Tag Archives: moon

Partial Lunar Eclipse Today!

Photo via Wikimedia A partial eclipse of the moon will be visible before dawn on Saturday, June 26th. It will be visible to those living in the western half of the United States, Canada or South America. The best view in the U.S. will be the Pacific States. This type of eclipse takes place when a full moon is partly blocked by the Earth’s shadow. The eclipse starts at 10:17 Universal Time (5:17 a.m. Central Time, 4:17 a.m. Mountain Time or 3:17 a.m. Pacific Time). It will last for over 2.5 hours. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Here is the original post:
Partial Lunar Eclipse Today!

Big Lunar Eclipse – 3:17 am PDT

PhysOrg.com) — This Saturday morning, June 26th, there's going to be a lunar eclipse—and for many residents of the USA, it's going to be a big one. The eclipse begins at 3:17 am PDT (10:17 UT) when the Moon enters the sunset-colored shadow of Earth. By 4:38 am PDT (11:38 UT), the moment of greatest eclipse, 54% of the Moon's diameter will be covered. From beginning to end, the event lasts almost three hours. Although the eclipse is only partial, it will be magnified in size and charm by the “Moon Illusion”–a result of the eclipse occurring close to the horizon from viewing sites in the USA. For reasons not fully understood by astronomers or psychologists, low-hanging Moons look unnaturally large when they beam through trees, buildings and other foreground objects. In fact, a low Moon is no wider than any other Moon—cameras prove it—but the human brain insists otherwise. Who are we to argue? The effect will be particularly strong in western and central parts of the USA and Canada where the Moon will be setting as the eclipse reaches maximum. (Observing tip: Look low and to the west just before dawn.) The fact that the extra size is just an illusion in no way detracts from the beauty. People in New England and northeastern Canada will justmiss it. The Moon sets shortly before the eclipse begins. http://www.physorg.com/news196698260.html added by: Stoneyroad

Never Let Me Go Trailer: Save Us From the Summer Doldrums, Carey Mulligan!

Christ, can fall get here fast enough? This has been one of the most uninspiring summer movie seasons ever, and it only makes the quality releases coming in a few months all the more essential. Yesterday, Sofia Coppola threw us a life preserver by way of her trailer for Somewhere , and now it’s Never Let Me Go ‘s turn.

Read more:
Never Let Me Go Trailer: Save Us From the Summer Doldrums, Carey Mulligan!

Crowds Surround TBS for Late-Night War Vet’s Arrival

The Sea Turtles’ Breeding Tradition is Threatened – Delicate Turtles Dying Amid the BP Oil Spill

http://www.latimes.com/media/alternatethumbnails/blurb/2010-06/34574476-12213022… Sea turtles' breeding tradition threatened By Kim Murphy On an Alabama beach, the reptiles return to their birthplace to deposit their eggs. But this year, hundreds have been found dead or stranded. Photos (click on link) By Kim Murphy, Los Angeles Times June 12, 2010 | 8:18 p.m. Reporting from Gulf Shores, Ala — Each summer, a ritual millions of years old unfolds on this beach, next to the high-rise condos and beach chairs, the T-shirt shops and the Hooters across the road. A 300-pound loggerhead turtle drags herself out of the water for the first time since her birth, probably on the same beach, 18 years ago. Under the moonlight, she kicks a 2-foot-deep hole into the sand, drops in a gleaming heap of eggs, covers it and then lumbers back out to sea. Two months later, 100 or more tiny turtles will scratch their way up through the sand, glimpse the shine of the moon and stars on the water that serves as some kind of celestial GPS, and head for the sea. Fishermen's nets, children with sand shovels, confusing waterfront lights and pollution have plundered the sea turtles, leaving all five species that inhabit the Gulf of Mexico endangered or threatened. Now they face what may be the most serious threat of all: millions of gallons of spilled oil, much of it in the waters they must navigate to reach their Alabama nesting beaches. More than 350 turtles have been found dead or foundering along the Gulf Coast since the April 20 well blowout, a number wildlife biologists find alarming. At least 62 turtles have been found covered in oil. Rescuers in Gulfport, Miss., on Thursday were called to collect 20 turtle carcasses, the highest daily number they have ever recorded. Researchers say there is no way of knowing how many more turtles have perished at sea. “Before, we didn't deal much with dead turtles. The calls we'd get were few and far between,” said Tim Hoffland, director of animal care at the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport. “But since this oil spill, it's just gone berserk,” Hoffland said. “I'm getting calls from my people saying they can't even walk a quarter-mile on the beach without running into dead turtles. It's crazy.” The turtle deaths pose a complex forensics mystery for scientists, many of whom say they are not ready to blame it all on the oil spill. Many of the stranded turtles, for example — five times the number seen in recent years — have been caught by fishing hooks. Toxicology tests will try to determine whether a toxic algae bloom may have killed some of the animals. Many researchers say the spill could have unleashed a tangled web of threats that is killing the turtles even without swathing them in oil. Some suspect shrimping boats — unleashed recently for what many fishermen feared could be their last chance to harvest before oil kills off or contaminates their catch — may have harmed the turtles in their eagerness. It's possiblethey dispensed with the required openings in their nets and inadvertently trapped turtles, leaving them unable to surface for air and causing them to drown. Oil or dispersants may have poisoned the turtles or the fish and crabs they rely on for food; the turtles then may have been driven toward fishing bait along the piers, resulting in the large number of hookings. In a little more than half of the roughly 70 necropsies performed so far, there has been evidence of either acute toxicosis — of unexplained origins — or drowning, said Michael Ziccardi, director of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network at UC Davis, who has been working in the field to help diagnose the deaths. “What we're doing is a CSI for sea turtles. We're taking all of that information and pursuing the clues to try to see why these animals are dying,” he said. So important are their findings — illegal fishing, for example, could carry criminal penalties — that the turtle carcasses are being marked with evidence tags and kept under lock and key in a refrigerated trucking container at the Gulfport marine mammal facility until they can be picked up by government scientists. Though turtle strandings around the world are relatively common, the number on the Gulf Coast has averaged only 47 a year over the last five years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The significant increase this year raises an uncertainty: How much of the bigger reported number is due to the larger number of people on the beach looking for troubled animals? Here on the white beaches of Alabama, there are typically far fewer sea turtle nests than the tens of thousands in Florida. The loggerheads that make their way here are so threatened by the bustling resort development that volunteers with a group called Share the Beach patrol the 47 miles of sand at dawn each morning. They look for new nests and fence them off with posts, tape and warning signs — an effort that has won ready cooperation from residents and tourists. Mike Reynolds, a real estate agent and auctioneer from Gulf Shores who heads the group, said he fears there are already signs that fewer turtles have made their way toward shore through the oil and tar balls. “By this time of year, we should have 11 nests. We have six,” he said one morning last week as he motored in a dune buggy down the beach, looking for the long, sliding track known as a “crawl” that shows a female turtle has made her way onto the beach to deposit her eggs. Reynolds said the volunteers began their work eight years ago to counteract the devastating effect of development on the newly hatched sea turtles, which were increasingly turning toward the urban lights on shore rather than the safe glint of starlight on the sea. “Back in the late '90s, we lost tens of thousands of turtles,” Reynolds said. “They'd start going to the light; they'd end up getting dehydrated in the dunes, foxes would eat them, coyotes would eat them, and you'd drive down the road and you'd find squished baby sea turtles.” Since then, local officials have passed an ordinance minimizing lights on the beach during hatching season. Just before the babies emerge, volunteers dig a deep trench from the nest directly to the sea. But in what is normally a busy nesting season, sticky globs of oil have marred the beach. Sargassum seaweed, a favorite habitat for young turtles, has washed up soaked with oil. The last nest laid on the beach, on June 3, came exactly one day before the first waves of oil showed up in Gulf Shores. Are the turtles merely slow this year, Reynolds wonders? Or unable to make it through the oil? Or dead? The volunteers — a postal carrier, an office manager, a teacher, a retired transportation specialist — are motivated by a growing fear, and a lingering sense of obligation: Whatever primordial impulse drives these slow, heavy turtles toward their shores must be honored. “These turtles circumvent the globe, and no matter where they go, 18 or 20 years after they were born, they're driven to come back to this beach to nest. It doesn't matter if it's oiled, or if it's got too much light on it, or too many people or too much trash,” Reynolds said. “So we can have our houses here, have our condos, get our suntans, as long as we remember this is an important habitat for an ancient creature that doesn't have a choice.” added by: EthicalVegan

NASA scientists discover evidences of life on Saturn’s moon, Titan

NASA scientists have discovered evidences of life on Saturn's moon, Titan. Analyzed data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft suggest a primitive, exotic form of life or precursor to life on Titan's surface breath with a dense atmosphere around the planet and feed with a complex chemistry on the surface of the moon. “One key finding comes from a paper online now in the journal Icarus that shows hydrogen molecules flowing down through Titan's atmosphere and disappearing at the surface,” NASA website says. “Another paper online now in the Journal of Geophysical Research maps hydrocarbons on the Titan surface and finds a lack of acetylene.” read more: http://en.rian.ru/science/20100605/159318120.html added by: bmltv

In Chicago, A Fashion Show Satisfies Our Love for Recycled Textiles (and Our Sweet Tooth, Too) [Photos]

From afar it looks like just another golden hued evening gown but up close it’s hundreds of M&M wrappers–yum! Image courtesy of EarthShare Illinois We’re no strangers to green fashion in Chicago; Designers Vaute Couture , Frei Designs , and Mountains of the Moon

View post:
In Chicago, A Fashion Show Satisfies Our Love for Recycled Textiles (and Our Sweet Tooth, Too) [Photos]

Possible Signs of Methane-Based Life on Titan

Something is consuming hydrogen and organic molecules on Saturn's moon Titan, and the recipe matches astrobiologists' theories about possible methane-based life. Granted, there may be other chemical explanations — it's just that no one knows what they are yet. New data from the Cassini spacecraft show hydrogen is disappearing near Titan's surface. What's more, scientists have not been able to find acetylene, an organic molecule that should be pretty abundant in the moon's thick atmosphere. All this fits very nicely with a theory from NASA astrobiologist Chris McKay, who proposed five years ago that microbial life on Titan could breathe hydrogen and eat acetylene, producing methane as a result. Scientists emphasize that the findings are not proof of life, and there's plenty of work to do before non-biological causes can be ruled out. Scientific conservatism suggests that a biological explanation should be the last choice after all non-biological explanations are addressed,” says Mark Allen of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., in a NASA release. The good news is that even if life is ruled out, the non-biological explanations are still interesting. According to previous studies, hydrogen should be distributed pretty evenly throughout Titan's atmosphere. But it's disappearing at the surface. “It's as if you have a hose and you're squirting hydrogen onto the ground, but it's disappearing,” says Darrell Strobel, a Cassini interdisciplinary scientist based at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., who authored a paper published in the journal Icarus. It's possible that the hydrogen is combining with carbon on Titan's surface to produce methane. But Titan is too cold for that to happen quickly enough to account for all the missing hydrogen. An unknown mineral could be the culprit, meaning scientists may have found a new substance previously unknown to exist on Titan. The explanations for the dearth of acetylene are equally puzzling. The hydrocarbon should form abundantly in icy aerosols in Titan's atmosphere, but it's not there. It's possible that sunlight or cosmic rays are transforming the acetylene into more complex molecules that would fall to the ground with no acetylene signature, according to NASA. It's also possible that chemical reactions are transforming acetylene into benzene (which Cassini did observe on Titan's surface), but that would require a catalyst, which hasn't been identified. There's one more thing: Cassini observed an organic compound with the benzene that scientists have not been able to identify. Cassini has several more Titan flybys in which to gather data — in fact, the craft is set to fly within 2,000 miles of Titan's surface this afternoon, to make infrared scans of the moon's north polar region. The region includes Kraken Mare, the largest lake on Titan, which covers a greater area than the Caspian Sea on Earth. If methane-based microbes do live on Titan, there's a good chance they would live in just those sort of lakes. http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-06/new-cassini-findings-hint-methane-… added by: pjacobs51

Bruce Beresford-Redman Proclaims Innocence, Responds to Arrest Warrant

For the first time since his wife was killed in Cancun, Bruce Beresford-Redman has spoken out. The former Survivor producer has officially been charged with “qualified homicide” by Mexican authorities, seven weeks after Monica Beresford-Redman was found strangled to death in a sewer near the Moon Palace resort, where the couple had been on vacation. “I am devastated at her loss; and I am incensed at the suggestion that I could have had anything to do with her death,” Bruce said in a statement yesterday, responding to his arrest warrant. “I am innocent.” Bruce has been the sole person of interest in the case because sources confirmed he’d been having an affair , and witnesses spotted Bruce and Monica arguing on the beach the night she was killed. Continued Bruce in his statement: “Monica was the axis around which our whole family revolved. From her sisters and parents to my parents and of course to our children and me, she was everything to us. My children have had one parent taken from them by a senseless act of violence. I implore the Mexican authorities not to take their remaining parent by a miscarriage of justice and to do what is right not just what is expedient.” Beresford-Redman returned to the United States last week, against the wishes of Mexican officials. He’s filed for full custody of his two young children. If necessary, Mexican authorities will extradite him to their country. Attorney Richard G. Hirsch referred to the warrant as “extremely disturbing” and said his client was “innocent of this crime and is prepared to defend himself in a court of law.” He’ll eventually get the chance to.

Originally posted here:
Bruce Beresford-Redman Proclaims Innocence, Responds to Arrest Warrant

‘Dancing With The Stars’ Finale: Nicole Scherzinger Wins It All

Evan Lysacek and Erin Andrews settle for second and third, respectively, during action-packed finale. By Kara Warner Ten weeks of fierce competition, a diverse cast of headline-making celebrities and countless can’t-believe-they-stayed-on costumes all boiled down to Tuesday night’s (May 25) “Dancing With the Stars” season finale. And after two hours and a slew of great performances, the coveted mirror-ball trophy was bestowed, as many predicted, upon Nicole Scherzinger and her partner, Derek Hough. The season-ten favorites beat out second-place finishers Olympian Evan Lysacek and Anna Trebunskaya and third-place duo Erin Andrews and Maksim Chmerkovskiy. The winners kicked off the evening’s “favorite dance” round with the first of a trio of fiery Argentine tangos (all three dancing couples performed the Argentine tango for that round), which garnered rave reviews from the judges and sealed their place in the final two. But it was their final, high-energy jive to Ike & Tina Turner’s “Proud Mary” that clinched the win. Their performance prompted veteran ballroom judge Len Goodman to call the competition 20 minutes prior to the winner being announced — and before Lysacek and Trebunskaya had taken the floor. “There is only one winner of ‘Dancing With the Stars’ — it should be you,” he boldly stated. The always effusive Bruno Tonioli agreed: “This has been the best season of ‘Dancing With the Stars’ ever! You two have produced the most inventive, stunning dances I’ve ever seen! This [dance] was the crowning glory of an amazing season.” Carrie Ann Inaba said simply, “You set this place on fire.” As for Scherzinger and Hough, they were over the moon. “I’m just so flippin’ happy right now!” the Pussycat Dolls frontwoman declared. The show’s other highlights, in addition to great performances by Lysacek and Andrews and a few teary goodbyes, included Buzz Aldrin’s brief return to the dance floor in a sparkly jumpsuit and Niecy Nash and Pamela Anderson “who’s the sexiest?” showstopper. The cheesiest moment was easily when “The Bachelor” couple Jake Pavelka and his fianc