sciencealert.com

x4740N, do astronomy w A Mysterious Wave-Like Structure in Our Galaxy Found to Be Slowly Slithering

Reminds me of that thing from one of the star trek movies

nokturne213, do astronomy w Salads Grown in Space May Pose a Deadly Problem

Salad is good for you, generally speaking, so growing fresh greens in orbit seems like a winning way for space farers to stay healthy. New research suggests that as nutritious as space salad might be, it could pose something of a risk to astronauts.

The problem is growing leafy plants like lettuce and spinach in space can come with a side dish of bacteria, according to a new study from a team at the University of Delaware. In tests on plants grown in simulated microgravity, they were shown to actually be more susceptible than normal to the Salmonella enterica pathogen.

otter,

Interesting

I guess some of the plants natural defences rely on gravity, so without them they’re more susceptible (till we can breed a better variant)

driving_crooner,
@driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br avatar

They’re also way lower genetic diversity in anything you grow in space.

LanternEverywhere,

Sounds like not a big problem at all. Seems like they'll just have to use appropriate cleaning methods. Even in the worst case scenario they would probably just have to use food irradiation.

https://www.fda.gov/food/buy-store-serve-safe-food/food-irradiation-what-you-need-know

EDIT

In fact reading my own link i learned that they ALREADY irradiate food that astronauts eat

Drunemeton, do astronomy w JWST Imaged Two Apparent Alien Worlds Still Circling The Bodies of Their Dead Stars
@Drunemeton@lemmy.world avatar

I’m calling dibs on Neptune as my family’s home base in the future!

I know it’s several billion years in the future, but I called it.

5714, do astronomy w Salads Grown in Space May Pose a Deadly Problem

It seems that space ecosystems are underdeveloped.

ClopClopMcFuckwad, do astronomy w Salads Grown in Space May Pose a Deadly Problem
@ClopClopMcFuckwad@lemmy.world avatar

We know that the International Space Station (ISS) is home to a lot of aggressive bacteria and fungi

Damn, TILd

outstanding_bond, do astronomy w NASA Selects a Wild Plan to "Swarm" Proxima Centauri With Thousands of Tiny Probes

A very cool idea, however the headline is misleading - NASA has not even remotely committed to running this mission. They’ve selected the swarm project as one of 13 projects in their innovation program and given it up to $175k to study feasibility. That’s roughly a postdoc for two years. This is far, far from committing the hundreds of millions or billions needed for the execution of this mission.

xilliah, do astronomy w NASA Selects a Wild Plan to "Swarm" Proxima Centauri With Thousands of Tiny Probes

The laser array is expensive but if it’s continuous and spread out enough you could keep sending newer probes. Or if it’s not continuous you could use it for different directions!

Starfighter,

According to Scott Manley’s video on the topic the probes would need to arrive at the correct time in order to form what is effectively a huge phased array antenna.

Only then is the combined transmission power of these tiny probes large enough to be received on earth.

happybadger, do astronomy w NASA Selects a Wild Plan to "Swarm" Proxima Centauri With Thousands of Tiny Probes
@happybadger@hexbear.net avatar

As Universe Today explored in a previous post, it would take between 19,000 and 81,000 years for a spacecraft to reach Proxima Centauri using conventional propulsion (or those that are feasible using current technology)

Jesus, at 4.25 light-years.

GlitchyDigiBun,
@GlitchyDigiBun@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Acceleration is a bitch. A manned flight would take longer as it would have to cap it’s thrust to 1-1.5G or risk long term effects. Not to mention having to cancel ALLL of that thrust starting at the halfway point.

happybadger,
@happybadger@hexbear.net avatar

Biology is frustrating. We’re built for everything except leaving the immediate area around the sea we crawled out of. Anything beyond that and our bones melt into cancer.

Flyberius,
@Flyberius@hexbear.net avatar

If you could maintain 1g of acceleration you would reach light speed in about a year.

kszeslaw, do wolnyinternet w Najstarsza strona internetowa miała właśnie 25 urodziny

Chyba 33… to artykuł z 2015

harcesz,
!deleted269 avatar
Cuttlersan, do astronomy w The First US Moon Lander Since The Apollo Era Is About to Make History

Exciting! :D

Xariphon, do astronomy w A Bizarre State of Matter Exists Deep Inside Large Neutron Stars

Would it be a yes-or-no thing, or more of a continuum?

At stellar mass x there's Some quark soup but it's mostly ordinary neutronium, at 50x there's More, at 10,000x there's Pretty Much All Of It, etc?

Or is it a critical mass kind of thing where at stellar mass x there's No Soup For You and at x+3 it's a veritable soup buffet?

MartianSands,

The latter, I suspect. That’s certainly how forming a neutron star works in the first place, because if a star gets so dense that it can form neutronium then the neutronium (which is far more dense than the core was before) can easily keep making more.

It’s a similar story with black holes. Get past the threshold at which it forms, and the process runs away and swallows the whole star.

If a quark soup is more dense than neutronium, then it would be fairly all-or-nothing

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