Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Launch Of James Webb Telescope Delayed

On march 27th 2018, NASA announced that the scheduled launch of the James Webb Space Telescope moved from its previous expected launch window of spring 2019 to May of 2020. The spacecraft has been in development for over two decades. NASA says that it needs more time to tests the telescope's intricate systems and to make repairs to its sun shield. The James Webb Space Telescope is slated to become the replacement for the Hubble Space Telescope.

Unlike Hubble, the Webb telescope will not be serviceable once it is launched. The Hubble Space Telescope orbited the Earth. The Webb telescope will go into orbit around the sun at a point that's a million miles away from Earth. Because of the very real need to get everything right before launch, it's possible that the Webb telescope may exceed its 8 billion development budget. NASA's partner on the project, the European Space Agency, says the spacecraft will be launched from French Guiana.

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

A New Form Of Light Has Been Created

On February 15th 2018, scientists at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and Harvard, announced in the Journal Science, that they have created a new form of light. According to Vladan Vuletic, the Lester Wolf Professor of physics at MIT and Mikhail Lukin of Harvard, who led the research team, groups of three photons were observed interacting with each other. They say that the photons were sticking together in a way that formed a new photonic matter.

Normal beams of light are composed of photons or tiny packets of energy, but those photons don't interact, they just pass each other. A way to picture this is to imagine shining two flashlights so as to make the beams touch each other. What you will see is the two beams passing each other by. However, when the research team shined a weak laser beam through a cloud of rubidium atoms, the photons interacted by binding together in pairs and triplets.

Photons, by nature, travel at 186,000 miles per second, but the researchers observed them traveling through the cloud at 100,000 times slower than normal. As the photons interacted, the resulting pairs and triplets gave off a phase shifted energy signature. The team worried as to whether these photon groupings would be stable. However, they discovered that a three photon grouping was more stable than two.

The team also found that the bond grows stronger as more photons are added. While the idea or possible use for this discovery may lead some to envision Star Wars like light sabers, the team wants to use the attractive and repulsive interactions of the photons to one day make light crystals. They believe that such crystals could be used to in quantum communication and quantum computing.

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Physicist Stephen Hawking Dies

Noted physicist and author, Stephen Hawking died Wednesday March 13th 2018, he was 76.  According to his family he died peacefully at his home in Cambridge in the United Kingdom, as the result of complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Dr. Hawking was best known for his work in cosmology, specifically black holes and relativity and for authoring the hugely successful science book, "A Brief History of Time." 

Dr. Hawking was diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, when he was 22. Progression of the motor neurone disease eventually left Dr. Hawking confined to a wheelchair and unable to speak. He did not however let that stop him from making significant contributions to science. When he was a graduate student at Cambridge University he and Roger Penrose of Berkbeck College of London were able to prove mathematically that black holes actually exist.

He later theorized the existence of mini proton sized black holes that he believed eventually evaporated. He then concluded that this meant that these black holes were essentially radiating away through what has become known as Hawking Radiation. A few years later, with the help of Dr, James Hartle form the University of California Santa Barbara, Dr. Hawking arrived at the assessment that our universe was a closed system and therefore is boundless like the Earth. 

In the late 1980's, Dr. Hawking achieved real stardom when he wrote the science book, "A Brief History of Time." His book stayed on the Sunday Times best seller list for 237 weeks which won it a place in the Guinness Book of Records. Dr, Hawking won the Einstein Award, the Wolf Prize, the Copley Medal, and the Fundamental Physics Prize. In 2009, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In 2014 His life was made into a movie named, "The Theory of Everything," which won an Academy Award for Eddie Redmayne, the actor who portrayed him.   

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

China's Tiangong-1 Space Station Is Falling

China's first space station, the Tiangong-1, is expected to fall back to Earth between March 24th and April 19th 2018. The Aerospace Corporation, a non profit R and D company has been tracking the Tiangong-1. They say the 8.5 ton space craft will likely re enter somewhere, over either the northern United States, parts of South America, northern China, the Middle East, central Italy, northern Spain, New Zealand, the south of Africa, or Tasmania in Australia. 

The Tiangong-1 was launched in 2011. Its name means "Heavenly Palace," in English. It is a single module craft that is operated by the China National Space Administration. The Tiangong-1 was used for both maned and unmanned missions. It has been host to two crews of "taikonauts," which is Chinese for astronaut. The final crew of "taikonauts," left the Tiangong-1 in 2013. In 2016, China launched the Tiangong-2 spacecraft.                         

That same year, China admitted that it had lost control of the Tiangong-1. Jonathan McDowell an astrophysicist from Harvard said, that the Tiangong-1's has been speeding up and that it is now falling at a rate of 6 km a week. He believes that no one will know where it will actually fall until it reaches its final week. The Aerospace Corporation says, "When considering the worst case location... the probability that a specific person (ie, you) will be struck by Tiangong-1 debris is about a million times smaller than the odds of winning the Powerball jackpot."