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Jill Taylor’s Stroke of Insight

Neuroscientist Jill Taylor describes her experience with a stroke.

New Solar Cycle Begins

A reversed-polarity sunspot was detected today, marking solar minimum and the beginning of the 24th solar cycle (since humans first recorded the undulating pattern of solar intensity nearly 400 years ago).

Milkywayset

(time-lapse video of Milky Way setting on Earth’s horizon)

New Images of Europa

There’s a high-res version of the above collage that makes the detail in the bottom-most view of Europa really stunning. Images recently reprocessed by Ted Stryk from original Galileo telemetry.

SpaceCollective

“Where forward thinking terrestrials share ideas and information about the state of the species, their planet and the universe, living the lives of science fiction.”

An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Everything

His explanation traces the seemingly erratic nature of fundamental particles to the symmetries of E8, a simplified representation of an even more complex 248-dimensional object. “My brain exploded with the implications and the beauty of the thing,” he told New Scientist, recalling when he first made the connection between his theories and the shape of E8. “I thought: ‘Holy crap, that’s it!’” Thus far all the particle interactions predicted by his model correspond with observations in the real world. (…)

Galaxies in Love

I think the bottom one is more into the top one than vice versa but such is love. The pair is known as Arp 87 and are flirting just 92 million parsecs (300 million light-years) away. Image released today at HubbleSite.

Biggest Full Moon of the Year, this Week

The full moon this Thursday & Friday, on the 25-26th of October will at the perigee of its orbit, and will appear as much as 14% wider and 30% brighter than normal as it passes.

Kaleidoscopic Lunar Transit

Playing around with Videator and Mac OS X’s Core Image tonight. Original footage taken from the STEREO spacecraft.

Perseid Meteor Shower

Tomorrow night, Sunday, August 12, around 9:00 pm (in your local time zone), this year’s Perseid meteor shower will be starting to peak. These meteors are considered “earthgrazers”: they will appear on the horizon and skim long and colorful overhead. By 2 am Monday morning their rate might be up to dozens an hour, climaxing around dawn at more than one a minute.

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Justin Ruckman