http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDjjALt-IQY#t=25
بثت السلطات في هاواي فيديو يظهر لحظة هبوط المراهق الأميركي من أصل صومالي Continue reading
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDjjALt-IQY#t=25
بثت السلطات في هاواي فيديو يظهر لحظة هبوط المراهق الأميركي من أصل صومالي Continue reading
Next Episode – Saturday
We made a very secret portal!
Squiddy T-Shirts – http://iballisticsquid.spreadshirt.co.uk/
Subscribe – http://www.youtube.com/iballisticsquid
Twitter – https://twitter.com/iBallisticSquid
Facebook – http://www.facebook.com/pages/IBallisticSquid/164520893684505
Motorbikes + ramps + Shotguns = MotoJousting
Subscribe to Martyn’s Channel!
http://www.youtube.com/user/inthelittlewood
Mission Link: http://rsg.ms/1noLg8Y
Game Link: http://www.rockstargames.com/V/
End theme by the incredible Dan Bull:
http://www.youtube.com/user/douglby
All other music is in game music. It makes me want to do so many more LaC videos. 😀
Discussion here: http://www.reddit.com/r/nerdcubed
Nerd³ Site! http://nerdcubed.co.uk/
Dad³ Channel! http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialDadCubed
Second Channel! http://www.youtube.com/user/Officiallynerdcubed
Nerd³ Twitter! https://twitter.com/Dannerdcubed
T-Shirts! http://districtlines.com/nerdcubed
The gravity of a planet, however weak it might be, is enough to pull its parent star just a little bit out of place as the planet orbits.
While the radial velocity method studies a star’s spectrum to measure the star’s “wobble” toward and away from Earth, there is another trick to measure this tell-tale motion: simply look for the star to move back and forth in the sky.
With exceptionally sharp vision, a telescope can actually see a star move relative to other stars. Astrometry is the science of precisely measuring the position of objects in the sky. If astronomers use this method to monitor a star and see that it sways with a periodic rhythm, like slow dancers at a prom, they can tell that an unseen companion — perhaps a planet — is orbiting the star and pulling it to and fro.
The gravity of a planet, however weak it might be, is enough to pull its parent star just a little Continue reading
If a planet’s orbit around its star is angled just right, the planet will regularly pass in front of or “transit” its star from our point of view. When it does, the planet will block a tiny bit of the star’s light.
Astronomers can search for planets by watching for slight, periodic changes in the brightness of a star. If the brightness of a star changes regularly and consistently, it could mean that a planet is repeatedly transiting the star and blocking a little bit of starlight each time around.
If a planet’s orbit around its star is angled just right, the planet will regularly pass in front of or Continue reading
Taking a picture of an extrasolar planet sounds like the easiest way to discover a planet, but in reality, it is probably the most difficult. Seeing the faint glow of a planet amidst the brilliant glare of its parent star is like spying a firefly buzzing around a huge spotlight from a mile away.
But it has been done. Astronomers use a dark “mask” called a coronagraph to cover up the star and most of its glare. If the planet is far enough away from its star so that it isn’t also covered by the coronagraph, a keen-eyed telescope might be able to pick out the dim reflected light of the planet shining through.
Taking a picture of an extrasolar planet sounds like the easiest way to discover a planet, but in reality, it Continue reading