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#astronomy

152 posts115 participants3 posts today

Here is one I am unexpectedly pleased by.

This is IC4592, aka The Blue Horsehead Nebula.

This is a rather faint nebula dominated by an extremely bright star, making itc tricky to image. I've had many attempts in the past. Tonight, I gave it 4 hours, and the postprocessing finally brought it out of the dark

236x60s@80, Astro filter (Light pollution), Dwarf3. Postprocessing in Stellar Studio and Snapseed.

Quantum Entanglement

Quantum physics is fascinating.

Quantum Entanglement is the phenomenon where the quantum state of each particle in a group cannot be described independently of the state of the others, even when the particles are separated by an astronomical large distance. The topic of quantum entanglement is at the heart of the disparity between classical physics and quantum physics: entanglement is a primary feature of quantum mechanics not present in classical mechanics.

Measurements of physical properties such as position, momentum, spin, and polarization performed on entangled particles can, in some cases, be found to be perfectly correlated. For example, if a pair of entangled particles is generated such that their total spin is known to be zero, and one particle is found to have clockwise spin on a first axis, then the spin of the other particle, measured on the same axis, is found to be anticlockwise. However, this behavior gives rise to seemingly paradoxical effects: any measurement of a particle's properties results in an apparent and irreversible wave function collapse of that particle and changes the original quantum state. With entangled particles, such measurements affect the entangled system as a whole.

Read more here

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement?wprov=sfla1

Astronomia
Postkarte Mail Art Arte Postale
Postkarte 15 × 10 cm

Astronomia para o desenvolvimento.

Para conhecer o universo a partir da nossa nave espacial Terra,
precisamos urgentemente manter a nossa Terra em forma.
Planetário do Porto-CCV, Rua das Estrelas S/N, 4150-762 Porto, Portugal
https://www.rittiner-gomez.ch/astronomia/
#astronomie #astronomy #space #astronomia #astro #science #universe #telescope #astrophoto #cosmos #astrophotographie #sky #galaxy #astronomer #physics #astronaut #nightsky #stars #espace #astronomical #astrofotografie #cosmology #milkyway #postcarte #artepostal
Continued thread

[...]

"We discovered seven stars that should not be there," explained Maximilian Häberle of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany, who led this investigation. "They are moving so fast that they would escape the cluster and never come back. The most likely explanation is that a very massive object is gravitationally pulling on these stars and keeping them close to the center. The only object that can be so massive is a black hole, with a mass at least 8,200 times that of our Sun."

Several studies have suggested the presence of an IMBH in Omega Centauri. However, other studies proposed the mass could be contributed by a central cluster of stellar-mass black holes, and had suggested the lack of fast-moving stars above the necessary escape velocity made an IMBH less likely in comparison.

"This discovery is the most direct evidence so far of an IMBH in Omega Centauri," added team lead Nadine Neumayer of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany, who initiated the study, together with Anil Seth from the University of Utah, Salt Lake City.
[...]
If confirmed, at a distance of 17,700 light-years the candidate black hole resides closer to Earth than the 4.3-million-solar-mass black hole in the center of the Milky Way, located 26,000 light-years away.

Omega Centauri is visible from Earth with the naked eye and is one of the favorite celestial objects for stargazers living in the southern hemisphere. Located just above the plane of the Milky Way, the cluster appears almost as large as the full Moon when seen from a dark rural area. It was first listed in Ptolemy’s catalog nearly 2,000 years ago as a single star. Edmond Halley reported it as a nebula in 1677. In the 1830s the English astronomer John Herschel was the first to recognize it as a globular cluster.

science.nasa.gov/missions/hubb

Continued thread

July 10, 2024

NASA’s Hubble Finds Strong Evidence for Intermediate-Mass Black Hole in Omega Centauri

Most known black holes are either extremely massive, like the supermassive black holes that lie at the cores of large galaxies, or relatively lightweight, with a mass of under 100 times that of the Sun. Intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) are scarce, however, and are considered rare "missing links" in black hole evolution.

Now, an international team of astronomers has used more than 500 images from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope — spanning two decades of observations — to search for evidence of an intermediate-mass black hole by following the motion of seven fast-moving stars in the innermost region of the globular star cluster Omega Centauri.

These stars provide new compelling evidence for the presence of the gravitational pull from an intermediate-mass black hole tugging on them. Only a few other IMBH candidates have been found to date.

Omega Centauri consists of roughly 10 million stars that are gravitationally bound. The cluster is about 10 times as massive as other big globular clusters — almost as massive as a small galaxy.

Among the many questions scientists want to answer: Are there any IMBHs, and if so, how common are they? Does a supermassive black hole grow from an IMBH? How do IMBHs themselves form? Are dense star clusters their favored home?

The astronomers have now created an enormous catalog for the motions of these stars, measuring the velocities for 1.4 million stars gleaned from the Hubble images of the cluster. Most of these observations were intended to calibrate Hubble's instruments rather than for scientific use, but they turned out to be an ideal database for the team's research efforts.
arxiv.org/abs/2404.03722
zenodo.org/records/11104046
[...]

science.nasa.gov/missions/hubb

"How can the James Webb Space Telescope see so far?" by @Spacecom / @TheConversationUS / @AdiFoord - #NASA #WebbSpaceTelescope is made to see infrared light because distant galaxies get red-shifted so far down by the distance that they drop out of the visible spectrum into infrared. Since heat also radiates in infrared, the telescope has to be kept extremely cold so its own structure doesn't interfere with observing faint distant galaxies. space.com/astronomy/james-webb #JWST #astronomy #science

Space · How can the James Webb Space Telescope see so far?By Adi Foord