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The April 2010 issue of Astronomy Now, the UK's best-selling astronomy magazine, is now on sale at all good newsagents.



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The five-minute white dwarf waltz
...Utilising the resolving power of the ten-metre Keck telescope in Hawaii, astronomers from the University of Warwick and Radboud University in the Netherlands have confirmed the existence of a double white dwarf system where the two stars orbit one another every 5.4 minutes...
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Gamma-ray glow steeped in mystery
...An omnipresent fog of high energy gamma-ray radiation that bathes the entire Universe is being produced mostly by a mysterious, unknown source, revealed scientists this week at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society’s High-Energy Astrophysics Division...
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Lava likely made river-like channel on Mars
...Dried-up river channels on Mars are some of the best evidence that water once flowed on the surface of the red planet, but new analysis of a channel once thought to have been carved by water shows that it was in fact formed from lava...
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WISE catches first glimpse of the infrared Universe
STEPHEN CLARK
SPACEFLIGHT NOW
Posted: 07 January 2010


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NASA's infrared sky-mapping telescope has snapped its first image of the cosmos three weeks after launch, confirming the spacecraft's sensitive detectors are ready to create an atlas of the Universe.


This image of a region in the constellation Carina was taken shortly after the WISE satellite ejected its dust cover. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA
 
"I think the most important event in the life of a telescope is the first light," said William Irace, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer project manager at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

WISE launched from a California military base Dec. 14 and jettisoned the telescope's dust cover two weeks later.

The image released by NASA on Wednesday shows a region in the constellation Carina containing about 3,000 stars, including a relatively bright swelling red giant star, according to David Leisawitz, WISE mission scientist at the Goddard Space Flight Center.

WISE glimpsed cool interstellar dust glowing in infared light on the left side of the picture, proving the $320 million mission can accomplish what it set out to do -- map the infrared Universe and detect countless new galaxies, stars and asteroids.

"Our sky is filled with such stuff, and WISE will see that in plentiful amounts," Leisawitz said.

The first light image was taken in an 8.8-second exposure, part of an engineering test to verify the 16-inch telescope and four detectors work properly.

"We are definitely in focus," Irace said.

WISE will repeat the process 7,500 times each day during its primary mission.

"This is a snapshot of the sky taken with WISE," Leisawitz said. "Over the course of its mission, it will take literally millions of these snapshots to complete a survey of the entire sky. Each one of those little snapshots is about three times the size, in area, of the moon."

The satellite will take pictures every 11 seconds, scanning the entire sky at least one-and-a-half times by October, when the craft's reservoir of super-cold solid hydrogen is expected to run out.

WISE needs the hydrogen to cool its detectors enough to permit the telescope to see some of the coldest objects in the Universe.

The survey phase of the mission will begin in a couple of weeks. Officials are now working to match the motions of the spacecraft and the scan mirror to create "freeze-frame" images.

"WISE is now poised to deliver on its promise to measure hundreds of millions of stars, hundreds of millions of galaxies, and hundreds of thousands of solar system objects, such as asteroids," Leisawitz said.

The mission's final results won't be available to the public until March 2012, but scientists will unveil selected images beginning next month.

2010 Yearbook
Our latest 132-page Astronomy Now special edition is an extravaganza of astronomy for the year ahead, with a complete 30-page guide to observing the planets, moon, meteor showers, two solar eclipses, and the deep sky in 2010.
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Hubble Reborn
Hubble Reborn takes the reader on a journey through the Universe with spectacular full-colour pictures of galaxies, nebulae, planets and stars as seen through Hubble's eyes, along the way telling the dramatic story of the space telescope, including interviews with key scientists and astronauts.
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3D Universe
Witness the most awesome sights of the Universe as they were meant to be seen in this 100-page extravaganza of planets, galaxies and star-scapes, all in 3D!
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Infinity Rising
This special publication features the photography of British astro-imager Nik Szymanek and covers a range of photographic methods from basic to advanced. Beautiful pictures of the night sky can be obtained with a simple camera and tripod before tackling more difficult projects, such as guided astrophotography through the telescope and CCD imaging.
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Starry Night
Explore the Universe with these new versions of the award-winning Starry Night Software. Available now from the Astronomy Now Store.
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Exploring Mars
Astronomy Now is pleased to announce the publication of Exploring Mars. The very best images of Mars taken by orbiting spacecraft and NASA's Spirit and Opportunity rovers fill up the 98 glossy pages of this special edition!
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Mars rover poster
This new poster features some of the best pictures from NASA's amazing Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity.
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