"The large-scale homogeneity of the universe makes it very difficult to believe that the structure of the universe is determined by anything so peripheral as some complicated molecular structure on a minor planet orbiting a very average star in the outer suburbs of a fairly typical galaxy."

— Steven Hawking

Astronomy

Heavy or painful menstrual periods are linked to worse exam results

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 9:00am
Heavy, prolonged or painful menstrual periods are associated with more days off school and scoring worse on compulsory exams in a UK study
Categories: Astronomy

Heavy or painful menstrual periods are linked to worse exam results

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 9:00am
Heavy, prolonged or painful menstrual periods are associated with more days off school and scoring worse on compulsory exams in a UK study
Categories: Astronomy

Netflix's asteroid-impact series 'Goodbye Earth' is an insufferably slow disaster saga (review)

Space.com - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 9:00am
A review of Netflix's new 12-episode dystopian sci-fi series, "Goodbye Earth."
Categories: Astronomy

The Anthropology of Past Disease Outbreaks Can Help Prevent Future Ones

Scientific American.com - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 9:00am

Three factors determine whether a society experiences disease outbreaks—and how we can fight them

Categories: Astronomy

500-year-old maths problem turns out to apply to coffee and clocks

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 8:00am
A centuries-old maths problem asks what shape a circle traces out as it rolls along a line. The answer, dubbed a “cycloid”, turns out to have applications in a variety of scientific fields
Categories: Astronomy

500-year-old maths problem turns out to apply to coffee and clocks

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 8:00am
A centuries-old maths problem asks what shape a circle traces out as it rolls along a line. The answer, dubbed a “cycloid”, turns out to have applications in a variety of scientific fields
Categories: Astronomy

3 ATs

APOD - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 8:00am

Despite their resemblance to


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Scientists use XRISM spacecraft to predict fate of matter around monster supermassive black hole

Space.com - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 8:00am
The spacecraft XRISM has examined light from a distant galaxy that houses a supermassive black hole to determine the fate of matter in the void's gravitational thrall.
Categories: Astronomy

Will Mexico City Run Out of Drinking Water?

Scientific American.com - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 7:00am

More huge cities are facing Day Zero—the date water taps go dry—just as Cape Town, South Africa, did

Categories: Astronomy

Is Earth Safe from a Nearby Supernova?

Scientific American.com - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 6:45am

An exploding star is a catastrophe on a cosmic scale, but here on Earth we’re safe from such astral disasters—for now

Categories: Astronomy

China's Chang'e 6 probe to the moon's far side has a big lunar mystery to solve

Space.com - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 6:00am
By retrieving rare volcanic samples from the lunar far side, Chang'e-6 aims to provide answers as to why volcanism was so limited on just one side of the moon.
Categories: Astronomy

Monkeys can learn to tap to the beat of the Backstreet Boys

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 5:00am
With a bit of training, macaques can make rhythmic movements in time with music, an ability only shown before by a handful of animals
Categories: Astronomy

Monkeys can learn to tap to the beat of the Backstreet Boys

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 5:00am
With a bit of training, macaques can make rhythmic movements in time with music, an ability only shown before by a handful of animals
Categories: Astronomy

This Week's Sky at a Glance, May 10 – 19

Sky & Telescope Magazine - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 4:43am

The waxing Moon this week travels eastward from the horns of Taurus past the heads of Gemini, the Beehive in Cancer, then the forefoot of Leo on its way to occulting Beta Virginis.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, May 10 – 19 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.

Categories: Astronomy

Earth from Space: Bolivian salt lakes

ESO Top News - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 4:00am
Image: This Copernicus Sentinel-2 image features salt flats and lakes in southwest Bolivia, near the crest of the Andes Mountains.
Categories: Astronomy

Extreme exercise may help you live longer without stressing your heart

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 7:30pm
People who can run a mile in less than 4 minutes generally live almost five years longer than would otherwise be expected, challenging the idea that too much strenuous exercise is bad for the heart
Categories: Astronomy

Extreme exercise may help you live longer without stressing your heart

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 7:30pm
People who can run a mile in less than 4 minutes generally live almost five years longer than would otherwise be expected, challenging the idea that too much strenuous exercise is bad for the heart
Categories: Astronomy

4 large incoming solar bursts could supercharge the auroras this weekend

Space.com - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 6:00pm
The NOAA has bumped up its geomagnetic storm watch for May 11 to a "rare" level as solar activity continues at high levels and at least four coronal mass ejections propel toward Earth.
Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers are on the Hunt for Dyson Spheres

Universe Today - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 4:57pm

There’s something poetic about humanity’s attempt to detect other civilizations somewhere in the Milky Way’s expanse. There’s also something futile about it. But we’re not going to stop. There’s little doubt about that.

One group of scientists thinks that we may already have detected technosignatures from a technological civilization’s Dyson Spheres, but the detection is hidden in our vast troves of astronomical data.

A Dyson Sphere is a hypothetical engineering project that only highly advanced civilizations could build. In this sense, ‘advance’ means the kind of almost unimaginable technological prowess that would allow a civilization to build a structure around an entire star. These Dyson Spheres would allow a civilization to harness all of a star’s energy.

A Civilization could only build something so massive and complex if they had reached Level II in the Kardashev Scale. Dyson Spheres could be a technosignature, and a team of researchers from Sweden, India, the UK, and the USA developed a way to search for Dyson Sphere technosignatures they’re calling Project Hephaistos. (Hephaistos was the Greek god of fire and metallurgy.)

They’re publishing their results in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Academy of Sciences. The research is titled “Project Hephaistos – II. Dyson sphere candidates from Gaia DR3, 2MASS, and WISE.” The lead author is Matías Suazo, a PhD student in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Uppsala University in Sweden. This is the second paper presenting Project Hephaistos. The first one is here.

“In this study, we present a comprehensive search for partial Dyson spheres by analyzing optical and
infrared observations from Gaia, 2MASS, and WISE,” the authors write. These are large-scale astronomical surveys designed for different purposes. Each one of them generated an enormous amount of data from individual stars. “This second paper examines the Gaia DR3, 2MASS, and WISE photometry of ~5 million sources to build a catalogue of potential Dyson spheres,” they explain.

A Type II civilization is one that can directly harvest the energy of its star using a Dyson Sphere or something similar. Credit: Fraser Cain (with Midjourney)

Combing through all of that data is an arduous task. In this work, the team of researchers developed a special data pipeline to work its way through the combined data of all three surveys. They point out that they’re searching for partially-completed spheres, which would emit excess infrared radiation. “This structure would emit waste heat in the form of mid-infrared radiation that, in addition to the level of completion of the structure, would depend on its effective temperature,” Suazo and his colleagues write.

The problem is, they’re not the only objects to do so. Many natural objects do, too, like circumstellar dust rings and nebulae. Background galaxies can also emit excess infrared radiation and create false positives. It’s the pipeline’s job to filter them out. “A specialized pipeline has been developed to identify potential Dyson sphere candidates focusing on detecting sources that display anomalous infrared excesses that cannot be attributed to any known natural source of such radiation,” the researchers explain.

This flowchart shows what the pipeline looks like.

This flowchart from the research illustrates the pipeline the team developed to find Dyson Sphere candidates. Each step in the pipeline filters our objects that don’t match the expected emissions from Dyson Spheres. Image Credit: Suazo et al. 2024.

The pipeline is just the first step. The team subjects the list of candidates to further scrutiny based on factors like H-alpha emissions, optical variability, and astrometry.

368 sources survived the last cut. Of those, 328 were rejected as blends, 29 were rejected as irregulars, and 4 were rejected as nebulars. That left only 7 potential Dyson Spheres out of about 5 million initial objects, and the researchers are confident that those 7 are legitimate. “All sources are clear mid-infrared emitters with no clear contaminators or signatures that indicate an obvious mid-infrared origin,” they explain.

This pie chart shows the breakdown of the 368 sources that made it through the filter. Only 7 objects out of millions are labelled Dyson Sphere candidates. Image Credit: Suazo et al. 2024.

These are the seven strongest candidates, but the researchers know they’re still just candidates. There could be other reasons why the seven are emitting excess infrared. “The presence of warm debris disks surrounding our candidates remains a plausible explanation for the infrared excess of our sources,” they explain.

But their candidates seem to be M-type (red dwarf) stars, and debris disks around M-dwarfs are very rare. However, it gets complicated because some research suggests that debris disks around M-dwarfs form differently and present differently. One type of debris disk called Extreme Debris Disks (EDD) can explain some of the luminosity the team sees around their candidates. “But these sources have never been observed in connection with M dwarfs,” Suazo and his co-authors write.

That leaves the team with three questions: “Are our candidates strange young stars whose flux does not vary with time? Are these stars’ M-dwarf debris disks with an extreme fractional luminosity? Or something completely different?”

This figure from the research shows the seven candidates plotted on a colour-magnitude diagram. It indicates that all seven are M-dwarfs. Image Credit: Suazo et al. 2024.

“After analyzing the optical/NIR/MIR photometry of ~5 x 106 sources, we found 7 apparent M dwarfs exhibiting an infrared excess of unclear nature that is compatible with our Dyson sphere models,” the researchers write in their conclusion. There are natural explanations for the excess infrared coming from these 7, “But none of them clearly explains such a phenomenon in the candidates, especially given that all are M dwarfs.”

The researchers say that follow-up optical spectroscopy would help understand these 7 sources better. A better understanding of the H-alpha emissions is especially valuable since they can also come from young disks. “In particular, analyzing the spectral region around H-alpha can help us ultimately discard or verify the presence of young disks,” the researchers write.

“Additional analyses are definitely necessary to unveil the true nature of these sources,” they conclude.

The post Astronomers are on the Hunt for Dyson Spheres appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

Video: Plunge into a Black Hole

Sky & Telescope Magazine - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 3:56pm

A new visualization from NASA takes the viewer on a one-way journey into a black hole.

The post Video: Plunge into a Black Hole appeared first on Sky & Telescope.

Categories: Astronomy