Search This Blog
Following are links to various U.S. government press releases.
Counterterrorism
White-Collar Crime
Popular Posts
-
FROM: U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT Tuesday, July 2, 2013 Justice Department Reaches Settlement with Rhode Island Company to Resolve Immigrat...
-
FROM: FEMA SEATTLE, Wash. -- As the days get warmer, we look forward to gardening and playing outdoors. But this is also a time to be awa...
-
FROM: U.S. HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES From the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, I’m Talib Babb with HHS HealthBeat. Gettin...
-
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE Think Asia, Think Hong Kong Remarks Heidi Crebo-Rediker Chief Economist Washington, DC June 11, ...
-
CDC: Nearly half of U.S. adults were not receiving key preventive health services before 2010
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
GLOB STARS
This photo and excerpt are from the NASA website:
The Hubble Space Telescope has produced the most detailed image so far of Messier 9, a globular star cluster located close to the center of the galaxy. This ball of stars is too faint to see with the naked eye, yet Hubble can see over 250,000 individual stars shining in it. Messier 9, pictured here, is a globular cluster, a roughly spherical swarm of stars that lies around 25,000 light-years from Earth, near the center of the Milky Way, so close that the gravitational forces from the galactic center pull it slightly out of shape. Globular clusters are thought to harbor some of the oldest stars in our galaxy, born when the universe was just a small fraction of its current age. As well as being far older than the sun -- around twice its age -- the stars of Messier 9 also have a markedly different composition, and are enriched with far fewer heavier elements than the sun. In particular, the elements crucial to life on Earth, like oxygen and carbon, and the iron that makes up our planet’s core, are very scarce in Messier 9 and clusters like it. This is because the universe’s heavier elements were gradually formed in the cores of stars, and in supernova explosions. When the stars of Messier 9 formed, there were far smaller quantities of these elements in existence. As well as showing the individual stars, Hubble’s image clearly shows the different colors of the stars. A star’s color is directly related to its temperature -- counter-intuitively, perhaps, the redder it is, the cooler it is; and the bluer it is, the hotter. The wide range of stellar temperatures here is clearly displayed by the broad palette of colors visible in this image. Image Credit: NASA and ESA
