nunatak

Geograph, Geoökologe, Bodenkundler & Ethnologe, GIS & Linux User. Interessiert an OpenData, OpenSource, Netzkultur & mehr.

Bin eigentlich ein recht fauler Blogger. Nicht weil ich keine Lust habe oder nichts zu sagen hätte. Meisten fehlt, jedenfalls gefühlt, einfach die Zeit. Muss vielleicht mal am Zeitmanagement arbeiten.

Jedenfalls läuft hier das bisschen was ich nebenbei mal blogge zusammen. Vor allem auch die Postings die ich auf #Diaspora absetze. Weil's so schön einfach ist. Nur die Formatierung sieht bisher noch sehr unschön aus.

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Posterous (ergraut langsam)
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Wordpress Blog (derzeit sogar wieder etwas aktiv)
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Teilnehmende Beobachtungen

nunatak@jabber.ccc.de
nunatak@joindiaspora.com

Googleplus & Facebook:
Ja, aber wer interessiert sich schon dafür.

Interessen:

Natur
Wissenschaft
Literatur
Netzkultur
digitale Medien
OpenSource
Linux
Politik
Python (Dilettant)
OpenStreetMap
OpenAccess
OpenData
OpenCulture


Geographie
Bodenkunde
Agrarwissenschaft
Geoarchäologie
Geomorphologie
Stadtgeographie (Urban Studies)
Klimatologie
Ökologie
Ethnologie
Philosophie
GIS (ESRI, wenn's sein muss) / FOSSGIS (GrassGIS, QGIS, uDIG, gvSIG, SAGA GIS,... Status: Lehrling)

Wandern, Biken, Yoga, Schwimmen, Kochen, Lesen, Denken, Musik natürlich (vielfältig und äußerst geschmackvoll! Is klar.)
Recent Tweets @nunatakker
Posts tagged "science"

avarenity:

kaiyves:

unknownskywalker:

Dragon Fire

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket soared into space from Space Launch Complex-40 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, carrying the Dragon capsule to orbit at 3:44 a.m. EDT on Tuesday, May 22, 2012. The launch is the company’s second demonstration test flight for NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services, or COTS, Program.

During the flight, there will be a series of check-out procedures to test and prove Dragon’s systems, including rendezvous and berthing with the International Space Station. If the capsule performs as planned, the cargo and experiments it is carrying will be transferred to the station.

Watch the launch footage: http://youtu.be/dlpk-gOkY6M

Wooo!

reblogging for Dragon!

(via crownedrose)

expose-the-light:

Exquisite Exoplanetary Art

They’re alien worlds orbiting distant stars far out of reach of detailed imaging by even our most advanced telescopes. And yet, day after day, we see vivid imaginings of these extrasolar planets with the help of the most talented space artists.

The definition of an extrasolar planet — or “exoplanet” — is simply a planetary body orbiting a star beyond our solar system, and nearly 700 of these extrasolar worlds have been discovered so far (plus hundreds more “candidate” worlds).

So, with the flurry of recent exoplanet discoveries, Discovery News has collected a few of the dazzling pieces of art born from one of the most profound searches mankind has ever carried out: the search for alien worlds orbiting other stars; a journey that may ultimately turn up a true “Earth-like” world. 

1. The Transit

As an exoplanet passes in front of its star as viewed from Earth, a very slight dip in starlight brightness is detected. Observatories such as NASA’s Kepler space telescope use this “transit method” to great effect, constantly detecting new worlds.

2. Crazy Aurorae

Planets with a global magnetic field, like Earth, have some dazzling interactions with the winds emanating from their stars. The high-energy particles bombard the planet’s atmosphere after being channeled by the magnetism. A wonderful auroral lightshow ensues.

But say if there’s an exoplanet, with a magnetosphere, orbiting really close to its star? Well, stand back! The entire world would become engulfed in a dancing show, 100-1000 times brighter than anything we see on Earth.

3. Angry Suns, Naked Planets

Exoplanets come in all sizes and all states of chaos. Some might have wonky orbits, others might be getting naked. Other times, they’re simply being ripped apart by X-rays blasted from their parent star. Bummer.

4. Super-Earths

Super-Earths get a lot of press. Mainly because “Earth” is mentioned. Sadly, most of these worlds are likely completely different to anything we’d call “Earth.” And you can forget calling the vast majority of them “Earth-like.” It’s simply a size thing — they’re bigger than Earth, yet a lot smaller than Jupiter, hence their name, “super-Earth.” Easy.

### Scigit Easy paper collaboration for scientists. [SciGit is a collaboration system](http://www.scigit.com/) for scientists to work on the same paper with version control easily. #openscience #science