Monday, 20 June 2016

The spider in the loop



Yorkshire Photography





News: UNIVERSE - distributed around Yorkshire June 20, 2016 02:08:46 PM


Copyright ESA and the Planck Collaboration


This multicoloured swirl of yellow and blue shows a prominent ring of gas near the North Celestial Pole. The pole appears to be fixed in place, while the rest of the night sky slowly circles around it because of Earth’s rotation. This image comes courtesy of ESA’s Planck satellite, which spent years mapping the entire sky in exquisite detail between 2009 and 2013.


The North Celestial Loop lies over 325 light-years away from us towards the constellation of Ursa Major (The Great Bear). It is composed of dust and neutral hydrogen blown and sculpted into an expanding shell. This can happen in a number of ways: when a dying star explodes as a supernova, by the strong winds streaming into space from nearby stars, or even when fast-moving clouds near the edges of the Milky Way fall inwards and shunt material towards the centre of our Galaxy.


Rather than being a neat, distinct loop, this disorderly feature comprises numerous filaments that knit together, forming small clouds that are connected via coarse arches of material. One such cloud – dubbed a cirrus cloud because it reminds us of the thin, wispy cirrus clouds familiar on Earth – can be seen sitting at the centre of the frame, with tendrils extending from a central point. This feature has been nicknamed ‘the Spider’.


The Loop is expanding and pushing through its surroundings at 15–20 km/s. It contains a mass of neutral hydrogen roughly equivalent to the mass of 1500 Suns. Recent studies of its expansion have puzzled astronomers. They expect neutral hydrogen loops to expand in a spherical manner, but this loop appears instead to be expanding in a cylindrical manner, with the cylinder pointing almost directly towards us, hence its ring-like appearance.


This image is not a traditional view of the Loop; it has a pattern reminiscent of the relief lines of a map spread across the frame, resembling small eddies of swirling water in a stream. These lines represent the orientation of the Milky Way’s magnetic field, while the colours indicate the strength of emission from cosmic dust at each location. Dust grains in and around the Milky Way align themselves along the field lines emanating from our Galaxy into space, and thus their emission is also aligned. This polarised dust emission was detected by the Planck satellite.


The emission from dust is computed from a combination of Planck observations at 353, 545 and 857 GHz, whereas the direction of the magnetic field is based on Planck polarisation data at 353 GHz.

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Serious collision in Rotherham



Yorkshire Photography





News: Latest - distributed around Yorkshire June 20, 2016 01:04:31 PM


Police are asking for witnesses to come forward after a serious collision in Rotherham last night (Sunday 19 June).


At about 7pm, a silver Vauxhall Corsa was driving along Hooton Road towards Kilnhurst when it collided with a pillar and a stone wall.


The driver of the car, a 22-year-old man, was taken to hospital with serious injuries. He currently remains in hospital in a serious but stable condition.


A 21-year-old woman who was a passenger in the car, also suffered serious injuries as a result of the collision. She remains in hospital at this time in a serious but stable condition.


Police are asking anyone who saw what happened, or who saw the car before the collision, to contact them on 101 quoting incident number 1006 of 19 June 2016.


Information can also be emailed to enquiries@southyorks.pnn.police.uk
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Art students showcase their talents



Yorkshire Photography





News: Latest - distributed around Yorkshire June 20, 2016 01:37:23 PM


Recent graduates from University Campus Barnsley (UCB) will be showcasing their talents at the ‘Art Matters More Than Facts exhibition which opens on Tuesday 21 June at UCB and Saint Mary’s Church, Barnsley.


The exhibition is open to the public and will run until Thursday 30 June. The artwork on show will comprise a collection of paintings, photography, graphic design, printmaking, ceramics and sculpture. The exhibition will be open from 10.00am to 4.00pm, Monday to Friday.


Evan Wood, HE Curriculum Coordinator from Art, Design and Fashion, said: “The exhibition is the highlight of the academic year for our graduates and gives them a great opportunity to share and celebrate the journey they have been on in their respective programmes whilst raising their public profile.


“The exhibition allows staff and students to come to together and celebrate graduates moving into employment or further study.”


The exhibition is one of many that UCB will organise throughout the year, which celebrates the creative abilities and vision of both staff and students.


Graduate Deborah Geddes said: “The facilities and tutoring have been excellent. I needed to find some direction in my career and this course has definitely shown me the way forward.”


For more information about the exhibition or the courses available at UCB, please contact our Information Team on call 01226 216 165, email info@barnsley.ac.uk, or visit universitycampus.barnsley.ac.uk/

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Active Ability basketball session



Yorkshire Photography





WHAT’S ON AROUND THE BOROUGH


News: Latest - distributed around Yorkshire June 20, 2016 02:18:26 PM


Every week


Location: Thrybergh Sports Centre


Time: 17:00 - 18:00


Cost: £2


Fun basketball session for adults with disabilities.


Rotherham Hawkes Basketball Club provide inclusive basketball for a variety of abilities including wheelchair basketball.


You can just turn up on the day, but booking is advisable.

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NASA Hybrid Electric Research Plane Gets X Number, New Name



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News: Latest - distributed around Yorkshire June 20, 2016 01:37:23 PM


With 14 electric motors turning propellers and all of them integrated into a uniquely-designed wing, NASA will test new propulsion technology using an experimental airplane now designated the X-57 and nicknamed “Maxwell.”

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden highlighted the agency’s first X-plane designation in a decade during his keynote speech Friday in Washington at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) annual Aviation and Aeronautics Forum and Exposition, commonly called Aviation 2016.


“With the return of piloted X-planes to NASA’s research capabilities – which is a key part of our 10-year-long New Aviation Horizons initiative – the general aviation-sized X-57 will take the first step in opening a new era of aviation,” Bolden said.


As many as five larger transport-scale X-planes also are planned as part of the initiative. Its goals – like the X-57 – include demonstrating advanced technologies to reduce fuel use, emissions and noise, and thus accelerate their introduction to the marketplace.


The X-57 number designation was assigned by the U.S. Air Force, which manages the history-making process, following a request from NASA. The first X-plane was the X-1, which in 1947 became the first airplane to fly faster than the speed of sound.


“Dozens of X-planes of all shapes, sizes and purposes have since followed – all of them contributing to our stature as the world’s leader in aviation and space technology,” said Jaiwon Shin, associate administrator for NASA’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate. “Planes like the X-57, and the others to come, will help us maintain that role.”



This artist's concept of NASA's X-57 Maxwell aircraft shows the plane's specially designed wing and 14 electric motors. NASA Aeronautics researchers will use the Maxwell to demonstrate that electric propulsion can make planes quieter, more efficient and more environmentally friendly.


Credits: NASA Langley/Advanced Concepts Lab, AMA, Inc.

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Popular poetry festival returns to Mexborough



Yorkshire Photography





News: Latest - distributed around Yorkshire June 20, 2016 01:04:31 PM


One of the best poets of his generation, Ted Hughes, is being celebrated with a festival in his name.


The event is taking place from Friday, 24 June to Sunday, 26 June in Mexborough.


The poets south yorkshire connections have regularly been overlooked but a local community group is working hard to put that right.


The Ted Hughes Poetry Festival 2016 follows a successful inaugural event last year, which attracted over 500 people from across the country. Such is the pull of the great writer, that due to popular demand, the festival has returned for a second year and will become an annual event, putting south yorkshire firmly on the literary map.


Dominic Somers, creative producer of the Ted Hughes Festival said: “We are thrilled to have got funding from the Arts Council, Right Up Our Street and the Dearne Valley Landscape Partnership (DVLP)for which Barnsley Council are the lead partner, to put on the festival for a second year.


“We have a stellar cast of artists taking part. The ‘Three Ian’s’ - McMillan, Clayton and Parks will start proceedings on the Friday night with a mixture of poetry, story and humour. Ian McMillan’s recent appointment as the Barnsley Poet Laureate is great timing for the festival.


“A real coup for this year is the Saturday night, which will see a reading by acclaimed poet and artist Frieda Hughes, Frieda is of course, Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath’s daughter.”

Ted Hughes was a poet and children’s writer, who is often ranked as one of the best poets of the English language. Hughes, who spent 13 of his formative years in South Yorkshire, held the post of Poet Laureate from 1984 until his death in 1998.


Another Dearne Valley writer, Barry Hines, will be remembered at the festival. Visitors are invited to come along to a special free screening of The Gamekeeper at the Cosy Cinema in Mexborough.


The festival will include a range of other performances and activities, including appearances by award winning and acclaimed poets Helen Mort, Greg Leadbetter, Vidyan Ravithiran and Cathy Galvin, who will give readings. Greg and Vidyan will participate with Ed Reiss and Steve Ely in a roundtable discussion, ‘Politics and Ted Hughes’.


Nick Wilding will give a talk on Ted Hughes and the First World War. As well as this local musician Mick Jenkinson will perform acoustic arrangements of some of the ballads Ted Hughes would sing as an undergraduate in the pubs of Cambridge.


Matthew Clegg and singer-songwriter Ray Hearne will reprise their popular ‘A Navigation’ performance trail, whilst poet Ed Reiss will lead a poetry walk from Mexborough to Sprotborough Falls.


Steve Ely and Dominic Somers will lead an updated version of the ever-popular ‘Ted Hughes’s Paper Round’ and Ian Parks will host an evening devoted to another Mexborough poet, Harold Massingham. Visual arts will be represented by photographer Karl Hurst’s, Ted Hughes-based exhibition and Hughes-themed work from local art groups.


Dominic Somers, creative producer of the Ted Hughes Festival added: “There is so much going on throughout the festival, I’d advise people to take a look at the website and see which events suit them.”


Tickets are bookable now on the website www.tedhughesproject.org and for further information please contact Dom Somers on 07728 914993.

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Saturday, 18 June 2016

Clifton Park Picnic

CLIFTON PARK ROTHERHAM


A family picnic in Clifton Park Rotherham.


20160618-picnic-rotherham




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