gototopgototop

Picture Galleries

NORWAY

Kolsåstoppen

ITALY

Venezia

ENGLAND

London

GREECE

Santorini

Random image

Hobby

Woodturning

article thumbnail

Pictures of wooden bowls, trunks, platters and other objects


Rose painting

article thumbnail

Rosepainted bowls, platters and chests


Calculators

Levealder kalkulator

There are no translations available.Bruk vår "Når vil jeg dø" forventet levealder kalkulatoren for å vurdere hvor lenge du vil leve. Når du vet forventet levealder, kan du anslå lengden på pens [ ... ]


More calculators

NASA Todays picture

Remnant of a Supernova
NASA Image Of The Day
Vital clues about the devastating ends to the lives of massive stars can be found by studying the aftermath of their explosions. In its more than twelve years of science operations, NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory has studied many of these supernova remnants sprinkled across the galaxy. The latest example of this important investigation is Chandra's new image of the supernova remnant known as G350.1+0.3. This stellar debris field is located some 14,700 light years from the Earth toward the center of the Milky Way. Evidence from Chandra and from ESA's XMM-Newton telescope suggest that a compact object within G350.1+0.3 may be the dense core of the star that exploded. The position of this likely neutron star, seen by the arrow pointing to "neutron star" in the inset image, is well away from the center of the X-ray emission. If the supernova explosion occurred near the center of the X-ray emission then the neutron star must have received a powerful kick in the supernova explosion. Data suggest this supernova remnant, as it appears in the image, is 600 and 1,200 years old. If the estimated location of the explosion is correct, this means the neutron star has been moving at a speed of at least 3 million miles per hour since the explosion. Another intriguing aspect of G350.1+0.3 is its unusual shape. Many supernova remnants are nearly circular, but G350.1+0.3 is strikingly asymmetrical as seen in the Chandra data in this image (gold). Infrared data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (light blue) also trace the morphology found by Chandra. Astronomers think that this bizarre shape is due to stellar debris field expanding into a nearby cloud of cold molecular gas. The age of 600-1,200 years puts the explosion that created G350.1+0.3 in the same time frame as other famous supernovas that formed the Crab and SN 1006 supernova remnants. However, it is unlikely that anyone on Earth would have seen the explosion because of the obscuring gas and dust that lies along our line of sight to the remnant. These results appeared in the April 10, 2011 issue of The Astrophysical Journal. Image Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO/I. Lovchinsky et al; IR: NASA/JPL-Caltech...
06 Feb 2012
800x6001024x768Large

Windows Mobile Programs

Touch Words

article thumbnail

There are no translations available. TouchWords - Finn alle ord på skjermen. Trykk første bokstaven i ordet og beveger fingeren til siste
Sp [ ... ]


More programs

It - security.

Sikkerhetstrusler

article thumbnail

There are no translations available. Det er ikke alltid man kan se at pc-en er infisert. Noen typer virus ødelegger filer eller slår av maskinen. Andre typer kan operere i bakgrunnen og man behøve [ ... ]


Sikkerhetsretningslinjer

article thumbnail

There are no translations available. Sikkerhetsretningslinjer for hjemme-pc


Del denne siden

Language

Norsk bokmål (Norway)English (United Kingdom)

Translate

Search

Webstesun.com

Internet Speedometer

Internet Speedometer

Internet Speed Calculator

©Copyright 2005 - 2012 stesun.com 
RocketTheme Joomla Templates