Posts: 266
Threads: 3
Joined: Jan 2013
I can't think of anyone on God's green earth who would be even the slightest bit interested in being sent my posts from PunaWeb
I'm not that interesting!
Hope everyone is doing well.
Hugs,
Pam
Pam in CA
Pam in CA
Apologies, I deleted my reply because i was being too much like them.
peace
Posts: 10,227
Threads: 345
Joined: Apr 2009
Not a discovery as such, but a beautiful picture of of Mauna Kea's sunrise shadow with Hualalai and Mauna Kea's western slopes in the foreground. It's been entered into the annual Insight Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2016 contest. The picture is about two-thirds down this page:
http://sa.news-switcher.newslabs.co:8001...s-36907268
brilliant assertion gypsy69. sleep well
Posts: 5,640
Threads: 101
Joined: Dec 2008
Always amusing to see the anti-science crowd busily typing on their phones and posting to the internet.
The rate of discoveries seems to be increasing, I can only imagine where we'll be 10 years from now. The chance of planets with the potential to support life is increasing all the time. Exciting days. Along with, of course, the increase of our knowledge about the workings of the Universe. Dark matter is fascinating just by itself.
Keep up the great work, Maune Kea astronomers, and all scientists. Humanity owes you a lot.
Posts: 14,115
Threads: 424
Joined: Aug 2012
I can only imagine where we'll be 10 years from now
Here on Earth, arguing about "property rights".
If we spent half the time and money that goes into pointless lawsuits ("rectangular with rounded corners", etc) on actual R&D, we'd probably have a moon base and/or people on Mars by now.
Posts: 11,023
Threads: 750
Joined: Sep 2012
If we spent half the time and money that goes into pointless lawsuits... we'd probably have a moon base and/or people on Mars by now
If only there was a way we could send our lawyers to a moon base, or Mars. For the betterment of all man&womankind.
Win win.
The moon kind of surprises me sometimes. I’ll be out at night and I’ll see a nice moon, and say, “Hey, that looks good.” Then I’ll say, “Oh sh-t, I went up there one time!” Kind of surprises me. It’s like there are two Moons, you know—the one that’s usually around, and then that one. - Michael Collins, Apollo 11 astronaut
"I'm at that stage in life where I stay out of discussions. Even if you say 1+1=5, you're right - have fun." - Keanu Reeves
Posts: 10,227
Threads: 345
Joined: Apr 2009
"All the emotionalism is over TMT but most of the existing observatories on Mauna Kea are doing just fine. There is a new era of instrumentation upgrades and motion control systems that are going to make them more powerful and more productive."
Just the other day you wrote:
"These are the last days of large ground based optical telescopes."
How are your two comments consistent?
"Astronomy is almost totally financed by government handouts, the US and the rest, from taxes. Funding is very, very competitive and ultimately rests on how productive an observatory is. In the past, that meant publishing. Today, it is the number of F**book likes, almost. To do that, the observatories have turned to marketing for funding."
The observatories haven't turned to marketing. Those that use FB do it to help publicize their work. The number of likes does not influence the funding of an observatory and never has. Scientific productivity is still based on the number of research papers published using data from an observatory.
"This one you don't hear from because it is NASA funded. This is a fantastic discovery and Juno's first close up soon will have image resolution with fidelity only dreamed of by astronomers. And, We The People, who are funding these missions are making the data instantly accessible to the entire planet for no cost (other than knowing what to do with it). This is what a totally corrupt government does?"
The IRTF is not the only NASA-funded observatory on Mauna Kea and if you had bothered to read the thread this result was mentioned earlier. Quite why you think people might not hear about science results because of NASA funding is beyond me. The fact that you repeated the news and posted a link about it shows that people do hear about it.
Incidentally, data from Juno will be proprietary for a period of time. That's very typical so that the people who designed and spent much of their on a project get the first chance to use the data before it becomes public.
Posted - 07/31/2016 : 23:36:02 Show Profile Email Poster Edit Reply Reply with Quote Delete Reply
Both comments place an unworthy burden on the phrase "being consistent".
Explain why Tom ?
Maybe try answer one before asking another ?