A nice cover from an old book about astronomy. You can see hundreds more of vintage book covers on the Facebook page Perfectly Bound: The Dying Arts of Book Design and Binding.
ISON Update!
The Hubble Space Telescope snapped new photos of Comet ISON (“The Comet of the Century”) a few days ago. It’s still set to make a big appearance around Thanksgiving. Here’s a photo:
And here’s a nifty animation of Comet ISON’s projected trajectory around the Sun, seen from different angles. Don’t worry, it only looks like the comet is colliding with Mars and the Earth.
Fermi Paradox
Nice short piece on the Fermi Paradox in NYT, here. Named after physicist Enrico Fermi, who in 1950 pointed out that if there are billions of suns in our galaxy, and if even a tiny fraction of those suns have Earth-like planets, and if only a tiny fraction of those planets could develop human-like intelligent life, well, then our galaxy ought to be teeming with life, right? Fermi asks: Where is everybody?
Like, for example, this Orion Slave Girl:
Mr. Moonlight
And just for fun, and because it may be the worst song The Beatles ever recorded, there’s this:
Starry Ceiling
Giotto. The ceiling of the Scrovegni Chapel (Cappella degli Scrovegni), aka the Arena Chapel. Padua, Veneto, Italy. (detail)
From Stephen Ellcock.
NASA Wants to Lasso an Asteroid, Tow it Home
This news last week, as reported in, among other publications, Florida Today:
Plans are in the works for astronauts to capture an asteroid, tow it into orbit around the Moon, and then visit it for an asteroid-walk.
Here’s an artist’s rendition of the lassoing procedure:
Which of course puts one (or at least me) in mind of this, from the movie It’s a Wonderful Life:
Comet Siding Spring
Comet Siding Spring (named after the observatory in Australia from where it was first spotted) is on track to have a close encounter with Mars in October 2014. Here’s what it’ll look like if you’re a Martian:
And here’s more info on Comet Siding Spring, in case you’re curious:
http://www.space.com/20443-mars-comet-2014-flyby-science.html?cmpid=520721
Carl Sagan and Stephen Hawking Sing Trippy Number About the Universe
Here are Carl Sagan and Stephen Hawking singing (in a sense) a song about the mysteries of the universe.