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Friday, April 27, 2018

ESO — A New Supernova Over Munich — Organisation Release eso1813

ESO — Reaching New Heights in Astronomy
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ESO News
27 April 2018

On 26 April 2018, the ESO Supernova Planetarium & Visitor Centre was officially inaugurated, and its doors will be open to the public from tomorrow 28 April 2018. The centre, located at ESO Headquarters in Garching, Germany provides visitors with an immersive experience of astronomy in general, along with ESO-specific scientific results, projects, and technological breakthroughs. All activities in the ESO Supernova will be free of charge during 2018, and shows and other events can be booked online.

The release, images and videos are available on:
https://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1813/

Kind regards,
The ESO Education and Public Outreach Department
27 April 2018




  ESOblog


Eyes on the Stars — ESO astronomer Suzanna Randall on what it's like to train as an astronaut

Interview with: Suzanna Randall

27 April 2018: Over the last 40 years, 12 German men have journeyed into space — but no German women. The initiative Astronautin wants to change that. The ambitious programme is currently training ...

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Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Speaking of Science: A bird bone to pick

Speaking of Science
Sarah Kaplan and Ben Guarino on Science
 

(Top from L to R) Two photographs taken in September 1909 in the Malol lagoon, Aitape, northern New Guinea by anthropologist Albert Buell Lewis. (Down L to R) Two photographs made in Asmat by Bruno Zanzottera picturing a cassowary bone dagger attached to the left arm of an Asmat man in a pirogue on the Seper River. (Nathaniel Dominy/Dartmouth College/AFP/Getty Images)

About 100 years ago, people in northern New Guinea carved daggers out of cassowary bones. The bones of a cassowary, a type of giant bird, were as strong as human femurs, scientists at Dartmouth College discovered recently. Cassowaries weigh 125 pounds and are flightless, so it makes sense their bones would be thick (at least for birds). They do not have the classic hollow bones of flying birds, called "pneumatic" bones in the scientific jargon.

I had always assumed that hollow bones were lighter, so flying birds did not have to cart around as much weight. Galileo thought as much in 1638, and that idea persists in modern textbooks. Following a tangent while reporting this story, though, I stumbled upon a different answer. As in many things with science, it's a little more complicated that it first seems.

Hollowness probably first evolved to make the bones of flying animals stiffer, not as a way to decrease the mass of their skeletons. In 2010, researchers at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst measured the density of bird bones and mammal bones, and found, for their size, the bird bones were denser on average. Yes, birds have air sacs in their bones — in fact, the sacs are connected to their respiratory system. These sacs have another advantage, making each breath during a flight more energy efficient.

As it goes, dinosaurs, too, had the sacs in their bones: "Air pockets for [a] high-energy lifestyle," as Nature magazine put it.

Ben

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