Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Two of the Milky Way's Spiral Arms go Missing

Two of the Milky Way's Spiral Arms go Missing

Our Milky Way Gets a Makeover Like early explorers mapping the continents of our globe, astronomers are busy charting the spiral structure of our galaxy, the Milky Way. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
› Full image and caption
St. Louis, Mo. -- For decades, astronomers have been blind to what our galaxy, the Milky Way, really looks like. After all, we sit in the midst of it and can't step outside for a bird's eye view.

Now, new images from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope are shedding light on the true structure of the Milky Way, revealing that it has just two major arms of stars instead of the four it was previously thought to possess.

"Spitzer has provided us with a starting point for rethinking the structure of the Milky Way," said Robert Benjamin of the University of Wisconsin, Whitewater, who presented the new results at a press conference today at the 212th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in St. Louis, Mo. "We will keep revising our picture in the same way that early explorers sailing around the globe had to keep revising their maps."

An artist's concept of the structure of our two-armed Milky Way is online at http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/spitzer/multimedia/20080603a.html.

Since the 1950s, astronomers have produced maps of the Milky Way. The early models were based on radio observations of gas in the galaxy, and suggested a spiral structure with four major star-forming arms, called Norma, Scutum-Centaurus, Sagittarius and Perseus. In addition to arms, there are bands of gas and dust in the central part of the galaxy. Our sun lies near a small, partial arm called the Orion Arm, or Orion Spur, located between the Sagittarius and Perseus arms.

"For years, people created maps of the whole galaxy based on studying just one section of it, or using only one method," said Benjamin. "Unfortunately, when the models from various groups were compared, they didn't always agree. It's a bit like studying an elephant blind-folded."

Large infrared sky surveys in the 1990s led to some major revisions of these models, including the discovery of a large bar of stars in the middle of the Milky Way. Infrared light can penetrate through dust, so telescopes designed to pick up infrared light get better views of our dusty and crowded galactic center. In 2005, Benjamin and his colleagues used Spitzer's infrared detectors to obtain detailed information about our galaxy's bar, and found that it extends farther out from the center of the galaxy than previously thought.

The team of scientists now has new infrared imagery from Spitzer of an expansive swath of the Milky Way, stretching 130 degrees across the sky and one degree above and below the galaxy's mid-plane. This extensive mosaic combines 800,000 snapshots and includes over 110 million stars.

Benjamin developed software that counts the stars, measuring stellar densities. When he and his teammates counted stars in the direction of the Scutum-Centaurus Arm, they noticed an increase in their numbers, as would be expected for a spiral arm. But, when they looked in the direction where they expected to see the Sagittarius and Norma arms, there was no jump in the number of stars. The fourth arm, Perseus, wraps around the outer portion of our galaxy and cannot be seen in the new Spitzer images.

The findings make the case that the Milky Way has two major spiral arms, a common structure for galaxies with bars. These major arms, the Scutum-Centaurus and Perseus arms, have the greatest densities of both young, bright stars, and older, so-called red-giant stars. The two minor arms, Sagittarius and Norma, are filled with gas and pockets of young stars. Benjamin said the two major arms seem to connect up nicely with the near and far ends of the galaxy's central bar.

"Now, we can fit the arms together with the bar, like pieces of a puzzle," said Benjamin, "and, we can map the structure, position and width of these arms for the first time." Previous infrared observations found hints of a two-armed Milky Way, but those results were unclear because the position and width of the arms were unknown.

Though galaxy arms appear to be intact features, stars are actually constantly moving in and out of them as they orbit the center of the Milky Way, like London commuters in a busy traffic circle. Our own sun might have once resided in a different arm. Since it was formed more than 4 billion years ago, it has traveled around the galaxy 16 times.

Co-investigators of this research include Ed Churchwell, Marilyn Meade and Brian Babler of the University of Wisconsin, Madison; Barbara Whitney of the Space Science Institute, Madison, Wis.; Rémy Indebetouw of the University of Virginia, Charlottesville; and Christer Watson of Manchester College, Ind. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the Spitzer mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Science operations occur at the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology, also in Pasadena. For more information about Spitzer, visit http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/spitzer and http://www.nasa.gov/spitzer .

Monday, February 2, 2009

Make your brain more useful

Here are some simple daily activities which can boost your brain power to astonishing levels. Trust me they work.
1. Try using left hand. Now starting with your mouse. Then try it with a pen. Don't get disappointed at first with your handwriting.
2. Practice reading upside down or side ways.
3. Learn the memory palace technique. Very easy to learn and implement.
4. Start drawing in paint. Try imitate a anime to start with.
5. Listen to music, concentrate on the basslines and try to recreate them in your mind.
6. Yes do this, play a lot of 'dodge this' type of games or flash games. try to get highscores. Start with dolphin olympics 2 or filler from kongregate to generate interest.
7. Make a rule to learn 5 new words daily.

Its easy to preach than to practice......But even I'm trying c'mon dude. indigoanalysis@gmail.com

Sunday, February 1, 2009

~FASTEST WAY TO SAFELY TURN OFF YOUR PC~

This is quite simple and a useful technique.

After saving all your work.....

1. Press ' Alt+Ctrl+Del ' to open the task manager....

2. Go to the ' Shut Down ' tab...

3. While holding the' Ctrl ' key press ' Turn off ' in the drop down list....

over....

If this is your first time, wait for 3-5 seconds.From next time onwards its just a second.



~pr@z_off~



~BROADBAND~
Disable the bandwidth reserved by Win XP

This is for broad band connections. I didn’t try it on dial up but might work for dial up.

1.make sure you are logged on as actually "Administrator". Do not log on with any account that just has administrator privileges.

2. start - run - type gpedit.msc

3. expand the "local computer policy" branch

4. expand the "administrative templates" branch

5. expand the "network branch"

6. Highlight the "QoS Packet Scheduler" in left window

7. in right window double click the "limit reservable bandwidth" setting

8. on setting tab check the "enabled" item

9. where it says "Bandwidth limit %" change it to read 0

reboot if you want to but not necessary on some systems your all done. Effect is immediate on some systems. some need re-boot.

This is more of a "counter what XP does" thing. In other words, XP seems to want to reserve 20% of the bandwidth for its self. Even with QoS disabled, even when this item is disabled. So why not use it to your advantage. To demonstrate the problem with this on stand alone machines start up a big download from a server with an FTP client. Try to find a server that doesn't max out your bandwidth. In this case you want a slow to medium speed server to demonstrate this. Let it run for a couple of minutes to get stable. The start up another download from the same server with another instance of your FTP client. You will notice that the available bandwidth is now being fought over and one of the clients download will be very slow or both will slow down when they should both be using the available bandwidth. Using this "tweak" both clients will have a fair share of the bandwidth and will not fight over the bandwidth.



~pr@z_off~

Monday, January 26, 2009

Windows XP search

In Windows Xp one of the the major problem is the search, it sucks. Unlike Vista XP's desktop search engine is very bad.
People install the other third party desktop serachs like the Google desktop. However I would suggest something like the one offered by Microsoft free of cost here. It automatically indexeswhen your computer is using less processor.
Google desktop isn't a bad choice either, infact better. Somehow if I used XP I would have used the WDM.

Windows desktop search: link

Friday, January 23, 2009

Last FM

I  have always had people coming to me and asking "Where the hell do you find such awesome artists?"
This site helps you to find songs/artists similar to the type you listem to. Trust me this works very well.
It provides you with a plugin that integrates with common mp3 players like winamp, wmp, itunes, songbird etc. The plugin records your choices internally and provides you with artist information ass well.
Please never play a song without id3 tag else last won't scrobble(record your choice) it.
In winamp id3 tag can be added by
step1: Right Click on the song
step2: goto send to>> autotag
you are done id3 tag is added


author: indigoanalysis@gmail.com

Esnips


I found esnips a very good place to find rare songs and stuff.......
But esnips never allows people to download stuff from its site. Here is what I found, a esnipss link generator.

esnips link generator : click here

souce: esnips blog

author: indigoanalysis@gmail.com