Perry wins backing of another Republican Governor

Nevada fiscal conservative Brian Sandoval

Release...

Our nation needs a leader in the White House who understands the role of government and our economy. Governor Rick Perry has the strongest record of job creation, fiscal discipline, and executive branch leadership among the presidential candidates. As a governor, Rick Perry created a tremendous blueprint for job creation and as President, I know he will get America working again. I consider Governor Perry a friend and I am proud to endorse his campaign for President.

RickPerry.org

Libertarian Republican appointed Texas Dir. for Gary Johnson for President

From Dave Nalle:

I'm very pleased to announce my appointment as Texas State Director for the Gary Johnson for President campaign. With the help of State Finance Director Charles Lupton I'll be working with the national campaign to raise awareness of Governor Johnson's principles and platforms as we move forward towards the Texas GOP primary in March.

No state has a greater love for individualism and liberty than Texas does and Gary Johnson's vision of a smaller and less intrusive federal government which respects state and individual rights is just what most Texas Republicans want to hear. We've had enough of a government which is constantly meddling in our wallets and our bedrooms and our businesses.

For our nation to recover from the disastrous policies of the Obama administration we need real leadership with a proven record. In two terms as Governor of New Mexico, Gary Johnson vetoed over 750 bills, cut state budgets, created impressive job growth and found sensible solutions to serious problems facing his state. We need the same kind of pragmatic and proactive leadership in Washington to get our government under control and back on track. Gary will bring us balanced budgets now, not 20 years down the road, with immediate budget cuts and lower taxes to spur job creation. Gary has a realistic plan to reduce the size and cost of government by 42% if we just stop spending, stop borrowing and stop printing money we don't have.

Gary has the experience, the skills and the ideas we need in a president, but he needs our help. The media is trying to pick the candidates. They're keeping Gary out of the debates and focusing on big government and big spending candidates like Mitt Romney and Rick Perry. Their Republican Party of crony capitalism and endless bailouts for special interests cannot be the future of our party if we are to preserve our republic and our liberty. We need to be more than just voters. We need to become citizen activists.

Gary is running a true grassroots campaign. It will only succeed with your effort and your support. We need volunteers here in Texas to work on getting Gary on the ballot and to coordinate local efforts all around the state. If you're interested in volunteering, please send me an email at dave@fontcraft.com. All are welcome. Gary's ideas appeal across the political spectrum because we're all waking up to the fact that government has become our master and not our servant. We'll welcome Republicans, Democrats, Independents and Libertarians who are ready to take back our nation and restore our liberty.

If you have more money than you have time, the campaign needs all the financial help it can get as we start things up here in Texas and to make a real mark in the early primaries. Anything you can give will help at http://www.garyjohnson2012.com. We want Texas to lead in fundraising just like we lead in our love of liberty.

We're also sponsoring Hangout events in September and October where groups of supporters can get together at a home or in a coffee shop or anywhere else to talk with Gary live by teleconference.

I hope you'll also keep in touch through social media. A great start for that is joining our Facebook page.

Times may be grim, but I see hope glimmering on the horizon. With your help and a candidate like Gary Johnson we will see a new day dawn for liberty and a restoration of true government for the people in 2012.

Please don't hesitate to contact me by email or phone 512-656-8011, and expect to hear more good news as the campaign progresses.

The Big Winner interviewed on Fox

From Eric Dondero:

Humbled, and surprisingly mellow (perhaps a bit tired from a previous night of no sleep?), the big victor Bob Turner appeared on Fox News with Megyn Kelly.

Kelly asserts loudly:

90 years... 90 years...

The seat has not been held by a Republican since 1923.

Kelly then asks, "what was the magic?"

Turner responds:

President Obama, loud and clear. The people of this district are concerned about Israel... Jobs... the inability to return to prosperity.

Note - This website was an early and enthusiastic supporter of Bob Turner for Congress, way back to 2010.

Libertarian Media blackout on Tuesday’s Republican victories

by Eric Dondero

I could have never predicted this. Sure, you'd think they'd downplay Bob Turner and Mark Amodei's wins in New York and Nevada. But to completely ignore the biggest political story of the week?

A look at Reason, arguably the top libertarian site, shows the following headlines this morning:

Bachmann's Vaccine Panic

India's Mangled School Reforms

Use the Tiny Tiles—And Other Tales from the Stimulus

Okay, the Bachmann story. Understandably reportable. But School Reform in India?

Bob Turner, a Republican, won a seat in a district that was 5 to 1 Democrat over Republican registration. The seat had not been held by a Republican since 1923!

And the top libertarian website chooses to report on India education instead?

There are 12 headline stories at LewRockwell.com. Not a one of them is about the elections in New York and Nevada. And nothing at the Rockwell blog either.

Daily Paul? They're pumping up Radical Islamists, as usual: "Bombshell: Saudi Arabia threatens to cut ties with US over Palestine UN Veto."

The official Libertarian Party site LP.org? The sound of silence on NY and NV.

Nothing but policy issues on the front page of Cato.org. But don't get the idea that they totally avoid politics. Au contraire. Dave Boaz has an article at the blog "Is It Too Late for Another Candidate?" Apparently, it's more important to Boaz to get all-dreamy about another possible GOP prez nominee rather than report on this huge election news.

20 headline articles at NolanChart.com. Not a one of them on the Turner and Amodei victories.

The Humble (so-called) Libertarian, similarly, not a word about the elections.

Radley Balko's much-lauded The Agitator has zero coverage of Turner and Amodei.

There is one single libertarian website covering the story: Rational Review, edited by anarch-libertarian Thomas L. Knapp.

Bob Turner's win in New York was historic. Mark Amodei's victory in Nevada portends nothing but bad signs for 2012 for the Democrat Party in that critical swing state.

You'd think a movement that promotes itself as "pro-liberty" would have at least something to say about these two incredibly historic victories for the freedom side.

One can only conclude, that a pro-defense, pro-Israel Republican winning in New York, and a Tea Party conservative winning in Harry Reid's backyard, doesn't quite fit their template. What else could explain this nearly-complete libertarian media blackout of the biggest political story of the week, and perhaps the entire year?

Episode 47 Cardiac Fusion with Dr Kaufmann video version

Dr Philipp A. Kaufmann, from University Hospital Zurich video version

This podcast Features an interview with Dr Philipp A. Kaufmann, from University Hospital Zurich and looks at image fusion of...

This podcast is for nuclear medicine professionals and PET professionals This is one of the worlds longest running medical podcasts. Direct link to itunes itunes link Please email suggestions for topics, offers of interviews, bouquets and brickbats. nucmedpodcast@gmail.com


Episode 47 Cardiac Image Fusion With Dr Kaufmann

Episode 47 Dr Philipp A. Kaufmann Image Fusion audio version

This podcast Features an interview with Dr Philipp A. Kaufmann from Zurich who has been using fusion of both myocardial...

This podcast is for nuclear medicine professionals and PET professionals This is one of the worlds longest running medical podcasts. Direct link to itunes itunes link Please email suggestions for topics, offers of interviews, bouquets and brickbats. nucmedpodcast@gmail.com


Regular frequency patterns in the classical ? Scuti star HD 144277 observed by the MOST? satellite

Authors: K. Zwintz, P. Lenz, M. Breger, A. A. Pamyatnykh, T. Zdravkov, R. Kuschnig, J. M. Matthews, D. B. Guenther, A. F. J. Moffat, J. F. Rowe, S. M. Rucinski, D. Sasselov and W. W. Weiss.<br />Astronomy & Astrophysics Vol. 533 , page A133<br />Published online: 15/09/2011<br />
Keywords:
stars: oscillations ; techniques: photometric ; asteroseismology ; stars: variables:?Scuti ; stars: individual: HD 144277.

A Planet With Two Suns is Found

Schematic of the planet with two suns. Click for larger. Credit: Avi Shporer and team / University of California Santa Barbara

 

Ah this is very cool to think about even beyond Star wars.

By the way, I was out looking for the supernova this morning (thwarted by clouds) but was treated to the Moon and the star Sheratan, a bright bluish star only about 5 degrees away.  If you happen out tomorrow about 6 a.m. your time have a look.  Tomorrow, it should be clear enough here to also see the star Lorenzin Alpha ARI. Alpha ARI is a bit brighter than Sheratan and a bit yellower. The three should make for a nice pairing.

Back to the two suns, below is a fun snippit from the press release from the University of California Santa Barbara and clicking the “more” link at the bottom will get you the entire press release or you can just click the link.

The planet’s orbital period is 229 days, while the stellar binary has a 41-day orbit. Although the planet’s orbital period is close to that of Venus in our solar system, it is not an Earth-like, terrestrial planet. Its radius and mass are similar to those of Saturn, making it a gas giant planet. The two stars are both smaller than the Sun. The bigger of the two, the primary, measures 69 percent of the Sun’s mass and 65 percent of its radius. The smaller star, the secondary, is considerably smaller, with 20 percent of the Sun’s mass and 23 percent of its radius. In fact, the secondary star is the smallest low-mass star to have its mass and radius measured at such high precision.

UC Santa Barbara astrophysicist Avi Shporer is part of the NASA team that has found the first known planet with two “suns,” an idea popularized by the 1977 movie “Star Wars.” The discovery is published this week in the journal Science.

In the iconic scene from “Star Wars,” Luke Skywalker gazes into the distance as two suns set on the horizon. This type of planet is called a circumbinary planet, meaning it orbits a binary star system, as opposed to a single star like our Sun. Circumbinary planets have been pursued by astronomers for decades. Although some scientists have claimed to detect such a planet in the past, none of those claims have been widely accepted by the scientific community.

The Science article reports the first clear detection of a circumbinary planet. The system is called Kepler-16, and it is the 16th planetary system discovered by NASA’s Kepler space telescope. It is located approximately 220 light-years from our Sun, near the constellation Cygnus, in the Milky Way galaxy.

“It is the combination of the unprecedented precision and the continuous observations from space that allowed the detection of Kepler-16,” said Shporer, who is also a researcher with the UCSB-affiliated Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network (LCOGT) based in Goleta.

At first, the system was identified as an eclipsing binary star, a system of two stars orbiting each other and showing eclipses once every orbital period. Excitement within the Kepler team grew when the scientists were able to identify transits — small, shallow eclipses induced by a small body such as a planet as it eclipses its parent stars. Further analysis confirmed that these transits are indeed induced by a planet in an orbit around both stars.

“This system is so fascinating since it is viewed edge-on, and all three bodies — the two stars and the planet — are all eclipsing each other,” said Laurance Doyle of the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Institute, lead author of the Science paper.

Kepler is a NASA discovery-class mission designed to look for Earth-like planets orbiting Sun-like stars in their habitable zone. Kepler is looking for these planets by continuously monitoring the light intensity of over 150,000 stars simultaneously. Kepler’s high sensitivity makes it capable of detecting the minute decrease in a star’s light caused by a small planet crossing the line of sight to the star, thereby momentarily blocking a small fraction of the light coming from the star.

“The transits and mutual eclipses enable a detailed characterization of the system, including the mass and radius of all objects and their orbits,” said Shporer.

The depth of an eclipse gives a sense of the size of the eclipsing body. In the case of Kepler-16, the exact timing of the eclipses is affected by the gravitational pull of the planet. Although the planet’s mass is small relative to the two stars, it is able to slightly affect their orbit, making the stellar eclipses occur earlier or later, by up to a minute, compared to a constant period model. As for the planetary transits, analysis of Kepler’s measurements is challenging because the timing of the transits deviates significantly from a constant period model, since each transit occurs at a different orbital phase of the inner star.

The planet’s orbital period is 229 days, while the stellar binary has a 41-day orbit. Although the planet’s orbital period is close to that of Venus in our solar system, it is not an Earth-like, terrestrial planet. Its radius and mass are similar to those of Saturn, making it a gas giant planet. The two stars are both smaller than the Sun. The bigger of the two, the primary, measures 69 percent of the Sun’s mass and 65 percent of its radius. The smaller star, the secondary, is considerably smaller, with 20 percent of the Sun’s mass and 23 percent of its radius. In fact, the secondary star is the smallest low-mass star to have its mass and radius measured at such high precision.

Ground-based observations are an important part of the Kepler project. “At LCOGT, we are using our telescopes as part of the large effort carried out by U.S. astronomers and others, to follow-up and accurately characterize the detections made by Kepler,” said Tim Brown, scientific director of LCOGT and an adjunct professor of physics at UCSB. Brown is an important member of the Kepler team.

The Kepler-16 discovery is one of a series of discoveries made by Kepler since its launch in March 2009. Shporer said the most interesting ones are probably yet to come as Kepler continues to monitor the stars.

Picture of Rhea and Rumors of the ISS

Cassini's close up of the surface of the Saturn moon Rhea. Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

A combo post of sorts because one thing has nothing to do with the other . . .

I was going to post about the ISS essentially being abandoned, but I’m not sure that’s really the case. Three of the staff aboard are coming home tomorrow and there have been rumors of the remainder returning in a couple of months if the space station cannot be resupplied by the end of November. Then I hear the Russians have scheduled manned flights for November 12th and December 20th with an unmanned cargo ship on October 30th. So I’m not totally sure of what is happening.

All the speculation stems from the loss of a unmanned Soyuz carrying cargo to the ISS prompting Russia to cancel all manned flights pending an investigation in to the mishap. Can’t find fault with that decision and with the demise of the shuttle program, well there you go, the whole thing isn’t too far a field from being halted.

So the image, well that’s a good close shot of a battered Rhea taken by Cassini from 12,000 miles (20,000 km).

From the Cassini website:

In this image obtained by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft on its closest flyby of Saturn’s moon Rhea, the heavily cratered surface of the moon appears in great detail. Just to the bottom right of the center of this image, a bright area appears to indicate a freshly excavated double crater. Double craters can appear when two gravitationally linked asteroids crash into a surface. This image was obtained by Cassini’s narrow-angle camera on Jan. 11, 2011, from a distance of about 20,000 kilometers (12,000 miles) away.

The Latest Vesta Pic

Dawn's cameras show steep slopes on Vesta. Click for larger. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA

Nice picture of a big crater. If this is the southern pole region and it appears to be, the crater could be that 460 km job that it’s thought escavated almost 1 percent of Vesta.

Want a bigger image? See the image at the Dawn webpage.

PASADENA, Calif. — NASA’s Dawn spacecraft obtained this image with its framing camera on Aug. 26, 2011. This image was taken through the camera’s clear filter. The image has a resolution of about 260 meters per pixel.

Oppy’s Tribute to Sept. 11

Mars Rover Opportunity does a self portrait on Sept. 11. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell University

The Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity took this self portrait on September 11, 2011 while exploring in the region of Endeavour crater called Cape York.

As of September 7, 2011 solar array energy production was 336 watt-hours, so it’s still pretty good.  The rover has traveled 20.86 miles on Mars so far.

The image is significant not because the ground it’s on, but that little American flag.  That flag is mounted on a piece of metal taken from the Twin Towers.  Sort of Oppy’s tribute.

Whoa, Puppy

Take a look at this:

NASA

Unbelievable.  Here’s what NASA says about it:

New Supernova Remnant Lights Up

Using the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers are witnessing the unprecedented transition of a supernova to a supernova remnant, where light from an exploding star in a neighboring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud, reached Earth in February 1987. Named Supernova 1987A, it was the closest supernova explosion witnessed in almost 400 years. The supernova’s close proximity to Earth allows astronomers to study it in detail as it evolves. Now, the supernova debris, which has faded over the years, is brightening. This means that a different power source has begun to light the debris. The debris of SN 1987A is beginning to impact the surrounding ring, creating powerful shock waves that generate X-rays observed with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory. Those X-rays are illuminating the supernova debris and shock heating is making it glow in visible light. Since its launch in 1990, the Hubble telescope has provided a continuous record of the changes in SN 1987A.

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, and P. Challis (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)

I’m seriously impressed.