Vampires and thrillseekers rejuvenate dead stars | Bad Astronomy

I have a tale of death, near death, and undeath to weave for you, but first, gaze upon the jewel-like beauty of the glittering denizens of M30:

hst_acs_m30

This image was taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys on board the Hubble Space Telescope. I had to cut it and compress it drastically to get it to fit on the blog, so you very much want to click on it to embiggen it massively and see it in its fully resolved glory.

The image is of the insanely beautiful globular cluster M30, an ancient city of a few hundred thousand stars located 28,000 light years away in the constellation of Capricornus. The cluster is ancient, about 13 billion years old, making it as old or even older than the Milky Way itself. The core of the cluster is unusually dense as such things go, which is why it was studied. Where better to find vampires and thrillseekers?

Like people, stars are born, age, and die. Stars born with more mass tend to die off more quickly, consuming their fuel at far higher rates than their lower-mass brethren. These stars tend to be blue, so in an old cluster like M30 you’d expect to see no blue stars at all; they should all be long gone. And yet, there are quite a few — astronomers call them blue stragglers. Where did they come from?

One theory, which has been borne out by observations, is that blue stragglers are in tight binary systems, with a dead star in such close proximity to a normal star that it can siphon off the normal star’s gas, using it to rejuvenate itself. This would make them vampires, of course, sucking the life force of other stars in an attempt to stay young.

But another idea was that dead stars might also physically collide with other stars and merge, forming a single star that would burn blue and bright. In an environment like that near our own Sun this kind of collision can almost literally never happen; even considering the entire Milky Way Galaxy over its entire lifetime a head on collision has probably never happened out here in the stellar suburbs.

But that cluster M30 is pretty densely populated with stars, and collisions are far more likely. What observations like this one of the cluster (and also of an ancient cluster called NGC 188) have shown is that the blue stragglers appear to have two different sub-groups; one that appears to have come from the vampire stars, and another from stars that have collided: thrill-seekers, stars that have physically slammed into each other and merged, their combined mass separating them from the other blue straggler group.

Blue stragglers have been known since the 1950s, and the idea that they were pulling gas off nearby stars was proposed to explain them, too, but it’s only with our modern instrumentation that we can not only show that this is true, but that a second, far-fetched-sounding scenario of collisions also contributes.

I find it wonderful and extremely uplifting that an image as spectacular and gorgeous as the one above — it became my desktop wallpaper as soon as I saw it! — not only satisfies our desire for beauty and art, but can also be tapped to deliver incredible science that boosts our awe of what Nature can do. I love that we can understand such things, but you know what I love even more? The idea that we have only begun to understand the Universe.


A Mission Patch to Mark the End of the Shuttle Program

Space Shuttle Patches

The creation of mission patches is one of those age-old NASA traditions. Ever since humans first started traveling to space in the 1960’s, patches have been designed for each mission. It all began with the two-man Gemini IV mission in 1965 where the American flag was worn on a spacesuit and the tradition lives on today. The design of the mission patch is usually reserved for the crew (with the help of a NASA artist), but with only five Space Shuttle flights remaining, all scheduled to launch next year, NASA wanted to do something uplifting to mark the end of the Shuttle program. From October 15 to December 1, the Program opened up the design process and engaged past and present program workers to submit an emblem to mark the end of the shuttle era. NASA received 85 entries from people across the nation.

All 85 patch designs will be posted to an internal NASA website for a vote among employees from Jan. 11 through Jan. 29. 15 out of the 85 patch designs will be picked and flown on one of the last shuttle flights. NASA’s graphic artists will assist by adapting the winning concept for production. All 85 patch designs can be viewed here along with a short description from the artist. (PDF download: ~3mb)

Related articles on collectspace.com (by @robertpearlman):

The Dance of Saturn’s Moons

"Like sugar plum fairies in "The Nutcracker," the moons of Saturn performed a celestial ballet before the eyes of NASA's Cassini spacecraft. New movies frame the moons' silent dance against the majestic sweep of the planet's rings and show as many as four moons gliding around one another." More videos

Merry Christmas!

merry_christmas002I just wanted to take a moment to wish you all a very Merry Christmas. Whether you are on an island somewhere, or just wish you were, I hope you all have a safe and happy holiday.

I am spending my Christmas with my family off the island this year, which is the first time in many years. No doubt it will be a change from our usual tradition, but it is being with family on the Holiday’s that matter.

Safe and Happy Travel’s

Mark

Hanson on "Meh, Transhumanism"

Robin has an article up on Overcoming Bias titled "Meh, Transhumanism", claiming that transhumanism is

"a clever appropriation of the reigning academic storyline of defending minorities oppressed by a reigning majority. Here the minority is not an ethnicity or sexual orientation, but imagined future tech-modified people. Conservatives who accepted other kinds of diversity could be goaded into opposing this kind, allowing advocates to heroically defend against such prejudice, and get tenure in the process. Rah disliked future folk."


Is this what h+ has turned into - defending (or asserting?) people's right to modify themselves with technology? A quick look at the h+ declaration confirms that there is a passage about the "right to enhance" in there:

(8) We favour allowing individuals wide personal choice over how they enable their lives. This includes use of techniques that may be developed to assist memory, concentration, and mental energy; life extension therapies; reproductive choice technologies; cryonics procedures; and many other possible human modification and enhancement technologies.

I personally think that the core of the h+ vision is best described by these earlier items on the h+ declaration:

(1) Humanity stands to be profoundly affected by science and technology in the future. We envision the possibility of broadening human potential by overcoming aging, cognitive shortcomings, involuntary suffering, and our confinement to planet Earth.

(2) We believe that humanity's potential is still mostly unrealized. There are possible scenarios that lead to wonderful and exceedingly worthwhile enhanced human conditions.

(3) We recognize that humanity faces serious risks, especially from the misuse of new technologies. There are possible realistic scenarios that lead to the loss of most, or even all, of what we hold valuable. Some ofthese scenarios are drastic, others are subtle. Although all progress is change, not all change is progress.

(4) Research effort needs to be invested into understanding these prospects. We need to carefully deliberate how best to reduce risks and expedite beneficial applications. We also need forums where people can constructively discuss what should be done, and a social order where responsible decisions can be implemented.

(5) Reduction of existential risks, and development of means for the preservation of life and health, the alleviation of grave suffering, and the improvement of human foresight and wisdom should be pursued as urgent priorities, and heavily funded.

These items are more focussed on the overall prospects for human value moving into the future, rather than trying to defend the rights of those who wish to move a little faster than the herd.
Personally, the only "transhumanist right" that remotely concerns me is the right to be cryopreserved before I biologically die, which is currently a right that we do not have.
Also, when Robin says "Rah, Disliked future folk", is he mocking those who seek to mitigate existential risk? Or is that comment directed more at the Stelarcs and postgenderists of this world who like to advocate radical departures from the human body?

New Publication: ‘Roman Jakobson e il futurismo italiano’

Roman Jakobson e il futurismo italiano

Matteo D’Ambrosio
Liguori Editore, 2009
ISBN: 978-88-207-4581-3

Also available as an e-book!

Roman Jakobson, uno dei maggiori linguisti e teorici della letteratura, in gioventù fu poeta futurista e incontrò Marinetti. Nei suoi primi scritti mise più volte a confronto il Futurismo italiano con le esperienze dell’avanguardia russa, del Cubismo e del Dadaismo. In questo volume sono analizzati in particolare l’articolo del 1919 sul Futurismo (ispirato dal formalismo e dalla teoria della relatività einsteiniana) e alcune pagine del saggio del 1921 su Chlebnikov e la nuova poesia russa, in cui Jakobson privilegia la riflessione sulla materialità acustica del segno e sull’autonomia della parola poetica, esamina alcuni manifesti marinettiani ed elabora proposte metodologiche alla base della teoria e della critica letteraria del Novecento. In allegato una loro prima traduzione italiana integrale.

Capitoli

  1. Croce e Jakobson uniti contro la prima avanguardia
  2. L’attività giovanile e l’incontro con Marinetti
  3. L’articolo sul Futurismo (1919)
  4. Futurismo e Formalismo
  5. Il Futurismo italiano nel saggio su Chlebnikov e la nuova poesia russa
  6. Lettera da Reval
  7. Il Futurismo italiano nell’articolo sul Dadaismo
  8. Conclusioni
  9. Allegato 1:: R. Jakobson, da Nuova poesia russa, 1921
  10. Indice delle illustrazioni
  11. Indice dei nomi

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Now You Can Have Perfect Toast Without Trial-and-Error Kitchen Mishaps [Household]

This is coming from the girl who went nuts over a self-stirring coffee cup, but a see-through toaster is abso-freakin'-lutely brilliant. No more burnt toast or kitchen fires since I can see when the bread is perfectly oh-so-yummy-golden-brown.

Of course, this isn't the first time that someone's thought of making a transparent toaster, but this one is actually more than a concept. Apparently it'll actually be made and sold by a company called Magimix.

Geez. Now I'm craving toast and will probably cause a kitchen fire with my old-school, non-transparent toaster. [Moco Loco via kPSFK]



Apple Patent Application Reveals a Bumpy Tablet [Unconfirmed]

Some of Apple's recently revealed patent applications may spoil the surprise over how we'll interact with the Apple tablet. According to Apple Insider's speculations, the patent applications imply that we'll have a multi-touch gadget with tactile feedback.

Apparently this batch of patent applications is for a dynamic surface which can "create physical bumps or dots for the user to feel when it is in keyboard mode." In theory, such a surface would allow you to orient your fingers better on the touchscreen for typing, but never interfere with other actions.

As usual, this is yet another neat tease about the lovely tablet which will fit into my handbag one day. Let's just hope it's soon though, because all the rumors, speculation, and gossip are starting to drive me nuts. [Apple Insider]



The Y2K+10 Holiday Card [Y2k10]

Have a Merry Xmas and a Happy Next Decade! Much love, The Last Decade.

Anna Jane Grossman will be with us for the next few weeks, documenting life in the early aughts, and how it differs from today. The author of Obsolete: An Encyclopedia of Once-Common Things Passing Us By (Abrams Image) and the creator of ObsoleteTheBook.com, she has also written for dozens of publications, including the New York Times, Salon.com, the Associated Press, Elle and the Huffington Post, as well as Gizmodo. She has a complicated relationship with technology, but she does have an eponymous website: AnnaJane.net. Follow her on Twitter at @AnnaJane.



Young Girls: Do Not Give Up Your Sexting Virginity to Half the High School Like This [Sexting]

Look, teenage girls of America: You have got to save your sexting virginity until you meet someone really special. Not some random "male acquaintance." Because that's when the police get involved.

A sexting case in Plainfield, Illinois (a lesser-known site of the sexual revolution) has "exploded into the largest sexting case Plainfield police have ever encountered." A 16-year-old girl sent out less savory pics of herself to "a male acquaintance" (?), and being presumably a 16-year-old guy, the shots didn't stay secret for long. Apparently over half the student body has seen them, parents, police, PTA members and probably President Obama are all freaking the fuck out, and really, this could be the end of the noble American experiment. Note: The source has several hundred photo galleries linked underneath the story. Do not be fooled, none of them contain nudie pics of 16-year-old girls. [WBBM]



Slo Mo Duck’s Corkscrew Penis Showcases the Majesty of Nature [Science]

Here is a slow-mo video of a scientist making a duck have sex with corkscrew-shaped beakers. It is one of the craziest things I've ever seen. Merry Christmas!

You're going to want to check out Carl Zimmer's full article about what exactly is going on here. Essentially, evolution has caused duck penises and duck vaginas to adapt into pretty wild and complex contraptions, with the penises unfurling into clockwise corkscrew shapes while the vaginas have evolved into counter-clockwise passageways with multiple pockets. And you thought your vagina was impressive!

Seriously, go check out the article to give this video some context. If nothing else, it'll provide you with a deeply inappropriate anecdote to tell your extended family over dinner tonight. [Discover Magazine]



Time and Relative Dimensions in Cookies | Bad Astronomy

One of the reasons I love this time of year is that Mrs. BA is a fantastic cook and baker. She was making cutout cookies the the day, and asked if I wanted anything special.

Well, duh.

tardis_cookie

Who wouldn’t want a cookie that’s bigger on the inside than the outside?

And of course, more apropos of the season:

fsmcookie

MMMmmmmmm. Sacrilicious.