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Zeitpunkt              Nutzer    Delta   Tröts        TNR     Titel                     Version  maxTL
Mi 11.09.2024 00:00:02   190.378      -1    9.680.967    50,9 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Di 10.09.2024 00:00:00   190.379       0    9.674.844    50,8 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Mo 09.09.2024 00:00:00   190.379       0    9.665.659    50,8 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
So 08.09.2024 00:00:01   190.379    -102    9.656.837    50,7 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Sa 07.09.2024 00:00:00   190.481      -1    9.649.604    50,7 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Fr 06.09.2024 00:00:02   190.482      -2    9.640.109    50,6 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Do 05.09.2024 00:00:02   190.484       0    9.630.382    50,6 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Mi 04.09.2024 00:00:01   190.484     -68    9.621.597    50,5 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Di 03.09.2024 00:00:01   190.552      -5    9.613.971    50,5 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500
Mo 02.09.2024 00:00:01   190.557       0    9.605.246    50,4 Mastodon                  4.3.0...   500

Mi 11.09.2024 17:41

1/ It's amazing that we can see details on the surface of some stars, but watching them move is even cooler 🤩

Using ALMA, astronomers have followed the motion of gas bubbles on the red giant star R Doradus over the course of a month. The bubbles are huge, about 75 times bigger than the Sun!

Press release: eso.org/public/news/eso2412/
Video summary: youtube.com/watch?v=jaxyu4RP9-

Three images in a row are labelled, from left to right, ‘2023-07-18,’ ‘2023-07-27,’ and ‘2023-08-02’, respectively. Each image shows a blurry, yellow sphere with dark and light patches, against a grainy, brown background. The patches move and change between each image. In the bottom left of the first image, the outline of a circle slightly smaller than the yellow sphere is labelled, ‘Earth’s orbit’.

Three images in a row are labelled, from left to right, ‘2023-07-18,’ ‘2023-07-27,’ and ‘2023-08-02’, respectively. Each image shows a blurry, yellow sphere with dark and light patches, against a grainy, brown background. The patches move and change between each image. In the bottom left of the first image, the outline of a circle slightly smaller than the yellow sphere is labelled, ‘Earth’s orbit’.

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