One Shot
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Active from | 1998 |
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Albums | Dark Shot |
Vendredi 13 | |
One Shot | |
Live in Tokyo | |
Record labels | Soleil Zeuhl |
Le Triton | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1771607 |
About One Shot
Bond villains in the frame
... " Christoph Waltz played Ernst Stavro Blofeld in Spectre (2015)" Paul Newman gave me the nickname One Shot Gotts due to the speed of my shooting...
Euclid telescope: First images revealed from 'dark Universe' mission
... The astonishing James Webb telescope, for example, has much higher resolution, but it can t cover the amount of sky that Euclid does in One Shot...
Covid jab could be available privately from 2024
... " Nobody wants to get two, three, four shots every winter, " Mr Bancel said: " So we are really obsessed at the company about how do we combine those products to end up getting one annual shot where you go to your pharmacy or doctors early in the fall" You get One Shot - flu, Covid, RSV protection - and you can spend a healthy winter...
Chris Kaba: Armed officers step back from duties after Kaba murder charge
... A firearms officer fired One Shot through the windscreen and hit Mr Kaba...
Teacher suicide exposes parent bullying in S Korea
... Whereas families in Korea used to have five or six children, now most have just one, meaning they have just One Shot at success...
Palestinian shot in back of head puts Israel's use of force under scrutiny
... As he ran away from the area where the troops were stationed, One Shot him in the back of the head, said the witnesses...
Ukraine war: 'People call us the Ghosts of Bakhmut'
... Kuzia says: " One Shot, one target...
Eurovision: Brotherhood of Man star's tips on winning the contest
... " We thought this was the One Shot, so let s be as good as we can be...
Euclid telescope: First images revealed from 'dark Universe' mission
By Jonathan AmosScience correspondent
Europe's Euclid telescope is ready to begin its quest to understand The Greatest Mysteries in The Universe .
Exquisite imagery from The space observatory shows its capabilities to be exceptional.
Over The Next Six Years , Euclid will survey a third of The Heavens to get some clues about The nature of so-called Dark Matter and Dark Energy .
These unknown " influencers" appear to control The Shape and expansion of everything that's Out There .
Researchers concede, however, they know virtually nothing about them, even though they probably account for 95% of The contents of The cosmos.
Neither Dark Matter nor Dark Energy are directly detectable. Our only hope of gaining some understanding is to trace their subtle signals in The things we can see.
This will be Euclid's job: to observe The Contours , distances and motions of billions of galaxies, some of whose light has taken almost The entire Age Of The Universe to reach us.
Somewhere in The statistics of this 3D cosmic map - The largest ever Made - scientists expect to find answers.
Horsehead NebulaEuclid's survey will be The Most fundamental of inquires, argued Prof Carole Mundell, The Director of science at The European Space Agency (Esa).
" We Are human, we want to understand everything around us; whether that was as ancient people looking at The Night Sky and drawing constellations on our caves, or trying to understand whether The Sun would come back after The Winter - we seek that knowledge and insight, " she told Bbc News .
" We don't currently understand 95% of The Universe , a universe that is 13. 8 billion years old. We're sentient beings who've been around for a tiny fraction of that time, but we could be The species that gets to figure it All Out . "
Dark Matter and Dark Energy are among The biggest puzzles in modern astrophysics.
The former could be some as-yet-undetected particle. Astronomers infer its presence from The gravitational pull it exerts on The Matter we can see. Galaxies would fly apart if it wasn't there.
The latter represents a very different problem. It could be some kind energy in The vacuum of space. Whatever it is, it appears to be working against gravity to push galaxies apart at an ever-accelerating rate.
Perseus ClusterThe €1. 4bn (£1. 2bn) Euclid telescope went into space In July . Since then, engineers have been fine-tuning it.
There were some early worries. Initially, Euclid's optics couldn't lock on to stars to take a steady image. This required new software for The Telescope 's fine guidance sensor.
Engineers also found some stray light was polluting pictures when The Observatory was pointed in a certain way. But with these issues all now resolved, Euclid is good to go - as evidenced by The release of five sample images on Tuesday.
" They are fantastic, " said Prof Isobel Hook, who worked on one The Teams in The 1990s that first discovered The Universe was expanding at a faster and faster pace.
" I finally saw The images at full resolution on Monday, and they really blew me away. We were expecting Euclid to perform very well and it really has met all our expectations. It's a big relief and really wonderful to see, " The Lancaster University astronomer enthused.
Ngc 6397No previous space telescope has been able to combine The breadth, depth and sharpness of vision that Euclid can.
The Astonishing James Webb telescope, for example, has much higher resolution, but it can't cover The amount of sky that Euclid does in One Shot .
" This giant camera with billions of pixels is now ready to go and survey The distant Universe and objects over a vast range of The sky - a vast volume of The sky In Space and In Time , " said Prof Mark Mccaughrean .
" It's only by looking at huge numbers of galaxies that we'll be able to tease out those subtle signals for Dark Energy and Dark Matter , which is what Euclid is all about, " Esa's senior scientific advisor told Bbc News .
NGC 6822Engineering challenge
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com