Introducing Chandra's Video Blog
While we like the written word as much as the next person, we thought
it would be good to mix things up. We recently got a new, small,
handheld video camera (about the size of a cell phone). The plan is
to use this to add simple videos to the Chandra blog and other places
on the website. Because it’s handheld and very sensitive, it’s easy
for the videos to appear shaky and the sound is not perfect. We’ll
work on this for the future. In the meantime, here are a few videos
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Ushering in IYA2009, Chandra-Style
There are some exciting, yet different, Chandra-related events happening at the American Astronomical Society (http://aas.org/) meeting in Long Beach, CA today. First, there was a press conference this morning to announce new results on Cassiopeia A that bring this supernova remnant "to life". One result shows how Cas A has changed from 2000 – just after Chandra’s launch – through until late 2007. This is the first time scientists have been able to watch as a supernova remnant changes like this over time.
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Last minute E-carding
It sounds like a good portion of the United States got walloped over the weekend with snow and ice and seemingly everything in between. (Yesterday was, after all, the winter solstice and the official start of the season, so what else should we have expected?) While the white stuff can be beautiful, it can also put a damper on holiday errands. For those of us who might be lagging behind on getting their holiday cards in the mail, we here at Chandra can help you out.
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Dark Energy Trailer on YouTube
By now, you've probably seen the news stories on our exciting and important new work on dark energy. For those of you who want even more, take a look at this posting on YouTube. The main scientist behind these results, Alexey Vikhlinin of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, put together a great movie describing the new science.
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Doing More with More
Back in 2002, we released a colorful image of the star-forming region known as 30 Doradus (also called the Tarantula Nebula.) At the time, we thought it was a beautiful image – and it was – of this pocket of intense stellar birth and death in the neighboring Large Magellanic Cloud.
Chandra's 30 Doradus from 2002 (left) and 2008 (right)
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X-ray 101
There are those of us who are experts, and then those of us who are not. Even some of us who have been working in X-ray astronomy can lose track of some of the basics. To help provide a little introduction or perhaps just a refresher, we’ve put together a little thing we like to call “X-ray 101”. It’s meant just to give a very quick overview of what Chandra is and what X-ray astronomy is all about.
A sample image from the activity
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News flash: Sticky tape generates X-rays
Recently a group of researchers from the University of California at Los Angeles announced what has been described by the New York Times as a "tour de force of office supply physics." The scientists measured X-ray flashes from a roll of Scotch tape as it was unpeeled.
Watch the full video at Nature
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A Pinwheel in X-rays
M101: A large spiral galaxy about 25 million light years away in the constellation Ursa Major. More at http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2008/m101/
Download the desktop: http://chandra.harvard.edu/resources/desktops_year.html?year=2008
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FREE STUFF!
Now that we shamelessly have your attention, we'd like to invite you to take a survey about our newly redesigned website. We know, we know, surveys can be less than stimulating. To make it worth your while, we are offering the possibility of a free package of Chandra goodies – bookmarks, postcards, etc. – that will be mailed directly to you. We’ll pick 50 people randomly to get the stuff, and we’ll let you know if you’ve been chosen.
Huge Russian Dolls Surrounding a Galaxy
M84: A massive elliptical galaxy about 55 million light years away in the Virgo Cluster. More at http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2008/m84/
-Kim Arcand, CXC
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