to travel faster than the speed of light
you got fo manipulate TIME and not just distance cover
(08-07-2024, 03:18 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Next and many next generation rocket technology can help us. But it can take100, 500 or maybe 1000 years...arhh. It's moving moment as we try to get closer to light travel. Since science took a look at atom. A note on smallest part of a substance that cannot be broken down chemically. Each atom has a nucleus (center) made up of protons (positive particles) and neutrons (particles with no charge). Electrons (negative particles) move around the nucleus.
JWST Detect LED Artilicial Light on Proxima Life Revealing Aliens Cities Life. Aliens. Just oni 4.2 light years for Earth. Maybe 10% 20% maybe 50% of light to send eg: Like Voyager 1 again be b4 2130 years.
Voyager 1 › Max speed. 61,500 km/h
Some unveils mysteries on Aliens external brain organ like those Nazca Lines and Their Laboratory.
https://www.youtube.com/live/bYGnHC8p5b4...MMuz-nT0Ji
Scientists call region of space influenced by sun the heliosphere so without an interstellar probe, don't know much about its shape. The heliosphere blocks many cosmic rays, shown as bright streaks in this animated image, from reaching earth and planets in our solar system.
The heliosphere blocks many cosmic rays, shown as bright streaks in animated image, from reaching our & planets on our solar system. NASA Space Center.
The sun warms the Earth, making it habitable for people and animals. But that’s not all it does, and it affects a much larger area of space. The heliosphere, the area of space influenced by the sun, is over a hundred times larger than the distance from the sun to the Earth.
The sun is a star that constantly emits a steady stream of plasma – highly energized ionized gas – called the solar wind. In addition to the constant solar wind, the sun also occasionally releases eruptions of plasma called coronal mass ejections, which can contribute to the aurora, and bursts of light and energy, called flares.
Plasma coming off the sun expands through space, along with sun’s magnetic field. Together they form the heliosphere within the surrounding local interstellar medium – the plasma, neutral particles and dust that fill the space between stars and their respective astrospheres. Heliophysicists like me want to understand the heliosphere and how it interacts with the interstellar medium.
https://www.space.com/heliosphere-shape-...ific-probe
(15-07-2024, 10:20 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]https://videos.space.com/m/45CgXDYQ/voya...t=9wzCTV4g
CNN --- The Voyager 1 spacecraft is sending back a steady stream of scientific data from uncharted territory for the first time since a computer glitch sidelined the historic NASA mission seven months ago. Currently the farthest spacecraft from Earth, Voyager 1 stopped communicating coherently with mission control in November 2023.
The probe seemed caught up in a “Groundhog Day” scenario, with its flight data system’s telemetry modulation unit sending back an indecipherable repeating pattern of code from billions of miles away.
A creative fix by the Voyager mission team restored communication with the spacecraft, and engineering data began streaming back to mission control in April, informing the team of the spacecraft’s health and operational status.
Solar storms that led to dazzling auroras threatened to destroy thousands of satellites around Earth. Solar storms that led to dazzling auroras worldwide in May caused many satellites to lose altitude, putting them at risk of collision, a new study said.
The research, accepted for publication in the Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets, calls for a better understanding of the impact of solar storms on satellite operations and the sustainability of their orbits. Spectacular northern lights dazzled across the skies of North America and Europe in May caused by one of the strongest-ever releases of charged particles from the Sun in centuries.
https://sg.news.yahoo.com/huge-solar-sto...ccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAFJuCHl-RznoTfi-yp_Y0XIMCuo5PHRONyw0jicUro5tOxj_jjAu4ZboXe5gPeNeWYlsRbLdwDS4N3wZP46s24jjyRRnputasxacGsj30bEAY3pzdQ63v7SooJ1I5mHZh7-9jdce1gSWlUrXp65TMhJUs1vw9vpEj6ISqEju48b1
Sunita Williams's return from space: Nasa, Boeing to make important announcement
The mission, known as the Boeing Crew Flight Test, has encountered technical challenges that have delayed the astronauts' return.
Nasa and Boeing are set to make a crucial announcement regarding the return of astronauts Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore from the International Space Station (ISS).
The two astronauts have been aboard the ISS since June 6, following their launch on the Boeing Starliner spacecraft as part of Nasa's Commercial Crew Program.
The mission, known as the Boeing Crew Flight Test, has encountered technical challenges that have delayed the astronauts' return.
Starliner
https://www.indiatoday.in/science/story/...2024-07-24
The James Webb Space Telescope achieved a rarity — snapping an image of a planet beyond our solar system. The exoplanet, Epsilon Indi Ab, is located 12 light-years away. That's trillions of miles, but right next door, cosmically speaking. The world is somewhat like the gas giant Jupiter, but twice as massive. (For reference, "If Earth were the size of a grape, Jupiter would be about as big as a basketball," NASA notes.)
"This discovery is exciting b'cos, planet is quite similar to Jupiter — it's a little warmer, is more massive, but more similar to Jupiter than any other planet has been imaged so far," Elisabeth Matthews, a scientist at Max Planck Institute for Astronomy who led research, said in a statement. The research was published in the science journal Nature.
The Webb telescope, the most powerful space observatory ever built, used a coronagraph to capture the faint light from this far-off planet. A coronagraph blocks light from a specific star while capturing an image. This allows light from the nearby exoplanet to reach Webb.
"Directly detecting planets around other stars is no easy feat," NASA explains. "Even the nearest stars are still so far away that their planets appear to be separated by a fraction of the width of a human hair held at arm’s length. At these tiny angular scales, the planet’s faint light is lost in the glare of its host star when trying to observe it."