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Catching up the passenger service in front of it, 49835 Zeebrugge - Mulhouse comes to a stand on line 154 between Jambes and Lustin. Due to Brexit, this Gefco link will soon dissapear. 20/06/2019
Un paseo por la historia y cultura de la Selva Negra. El Museo al aire libre de Vogtsbauernhof en Gutach (Schwarzwaldbahn) nos proporcionan una visión de la vida que llevaban los campesinos que la poblaban entre los siglos XVI y XIX. El Vogtsbauernhof está constituido por más de una docena de casas rurales, repartidas por la ladera de una montaña, a tamaño natural y completamente de madera, todas visitables. También están las herramientas empleadas hasta no hace mucho y los cultivos típicos. La agricultura que se ha practicado durante los siglos han hecho de la Selva Negra lo que es ahora: un paisaje inconfundible. Por todas partes se encuentran las típicas casas de la región, que se esconden bajo los tejados inclinados que casi rozan el suelo como si de capuchas se tratara, una buena muestra de ellas las encontramos en este museo. Además del exterior de las granjas podemos visitar su interior, ver las habitaciones, los comedores y hacernos una idea de la vida de estas gentes. Imponentes granjas, molinos, aserraderos nos muestran la arquitectura y economía de esta región en épocas anteriores. (Minube)
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CT Plus SN16 OVP 1335
- Fleet: 1335
- Reg: SN16 OVP
- Operator: CT Plus Yorkshire
- Route: X27 - Leeds
- Depot: Holbeck
- Livery: Bristol Community Transport
- Type: ADL Enviro 200 MMC
- Chassis No.:
- Body No.:
- Seating:
- New to/ Year:
- Livery new in:
- Location: Leeds
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Die korte intervormingstreintje (jawel, het zijn niet alleen ketelwagens, er rijdt ook een platte wagen met stalen elementen mee) zal voor deze 1335 geen al te zware last zijn.
11 maart 2015
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Capacity at Uckange yard is sometimes a bit harsh, as 49835 Zeebrugge - Mulhouse is experiencing on 26/06/2019. After heaving worked this GEFCO train all the way to Thionville, 1335 has to gain clearance to work the last few kilometers to Uckange where it will get a fresh driver to take it (and the GEFCO train) to Mulhouse.
Being to long for the tracks in "Luxembourg" yard, it has to pull up to exit signal, thus blocking the entire yard.
On its right, in "Est" yard, a loaded GEFCO train bound for Zeebrugge.
De Ambrogio van Muizen naar Gallarate (I) moet aan de inrit van Namur even wachten op kruising met enkele reizigerstreinen en geniet van het schone decor van de vallei van de Samber (links). 25/08/2016
Mortsel, 03/01/2014
Trein: NMBS 1335 + extra keteltrein 22735; Antwerpen-Noord B2 -> Chatelet-formation
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Oct 20, 2022
NASA’s Webb Uncovers Dense Cosmic Knot in The Early Universe
Astronomers looking into the early universe have made a surprising discovery using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope: a cluster of massive galaxies in the process of forming around an extremely red quasar. The result will expand our understanding of how galaxy clusters in the early universe came together and formed the cosmic web we see today.
A quasar, a special type of active galactic nucleus (AGN), is a compact region with a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy. Gas falling into a supermassive black hole makes the quasar bright enough to outshine all the galaxy’s stars.
The quasar Webb explored, called SDSS J165202.64+172852.3, existed 11.5 billion years ago. It is unusually red not just because of its intrinsic red color, but also because the galaxy’s light has been redshifted by its vast distance. That made Webb, having unparalleled sensitivity in infrared wavelengths, perfectly suited to examine the galaxy in detail.
Infographic titled “Motions of Gas Around an Extremely Red Quasar; Hubble ACS and WFC3 Imaging and Webb NIRSpec IFU Spectroscopy.”
At left, the quasar SDSS J165202.64+172852.3 is highlighted in a Hubble Space Telescope image taken in visible and near-infrared light. The images on the right and at bottom present new observations from the James Webb Space Telescope in multiple wavelengths. They demonstrate the distribution and motions of gas within a newly observed galaxy cluster around the central quasar.
Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, D. Wylezalek (Heidelberg Univ.), A. Vayner and N. Zakamska (Johns Hopkins Univ.) and the Q-3D Team
Download the full-resolution, uncompressed version and supporting visuals from the Space Telescope Science Institute.
This quasar is one of the most powerful known galactic nuclei that’s been seen at such an extreme distance. Astronomers had speculated that the quasar’s extreme emission could cause a “galactic wind,” pushing free gas out of its host galaxy and possibly greatly influencing future star formation there.
To investigate the movement of the gas, dust and stellar material in the galaxy, the team used the telescope’s Near Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec). This powerful instrument uses a technique called spectroscopy to look at the movement of various outflows and winds surrounding the quasar. NIRSpec can simultaneously gather spectra across the telescope’s whole field of view, instead of just from one point at a time, enabling Webb to simultaneously examine the quasar, its galaxy and the wider surroundings.
Previous studies by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and other observatories called attention to the quasar’s powerful outflows, and astronomers had speculated that its host galaxy could be merging with some unseen partner. But the team was not expecting Webb’s NIRSpec data to clearly indicate it was not just one galaxy, but at least three more swirling around it. Thanks to spectra over a broad area, the motions of all this surrounding material could be mapped, resulting in the conclusion that the red quasar was in fact part of a dense knot of galaxy formation.
“There are few galaxy protoclusters known at this early time. It’s hard to find them, and very few have had time to form since the big bang,” said astronomer Dominika Wylezalek of Heidelberg University in Germany, who led the study with Webb. “This may eventually help us understand how galaxies in dense environments evolve. It’s an exciting result.”
Using the observations from NIRSpec, the team was able to confirm three galactic companions to this quasar and show how they are connected. Archival data from Hubble hint that there may be even more. Images from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 had shown extended material surrounding the quasar and its galaxy, prompting its selection for this study into its outflow and the effects on its host galaxy. Now, the team suspects they could have been looking at the core of a whole cluster of galaxies – only now revealed by Webb’s crisp imaging.
"Our first look at the data quickly revealed clear signs of major interactions between the neighboring galaxies,” shared team member Andrey Vayner of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. “The sensitivity of the NIRSpec instrument was immediately apparent, and it was clear to me that we are in a new era of infrared spectroscopy."
The three confirmed galaxies are orbiting each other at incredibly high speeds, an indication that a great deal of mass is present. When combined with how closely they are packed into the region around this quasar, the team believes this marks one of the densest known areas of galaxy formation in the early universe. “Even a dense knot of dark matter isn’t sufficient to explain it,” Wylezalek says. “We think we could be seeing a region where two massive halos of dark matter are merging together.” Dark matter is an invisible component of the universe that holds galaxies and galaxy clusters together, and is thought to form a “halo” that extends beyond the stars in these structures.
The study conducted by Wylezalek’s team is part of Webb’s investigations into the early universe. With its unprecedented ability to look back in time, the telescope is already being used to investigate how the first galaxies were formed and evolved, and how black holes formed and influenced the structure of the universe. The team is planning follow-up observations into this unexpected galaxy proto-cluster, and hope to use it to understand how dense, chaotic galaxy clusters like this one form, and how it’s affected by the active, supermassive black hole at its heart.
These results will be published in the The Astrophysical Journal Letters. This research was completed as part of Webb’s Early Release Science program #1335.
The James Webb Space Telescope is the world's premier space science observatory. Webb will solve mysteries in our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
Media Contacts:
Laura Betz
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-9030
laura.e.betz@nasa.gov
Dr. Dominika Wylezalek
Heidelberg University, Germany
Bethany Downer
ESA/Webb Chief Science Communications Officer
Last Updated: Oct 20, 2022
Editor: Jamie Adkins
Tags: Goddard Space Flight Center, James Webb Space Telescope, Universe
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Crippling the international freight corridor Antwerp - Eastern France - Swiss - Italy once more, renewal works on line 130 Namur - Charleroi are being executed. Very slowly. Indeed, only working at day time, 2/3s of a day nothing happens while an extensive single line working slows down all trains having to go through Moustier. On 18/05/2019, mixed goods freight 44807 Woippy (F) - Antwerpen Noord is one of the many victims that day...