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Archive for December, 2011

Earthlike Planet Discovered

Posted by Nat W on December 6, 2011

The following article appeared on nationalgeographic.com.

“What makes this particular discovery so exciting is that this planet is right smack in the middle of the habitable zone…It’s also orbiting a star that’s almost a twin of our sun, whereas the other two detections are orbiting significantly cooler stars.”

Earthlike Planet Found Orbiting at Right Distance for Life

A possible Earth twin has been confirmed orbiting a sunlike star 600 light-years away—and the new planet may be in just the right spot for supporting life, NASA announced Monday.

Discovered by the Kepler space mission, the new planet—dubbed Kepler-22b—is the first world smaller than Neptune to be found in middle of its star’s habitable zone.

Also called the Goldilocks zone, the habitable zone is the region around a star where a planet’s surface is not too hot and not too cold for liquid water—and thus life as we know it—to exist.

(Also see “New Planet May Be Among Most Earthlike—Weather Permitting.”)

Other planets have been spotted in the habitable zones of their stars, but most of those worlds are Jupiter- or Neptune-size bodies that are unlikely to harbor life.

“The number of confirmed sub-Neptunian worlds in their habitable zones are few and far between, because they are the hardest ones to find,” said Natalie Batalha, Kepler’s deputy science team leader at San Jose State University in California.

(Related: “Six New Planets—Mini-Neptunes Found Around Sunlike Star.”)

In fact, only two known planets fit this description so far—Gliese 581d and HD 85512—and both worlds orbit at the very edges of their stars’ habitable zones, making them more akin to Venus and Mars than to Earth.

“What makes this particular discovery so exciting is that this planet is right smack in the middle of the habitable zone,” Batalha said.

“It’s also orbiting a star that’s almost a twin of our sun, whereas the other two detections are orbiting significantly cooler stars.”

(Find out more about the possibly habitable worlds in the Gliese system.)

Getting Closer to Truly Earthlike

The Kepler mission finds new worlds by simultaneously monitoring 150,000 stars for dips in brightness, which are indicative of planets passing in front of—or transiting—their stars.

Kepler-22b was among the 54 roughly Earth-size planet candidates announced by the Kepler team in February. But the spacecraft needs to watch at least three transits to confirm that a signal is a planet.

“Fortune smiled upon us with the detection of this planet,” William Borucki, Kepler’s principal investigator at the NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, said in a statement.

“The first transit was captured just three days after we declared the spacecraft operationally ready. We witnessed the defining third transit over the 2010 holiday season.”

The new planet is about 2.4 times the radius of Earth, but scientists don’t yet know its composition, because they are still missing a crucial piece of information: Kepler-22b’s mass.

(See “NASA Finds Smallest Earthlike Planet Outside Solar System.”)

The Kepler team is hopeful, however, that the mass of Kepler-22b could be calculated with the help of a new ground-based instrument in the Spanish Canary Islands that will begin observations next spring.

Called HARPS North, the new telescope is capable of measuring with high precision a planet’s doppler velocity—changes in the frequency of light from an object in space as it moves toward or away from Earth.

With this information, scientists can calculate the mass, and therefore the density, of Kepler-22b and determine whether it’s a rocky planet or a water world.

“We are really hopeful that HARPS North might be able to be a really big help in this quest for the mass of this planet,” San Jose State’s Batalha said.

“We’re just getting closer and closer to what is truly Earthlike, and that progress is exciting to watch.”

The new planet Kepler-22b will be detailed in an upcoming issue of the Astrophysical Journal.

 

Posted in >> analysis of news | 2 Comments »

A New Kasama Site Coming Soon: Funds and Volunteers Needed

Posted by eric ribellarsi on December 4, 2011

by Eric RibellarsiKasama Tiger Eye

The  world is changing with new openings and a new radicalizing generation. And with that, our own tasks and presentation are changing too.

Kasama is  moving to transform itself, including  the development of a new website.

Many of you read this site regularly. Many appreciate our work so far. Help us take a major leap together.

Funds are needed  — immediately 2,000 to 3,000 dollars, and more (in the tens of thousands) will be needed soon for a major restructuring of our project. Please consider contributing generously.

Kasama began as a relatively simple blog during a period of relative lull. It worked in a beginning way. It has created one space to regroup revolutionaries and start to re-conceive communist theory.

We have been hastening while we awaited — together.

A significant break is opened up in the political terrain.  We need to adapt. Seize new opportunities. Build on what we’ve done — while we refine our presentation, while we adjust our focus… quickly.

Everything about Kasama must change, and so too must Kasama’s web presence. I have sketched out a general outline of what is being envisioned.

  • We need to expand the team behind the site itself. We need more designers, developers, moderators, and regular writers. We have to move beyond ad-hoc.
  • The entire look and feel of the site is going to receive a complete overhaul.
  • The site needs to grow beyond the blog format to a center of communist publication that expands its columns, bloggers, media, and horizontal discussion.
  • Facebook and Twitter need to be integrated into every aspect of our site. Conversation streams on those networks need to be integrated into this site.
  • We need our own social networking capacity. We need individuals to be able to create their own profiles, make their own posts and share them on each other’s walls, as part creating of a broader center of radical discussion.
  • The various blogs and their posts that have been initiated by the Kasama project can be integrated into a unified site.
  • And these are only the first immediate steps…

Again, to accomplish these things we will have bills to pay and it will take new volunteers stepping forward. Contribute with the Make a Donation line, send an email to kasamasite (at) yahoo (dot) com to volunteer, and let’s do this together.

Posted in >> analysis of news, >> Kasama Project, Kasama, Kasama collectives | Tagged: , , , , | 12 Comments »

Fred Hampton: Live for the People, Die for the People

Posted by Nat W on December 4, 2011

Forty-two years ago today, Fred Hampton was murdered by the Chicago Police Dept. with FBI cooperation.

As Deputy Chairman of the Black Panther Party’s Chicago chapter, he brought about a truce between various street gangs in Chicago, organized weekly rallies, worked with the BPP’s local People’s Clinic, taught political education classes, and launched a project for community supervision of the police.

He was twenty-one years old when Chicago police gunned him down in his bed, after he had been drugged by his bodyguard, who was an FBI operative. Despite their attempts at a cover-up, Chicago Police Dept. were exposed in the documentary “The Murder of Fred Hampton” which we have provided below in its entirety.  This film does not only reveal the lengths to which Chicago PD, along with the FBI, went to kill Fred Hampton, and destroy the Black Panthers, but also portrays his talents as a speaker, organizer and thinker who was tireless in his efforts to fuse revolutionary politics with the people.

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Posted in >> Art and Culture, >> history, African liberation, Black History, Black Panthers, film, police, repression | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Final goals in twitter length: Making communism sharp, fresh, real

Posted by Mike E on December 2, 2011

the road to dawn

Can you explain our final goals in a contemporary way?

What would you say?

Write yours below — – in the length of a tweet.

Let’s compare and contrast.

* * * * * * * *

by Mike Ely

We can now often present communism to a generation relatively disentangled from the cold war — and even from  direct, immediate reference to previous “real existing socialism.”  We can reclaim communism’s global, visionary, communal and experimental-utopian qualities. We have that opportunity. And we have that necessity. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in communism, Kasama, Marxist theory, mass line, Mike Ely, Socialism | 67 Comments »

Occupy Wall Street “Goes Home”

Posted by Nat W on December 1, 2011

With the recent government crackdowns of occupations in major cities across the country, it appears that the Occupy Together movement is in a period transition. We are all pondering what the next wave of our movenment will look like. In many parts of the country as Occupiers prepare for the winter one idea has been to take the occupations indoors, into foreclosed homes, corporate headquarters, etc. The following call for a national day of action on foreclosure including the call for sit-ins at foreclosed properties may be a glimpse of what our winter of resistance may look like.

The following call appeared on occupywallst.org.

December 6: Occupy Wall Street “Goes Home”

December 6 will be a big day of action for the Occupy Wall Street movement. #OWS will join the struggle of families and communities that have been on the front lines of a struggle for economic justice. We will stand in solidarity and ask our fellow occupations to join us for a national day of action on the foreclosure crisis. We are fighting Wall Street’s reach on every block, every farm, every house in America with sit-ins at foreclosed properties to right this moral injustice.

The Occupy movement is born of the simple belief that humanity could meet our common needs if not for the predation and greed of the very few. Nowhere is this disparity of wealth and power more evident than in the struggle to secure the human right to housing.

In a nation that puts the right to housing at the center of its founding dream, millions of people have lost their homes or fear that they soon will because of the foreclosure crisis. Wall Street created this crisis with lies and greed. And Washington, instead of investigating Wall Street and banks, is cutting back room deals to let bankers escape justice for their crimes.

Wall Street turned a fundamental human need into a badly rigged casino game with fraudulent lending practices and corrupt securitization. They destroyed our economy, kicked tens of thousands of people illegally out of their homes, and are now using a small fraction of the money they stole to buy off politicians and settle for far less than they owe.

More information to come.

Contact: occupyourhomes@gmail.com On Twitter: @OccupyOurHomes Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/events/304693926222145/

Posted in >> analysis of news | 6 Comments »

 
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