English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Astronomy & Space - October 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

A.) In the interior of Jupiter
B.) in the atmosphere of Jupiter
C.) On the surface of Jupiter
D.) Nowhere

2006-10-10 08:07:47 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

A.) 10
B.) 7.5
C.) 5
D.) 2.5

2006-10-10 08:06:12 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

0

How can you tell relative temperatures of stars by the color of the star?

Why do some gaseous clouds of hydrogen glow green?

2006-10-10 08:01:55 · 5 answers · asked by ising4joy2000 1

Have you ever noticed that man has NOT walked on the moon since the 60's?? Have you ever wondered why we don't return to it? Granted, they say we have machines and things like that to do it for us, but do you really believe that man walked on the moon? Honestly, it seems to be a big hoax. Just watching the clips of the astronaunts "walking on the moon" seems too fake. I just find it funny to know we have never been on the moon since the 60's. I like verse of the Red Hot Chili Pepper song "Californication"....it says: "Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in the Hollywood basement." What are your thoughts?

2006-10-10 07:50:07 · 16 answers · asked by Jammin' On The One 3

try redshift 5.1, astronomy books, the internet, etc

2006-10-10 07:37:35 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

I was looking at satellite images of the moon on the Clementine Lunar Image Browser http://www.cmf.nrl.navy.mil/clementine/clib/
I found it weird that several area on the far side of the moon looked rather blurry, (like they where erased or air brushed). When I clicked on to some particularly obvious smudged out areas, to enhance I got a message that particular spot of the moon was unavalible to view close up. There where a few spots on the front side as well. Something weird seems to be going on so I checked out other sights, and the same thing happened. You can see every square inch of earth through the terra server, (except military bases) With the moon being so much smaller we should have perfect images. Anyone know of a good lunar sight that doesn't have restrictions?

2006-10-10 07:36:21 · 5 answers · asked by mslorikoch 5

what is the theorectical angular resolution of a 0.3m telescope...i choose a wavelength for visable light of....560nm...plz can some1 show me how 2 calculate it plz...the final answer needs 2 be in arcsecond''...and r we likely 2 achieve this resolution in pratice

thanx guys

2006-10-10 07:30:45 · 3 answers · asked by elli 1

Imagine a straight line going from the Little Dipper
to the Big Dipper. Following this straight line past
the Big Dipper you meet a very bright star. This star
is halfway closer to the Big Dipper than the Little
Dipper is, and is the very first bright star you meet
following this straight line after the Big Dipper.
Can you tell me what the name of this star (or planet) is?

2006-10-10 07:25:20 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-10-10 07:23:10 · 10 answers · asked by segato7 1

If eons ago the moon compressed out of dust and was captured by the earth's orbit after some explosion somewhere, how did something so chaotic develop into such a precise configuration?

If you were in charge of calculating how to make a moon hit the orbit of a planet with exactly the right spin on it so that it always has the same side facing the planet, the parameters would be very specific. How can nature have done that?

With other operations that are so specific, like mutations in evolution, there are billions of iterations that bring precise configurations, but with the moon there was only one shot.

2006-10-10 07:07:10 · 6 answers · asked by Jeremy 2

2006-10-10 06:53:58 · 7 answers · asked by Red Falcon 1

The scales they use too weigh it.

Not intellectual, I agree, but I got an headache thinking of the other way.

2006-10-10 06:50:40 · 15 answers · asked by GB123 2

2006-10-10 06:48:08 · 7 answers · asked by puddin 2

I can't find anywhere that says the name of the disease, just that it was a long and painful death.

2006-10-10 06:44:33 · 2 answers · asked by mslorikoch 5

2006-10-10 06:09:07 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous

I know this is a new science but some scientists have predicted earthquakes and volcanie erruptions by using the moon cycles.

2006-10-10 05:51:51 · 4 answers · asked by Prince Auggie 2

2006-10-10 05:48:26 · 9 answers · asked by varu 1

Is it b/c the earth is round and it is actually rising straight into the sky, but we're turning? Or does it have to penetrate the atmosphere in an angle?

2006-10-10 05:43:23 · 11 answers · asked by garfield_h2o 1

What time will the moon be viewable from the Eastern Time Zone(Atlanta) today? Thanks.

2006-10-10 05:32:12 · 3 answers · asked by Sam B 1

HUH

2006-10-10 05:16:01 · 22 answers · asked by GB123 2

and a BLACK HOLE?------is the pressure the same or different.

2006-10-10 04:45:19 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous

Do you believe that aliens are creating those crop circles. They seem too detailed for any mere human to create it overnight.

2006-10-10 04:37:25 · 9 answers · asked by cloud 4

2006-10-10 04:21:10 · 2 answers · asked by jammy.greeny@talk21.com 1

2006-10-10 04:19:49 · 8 answers · asked by jammy.greeny@talk21.com 1

Ok its for a projects and I need some info. I can't find much. Please help. Red giants, the life cycle of stars, black holes, white dwaves, mail sequence stars, quasars, irreglar galaxys, spiral galaxys, black dwarves, neutron stars, H-R diagram, galaxys, constellations. Please help me if you can

2006-10-10 04:19:38 · 9 answers · asked by Amanda W 1

If we had 3 soho type spacecrart 120 deg apart we could see the complete sun in geostationary orbit. Closer than mercury which is 88 days

2006-10-10 04:15:23 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-10-10 04:02:23 · 20 answers · asked by Desperate Dan 1

fedest.com, questions and answers