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Comments on: Google Sky brings the heavens to a browser near you

"Spitzer infrared showcases" 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 11:39 GMT

Coat

The things people will do for a bit more exposure...

Mine's the dirty brown mac with the camera in the buttonhole...

cool 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 11:53 GMT

We're all gonna die though, there's no sun (or sol)

Very cool though, cold even, really really really cold.

space battle 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 12:20 GMT

Alien

Wow! In almost no time at all I found this image...

http://www.google.com/sky/#latitude=66.33970959528405&longitude=-42.44293212890625&zoom=9&Spitzer=0.00&ChandraXO=0.00&Galex=0.00&IRAS=0.00&WMAP=0.00&Cassini=0.00&slide=1&mI=-1&oI=-1

Looks like evidence for some kind of space battle to me!

Privacy implications... 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 12:32 GMT

Thumb Up

Hopefully, amanfrommars will be writing a comment soon to complain about the privacy implications of this latest move by the big G.

Space Battle 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 12:42 GMT

Alien

Wow, that's odd!

Any astronomers out there want to enlighten me/us to what this is? Aside from proof of phaser-weilding stealth craft?

Re: SpaceBattle 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 12:43 GMT

Alien

It kind of does. That is, until you recall that light is itself invisible, and can only be "seen" by way of the things it reflects off of or refracts through.

Still, there's no reason that couldn't be two laser beams passing through a very large dust/chaff/debris cloud.

I think I must be suffering an alcohol deficiency.

Alan Parson's Project? 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 12:49 GMT

Coat

Looks like a remnant of the "LASERS" from the Alan Parson's Project.

re: space battle 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 12:52 GMT

Unhappy

after zooming in too the green beam i expected to see a star destroyer, but them pesky imperial scum must have developed clocking technology.

@Adam Foxton 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 13:01 GMT

Alien

it's a satellite going across the field of view then going into eclipse.

Re: Spacebattle 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 13:02 GMT

Boffin

The SDSS (visible) image is a mosaic, it is not perfectly aligned. The coloured slits are the edges of the images which composed the mosaic.

@Rafael 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 13:23 GMT

No you're totally wrong, it's clearly the trails of two starships entering hyperspace.

"the hoi polloi" 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 13:42 GMT

Coat

[pedant]

"the hoi polloi" is a tautology - "hoi polloi" means "the many" in Greek, so to say "the hoi polloi" is to say "the the many".

[/pedant]

=D

Anyone figured it out? 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 14:02 GMT

Paris Hilton

I must admit this thingy has lost me completely, I even tried the help & about features, no luck tho. Just what am I looking at? To start with, what does the time figure represent, and how does this correalate to a position in the sky? Which way is North & East, & doesn't it need to know where I am?

Say I want to know where a given planet will be tonight at 10pm, will this handle it, or are the times only relative (not relative in the Einstein sense, we all know that one.. or are told we do)?

Paris.. cos she used night vision too.

@rafael 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 14:40 GMT

Alien

Spoilsport :-(

Re: That's no moon... 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 15:02 GMT

(Written by Reg staff.)

Hello. If you want to post a Google image link that is long enough to actually reach the moon, please TinyURL the beast. Thanking you.

Earth and Sky podcasts 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 15:31 GMT

Go

assuming they are the same Earth and Sky broadcasts we get on public radio they are well worth opening the pod bay doors for.

That's no moon ... 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 16:08 GMT

Thumb Up

That so-called space battle is clearly someone having a quick game of Missile Command.

2001, errr no, 2010. Oh whatever .... 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 17:58 GMT

Pirate

I could not help but noticing the regimented series of Monoliths (m) in the area of Ursa Major.

Now what are they up to now?

They failed spectacularly when working with the simians on this smileball. (I mean slime covered planetary body)

Bones only because weesa-all-gonna-die (bad Jar-Jar impersonation) when the galactic bypass goes right through our neighbourhood.

@Anyone figured it out? 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 18:00 GMT

Boffin

"Say I want to know where a given planet will be tonight at 10pm"...

Use celestia or stellarium?

@AC - Sorry for being a spoilsport. There is enough weirdness in the universe *without* the artifacts, just search for it (hint: Seyfert's sextet - no need for puny space death rays)

Rafael, amateur astrogeek

Sod the star destroyers... 

Posted Friday 14th March 2008 23:16 GMT

.. we've found the empires next 1/2 build deathstar

http://tinyurl.com/26bvdg

Nice 

Posted Saturday 15th March 2008 08:05 GMT

Thumb Up

Nice to play with, but does it really have any real world use?

spamme@x86it.co.uk (Send an email to this if you want to get blocked from my mailserver!)

@Sarah Bee 

Posted Monday 17th March 2008 11:04 GMT

Unhappy

TinyURL? As a verb? Say it ain't so...

Re: @Sarah Bee 

Posted Monday 17th March 2008 11:07 GMT

(Written by Reg staff.)

Oh yes. That's pretty bad, isn't it. But not as bad as a link the length of the M25.

Looking for Gallifrey 

Posted Sunday 23rd March 2008 00:03 GMT

Can anyone tell me how to find the Kasterborous galaxy on google sky?

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