Hello world!
Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!
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Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!
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MESSENGER has returned quite a few high quality Mercury photographs. Check these out; the surface details are of the side of Mercury the Mariner 10 missions did not photograph!



The cratered surface of Mercury has not been visited in about 30 years. Only 45% of the surface of Mercury has been imaged by the Mariner 10. MESSENGER has a full suite of scientific instruments and will be able to tell us many things about the geological history, and hopefully about the highly reflective material (possibly water-ice in the perpetual shadows) of the north and south poles, of Mercury as well as image the remaining portion of the planet unseen by the previous Mariner mission.
The official MESSENGER website has a slew of great, entertaining, and interactive information pertaining to Mercury. Check it out for some fast facts, great animations, and even an interactive quiz or two to test your Mercurian knowledge.
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MESSENGER is now at its closest point (about 124 mi) from the surface of Mercury. Now… we wait for the pics!
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Tomorrow, the first flyby of Mercury will occur. As you can see, we are quickly approaching the closest planet to the Sun.
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Also, pointed out by the legendary Bad Astronomer, Travis Rector has a gallery of images available for public viewing. He has the fantastic job of processing the data from large telescopes around the world into the desktop-wallpaper-worthy photos we’ve all come to enjoy!Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »
Trust me it’s as easy as it sounds. Turn in your name and you’ll even be credited! Try to determine spiral, elliptical, and merging galaxies from fuzzy original photos. The computer program can pick out the galaxies, but the human eye is the only thing that can classify them.
Easy as it sounds, labelling can be tricky. They are awfully fuzzy, and sometimes you have to identify photographs from a bad angle.
Got some down time? Let’s classify some galaxies!
P.S. The GalaxyZoo blog will be on the blogroll from now on too! Check it out!
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Here’s my older pic of Mars…
And my newer pic. This one is 7 exposures stacked through Registax, and with adjusted Curves through Photoshop (with a custom diffraction spike brush as well).
Stay tuned in for how I made the improvements!
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