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Event: Brainwave @Rubin Museum
by Greg on Feb.05, 2010, under Science Event, Uncategorized
| February 17, 2010 | to | April 14, 2010 |
The Brainwave Festival is returning this month starting February 17th @ the gorgeous Rubin Museum of art!
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Still want to set the world on fire
Science, media, art, movies, politics, and what else I find interesting tweeting and reading on the internet.
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Mind Tweets
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- Becky Benson, 56, traveled from Orlando, Fla., because, she said, “we believe in Jesus Christ, and he is our (cont) http://tl.gd/3d0j6t 5 days ago
- Star trek nerd out on @scifri right now 1 week ago
- Excited that our programming team is installing the Matterhorn lecture capture open software to test. Lots of features in there, like OCR 1 week ago
- Woohoo!!! RT @engadget: MPEG-LA makes H.264 video royalty-free forever, as long as it's freely distributed http://bit.ly/9oaHAB 1 week ago
- #Community just did an amazing Bert and Ernie skit. Bravo! 1 week ago
- One frame of my rendered ae sequence is the premiere image for missing footage. Dynamic linking bug? Or permission hiccup? 1 week ago
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U.S. : Sci/Tech- Justice Dept. Criticizes Latest Google Book Deal - New York Times
- Google facing many risks in China standoff - Reuters
- Sun execs' resignations mark the end of an era - San Francisco Chronicle
- Facebook hoax may be clever marketing ploy - msnbc.com
- AT&T Agrees to Support Sling Player Mobile App - PC Magazine
- New Pluto Pictures Unveiled; Hubble's Sharpest Yet - National Geographic
- Amazon's Kindle Gets Ready to Battle Apple's iPad - PC World
- Justice Dept. Criticizes Latest Google Book Deal - New York Times
Nasa's Image of the Day
Little Galaxy With a Tail
This infrared portrait of the Small Magellanic Cloud, taken by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, reveals stars and dust in this galaxy as never seen before. T The image shows the main body of the Small Magellanic Cloud, which is comprised of the "bar" and "wing" on the left and the "tail" extending to the right. The bar contains both old stars (in blue) and young stars lighting up their natal dust (green/red). The wing mainly contains young stars. The tail contains only gas, dust and newly formed stars. Spitzer data has confirmed that the tail region was recently torn off the main body of the galaxy. Two of the tail clusters, which are still embedded in their birth clouds, can be seen as red dots. The data in this image are being used by astronomers to study the lifecycle of dust in the entire galaxy: from the formation in stellar atmospheres, to the reservoir containing the present day interstellar medium, and the dust consumed in forming new stars. The dust being formed in old, evolved stars (blue stars with a red tinge) is measured using mid-infrared wavelengths. The present day interstellar dust is weighed by measuring the intensity and color of emission at longer infrared wavelengths. The rate at which the raw material is being consumed is determined by studying ionized gas regions and the younger stars (yellow/red extended regions). The Small Magellanic Cloud, and its companion galaxy the Large Magellanic Cloud, are the two galaxies where this type of study is possible. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/STScI
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