These Are the Best Pluto Images New Horizons Captured

These Are the Best Pluto Images New Horizons Captured

NASA has just received the first batch of the sharpest images of Pluto captured during the July flyby—and they’re incredible. Are you ready to go cross-country skiing and ice climbing three billion miles from home? Because Pluto’s terrain is a frozen wonderland.

The images below are part of a sequence captured by New Horizons’ Long Range Reconnaissance Imager about 15 minutes from its closest approach to Pluto on July 14th, from a distance of just 10,000 miles (17,000 kilometers) above the dwarf planet’s surface. Together, these images form a 50 mile-wide strip that begins northwest of Pluto’s “heart” region, traversing the icy al-Idrisi mountains, and finally taking us on a tour of Sputnik Planum’s patterned plains.

Instead of the usual “point and shoot mode,” LORRI snapped the pictures every three seconds while the Ralph/Multispectral Visual Imaging Camera scanned Pluto’s surface. At 250-280 feet (77-85 meters) per pixel, they’re six times higher resolution than the global Pluto map the New Horizons team put together earlier this year. As such, they offer planetary scientists an unprecedented glimpse into the geomorphology of a world far more complex than we could have imagined.

“These new images give us a breathtaking, super-high resolution window into Pluto’s geology,” said New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern. “Nothing of this quality was available for Venus or Mars until decades after their first flybys; yet [for] Pluto we’re there already – down among the craters, mountains and ice fields – less than five months after flyby. The science we can do with these images is simply unbelievable.”

More of these super hi-res images are expected to trickle down from outer space over the next few days, so stay tuned. Me, I’ve already packed my space-grade snowshoes—just waiting for the next flight out.

These Are the Best Pluto Images New Horizons Captured

The “shoreline” of Sputnik Planum, the informal name for Pluto’s icy, block-shaped plains. The boundary between Sputnik and the al-Idrisi mountains is incredibly dramatic in this image, underscoring the complex geologic forces that brought these features together.

These Are the Best Pluto Images New Horizons Captured

Pluto’s icy plains are pockmarked with craters from ancient impacts. In this image, we see distinct geologic layers—similar to those found in rock outcroppings or drill cores on Earth—within the interior walls of several craters. These features are a huge asset to scientists hoping to piece together Pluto’s geologic past.

These Are the Best Pluto Images New Horizons Captured

The “Badlands”: A complex mess of topography sculpted by erosion and faulting. The cliff tracking from the left to the upper right near the top of the image is part of a canyon system that runs hundreds of miles around Pluto’s northern hemisphere. The mountains in the center are built mainly from water ice, but the New Horizons science team suspects they’ve been shaped over time by other exotic ices, including nitrogen and methane.

[NASA]


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via Gizmodo
These Are the Best Pluto Images New Horizons Captured

How the gun turrets work on a B-29 bomber

How the gun turrets work on a B-29 bomber

The Boeing B-29 Superfortress heavy bombers were one of the biggest and deadliest aircraft used during World War II. They were the bombers used to drop the atomic bomb and were also used during the Korean war. Here’s a video from Bryce Richert showing how the gun turret system worked on the B-29. Like the guy in the video said, it’s basically Robocop. Which is very impressive considering the B-29’s first flight was in 1942.


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via Gizmodo
How the gun turrets work on a B-29 bomber

See What Happens When You Sharpen a Knife Under a Microscope

S20151129_0041Everyone knows that a dull blade is no good. But do you know what a knife actually looks like up close as it’s being sharpened?

Read more on MAKE

The post See What Happens When You Sharpen a Knife Under a Microscope appeared first on Make: DIY Projects, How-Tos, Electronics, Crafts and Ideas for Makers.


via Make: DIY Projects, How-Tos, Electronics, Crafts and Ideas for Makers
See What Happens When You Sharpen a Knife Under a Microscope

Travel Back In Time To The Ancient Internet With oldweb.today

Travel Back In Time To The Ancient Internet With oldweb.today

Remember the Internet of yore? Oldweb.today renders websites in creaky browsers and load times, and will induce nostalgia, flashbacks and cold sweats.

Developers Ilya Kraymer and Dragan Espenschied and media arts foundation Rhizome.org have created oldweb.today, which allows you to experience the Internet as it once was. Choose from a selection of “legacy browsers” you’ve tried to block from your memory and a date, and oldweb.today will render the site of your choice in its closest Internet Archive version—complete with old-fashioned graphics and attendant loading time.

Travel Back In Time To The Ancient Internet With oldweb.today

Trying to visit 2006 Gizmodo in Netscape 3.04 brought up endless JavaScript errors until the browser just gave up; I fared better with IE 4.01, but I’m looking at an 8-minute total load time. Meanwhile, I’m sitting here twitching and losing all of my warm thoughts about the old days, even if Gizmodo’s “the Gadget Weblog” title made me grin.

What’s the point of this time-tripping experiment? Well, a post on Rhizome’s website wants you to think about how much our design and approach to the web has shifted:

Today’s web browsers want to be invisible, merging with the visual environment of the desktop in an effort to convince users to treat “the cloud” as just an extension of their hard drive. In the 1990s, browser design took nearly the opposite approach, using iconography associated with travel to convey the feeling of going on a journey. Netscape Navigator, which used a ship’s helm as its logo, made a very direct link with the nautical origins of the prefix cyber-, while Internet Explorer’s logo promised to take the user around the whole globe. This imagery reinforced the idea that the web was a very different kind of space from the “real world,” one where the usual laws and taxes shouldn’t apply.

Makes you think—and you’ll have plenty of minutes to think while your page renders. So go forth and use oldweb.today and, well, explore the Internet. Kids these days might not know how good they have it, but now we can show them what we experienced, in real (slow) loading time.

[oldweb.today; Rhizome]

via Gizmodo
Travel Back In Time To The Ancient Internet With oldweb.today

Infographic: How To File A Patent

In the United States, anyone who believes they have invented something truly unique is welcome to fill out a patent application to protect it, but it’s often a complicated and laborious process. Here are the steps involved in securing a patent:

  • Step 1: First, come up with something really cool, like a cheese grater that works in both directions. Oh shit, don’t steal that one! That’s mine!
  • Step 2: Research the marketplace to find out if your idea is original or if some asshole has already stolen it from you
  • Step 3: Call dibs
  • Step 4: Assess the financial potential of your invention by determining if it can be concisely summed up in a commercial jingle
  • Step 5: Before submitting your application, carefully review patent legal documents, occasionally stopping to nod your head as if you understand what they mean
  • Step 6: Patent and Trademark Office employees …




via The Onion
Infographic: How To File A Patent

Here are all the original Star Wars trilogy vehicles to scale

Here are all the original Star Wars trilogy vehicles to scale

One of our favorite artists, Scott Park, illustrated the spaceships and vehicles in the original Star Wars trilogy to scale and it’s just so good. You get to see how a Stomtrooper compares in size to a Tauntaun to an X-34 Landspeeder to a TIE Fighter to the Millennium Falcon to the Death Star and everything else in between. We put the wonderful illustrations together in a nice little lineup for you guys to see.

You can buy Park’s full poster here. You can also snag versions of the poster specifically for Episode IV, Episode V, and Episode VI.


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via Gizmodo
Here are all the original Star Wars trilogy vehicles to scale