dewline: Logo: Canadian Spaceflight (Canadian spaceflight)
On the DEWLine 2.0: Dwight Williams ([personal profile] dewline) wrote2018-02-01 07:16 pm

Something about exoplanet.eu

I didn't notice that you could selectively hide or reveal specific data-columns until tonight, just a few minutes ago.

Also noticed: In 32 days of the current year gone by thus far, we have two more exoplanets confirmed thus far: One orbiting a star from the Tycho catalogue about 1,800 lightyears away (give or take roughly 300 ly), and another orbiting HD 238914 at about 1,900 ly (again, give or take roughly 300 ly).

Small wonder that the International Astronomical Union's been
slowly making inroads through public competitions on naming the planets our astronomers across the planet have been logging in. One could wish that this process might move faster, especially given the sense that between GAIA, Kepler, JWST, and whatever else is in the planet-hunting/astrometry pipeline, we're in for a flood of new and useful data in the next few years.

I feel as if there's more intelligent commentary I could make, but I'm not sure which direction to steer towards.
mystical_journey: (Star-Star Matter)

[personal profile] mystical_journey 2018-02-02 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
With technology advancing as it is, more amazing discoveries will be made--stars. planets, and more.
thewayne: (Default)

[personal profile] thewayne 2018-02-02 03:01 pm (UTC)(link)
There's a WTF? scientific breakthrough where NASA thinks it can detect distortions the size of a tenth of a hydrogen molecule in its search for exoplanets.

https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2018/01/measuring-space-telescope-distortion-to-one-tenth-the-size-of-a-hydrogen-atom-will-enable-earth-sized-exoplanet-analysis.html