Posts Tagged holiday items

Ornamental

Hubble Supernova Bubble Resembles Holiday Ornament

Around this time of year, Hubble releases a holiday-themed image. I don’t think they can top last year’s Christmas tree, but this holiday ornament is still very beautiful and festive!

A delicate sphere of gas, photographed by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, floats serenely in the depths of space. The pristine shell, or bubble, is the result of gas that is being shocked by the expanding blast wave from a supernova. Called SNR 0509-67.5 (or SNR 0509 for short), the bubble is the visible remnant of a powerful stellar explosion in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a small galaxy about 160,000 light-years from Earth.

Ripples in the shell’s surface may be caused by either subtle variations in the density of the ambient interstellar gas, or possibly driven from the interior by pieces of the ejecta. The bubble-shaped shroud of gas is 23 light-years across and is expanding at more than 11 million miles per hour (5,000 kilometers per second).

Astronomers have concluded that the explosion was one of an especially energetic and bright variety of supernovae. Known as Type Ia, such supernova events are thought to result from a white dwarf star in a binary system that robs its partner of material, takes on much more mass than it is able to handle, and eventually explodes.

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Happy Hubble Holidays

Hubble Holiday Cards

Christmas is near, which means it’s time for this year’s new Hubble Holiday Cards! My favorite is still the baubles/ornaments card, but I definitely like this year’s new cards! :D Sadly, I never remember to plan to get any printed in time to actually give them out….

Hubble Holiday Cards

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Crystal Comet

Swarovski Crystal Comet ornament

I have a beautiful little star ornament by Swarovski, and when I went searching to see if they’d done anything similar, I came across this lovely little comet! Seems to be out of production — at least, it’s not in the Swarovski online store — but you can get it at Crystal Classics, or by doing a little searching online.

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Season’s Greetings

Happy holidays and merry Christmas from all of us me, here at Silver Rockets!

Somehow I missed that Hubble released two new holiday cards for this year, and I’m annoyed, so I’m posting one of them below. So there.

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Christmas Eve in Space

Woolworth's Jolly Christmas Book (1951)

Woolworth’s wishes you a very merry Christmas Eve… in space. With Robbie and Dottie. Found via Dreams of Space – Books and Ephemera.

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Christmas Shuttle

Santa with Shuttle Sleigh

I wanted to share my favorite spacey ornament (since I just put it on the tree earlier this week, getting a late start.) I found this shuttle-riding Santa Claus at a department store some seven or eight or nine years ago, and I haven’t seen his like since. It seems I couldn’t locate his manufacturer when I posted him on a previous blog in 2002, so if I couldn’t find him then, most likely I can’t find him for you now, unfortunately. He is wearing a space suit (I’d venture to say, Apollo-era), carrying a helmet, and the shuttle is quite detailed, but red and gold instead of black.

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Star-Forming Festivities

Hubble's Festive View of a Grand Star-Forming Region

A beautiful holiday image from Hubble, just released today!

Just in time for the holidays: a Hubble Space Telescope picture postcard of hundreds of brilliant blue stars wreathed by warm, glowing clouds. The festive portrait is the most detailed view of the largest stellar nursery in our local galactic neighborhood. The massive, young stellar grouping, called R136, is only a few million years old and resides in the 30 Doradus Nebula, a turbulent star-birth region in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a satellite galaxy of our Milky Way. There is no known star-forming region in our galaxy as large or as prolific as 30 Doradus. Many of the diamond-like icy blue stars are among the most massive stars known. Several of them are over 100 times more massive than our Sun. These hefty stars are destined to pop off, like a string of firecrackers, as supernovas in a few million years.

The image, taken in ultraviolet, visible, and red light by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3, spans about 100 light-years. The nebula is close enough to Earth that Hubble can resolve individual stars, giving astronomers important information about the birth and evolution of stars in the universe. The Hubble observations were taken Oct. 20-27, 2009. The blue color is light from the hottest, most massive stars; the green from the glow of oxygen; and the red from fluorescing hydrogen.

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Snoopy Salutes NASA

Snoopy NASA Ornament

Snoopy salutes the 50th anniversary of NASA, one of Hallmark’s 2008 Keepsake Ornaments. Must get my hands on this little guy.

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And the holidays begin…

Hubble Holiday Cards

Today is Black Friday and the frantic pistol-start of the Christmas shopping season. HubbleSite released their holiday cards earlier this week — this is the third year they’ve offered them — and you can download beautifully-designed files, ready for the print shop… or your printer! Each year I swear I’m going to have some of these printed up, and when the time comes I can never afford it. Shown above and below are this year’s new designs; 21 others to choose from!

Hubble Holiday Cards

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Hubble Holiday Cards, redux

Hubble Holiday Cards

Hubble Holiday Cards are back (see last year’s post), with three new designs at the top. Image above is my favorite of the three.

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