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STERNTALER / THE STAR MONEY

Contemporary interpretation of the fairytale "Sterntaler" (engl. “The Star Money or Start Talers”) from the Children‘s and Household Tales of the Brothers Grimm. The artist gazes into the evening sky, where a string of Starlink satellites manufactured by SpaceX can be seen flying in a row alongside stylized stars. The work is a collaboration between Swaantje Güntzel and the Darmstadt-based photographer Andreas Zierhut. It was created during an Artist-in-Science Residency Güntzel held at the European Space Agency (ESA/ESOC) in Darmstadt in 2022, realized by Kultur einer Digitalstadt (KeD).

The work is currently on display in the exhibition "Infinity - Emptiness - Liveliness" at Planetarium Hamburg. Organized by Junge Akademie, curated by Anne Hemkendreis. The exhibition can be visited until May 31st, 2025.

Swaantje Güntzel, Andreas Zierhut, 2022
Sterntaler
Diasec
120 x 80 cm
Foto: Andreas Zierhut

#art #contemporaryart #kunst #zeitgenössischekunst #conceptualart #konzeptkunst #womensart #womenartists #esa #europeanspaceagency #starlink #spacex #spacedebris #space #satellites #andreaszierhut #darmstadt #kultureinerdigitalstadt #fotografie #photography #raumfahrt #planetariumhamburg #jungeakademie #annehemkendreis #weltraumschrott #europäischeweltraumagentur #märchen #fairytale #sterntaler #gebrüdergrimm #thestarmoney #brothersgrimm #thebrothersgrimm #artistinscience #artistresidency #artistresidence

D-Ream keyboardist opines that the Poms should get closer to Europe wrt space tech & exploration.

theregister.com/2025/03/06/uk_

Say, that's an interesting idea, & it makes me wonder if maybe there might be other benefits from, oh i dunno, the Poms being tightly integrated with Europe more broadly. I wonder if anyone's ever thought of that before...

🤔🤷‍♀️ 💡🤭 😇

The Register · UK must give more to ESA to get benefits of space industry boom, says Brian CoxBy Lindsay Clark

£10 million investment in new space facilities for LISA in Scotland:
New lab spaces will be constructed at the UK Astronomy Technology Centre (UK ATC) to assemble the optical benches for the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna @LISA mission.
The new lab and clean rooms will be hosted at the Science and Technology Facility Council’s UK ATC site in Edinburgh. (This £10 million ESA contract will double UK ATC’s construction capabilities, and build on existing support from the UKSA and its membership of ESA.
The optical benches send and receive the laser beams over a 2.5 million kilometre distance between the 3 LISA spacecraft, enabling measurement of distance changes between them with an accuracy of a few trillionths of a metre (picometers). Work on the optical benches has already begun at UK ATC. The assembly process utilises Robotically Assisted Bonding (RAB), developed by UK ATC and the University of Glasgow and funded by the Uk Space Agency UKSA.

Euclid finds an Einstein Ring

What better way to start a cold February morning than with a lovely image from Euclid? The picture above on the left shows an image of the galaxy NGC 6505 and on the right a closer view of the central portion that reveals a near perfect Einstein Ring. This phenomenon is caused by gravitational lensing and is quite a rare occurrence because it requires a perfect alignment between a background source, a concentration of mass that acts as a lens, and the observer (in this case the Euclid telescope):

This find is all the more extraordinary because it was made using observations made during Euclid’s commissioning phase when the telescope was not yet fully focussed. The first release of (a small sample) of full-quality data from Euclid – the so-called Q1 release – will actually be announced next month.

The published paper by O’Riordan et al is available here, from which I have taken this image showing the two relationship between the two images above:

There has already been quite a lot of media coverage of this discovery (even in Ireland). Here is the Press Release from the European Space Agency explaining the background and some comments from people involved in the work:

–0–

Euclid blasted off on its six-year mission to explore the dark Universe on 1 July 2023. Before the spacecraft could begin its survey, the team of scientists and engineers on Earth had to make sure everything was working properly. During this early testing phase, in September 2023, Euclid sent some images back to Earth. They were deliberately out of focus, but in one fuzzy image Euclid Archive Scientist Bruno Altieri saw a hint of a very special phenomenon and decided to take a closer look.

“I look at the data from Euclid as it comes in,” explains Bruno. “Even from that first observation, I could see it, but after Euclid made more observations of the area, we could see a perfect Einstein ring. For me, with a lifelong interest in gravitational lensing, that was amazing.”

The Einstein Ring, an extremely rare phenomenon, turned out to be hiding in plain sight in a galaxy not far away. The galaxy, called NGC 6505, is around 590 million light-years from Earth, a stone’s throw away in cosmic terms. But this is the first time that the ring of light surrounding its centre is detected, thanks to Euclid’s high-resolution instruments.

The ring around the foreground galaxy is made up of light from a farther out bright galaxy. This background galaxy is 4.42 billion light-years away, and its light has been distorted by gravity on its way to us. The far-away galaxy hasn’t been observed before and doesn’t yet have a name.

“An Einstein ring is an example of strong gravitational lensing,” explains Conor O’Riordan, of the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Germany, and lead author of the first scientific paper analysing the ring. “All strong lenses are special, because they’re so rare, and they’re incredibly useful scientifically. This one is particularly special, because it’s so close to Earth and the alignment makes it very beautiful.”

Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity predicts that light will bend around objects in space, so that they focus the light like a giant lens. This gravitational lensing effect is bigger for more massive objects – galaxies and clusters of galaxies. It means we can sometimes see the light from distant galaxies that would otherwise be hidden.

If the alignment is just right, the light from the distant source galaxy bends to form a spectacular ring around the foreground object. These Einstein rings are a rich laboratory for scientists. Studying their gravitational effects can help us learn about the expansion of the Universe, detect the effects of invisible dark matter and dark energy, and investigate the background source whose light is bent by dark matter in between us and the source.

“I find it very intriguing that this ring was observed within a well-known galaxy, which was first discovered in 1884,” says Valeria Pettorino, ESA Euclid Project Scientist. “The galaxy has been known to astronomers for a very long time. And yet this ring was never observed before. This demonstrates how powerful Euclid is, finding new things even in places we thought we knew well. This discovery is very encouraging for the future of the Euclid mission and demonstrates its fantastic capabilities.

By exploring how the Universe has expanded and formed over its cosmic history, Euclid will reveal more about the role of gravity and the nature of dark energy and dark matter. The space telescope will map more than a third of the sky, observing billions of galaxies out to 10 billion light-years. It is expected to find around 100 000 strong lenses, but to find one that’s so spectacular – and so close to home – is astonishing. Until now, less than 1000 strong lenses were known, and even fewer were imaged at high resolution.

“Euclid is going to revolutionise the field, with all this data we’ve never had before,” adds Conor.

Although this Einstein ring is stunning, Euclid’s main job is searching for the more subtle effects of weak gravitational lensing, where background galaxies appear only mildly stretched or displaced. To detect this effect, scientists will need to analyse billions of galaxies. Euclid began its detailed survey of the sky on 14 February 2024 and is gradually creating the most extensive 3D map of the Universe yet. Such an amazing find, so early in its mission, means Euclid is on course to uncover many more hidden secrets.