Fractals, those infinitely repeating recursive patterns, are common patterns in nature. Satellite photos make that extra clear.
(via PetaPixel)
Source: petapixel.com
Fractals, those infinitely repeating recursive patterns, are common patterns in nature. Satellite photos make that extra clear.
(via PetaPixel)
Source: petapixel.com
Space Fence: Watching Over Us
Earth is surrounded by a dense population of orbiting man-made junk, such as derelict spacecraft, obsolete satellites and rubble and shards from explosions or collisions. NASA estimates that there are 22,000 pieces of junk bigger than a softball orbiting us, 500,000 pieces bigger than a marble, and hundreds of millions of pieces smaller than 1cm. This junk is dense and fast-moving, and collisions with current operational satellites could be devastating—not to mention the International Space Station—so the US-based “Space Fence” program is being developed to improve the way we detect, track, measure and catalogue this debris. It will replace the aging Air Force Space Surveillance System (installed in 1961), and with ground-based radars at different geographical sites, the Space Fence program will be able to detect smaller microsatellites and debris than current systems allow. It’s expected to track 200,000 objects in a search area 220,000 times the volume of Earth’s oceans, helping us differentiate between potential and actual threats and therefore protect satellites vital to the functioning of GPS, banking, and communication. Lockheed Martin is developing the radar system for the US Air Force, and the program is expected to go live in 2017.
Very cool project. For more on our debris danger, check out the film Space Junk: 3-D!
NASA iPad Visualization Explorer
In addition to hurtling people and expensive equipment into space, NASA does a ton of basic scientific research to help us learn more about this rock we call Earth. And much of that research gets turned into amazing visualizations, because stuff is always easier to learn when you make it look cool.
Now you can explore them via an iPad app. For free! Check out the NASA iPad Visualization Explorer for a constantly updated collection of interactive imagery beamed straight from their fleet of research spacecraft right to your hands.
(via Chart Porn, image at top is of ocean surface currents off the East Coast of the U.S. as captured by NASA satellites)
Source: chartporn.org
I'm Joe Hanson, Ph.D. biologist and host/writer of PBS Digital Studios' It's Okay To Be Smart. Check out my "Episode Extras" here. There's a lot of amazing science out there. Let's go discover it together.
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