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Erupting volcanoes as seen from space

Erupting volcanoes as seen from space


This series of incredible images from Nasa shows what gigantic ash clouds look like from miles above. Gallery


10900630267?profile=originalThe Pavlof Volcano in Alaska spews hot ash into the sky in May this year. (REX/Jesse Allen/Robert Simmon/NASA)

10900630084?profile=originalAnother image of the Pavlof volcano erupting in Alaska in May 2013. (REX/NASA/Robert Simmon/GM Gentry)

10900630480?profile=originalThe Sarychev Volcano in Russia spews a huge ash cloud upwards in June 2009. (Rex/NASA)

10900630857?profile=originalThe Chaitén Volcano, Chile, in May 2008. (REX/Jesse Allen/NASA/GSFC/METI)

10900630676?profile=originalA dramatic aerial image of the Manam Volcano, Papua New Guinea, in June 2010. (REX/Jesse Allen/NASA)

10900630878?profile=originalSmoke billows from the Klyuchevskaya Volcano in Russia in July 2007. (REX/NASA/Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS/Goddard)

10900631092?profile=originalShinmoe-dake Volcano in Japan, in January 2011. (REX/Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS/NASA-GSFC)

10900631858?profile=originalNyiragongo Volcano, Democratic Republic of Congo bursts into life last month. (REX/Jesse Allen/Robert Simmon/NASA)

10900631888?profile=originalIn November 2004, NASA captured this dramatic eruption at the Nyiragongo Volcano in the Democratic Republic of Congo. (REX/Jesse Allen/NASAEarthObservatory)

10900632280?profile=originalThe Sakurajima Volcano in Japan sends smoke 5km into the air last month. (REX/NASA/Jesse Allen/Robert Simmon)

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The alien face is seen in the aurora Northern Lights sky (Caters)

Yahoo! News UK -

We may finally have proof that there are aliens among us.

Using a complicated system unknown to us humans, aliens appear to have managed to beam their image onto the spectacular Northern Lights sky.

The photographer was shocked on his return home to see the image of the green faced alien in his pictures of the aurora Northern Lights.

Landscape photographer Iurie Belegurschi captured the image by accident in the Reykjanes peninsula of Iceland.

On a clear night on September 8, Belegurschi stayed up all night and waited to watch the aurora Northern Lights dance in the sky.

He said: "I didn't see the alien face during shooting, but when I came home I checked my photographs on the computer and I saw it! It's unbelievable, I couldn't believe my eyes."

"I can't describe with words what I feel when I see the Northern lights, but in my opinion it is the most amazing phenomenon we can witness.

"I wish everybody could see it at least once in their life."

But don't expect to see aliens if you do venture out to the remote area.

Self-taught Iurie moved to Iceland in 2006 to follow his biggest passion, the Northern Lights.

He is now waiting for the solar max in 2013-2014 to capture more aurora activity - with or without aliens.

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We’ve seen the light: Nasa spots light being emitted from “super-Earth” planet

Light glowing from a "super-Earth" planet beyond our solar system has been detected by Nasa’s Spitzer Telescope.

 

Until now, scientists have never been able to detect infrared light emanating from 55 Cancri E, a super-hot extrasolar planet twice the size and eight times the density of our own.

 

The Spitzer telescope was able to detect a super Earth's direct light for the first time using infrared vision. …

 

Experts are hailing the latest discovery as a historic step towards the eventual search for signs of life on other planets.

 

55 Cancri E is one of five exoplanets orbiting a bright star named 55 Cancri in a solar system lying in the constellation of Cancer (The Crab).

 

Previously, Spitzer and other telescopes were able to study the planet by observing how the light from 55 Cancri changed as the planet passed in front of the star.

 

In the new study, Spitzer instead measured how much infrared light came from the planet itself – revealing some of the planet’s major features.

 

At 41-light years from Earth, the giant planet is considered uninhabitable since it locked by tides, meaning that one side always faces the sun, and it doesn’t appear to have much of an atmosphere.

 

That means the surface of the planet has a temperature of 1,727 Celsius – or 3,140 degrees Fahrenheit – on its sun-facing side. That’s hot enough to melt silver or aluminium.

 

The other side doesn’t face the Sun at all and it is calculated that one year on the alien planet lasts just 18 hours.

 

The new findings are consistent with a previous theory that 55 Cancri E is a water world: A rocky core surrounded by a layer of water in a "supercritical" state where it is both liquid and gas, and topped by a blanket of steam.

 

Bill Danchi, Spitzer programme scientist at NASA, said: “Spitzer has amazed us yet again. The spacecraft is pioneering the study of atmospheres of distant planets and paving the way for NASA's upcoming James Webb Space Telescope to apply a similar technique on potentially habitable planets.”

 

Michael Werner, who also works on the Spitzer project, added: “When we conceived of Spitzer more than 40 years ago, exoplanets hadn't even been discovered. Because Spitzer was built very well, it's been able to adapt to this new field and make historic advances such as this.”

 

The planet was first discovered in 2004 and the new findings are published in the current issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters.

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