a cell to become dormant.

Cancer cells can also be pushed into becoming more specialised cells – like breast or bowel cells – and become stuck in that state (a process known as terminal differentiation), stopping them from dividing.

Finally, cancer cells can also stop dividing for what Buczacki describes as “unknown mechanisms”. “It may be that the cell isn’t receiving specific cues from surrounding cells or the environment, which could affect its ability to divide,” he adds.

But however a cell becomes dormant, it doesn’t always stay that way. “Cancer cells can sometimes sit for many years somewhere in the body, not dividing and then, for sometimes unknown reasons, they can start to divide again, regenerating the tumour in distant sites.”

Buczacki says it’s these dormant cells that scientists are aiming to understand. But they’re proving to be a fairly elusive bunch.

Studying sleeping cells

To understand cell behaviour, scientists rely on tools that measure some sort of activity in the cells they’re studying. For cancer cells, that’s mainly been studying how they grow and divide.

The big question for researchers studying dormancy has been “how do you study cells if they’re not dividing?”

This conundrum has made it difficult for researchers to get to know dormant cancer cells, leaving some key questions unanswered.

“We still don’t know what drives cancer cells to become dormant and what makes this behaviour reversible,” says Buczacki.

Scientists also don’t have a clear idea of where dormant cells could be hiding in the body.

“Because the cells will have left the original tumour and they won’t be dividing, they’re very difficult to find,” he adds.

Scientists have two main ideas for where dormant cells may be hiding:

  1. They could be sitting in parts of the body where the immune system can’t target them, like in the bone marrow. Then, when they’re triggered to start dividing again, they could move to a different organ and begin to develop into a tumour.
  2. Or they could be hiding out in organ where they will eventually become a tumour, sitting in a dormant state until something happens to make them start dividing again.

“Studies have shown both events happen – but which is happening in which tumours and what’s driving these different behaviours, we don’t know.”

Buczacki said it’s key for scientists to develop better tools to study dormancy, which could mean a combination of studying cells in a dish, animal models and altering the behaviour of cells by manipulating their DNA. All of which will be vital to help scientists reach their ultimate goal – killing dormant cells.

Tackling dormancy

When it comes to targeting dormant cells, scientists are investigating a few different options. The first is to kill them while they sleep, by targeting something unique on the surface of dormant cancer cells.

The other option is to wake the cancer cells up. Buczacki says scientists have been trying to force dormant cells to divide again, which would mean they’d respond to traditional drugs like chemotherapy.

But although it’s a compelling idea, there’s a long way to go – and much more to learn – before this approach could be trialled in people with cancer. As Buczacki explains: “The danger of waking them up is that if your drug doesn’t work or you don’t eradicate all of them when you’ve woken them up, the patient is going to develop recurrent disease more rapidly.”

In other words, scientists have got to be sure they can kill all the cells once they start dividing for this strategy to work.

However you do it, dealing with dormancy is “absolutely fundamental” for Buczacki. He’s particularly excited about the potential impact for patients whose early stage cancer seems to be cured by treatment, but whose disease eventually comes back.

“If we can understand the routes to dormancy and how we can target dormancy, then the possibility of making significant improvements to those patient outcomes is huge.”

And it’s not just Buczacki whose focusing on this. We recently brought researchers together to share ideas about how best to tackle dormancy and map out a path for future research. Dormancy is a fundamental challenge for researchers in their quest for new ways to improve survival for people with cancer – but it’s a challenge they’re more than eager to accept.

Katie 

If you’d like to ask us something, post a comment below or email sciencesurgery@cancer.org.uk with your question and first name. If you would like to speak to one of our nurses please call them on freephone 0808 800 4040.



from Cancer Research UK – Science blog https://ift.tt/2qZEG4Y

How to find a wormhole … if they exist

Wide disk of yellow-orange circles with a black ball in the center and light streak coming out.

Artist’s concept of a supermassive black hole. A new theoretical study outlines a method that could be used to search for wormholes (a speculative phenomenon) in the background of supermassive black holes. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech.

A new study outlines a method for detecting a wormhole – a speculative phenomenon that forms a passage between two separate regions of spacetime – in the background of supermassive black holes.

The idea of wormholes has long captured the imagination of sci-fi fans. You can picture a wormhole as a tunnel with two ends, each at separate points in spacetime. In theory, such pathways could connect one area of our universe to a different time and/or place within our universe, or to a different universe altogether.

But whether wormholes actually exist is up for debate. If they’re out there, the new paper, published on October 10, 2019, in the peer-reviewed journal Physical Review D, suggests a technique for detecting them.

The new paper suggest that scientists could hunt for a wormhole by looking for perturbations in the path of a star called S2, that orbits Sagittarius A* (pronounced A-star). Sagittarius A* is an object that’s thought to be a supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy. While there’s no evidence of a wormhole there, it’s a good place to look for one because wormholes are expected to require extreme gravitational conditions, such as those present at supermassive black holes.

Dark blue surface with stars bent into a U shape with a tube connecting the sides.

Here’s a visualization of a wormhole. For a simplified notion of a wormhole, space can be visualized as a two-dimensional (2D) surface. In this case, a wormhole would appear as a hole in that surface, lead into a 3D tube (the inside surface of a cylinder), then re-emerge at another location on the 2D surface with a hole similar to the entrance. Read more about this image here.

EarthSky’s 2020 lunar calendars are here! Get yours today. They make great gifts. Going fast.

The physicists suggest that if a wormhole does exist at Sagittarius A*, nearby stars – such as S2 – would be influenced by the gravity of stars at the other end of the passage. As a result, it would be possible to detect the presence of a wormhole by searching for small deviations in the stars’ expected orbits.

University at Buffalo physicist Dejan Stojkovic is a study co-author. He said in a statement:

If you have two stars, one on each side of the wormhole, the star on our side should feel the gravitational influence of the star that’s on the other side. The gravitational flux will go through the wormhole. So if you map the expected orbit of a star around Sagittarius A*, you should see deviations from that orbit if there is a wormhole there with a star on the other side.

Stojkovic said that if wormholes are ever discovered, they’re not going to be the kind that science fiction often envisions.

Even if a wormhole is traversable, people and spaceships most likely aren’t going to be passing through. Realistically, you would need a source of negative energy to keep the wormhole open, and we don’t know how to do that. To create a huge wormhole that’s stable, you need some magic.

Nevertheless, wormholes – traversable or not – are an interesting theoretical phenomenon to study. While there is no experimental evidence that these passageways exist, they are possible according to theory. As Stojkovic explains, wormholes are “a legitimate solution to Einstein’s equations.”

While current surveillance techniques are not yet precise enough to reveal the presence of a wormhole, Stojkovic says that collecting data on S2 over a longer period of time or developing techniques to track its movement more precisely would make such a determination possible. These advancements aren’t too far off, he says, and could happen within one or two decades.

Stojkovic cautions, however, that while the new method could be used to detect a wormhole if one is there, it will not strictly prove that a wormhole is present. He said:

When we reach the precision needed in our observations, we may be able to say that a wormhole is the most likely explanation if we detect perturbations in the orbit of S2. But we cannot say that, ‘Yes, this is definitely a wormhole.’ There could be some other explanation, something else on our side perturbing the motion of this star.

Bottom line: A new study suggests a way of finding a wormhole … if they exist.

Source: Observing a wormhole

Via University at Buffalo



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2Nsxztv
Wide disk of yellow-orange circles with a black ball in the center and light streak coming out.

Artist’s concept of a supermassive black hole. A new theoretical study outlines a method that could be used to search for wormholes (a speculative phenomenon) in the background of supermassive black holes. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech.

A new study outlines a method for detecting a wormhole – a speculative phenomenon that forms a passage between two separate regions of spacetime – in the background of supermassive black holes.

The idea of wormholes has long captured the imagination of sci-fi fans. You can picture a wormhole as a tunnel with two ends, each at separate points in spacetime. In theory, such pathways could connect one area of our universe to a different time and/or place within our universe, or to a different universe altogether.

But whether wormholes actually exist is up for debate. If they’re out there, the new paper, published on October 10, 2019, in the peer-reviewed journal Physical Review D, suggests a technique for detecting them.

The new paper suggest that scientists could hunt for a wormhole by looking for perturbations in the path of a star called S2, that orbits Sagittarius A* (pronounced A-star). Sagittarius A* is an object that’s thought to be a supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy. While there’s no evidence of a wormhole there, it’s a good place to look for one because wormholes are expected to require extreme gravitational conditions, such as those present at supermassive black holes.

Dark blue surface with stars bent into a U shape with a tube connecting the sides.

Here’s a visualization of a wormhole. For a simplified notion of a wormhole, space can be visualized as a two-dimensional (2D) surface. In this case, a wormhole would appear as a hole in that surface, lead into a 3D tube (the inside surface of a cylinder), then re-emerge at another location on the 2D surface with a hole similar to the entrance. Read more about this image here.

EarthSky’s 2020 lunar calendars are here! Get yours today. They make great gifts. Going fast.

The physicists suggest that if a wormhole does exist at Sagittarius A*, nearby stars – such as S2 – would be influenced by the gravity of stars at the other end of the passage. As a result, it would be possible to detect the presence of a wormhole by searching for small deviations in the stars’ expected orbits.

University at Buffalo physicist Dejan Stojkovic is a study co-author. He said in a statement:

If you have two stars, one on each side of the wormhole, the star on our side should feel the gravitational influence of the star that’s on the other side. The gravitational flux will go through the wormhole. So if you map the expected orbit of a star around Sagittarius A*, you should see deviations from that orbit if there is a wormhole there with a star on the other side.

Stojkovic said that if wormholes are ever discovered, they’re not going to be the kind that science fiction often envisions.

Even if a wormhole is traversable, people and spaceships most likely aren’t going to be passing through. Realistically, you would need a source of negative energy to keep the wormhole open, and we don’t know how to do that. To create a huge wormhole that’s stable, you need some magic.

Nevertheless, wormholes – traversable or not – are an interesting theoretical phenomenon to study. While there is no experimental evidence that these passageways exist, they are possible according to theory. As Stojkovic explains, wormholes are “a legitimate solution to Einstein’s equations.”

While current surveillance techniques are not yet precise enough to reveal the presence of a wormhole, Stojkovic says that collecting data on S2 over a longer period of time or developing techniques to track its movement more precisely would make such a determination possible. These advancements aren’t too far off, he says, and could happen within one or two decades.

Stojkovic cautions, however, that while the new method could be used to detect a wormhole if one is there, it will not strictly prove that a wormhole is present. He said:

When we reach the precision needed in our observations, we may be able to say that a wormhole is the most likely explanation if we detect perturbations in the orbit of S2. But we cannot say that, ‘Yes, this is definitely a wormhole.’ There could be some other explanation, something else on our side perturbing the motion of this star.

Bottom line: A new study suggests a way of finding a wormhole … if they exist.

Source: Observing a wormhole

Via University at Buffalo



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Halloween is a cross-quarter day

Two pumpkins with lights glowing through faces cut in them.

Photo via Kurt Magoon/Flickr.

2020 EarthSky lunar calendars are here! Get yours now.

Halloween – short for All Hallows’ Eve – is an astronomical holiday. Sure, it’s the modern-day descendant from Samhain, a sacred festival of the ancient Celts and Druids in the British Isles. But it’s also a cross-quarter day, which is probably why Samhain occurred when it did. Early people were keen observers of the sky. A cross-quarter day is a day more or less midway between an equinox (when the sun sets due west) and a solstice (when the sun sets at its most northern or southern point on the horizon). Halloween – October 31 – is approximately the midway point between the autumn equinox and winter solstice, for us in the Northern Hemisphere.

In other words, in traditional astronomy, there are eight major seasonal subdivisions of every year. They include the March and September equinoxes, the June and December solstices, and the intervening four cross-quarter days.

In modern times, the four cross-quarter days are often called Groundhog Day (February 2), May Day (May 1), Lammas (August 1) and Halloween (October 31).

Diagram of Earth's orbit with equinoxes, solstices, and cross-quarter days marked.

Equinoxes, solstices and cross-quarter days are all hallmarks of Earth’s orbit around the sun. Halloween is the 4th cross-quarter day of the year. Illustration via NASA.

For us in the Northern Hemisphere, Halloween is the darkest of the cross-quarter days, coming at a time of year when the days are growing shorter. Early people once said that the spirits of the dead wander from sunset until midnight around this cross-quarter day. After midnight – on November 1, now called All Saints’ Day – the ghosts are said to go back to rest.

The October 31 date for Halloween has been fixed by tradition. The true cross-quarter day falls on November 7, representing a discrepancy of about a week. According to the ancient Celts, a cross-quarter day marks the beginning – not the middle – of a season.

Seven bright stars in glowing blue clouds against a starry background.

The Pleiades star cluster, also known as the Seven Sisters. This tiny, misty dipper is easy to pick out in the night sky. Photo via Dave Dehetre/Flickr.

The Pleiades connection. It’s thought that the early forbear of Halloween – Samhain – happened on the night that the Pleiades star cluster culminated at midnight.

In other words, the Pleiades climbed to its highest point in the sky at midnight on or near the same date as this cross-quarter day. In our day, Halloween is fixed on October 31, though the midnight culmination of the Pleiades cluster now occurs on November 21.

Presuming the supposed connection between Samhain and the midnight culmination of the Pleiades, the two events took place on or near the same date in the 11th century (1001-1100) and 12th century (1101-1200). This was several centuries before the introduction of the Gregorian calendar.

At that time, when the Julian calendar was in use, the cross-quarter day and the midnight culmination of the Pleiades fell – amazingly enough – on or near October 31. But, then, the Julian calendar was about one week out of step with the seasons. Had the Gregorian calendar been in use back then, the date of the cross-quarter day celebration would have been November 7.

Calendar converter at Harvard University

But Halloween is now fixed on October 31. Meanwhile, the true cross-quarter day now falls on or near November 7 and the midnight culmination of the Pleiades cluster on or near November 21.

Bottom line: The present date for Halloween – October 31 – marks the approximate midway point between the autumn equinox and the winter solstice. Halloween is one of the year’s four cross-quarter days.

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Two pumpkins with lights glowing through faces cut in them.

Photo via Kurt Magoon/Flickr.

2020 EarthSky lunar calendars are here! Get yours now.

Halloween – short for All Hallows’ Eve – is an astronomical holiday. Sure, it’s the modern-day descendant from Samhain, a sacred festival of the ancient Celts and Druids in the British Isles. But it’s also a cross-quarter day, which is probably why Samhain occurred when it did. Early people were keen observers of the sky. A cross-quarter day is a day more or less midway between an equinox (when the sun sets due west) and a solstice (when the sun sets at its most northern or southern point on the horizon). Halloween – October 31 – is approximately the midway point between the autumn equinox and winter solstice, for us in the Northern Hemisphere.

In other words, in traditional astronomy, there are eight major seasonal subdivisions of every year. They include the March and September equinoxes, the June and December solstices, and the intervening four cross-quarter days.

In modern times, the four cross-quarter days are often called Groundhog Day (February 2), May Day (May 1), Lammas (August 1) and Halloween (October 31).

Diagram of Earth's orbit with equinoxes, solstices, and cross-quarter days marked.

Equinoxes, solstices and cross-quarter days are all hallmarks of Earth’s orbit around the sun. Halloween is the 4th cross-quarter day of the year. Illustration via NASA.

For us in the Northern Hemisphere, Halloween is the darkest of the cross-quarter days, coming at a time of year when the days are growing shorter. Early people once said that the spirits of the dead wander from sunset until midnight around this cross-quarter day. After midnight – on November 1, now called All Saints’ Day – the ghosts are said to go back to rest.

The October 31 date for Halloween has been fixed by tradition. The true cross-quarter day falls on November 7, representing a discrepancy of about a week. According to the ancient Celts, a cross-quarter day marks the beginning – not the middle – of a season.

Seven bright stars in glowing blue clouds against a starry background.

The Pleiades star cluster, also known as the Seven Sisters. This tiny, misty dipper is easy to pick out in the night sky. Photo via Dave Dehetre/Flickr.

The Pleiades connection. It’s thought that the early forbear of Halloween – Samhain – happened on the night that the Pleiades star cluster culminated at midnight.

In other words, the Pleiades climbed to its highest point in the sky at midnight on or near the same date as this cross-quarter day. In our day, Halloween is fixed on October 31, though the midnight culmination of the Pleiades cluster now occurs on November 21.

Presuming the supposed connection between Samhain and the midnight culmination of the Pleiades, the two events took place on or near the same date in the 11th century (1001-1100) and 12th century (1101-1200). This was several centuries before the introduction of the Gregorian calendar.

At that time, when the Julian calendar was in use, the cross-quarter day and the midnight culmination of the Pleiades fell – amazingly enough – on or near October 31. But, then, the Julian calendar was about one week out of step with the seasons. Had the Gregorian calendar been in use back then, the date of the cross-quarter day celebration would have been November 7.

Calendar converter at Harvard University

But Halloween is now fixed on October 31. Meanwhile, the true cross-quarter day now falls on or near November 7 and the midnight culmination of the Pleiades cluster on or near November 21.

Bottom line: The present date for Halloween – October 31 – marks the approximate midway point between the autumn equinox and the winter solstice. Halloween is one of the year’s four cross-quarter days.

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Hubble brings you a spooky cosmic face

Glowing orbs in space that look like a spooky mask.

Image via NASA/ESA.

To celebrate Halloween, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope released this new image, that captures two galaxies of equal size in a collision that appears to resemble a ghostly face. This observation was made on June 19, 2019.

According to a statement from Hubble:

Although galaxy collisions are common — especially in the early universe — most are not head-on impacts like the collision that likely created this Arp-Madore system 704 million light-years from Earth. This violent encounter gives the system an arresting ring structure, but only for a short amount of time. The crash has pulled and stretched the galaxies’ discs of gas, dust, and stars outward, forming the ring of intense star formation that shapes the “nose” and “face” features of the system.

Ring galaxies are rare, and only a few hundred of them reside in our larger cosmic neighborhood. The galaxies have to collide at just the right orientation so that they interact to create the ring, and before long they will have merged completely, hiding their messy past.

The side-by-side juxtaposition of the two central bulges of stars from the galaxies that we see here is also unusual. Since the bulges that form the “eyes” appear to be the same size, we can be sure that the two galaxies involved in the crash were of equal size. This is different from the more common collisions in which small galaxies are gobbled up by their larger neighbors.

Bottom line: Spooky cosmic face image for Halloween 2019 from the Hubble Space Telescope.

Via Hubble Space Telescope



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Glowing orbs in space that look like a spooky mask.

Image via NASA/ESA.

To celebrate Halloween, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope released this new image, that captures two galaxies of equal size in a collision that appears to resemble a ghostly face. This observation was made on June 19, 2019.

According to a statement from Hubble:

Although galaxy collisions are common — especially in the early universe — most are not head-on impacts like the collision that likely created this Arp-Madore system 704 million light-years from Earth. This violent encounter gives the system an arresting ring structure, but only for a short amount of time. The crash has pulled and stretched the galaxies’ discs of gas, dust, and stars outward, forming the ring of intense star formation that shapes the “nose” and “face” features of the system.

Ring galaxies are rare, and only a few hundred of them reside in our larger cosmic neighborhood. The galaxies have to collide at just the right orientation so that they interact to create the ring, and before long they will have merged completely, hiding their messy past.

The side-by-side juxtaposition of the two central bulges of stars from the galaxies that we see here is also unusual. Since the bulges that form the “eyes” appear to be the same size, we can be sure that the two galaxies involved in the crash were of equal size. This is different from the more common collisions in which small galaxies are gobbled up by their larger neighbors.

Bottom line: Spooky cosmic face image for Halloween 2019 from the Hubble Space Telescope.

Via Hubble Space Telescope



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Jupiter at sunset

Silhouette of a tree against a purple-pink sky, small dot of light on the upper left.

Image via Jim AndRobin Moore.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/31X0r29
Silhouette of a tree against a purple-pink sky, small dot of light on the upper left.

Image via Jim AndRobin Moore.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/31X0r29