#NASAScience

Jennifer Lynn BartlettBartlettAstro@astrodon.social
2025-05-08

#Astronomers
Did you work on Astro-1? Astro-2? #uv #spaceshuttle missions?

35th & 30th anniversary event planning is underway

Read Nicolle Zellner's announcement to join the festivities and celebrate their #NASAscience achievements

aas.org/posts/news/2025/04/ann

#astrophysics #instrumentation #NASA #histsci #museum

SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-05-06


Did we miss you last week?
If you didn't get by hyperwall for
"Accelerating the Discovery of "
or a literature exploration demo, view presentation materials at your leisure
doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15353298

Feldwebel KartoffelnKopfcoeusprime@social.linux.pizza
2025-05-06

Hey #dogsofmastodon are any of your little buddies trying to join the space program?
#nasascience

SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-05-02


Time is running out to visit the NASA booth in the exhibit hall

10:15 May 2 "Accelerating the Discovery of NASA Science" w/ @BartlettAstro

Come for a research tutorial until 1300 May 2

Your literature searches will never be the same


photograph courtesy rrabenda via Pixabay

Townhall style clock shows 13:00 against a blue sky
Jennifer Lynn BartlettBartlettAstro@astrodon.social
2025-05-01

#EGU25
I'll be with Mike Kurtz giving @SciXCommunity demos all day in the #NASA booth.

Come learn how our #digitallibrary supports your #openscience and transforms how you explore #science literature (& #data & #software

#earthscience #planetaryscience #heliophysics #astrophysics #NASAscience

Woman stands in front of table displaying Science Explorer (SciX) literature with NASA hyperwall in back displaying visualization of earth science data
SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-05-01


Bring your beer or soft drink to booth at 18:05 May 1st for Mike Kurtz's explanation of

"Science Explorer: Accelerating the Discovery of NASA Science"

just 15 min to improve your research efficiency
(demos all day)

Legend reads "Science Explorer:  Accelerating the Discovery of NASA Science."  Next to text is the logo of the Science Explorer and its website address scixplorer.org.  Above the text are five vertical rectangles with photographs representing the NASA science disciplines: earth science, planetary science, astrophysics, heliophysics, and biological and physical sciences.
SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-04-30


3 opportunities April 30 to improve your research efficiency w/ SciX

1545 "Accelerating the Discovery of NASA Science with @BartlettAstro in NASA booth

1720 "Enhancing Collaboration and Discovery" in Mike Kurtz in Room -2.32

Demos all day in NASA booth

Man speaks in front of large screen on which search results from Science Explorer can be seen.  NASA Science logo is partially visible on the left.
SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-03-28

American Physical Society, did you miss "Science Explorer: ADS for All " at ?

➡️ SciX, an providing w/ advanced search, visualization, & citation tools!

Access , , , , & more w/ familiar ADS features!

doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15054991

SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-03-28

American Physical Society, Did you miss did you miss "The Physics in the Astrophysics Data System" at last week?

SciX (based on ADS) is the ultimate resource for — 13M+ journal articles, preprints, conference proceedings & more!

Advanced search functions, citation metrics, & visualizations that map research connections make your literature reviews more efficient & comprehensive.

doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15054921

SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-03-20

APS colleagues Time is Running out!

Visit @BartlettAstro & Mike Kurtz in exhibit hall (booth #1310) before 1 PM PDT to explore what SciX can do for your research

SciX logo with analog clock face superimposed
SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-03-19

Physicists stop by our booth (1310) for stickers by multitalented glaciologist Yueyi Che

... and research tutorials, we have those too


illustration by Che for SciX

Orange shield with "Science Explorer" and "sciexplorer.org" at top between the Science Explorer logos.  The main body of the shield contains a pentagon divided into five labeled slices each with a drawing representing one of the included disciplines: Earth Science with a landscape including a volcano and glacier, Planetary Science with Saturn and its rings, Heliophysics with the Sun and prominences, Astrophysics with part of the James Webb Space Telescope Mirror reflecting stars, and Biological and Physical Sciences with a spacewalking astronaut.
SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-03-18

3 Ways Today to Accelerate Your with SciX

* Visit booth 1310 for a tutorial

Visit our posters 2-5 PM PDT in Exhibit Hall A

* Explorer: ADS for All (#232)
* Physics in the Data System (#508)

legend announcing "Accelerate Your Science Come for a tutorial" beneath
five vertical rectangles contain presentative photographs for Earth Science, Planetary Science, Astrophysics, Heliophysics, and Biological & Physical Sciences with logo for Science Explorer, or SciX, and its website address sciXplorer.org on right
SciXCommunitySciXCommunity
2025-03-17


join @BartlettAstro & Mike Kurtz
for a literature search tutorial tonight during the opening reception to make your more efficient & effective

Woman and man standing in front of Science Explorer convention booth with legend reading "APS 2025 Booth 1310 Experience the Future of Literature Searches"
Jennifer Lynn BartlettBartlettAstro@astrodon.social
2025-02-11
DrBob, Neurologist, 🧠Mechanicdrrjv@vmst.io
2024-12-28

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Makes History With Closest Pass to #Sun

“Operations teams have confirmed NASA’s mission to “touch” the Sun survived its record-breaking closest approach to the solar surface on Dec. 24, 2024.

Breaking its previous record by flying just 3.8 million miles above the surface of the Sun, #NASA’s #ParkerSolarProbe hurtled through the solar atmosphere at a blazing 430,000 miles per hour — faster than any human-made object has ever moved

A beacon tone received late on Dec. 26 confirmed the spacecraft had made it through the encounter safely and is operating normally.”

#NASAScience
science.nasa.gov/science-resea

Text Shot: "Flying this close to the Sun is a historic moment in humanity’s first mission to a star,” said Nicky Fox, who leads the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “By studying the Sun up close, we can better understand its impacts throughout our solar system, including on the technology we use daily on Earth and in space, as well as learn about the workings of stars across the universe to aid in our search for habitable worlds beyond our home planet.”
Jennifer Lynn BartlettBartlettAstro@astrodon.social
2024-12-20

#ArlingtonVA Parks & Rec, thank you for inviting me last week to talk to your Arlington 55+ community about #JWST & #NASAscience. Friends of Arlington's David M. Brown Planetarium has monthly opportunities to explore #astronomy further under the dome.

Galaxies IC 2163 and NGC 2207 by HST (left) & JWST (right)
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI
#NASA #HST #Astrophotography

These are two views of the same scene, each showing two overlapping spiral galaxies, IC 2163 at left and NGC 2207 at right. The Hubble Space Telescope’s ultraviolet- and visible-light observation is at left, and the James Webb Space Telescope’s mid-infrared light observation is at right. In Hubble’s image, the star-filled spiral arms glow brightly in blue, and the galaxies’ cores in orange. Both galaxies are covered in dark brown dust lanes, which obscures the view of IC 2163’s core at left. In Webb’s image, cold dust takes center stage, casting the galaxies’ arms in white. Areas where stars are still deeply embedded in the dust appear pink. Other pink regions may be objects that lie well behind these galaxies, including active supermassive black holes known as quasars. Turn your eye toward the bottom right of the Webb image. The largest, brightest pink region that glimmers with eight prominent diffraction spikes is a mini starburst — a location where many stars are forming in quick succession. The same region in the Hubble image appears as a bright blue cluster of stars. The lace-like holes in the white spiral arms of Webb’s images are often where supernovae exploded long ago. In the same regions, Hubble shows these areas are now populated with newer stars. The black areas to upper right and lower left of the Hubble image do not contain any data.
Pomarančpomaranc
2024-05-14

Light Show on Jupiter!

Hubble is teaming up with Juno to study Jupiter's amazing auroras, the colorful light displays dancing around its poles. These auroras are even more powerful than Earth's!

Hubble is capturing stunning images, while Juno will measure the solar wind that fuels these light shows. It's like a perfectly timed cosmic collaboration!

Credits: NASA, ESA, and J. Nichols (University of Leicester)

Jennifer Lynn BartlettBartlettAstro@astrodon.social
2024-05-07

@SciXCommunity
just a few minutes at the #NASAScience Explorer booth will boost your research efficiency ... plus we have tattoos

two hands: one showing abbreviation "SciX" and the other the NASA SciX logo, photograph courtesy D. Thompson (CC-BY 4.0)
Jennifer Lynn BartlettBartlettAstro@astrodon.social
2024-05-07

#AbSciCon2024 come by the #NASAScience Explorer booth to improve your research efficiency with a #digitallibrary tutorial ... and tattoos, we have those too.

#AbSciCon #astrobiology #astronomy #earthscience #planetaryscience #digitaltransformation #ProfessionalDevelopment #NASA @SciXCommunity
photo courtesy D. Thompson (CC-BY 4.0)

two hands: one showing abbreviation "SciX" and the other the NASA SciX logo, photograph courtesy D. Thompson (CC-BY 4.0)

Happy #TeacherAppreciationWeek! Celebrate by tuning into today’s #NASAScience webinars designed w/ classrooms in mind: go.nasa.gov/3M35N66

11am ET (15:00 UTC): Moon Trees: Apollo 14, #Artemis, Lasers, and Tree Height
6:30pm ET (22:30 UTC): Moon Phases, Eclipses, and Seasons
#NASAArtemis #Artemis

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