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Alma observatory captures stars being born, reports back on universe’s awkward teenage years

A baby book for our cosmos? That’d be a happy by-product of the massive insight star-gazing scientists are set to glean from Alma — the telescope responsible for ushering in a “new golden age of astronomy.” The Atacama large millimeter/submillimeter array (as it’s known in long form), located 3,000 meters above sea level on a Chilean plateau, goes beyond the voyeuristic powers of current optical telescopes, delivering detailed imagery of the dense gas clouds that birth baby stars. Why is this significant? Well, using the complex 20-antenna strong array (a total of 66 are planned), astronomers from North America, Europe and Japan will get a first-hand glimpse of the gaseous mix that was our universe a few hundred million years post-Big Bang . Consider the research a time-traveling peek back into the formative years of existence . Heady stuff, yes, but the array won’t have its multiple, celestial-focused eyes trained solely on star nurseries; scientists from around the globe already plan on getting an up close look at the Sagittarius A black hole . When these “Pyramids of the 21st Century” finish construction in 2013, we’ll be just one step closer to viewing the limits of our cosmic fishbowl. Alma observatory captures stars being born, reports back on universe’s awkward teenage years originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 19:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Alma observatory captures stars being born, reports back on universe’s awkward teenage years

A baby book for our cosmos? That’d be a happy by-product of the massive insight star-gazing scientists are set to glean from Alma — the telescope responsible for ushering in a “new golden age of astronomy.” The Atacama large millimeter/submillimeter array (as it’s known in long form), located 3,000 meters above sea level on a Chilean plateau, goes beyond the voyeuristic powers of current optical telescopes, delivering detailed imagery of the dense gas clouds that birth baby stars. Why is this significant? Well, using the complex 20-antenna strong array (a total of 66 are planned), astronomers from North America, Europe and Japan will get a first-hand glimpse of the gaseous mix that was our universe a few hundred million years post-Big Bang . Consider the research a time-traveling peek back into the formative years of existence . Heady stuff, yes, but the array won’t have its multiple, celestial-focused eyes trained solely on star nurseries; scientists from around the globe already plan on getting an up close look at the Sagittarius A black hole . When these “Pyramids of the 21st Century” finish construction in 2013, we’ll be just one step closer to viewing the limits of our cosmic fishbowl. Alma observatory captures stars being born, reports back on universe’s awkward teenage years originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 19:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Syria’s diverse opposition has finally come together in an official coalition, a move that should help the movement gain international support as violence continues, with at least 10 protesters killed yesterday. The new Syrian National Council brings together protest organizers, Kurdish groups, Syria’s banned Muslim Brotherhood, and others; about half…

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Niggerhead

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Niggerhead

Perry’s N Word Hunting Camp: Political Buzz 10.3 Rick Perry – ‘Niggerhead’ Rick Perry Racist “Niggerhead” controversy RICANROLL says: RT @ The_Hooleyman : Whats the fuss over Niggerhead ? If Blacks dont like the nigger word, they need to stop using it too. #tcot #Perry #Cain #YouNeedToStopItn

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Reading While Eating for October 3: Kid Stuff

Monday’s links ease you into the week with Ren & Stimpy and a cute animal video. Odd Ideas: If you can dream of it, it’s probably already patented. Check out some sketches from wacky, clever patents through history. (LIFE) Saving Smarts: Learn the tricks of the bargain trade with TIME’s Kayla Webley, who shopped alongside

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Whether you’re dreading it or desperate for it , you’ll have to wait at least a few more days to use Facebook’s new Timeline . There’s already an online firm called Timelines, and it’s not happy about the plan: The company, whose service is similar to what Facebook plans, sought a temporary…

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Jacqueline Laurita Twitter

BELIEVE IN YOURSELF w/ BRAVO TV HOUSEWIVES OF NJ : Motivational Monday #2 uvasodifid says: JACQUELINE LAURITA TWITTER : http://t.co/SEnIl71n

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How are monthly mood changes affected by the seasons? When should you talk to a doctor and seek treatment for depression? Find out in this article.

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Depression: Why Aren’t You Getting Treatment?

A look at common reasons why people avoid treatment for depression and expert advice on how to get past them.

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Erin Burnett Confirms She’ll Be ‘More Opinionated’ at CNN than at CNBC

CNN's newest addition to its prime-time line-up, former CNBC anchor Erin Burnett, told Reliable Sources host Howard Kurtz on Sunday that yes, she would be “more opinionated” at CNN than in the past. Burnett's show, “Out Front,” airs for the first time on Monday Oct 3 at 7 p.m. EDT. Kurtz interviewed Burnett at the bottom of the 11 a.m. hour on Sunday. He asked her “Are you going to be more opinionated, Erin Burnett, then you have been in your previous role as business correspondent?” She answered in the affirmative. [Video below the break.] However, Burnett added that “I would say point of view, to me, can be distinct from a partisan political point of view.” “[B]eing trustworthy, which I think is something I bring to the table in terms of numbers, and then you come out with a point of view of, this makes sense, this doesn't make sense, that isn't fair, that is fair – we can do that,” she continued. Last year, Burnett bizarrely compared soda pop with cocaine in an interview with a beverage company spokesperson on the “Fat Tax.” Earlier this year, Burnett claimed that the problem with the national debt is the country's revenue . “The problem is our revenue, what the government takes in, in taxes,” she told NBC's Today show host Matt Lauer. “What you pay every month out of your paycheck is way smaller, in fact, it's only somewhere around $2 trillion a year.” She did, back in 2007, provide a fact rarely heard on a network news broadcast as she explained how the wealthy pay a disproportionately large share of the tax revenue in the U.S. A transcript of the segment, which aired on October 2 at 11:38 a.m. EDT, is as follows: [11:38] KURTZ: Now nighttime cable news is very competitive, as you know. Very opinionated, as you know. People who have done the best seem to be the people who are the strongest personalities, sometimes the loudest. Certainly they don't lack for opinions. Are you going to be more opinionated, Erin Burnett, then you have been in your previous role as business correspondent? BURNETT: I think that there is – KURTZ: I want a yes or no answer. BURNETT: You want a yes or a no answer? KURTZ: Teasing. BURNETT: Well, the answer is yes, but I would say point of view, to me, can be distinct from a partisan political point of view. So where you have very successful people yelling from the left and from the right, being passionate, enthusiastic, energetic, and pulling together – being trustworthy, which I think is something I bring to the table in terms of numbers, and then you come out with a point of view of, this makes sense, this doesn't make sense, that isn't fair, that is fair – we can do that. KURTZ: I've read somewhere you don't want to worry about ratings. But, for example, Campbell Brown, a very talented journalist who came here from NBC News, eventually gave up her CNN show and said, I can't put up the kind of numbers that Bill O'Reilly, and at the time, Keith Olbermann, were putting up. So ratings is a reality in this business, as you know. Is this going to be a tough challenge for you? BURNETT: Well, I'm not going to be looking at them at first, because I think we have to be – we know what we are, and we have a mission statement and we need to be consistent with that. And I think that's really important, because I think as people know what that is, and you're consistent the issues we care about, that they will come to the show. So the most important thing is to be consistent and to believe in what we're doing. And I think it will rate – KURTZ: I bet your producers will look at the numbers. BURNETT: – and we will tweak as we need to tweak. But I come into this with a real belief that there is space for passionate, enthusiastic, fair journalism, as opposed to that pure political point of view. And I think a 7 p.m. hour is an hour where you can still do that.

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