Saturday, June 18, 2011

Thanks for photos : Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 20 &21







A lunar eclipse in progress in Harare, Zimbabwe Wednesday, June, 15, 2011. A total lunar eclipse occurred in some parts of Africa, Asia, Middle East and Western Australia. The 100 minute period of totality is said to be the longest since 2000 according to Astronomers. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)


A lunar eclipse in progress in  Harare, Zimbabwe Wednesday, June, 15, 2011. A total lunar eclipse occurred in some parts of Africa, Asia, Middle East and Western Australia.  The 100 minute period of t




The moon is seen behind an illuminated cross of Ayios Nickolaos church during a lunar eclipse over Nicosia, Cyprus, Wednesday, June 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Petros Karadjias)
The moon is seen behind an illuminated cross of Ayios Nickolaos church during a lunar eclipse over  Nicosia, Cyprus, Wednesday, June 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Petros Karadjias)

Thanks for photos : Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 17&18&19






Residents look at the moon during a partial lunar eclipse under the Roman pillars of the Temple of Hercules in Amman June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Ali Jarekji (JORDAN - Tags: SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT)
Residents look at the moon during a partial lunar eclipse under the Roman pillars of the Temple of Hercules in Amman


A partial lunar eclipse is seen over the village of Zejtun, lit up for its parish church feast of Saint Catherine, in the south of Malta June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi (MALTA - Tags: ENVIRONMENT RELIGION CITYSCAPE) MALTA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN MALTA


A partial lunar eclipse is seen over the village of Zejtun, lit up for its parish church feast of Saint Catherine, in the south of Malta
The moon is seen behind the wall of Damascus gate in Jerusalem Old City during a total lunar eclipse June 15, 2011. The image projected onto the wall is part of the Jerusalem Festival of Lights. REUTERS/Nir Elias (JERUSALEM - Tags: SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT)


The moon is seen behind the wall of Damascus gate in Jerusalem Old City during a total lunar eclipse







Thanks for the photo : Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 14&15&16





Residents look at the moon during a partial lunar eclipse under the Roman pillars of the Temple of Hercules in Amman June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Ali Jarekji (JORDAN - Tags: SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT)
Residents look at the moon during a partial lunar eclipse under the Roman pillars of the Temple of Hercules in Amman


The moon is seen behind the wall of Damascus gate in Jerusalem old city during a total lunar eclipse June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Nir Elias (JERUSALEM - Tags: SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT)
The moon is seen behind the wall of Damascus gate in Jerusalem old city during a total lunar eclipse


A shadow falls on the moon during a partial lunar eclipse, at the Vittoriano monument on Piazza Venezia in Rome June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Tony Gentile ( ITALY - Tags: SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT IMAGES OF THE DAY)


A shadow falls on the moon during a partial lunar eclipse, at the Vittoriano monument on Piazza Venezia in Rome

Thanks for the photo : Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 12&13

A shadow falls on the moon during a total lunar eclipse as seen from Brasilia June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino (BRAZIL - Tags: ENVIRONMENT)
A shadow falls on the moon during a total lunar eclipse as seen from Brasilia


The earth casts its shadow over the moon during a total lunar eclipse seen from behind the Pantheon of Freedom sculpture, featuring a torch, at Three Powers Square in downtown Brasilia, Brazil, Wednesday June 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)


The earth casts its shadow over the moon during a total lunar eclipse seen from behind the Pantheon of Freedom sculpture, featuring a torch, at Three Powers Square in downtown Brasilia, Brazil, Wednes

Thanks for the photo : Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 11

A lunar eclipse is seen over the Atomium in Brussels, early Thursday, June 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)


A lunar eclipse is seen over the Atomium in Brussels, early Thursday, June 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)

Thanks for the photo : Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 10

This five picture sequence shows various stages of a total lunar eclipse over Belgrade Serbia, between 20:30 and 21:30 local time on Wednesday, June 15, 2011. The total lunar eclipse was visible throughout most parts of Europe on Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/ Marko Drobnjakovic)


This five picture sequence shows various stages of a total lunar eclipse over Belgrade Serbia, between 20:30 and 21:30 local time on Wednesday, June 15, 2011. The total lunar eclipse was visible throu

Volcano ash turns Asian eclipse blood red 9

Today`s Yahoo!News got my attention! I feel what I am still alive is a miracle very seriously

A cloud of ash billows from Puyehue
volcano near Osorno in southern Chile. AFP/Claudio
Santana

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A monster black hole shredded a Sun-like star, producing a strangely long-lasting flash of gamma rays that probably won't be seen again in a million years, astronomers reported on Thursday.
That is definitely not the norm for gamma ray bursts, energetic blasts that typically flare up and end in a matter of seconds or milliseconds, often the sign of the death throes of a collapsing star.
"This is truly different from any explosive event we have seen before," said Joshua Bloom of the University of California-Berkeley, a co-author of research on the blast published in the journal Science.
Initially spied on March 28 by NASA's Swift spacecraft, which is trolling the universe for gamma ray bursts, this particular flash has lasted more than two months and is still going on, Bloom said in a telephone interview.
What makes this even stranger is that the black hole, located in the constellation Draco (The Dragon) about 4 billion light years, or 24 trillion miles (38.62 trillion km) from Earth, was sitting quietly, not eating much, when a star about the mass of our Sun moved into range.
"We have this otherwise dormant black hole, not gobbling up an appreciable amount of mass, and along comes this star which just happens to be on some orbit which puts it close to the black hole," Bloom said.
FEEDING FRENZY
"This was a black hole which was otherwise quiescent and it sort of has an impulsive feeding frenzy on this one star," he said.
Bloom figures this may happen once per black hole per million years.
This kind of behavior is different from what active black holes generally do, which is to suck in everything their vast gravity can pull in, even light. Most galaxies, including our Milky Way, are thought to harbor black holes in their hearts.
Black holes are invisible, but astronomers can infer their existence because the material they pull in lights up before it gets sucked in.
In this case, though, the black hole feasted on one star -- about the same mass as our Sun -- with such relish that it tore the star apart before gulping it down. As it did so, the black hole emitted powerful gamma ray jets from its center as bits of the dying star were turned into energy.
The black hole's gravitational pull was so great that it exerted what's called a tidal disruption on the passing star.
Astronomers could use this observation to help them learn more about how black holes grow, Bloom said.
"We still don't understand how black holes and the universe grow," he said. "We think most black holes start off as being no more than the mass of our Sun ... How they go from 10 solar masses to a billion solar masses is critical."
There is a strong connection between the mass of black holes and the mass of the galaxies that host them, with black holes feeding on gas and stars that come near.
(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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Photo Highlight Slideshow

A cloud of ash billows from Puyehue volcano near Osorno in southern Chile. AFP/Claudio Santana