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Top Ten Weirdest Things in the Universe (English)

Source:

http://dsc.discovery.com/space/top-10/strange-universe/space-10-weirdest-things-universe.html

TOP 10 WEIRDEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE:

Hypervelocity Stars

by Dave Mosher

























The more we look among the stars and galaxies, the weirder things seem to get.

Even space itself is puzzling, for example. Recent studies suggest that the fabric of the universe stretches more than 150 billion light-years across -- in spite of the fact that the cosmos is 13.7 billion years old.

From super-fast stars to the nature of matter, here we cover other strange and mysterious elements of the universe.

10. Hypervelocity Stars

If you've ever gazed at the night sky, you've probably wished upon a shooting star (which are really meteors).

But shooting stars do exist, and they're as rare as one in 100 million.

In 2005, astronomers discovered the first "hypervelocity" star careening out of a galaxy at nearly 530 miles per second (10 times faster than ordinary star movement).

We have ideas about what flings these rare stars into deep space, but aren't certain; anything from off-kilter supernova explosions to supermassive black holes might be responsible.

Caption: Artist's rendition of a hypervelocity star leaving a galaxy. Credit: Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: Black Holes

by Dave Mosher






















9. Black Holes

Speaking of black holes, what could be stranger?

Beyond a black hole's gravitational border -- or event horizon -- neither matter nor light can escape. Astrophysicists think dying stars about three to 20 times the mass of the sun can form these strange objects. At the center of galaxies, black holes about 10,000 to 18 billion times heavier than the sun are thought to exist, enlarged by gobbling up gas, dust, stars and small black holes.

What about mid-sized types? Perhaps surprisingly, evidence is both scarce and questionable for their existence.

Caption: Conception of a black hole pulling gas off of a nearby star. Credit: ESA/NASA

TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: Magnetars

by Dave Mosher











8. Magnetars

The sun spins about once every 25 days, gradually deforming its magnetic field.

Well, imagine a dying star heavier than the sun collapsing into a wad of matter just a dozen miles in diameter.

Like a spinning ballerina pulling his or her arms inward, this change in size spins the neutron star -- and its magnetic field -- out of control.

Calculations show these objects possess temporary magnetic fields about one million billion times stronger than the Earth's. That's powerful enough to destroy your credit card from hundreds of thousands of miles away, and deform atoms into ultra-thin cylinders.

Caption: Artist's rendition of a magnetar with magnetic fields shown. Credit: NASA

TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: Neutrinos

by Dave Mosher






















7. Neutrinos

Pull out a dime from your pocket and hold it up for a second... guess what? About 150 billion tiny, nearly massless particles called neutrinos just passed through it as though it didn't even exist.

Scientists have found that they originate in stars (living or exploding), nuclear material and from the Big Bang. The elementary particles come in three "flavors" and, stranger still, seem to disappear on a whim.

Because neutrinos occasionally do interact with "normal" matter such as water and mineral oil, scientists hope they can use them as a revolutionary telescope to see beyond parts of the universe obscured by dust and gas.

Caption: Construction of the NuMI neutrino source underway. Credit: BNL

TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: Dark Matter

by Dave Mosher












6. Dark Matter

If you put all of the energy and matter of the cosmos into a pie and divvy it up, the result is shocking.

All of the galaxies, stars, planets, comets, asteroids, dust, gas and particles account for just 4 percent of the known universe. Most of what we call "matter" -- about 23 percent of the universe -- is invisible to human eyes and instruments.

For now.

Scientists can see dark matter's gravitational tug on stars and galaxies, but are searching feverishly for ways to detect it first-hand. They think particles similar to neutrinos yet far more massive could be the mysterious, unseen stuff.

Caption: False-color depiction of dark matter around a star cluster. Credit: J.-P. Kneib/ESA/NASA


TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: Planets

by Dave Mosher












4. Planets

It might sound strange because we live on one, but planets are some of the more mysterious members of the universe.

So far, no theory can fully explain how disks of gas and dust around stars form planets -- particularly rocky ones.

Not making matters easier is the fact that most of a planet is concealed beneath its surface. Advanced gadgetry can offer clues of what lies beneath, but we have heavily explored only a few planets in the solar system.

Only in 1999 was the first planet outside of our celestial neighborhood detected, and in November 2008 the first bona fide exoplanet images taken.

Caption: Illustration of terrestrial, extrasolar planets. Credit: R. Hurt/NASA/JPL-Caltech

TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: Gravity

by Dave Mosher






















3. Gravity

The force that helps stars ignite, planets stay together and objects orbit is one of the most pervasive yet weakest in the cosmos

Scientists have fine-tuned just about every equation and model to describe and predict gravity, yet its source within matter remains a complete and utter mystery.

Some think infinitesimal particles called gravitons exude the force in all matter, but whether or not they could ever be detected is questionable.

Still, a massive hunt is on for major shake-ups in the universe called gravitational waves. If detected (perhaps from a merger of black holes), Albert Einstein's concept that the universe has a "fabric" of spacetime would be on solid ground.

Caption: Artist depiction of gravity waves around merging black holes. Credit: NASA

TOP 10 STRANGEST THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE: The Universe

by Dave Mosher





















1. The Universe

The source of energy, matter and the universe itself is the ultimate mystery of, well, the universe.

Based on a widespread afterglow called the cosmic microwave background (and other evidence), scientists think that the cosmos formed from a "Big Bang" -- an incomprehensible expansion of energy from an ultra-hot, ultra-dense state.

Describing time before the event, however, may be impossible.

Still, atom smasher searches for particles that formed shortly after the Big Bang could shed new light on the universe's mysterious existence -- and make it a bit less strange than it is today.

Caption: Illustration showing the creation and expansion of the universe. Credit: NASA

Article posted October 31, 2008.

1 comentario:

Anónimo dijo...

Cuando miro al cielo, me doy cuenta de lo diminuta que soy (más pequeña que una hormiga...), y sin embargo me gusta seguir mirando y descubriendo la estrellas de Jupiter y contar estrellas fugaces... somo menos que un suspio en este universo infinito...