Sunday, October 11, 2015

Hubble deep field image of the universe

http://www.spacetelescope.org/static/archives/images/large/heic1408a.jpg
http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2014/04/23/hubble_galaxies_deep_image_reveals_thousands_of_weird_galaxies.html


A HUBBLE IMAGE THAT WILL DRILL INTO YOUR BRAIN

APRIL 23 2014 12:00 PM
Hubble Drills Deep Into the Universe
By Phil Plait

Phil Plait writes Slate's Bad Astronomy blog and is an astronomer, public speaker, science evangelizer, and author of Death From the Skies!  

What happens when you take a 2.4-meter telescope, launch it into space, and command it to stare at one spot in the sky for a solid 14 hours, taking data both in visible light (like our eyes see) and infrared?This. This.Give me a moment to tell you why this image will destroy your brain. Click to nicely galactinate, or click here to hugely do so.All photos by NASA/ ESAAdvertisement Can I get a "Yowza!" from the congregation? No? Maybe that's because when I shrink this Hubble Space Telescope picture down to fit the blog you can't really get a sense of what you're seeing here. So click the picture to get the 1280 x 1280 image, or better yet, do yourself and your eyeballs a favor and take a poke at the huge 3900 x 3900 pixel version, because holy wow.
!  
What you're seeing here is a view of thousands of galaxies. Thousands. Sure, there are some stars in our own Milky Way punctuating this picture here and there but they are few, and just stomped flat by the number of whole galaxies you're seeing. The stars can be distinguished from galaxies because they're point sources; small dots. They also might have those lines going through them called diffraction spikes. Galaxies don't usually get those because they're fuzzier, spread out over many pixels. That suppresses the diffraction spikes.So for example that bright point with pretty spikes you see toward the upper right is a star, probably a few thousand light years from Earth. That's a long way to be sure, but even the nearest galaxies you can see in this image are hundreds of millions of light years away! Some are billions; the most distant objects in this shot are at least 9 billion light years distant. That's a million times farther away than any star in the picture.When the light we see here left those galaxies, the Sun hadn't yet formed. When the Earth itself was coalescing from countless specks of dust, that light still had half its journey here ahead of it.So yeah. This stuff is far.CLASS B1608+656, a cluster of galaxies far, far away.In fact you're seeing galaxies at all different distances from Earth in this image, but the observation itself was taken to look at the cluster of galaxies in the center. Called CLASS B1608+656, it's a clump of galaxies about five billion light years away. The mass of that cluster acts like a lens, bending space, magnifying objects behind it. This gravitational lens has distorted and amped up the brightness of a luminous galaxy located an additional several billion light years behind it, creating the weirdly shaped mess you see in the close-up above. Rings and arcs are common in such events.But there's so much more to this image; just scanning across it reveals an incredible variety and diversity of galaxies. Remember, too, you're looking at objects as they existed eons ago; many are still growing, suffering collisions with other galaxies, giving them fantastic shapes. As an example, I'm fond of this little group near the top of the main image:A cosmic train wreck a million light years long.I'm not precisely sure what to make of this. The bigger galaxies look to all be about the same distance from us, but that could be a coincidental alignment. Some of the galaxies are blue and clumpy looking, indicating they're aggressively forming stars (hot, young, massive stars are preferentially blue), while some are quite red. The red ones may be very dusty, which reddens the light from stars, or they may be farther away, their light redshifted as it fights against the expansion of the Universe itself, losing energy along the way. It may be a mix of both. Unfortunately, this image was made using only two filters, so colors can be difficult to interpret, and don't yield a lot of subtle information. The only way to know more about the galaxies would be to measure their distance, and I didn't find anything in the literature about them.Top CommentOkay, now you've done it. My mind is completely and irrevocably blown.  More...-Tom132 CommentsJoin InThat's worth taking a moment to ponder, actually. These are entire galaxies, collections of tens of billions of stars, planets, dust, and gas clouds, each and every one a monstrous object on scales that dwarf our everyday experience … yet there are so many of each of them in this image alone we can't possibly know their details. We can determine their coordinates on the sky, get a rough estimate of their distance, but there is simply no way to get a measure of them as individuals. They are too many. It's like trying to get the life history of everyone who passes you on a busy New York City street corner. The task is too overwhelming.And just in case I have not yet crushed your puny human mind, this image represents a tiny fraction of the entire sky; perhaps only one ten-millionth of it. That means there are hundreds of billions of galaxies like these scattered throughout the Universe.So gaze again at that image, one that drills a narrow but incredibly deep view through our cosmos, one that shows us both the awe-inducing grandeur and soul-squeezing immensity of it, and remember: The Universe is far, far larger than this still.And yet here we are, pondering it. To those galaxies, we are the ones who are lost in the anonymous throng. Yet I would argue we are as important and interesting a piece of the Universe as any other we can imagine. We are part of it at the same time as we study it, and to me, that is part of what makes us great.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

"The Great Mandala"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfmYF6Yboa4&sns=em

The Great Mandala (The Wheel of Life)
Peter, Paul and Mary

So I told him that he'd better shut his mouth
And do his job like a man.
And he answered "Listen, Father,I will never kill another.
"He thinks he's better than his brother that died
What the hell does he think he's doing
To his father who brought him up right?

Chorus:
Take your place on The Great Mandala
As it moves through your brief moment of time.
Win or lose now you must choose now
And if you lose you're only losing your life.
Tell the jailer not to bother
With his meal of bread and water today.
He is fasting 'til the killing's over
He's a martyr, he thinks he's a prophet.
But he's a coward, he's just playing a game
He can't do it, he can't change it
It's been going on for ten thousand years
(Chorus)
Tell the people they are safe now
Hunger stopped him, he lies still in his cell.
Death has gagged his accusations
We are free now, we can kill now,
We can hate now, now we can end the world
We're not guilty, he was crazy
And it's been going on for ten thousand years!
Take your place on The Great Mandala
As it moves through your brief moment of time.
Win or lose now you must choose now
And if you lose you've only wasted your life.

**********************
The song is about a conscientious objector who chooses to die (by starving himself)rather than kill.
The song is about a man making a morally unpopular existential choice  and giving his life for it no matter what his father or the public says.
Its one of the best anti-war songs ever written.

************
Groujo
"I can't say enough about this song. It's absolutely haunting. It tears my heart out and leaves me shaken. The phrasing and the chord progression is unique and disturbing and lovely. But it is the story that is devastating. A man of principle, a man of peace and dignity, gives up everything he has to effect change. Like so many have. He dies alone in a jail cell for his principles, without a friend, estranged from family, not appreciated or understood, an "enemy of the people". And ultimately there is no indication his sacrifice matters in the least: the killing continues unabated, he not a martyr for his cause. He was never thanked or supported and he will never know if he made the right decisions.We can feel certain the man was admirably in the right. The songwriter clearly agrees values this man's principles and courage, even if the 3 speakers in the song do not. We see him as a lonely prophet being cut down by the runaway train of cruelty and ignorance and fear that is our society. Like so many have. But he is never celebrated, never martyred. He is forgotten or reviled. An utterly purposeless tragedy.He has taken his place on the great mandala. For good or ill. The wheel of time doesn't notice. And so have the others in the song: the father, the jailer, the ruler, and the people. They take their places beside his. And the wheel rolls on, until they aren't even a memory. Is change even possible? The wheel metaphor suggest that ultimately it is not. As the second singer says, "He can't do it. He can't change it. It's been going on for 10,000 years." From this perspective, the man is misguided. He threw away his life for a hopeless cause. He's has "lost" and wasted his life. But knowing the songwriter as we do, this is not the intended message. We know he disagrees with the second singer, because he's been fighting for change his whole life. The losers are really the people who choose to rationalize their own views and refuse to accept the man's message, because they are creating exactly the dystopia they think is unavoidable. Like so many have.So we are forced to ask: what place will we ourselves take on the wheel? Consciously or not, we all choose our place on the great mandala. We have this brief moment to choose who we will be and what we will stand for. And, we are forced to confront the possibility that all our hopes and efforts will amount to nothing. I find it both excruciating and sublime that even the song refuses to reward the man for his sacrifice. Because the great mandala won't reward you either. The song ends on the disturbing thought that "if you lose you've only wasted your life." It's very ambiguous who the loser is here. And as frustrating as that is, that's exactly as it should be. You must decide for yourself."


*************
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Gp4G-pQ-JI&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

"collateral damage" --a euphemism for "murder"!






Americans bomb hospital in effort to retake Kunduz from the Taliban.

The Quebec City-born president of Doctors Without Borders offered up harrowing details of the attack on a hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, saying "patients burned alive in their beds."
"This was not just an attack on our hospital, it was an attack on the Geneva conventions," said Joanne Liu, president MSF International. "This cannot be tolerated."

"If we let this go, as if was a non-event, we are basically giving a blank check to any countries who are at war," she concluded. 
Then "war has no rules!"

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/kunduz-airstrike-doctors-without-borders-wants-unprecedented-probe-n439856

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2015/10/08/world/europe/kunduz-afghanistan-hospital-doctors-without-borders.html?referer=http://www.google.ca/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=3&rct=j&q=THE%20NATIONAL%20%7C%20Oct%203%2C%202015%20%7C%202%3A50%20Doctors%20Without%20Borders%20reacts%20to%20attack%20on%20Afghan%20hospital&ved=0CCIQqQIwAmoVChMIsOSw0tOwyAIVEzKICh0eRw2O&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2015%2F10%2F08%2Fworld%2Feurope%2Fkunduz-afghanistan-hospital-doctors-without-borders.html&usg=AFQjCNHntThFExiN4jLBeeJmPojHG_1UcQ

https://theintercept.com/2015/10/06/why-bombing-kunduz-hospital-was-probably-a-war-crime/