range rover sport for sale uae cheap luxury car rental wagga wagga cheap car rental tia cheap car rental arb rental car one day price audi electric car price uae car rental in amman al emad car rental dubai silicon oasis cars sharjah online car lowest price car in uae audi used cars dubai cheap car rental acv ruwais rent a car cheap car rental azo what is cdw in car rental dubai cheap luxury car rental cheap super car rental dubai short term car lease dubai kia price in uae land for rent in dubai enjoy car rental llc dubai cheap car rental lamezia terme vip rent a car reviews car rental melbourne cheap car rental algarve budget rent a car philippines self drive no deposit car hire dubai
  • Call-in Numbers: 917-633-8191 / 201-880-5508

  • Now Playing

    Title

    Artist

    Nasa will be imminently launching a new satellite that will help scientists uncover the secrets of black holes.

    The X-Ray Polarimetry Explorer mission (IXPE) will measure the radiation from the dense pits of gravity in distant space, scheduled to launch at 1am local eastern time, 6am GMT from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida on a Falcon 9 rocket.

    The craft, which will be the first space observatory of its kind, will look at the polarisation of X-rays from black holes and neutron stars through three identical telescopes.

    Each one has a set of nested, cylindrical mirrors that feed the X-rays to a detector that then measures the amount, and direction, of the polarised light.

    “The launch of IXPE marks a bold and unique step forward for X-ray astronomy,” said Dr Martin Weisskopf, IXPE’s principal investigator, in a statement. “IXPE will tell us more about the precise nature of cosmic X-ray sources than we can learn by studying their brightness and color spectrum alone.”

    Polarising light carry with it information about where it originated, and what it passed through in order to reach its destination.

    This is because normal light is comprised of waves of electric and magnetic field that, when they interact, vibrate at right angles to the direction the light is travelling in - and can move in any direction. Polarising light, however, is made of electric fields that can only vibrate in one direction.

    Analysing polarised x-rays will give scientists new insight into the nature of black holes, such as how they spin, what gives a pulsar its brightness, and are the fundamental laws of physics consistent across the whole universe.

    “This is going to be groundbreaking in terms of X-ray data acquisition”, Dr Weisskopf said.

    “We’ll be analysing the results for decades to come”.

    Read More


    Reader's opinions

    Leave a Reply