Astronomy Picture of the Day!

The Universe is expanding gradually now. But its initial expansion was almost impossibly rapid as it likely grew from quantum scale fluctuations in a trillionth of a second. In fact, this cosmological scenario, known as Inflation, is now reported to be further quantified by an analysis of three years of data from the WMAP spacecraft. WMAP's instruments detect the cosmic microwave background radiation - the afterglow light from the early Universe. WMAP's amazing success in exploring the first trillionth of a second and favoring specific inflationary scenarios lies in its ability to make unprecedented, precise measurements of the properties of the microwave background. The subtle properties are distilled from conditions in the early Universe and related to its first moments of existence. Schematically, this diagram traces the 13.7 billion year (plus a trillionth of a second ...) history of the Universe from the quantum scale to the formation of stars, galaxies, planets, and WMAP.

TheJoeD on
Did you ever take astronomy at ECSU? I did, it was held in the planetarium everyday. It was pretty interesting.
Cavutto on
No, I didn't.  I was always terrible at registering for classes on time.  Like really really terrible.  Luckily, the philosophy classes never filled up (except for the 100 level).  I wish I would've been more punctual because I would've taken way better classes. 
TheJoeD on
Man it was a totally cool class. I really wished I had paid more attention, skipped and got high less. A lot of the class focus was on Stephen Hawking's theories about the universe. There was also long discussions on the black hole, red dwarfs, prehistoric concepts of time. Shiet.
Cavutto on
There was a great show on Scientific American: Frontier last night about the dark energy/matter in the universe (PBS).  It was followed by an awesome show on cosmic lifeforms and what/where to look for/at.  I fuckin' love PBS.
TheJoeD on
No kidding! Remember NOVA? that was a great program. I saw a thing on CPTV about the flood of '55 narrated by the one and only Bob Steele. It was fucking awesome. Man, I don't have shit to do at work.
Cavutto on
I saw that same show on the flood of '55 (that was the one in south western CT, right?).  Nova is still on and still kicking scientific ass. 
TheJoeD on
Did you see the one about the Hartford Circus fire? That was pretty crazy. My grandfather and his family were supposed to go to that, but he got chicken pox or something so they opted not to go. Freaky.
Cavutto on
I think my grandfather (Thomas Barber) was a detective there or something like that. 
cavutto
Male - 28 years old
NEWINGTON, CT
United States
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