<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><xml><meta><title>Galaxies give birth to stars on cosmic highways : XML WIDGET</title><link>http://www.plime.com/science/</link><description>You can use this XML spec to create a desktop widget or other application (i.e. Flash visualization). Please share it with us in our forum and we'll link it here!</description><language>en-us</language></meta><items><link><id>48833</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/48833/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Galaxies give birth to stars on cosmic highways]]></title><description><![CDATA[Galaxies tend to give birth to their stars on the road, while travelling down intergalactic highways towards cosmic cities called galaxy clusters, new Spitzer Space Telescope observations reveal. Galaxies in relatively empty regions of the universe flock towards densely populated galaxy clusters, attracted there by the clusters' gravity.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>228</score><crdate>1/29/2008 8:59:52 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-01-29T20:59:52+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>38849</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/38849/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Infrared galaxies didn't always prefer the 'suburbs']]></title><description><![CDATA[Dusty infrared galaxies are cosmic &quot;nurseries&quot; for some of the universe's hottest young stars -- and new research from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows that when the universe was approximately six billion years old, these galaxies packed into the densest &quot;zip codes&quot; in space. Astronomers hope that this latest finding will give them insights into why the modern universe looks the way it does.]]></description><comments>1</comments><score>213</score><crdate>10/19/2007 8:12:15 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-10-19T08:12:15+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>60338</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/60338/1/</url><title><![CDATA[The Second Stellar Baby Boom]]></title><description><![CDATA[When it comes to giving birth, galaxies don't seem to have a &quot;ticking biological clock.&quot; In fact, observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope show that old galaxies were the biggest producers of new stars when our universe was half of its current age of 13.6 billion years.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>252</score><crdate>5/1/2008 9:53:24 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-05-01T21:53:24+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>44294</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/44294/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Space telescope unveils hidden cosmic giant]]></title><description><![CDATA[Astronomers from SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research have discovered a new cluster of galaxies, hidden behind a previously identified cluster of galaxies. The recently exposed cosmic giant is apparently just as bright as the first group, but is six times further away. The astronomers made the discovery as part of an international team using the space telescope XMM-Newton.]]></description><comments>1</comments><score>174</score><crdate>12/15/2007 7:49:40 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-12-15T07:49:40+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>58304</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/58304/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Spitzer Sees Shining Stellar Sphere]]></title><description><![CDATA[Millions of clustered stars glisten like an iridescent opal in a new image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Called Omega Centauri, this sparkling orb of stars is like a miniature galaxy. It is the biggest and brightest of the more than 150 similar objects, called globular clusters, that orbit around the outside of our Milky Way galaxy.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>306</score><crdate>4/15/2008 2:59:37 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-04-15T02:59:37+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>41791</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/41791/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Watching Galaxies Grow Old Gracefully]]></title><description><![CDATA[In the early 1900s, Edwin Hubble made the startling discovery that our Milky Way galaxy is not alone. It is just one of many galaxies, or &quot;island universes,&quot; as Hubble dubbed them, swimming in the sea of space. Now, a century later, NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer is helping piece together the evolution of these cosmic species.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>123</score><crdate>11/16/2007 8:07:35 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-11-16T08:07:35+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>47653</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/47653/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Cosmic Bird? Triple Cosmic Collision Of Galaxies Stuns Astronomers]]></title><description><![CDATA[Using ESO's Very Large Telescope, an international team of astronomers has discovered a stunning rare case of a triple merger of galaxies. This system, which astronomers have dubbed 'The Bird' - albeit it also bears resemblance with a cosmic Tinker Bell - is composed of two massive spiral galaxies and a third irregular galaxy.]]></description><comments>1</comments><score>225</score><crdate>1/18/2008 5:39:50 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-01-18T05:39:50+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>47168</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/47168/1/</url><title><![CDATA[The violent lives of galaxies: Caught in the cosmic matter web]]></title><description><![CDATA[Astronomers are using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope to dissect one of the largest structures in the Universe as part of a quest to understand the violent lives of galaxies. Hubble is providing indirect evidence of unseen dark matter tugging on galaxies in the crowded, rough-and-tumble environment of a massive supercluster of hundreds of galaxies.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>215</score><crdate>1/14/2008 7:28:21 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-01-14T07:28:21+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>56665</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/56665/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Galaxy Evolution Seen in Action]]></title><description><![CDATA[Recently, two groups of astronomers were able to see two classes of unique galaxies from the early universe. One group glimpsed galaxies that looked old even when the universe was young, suggesting they must have been some of the first galaxies to form after the birth of the universe. The other group found galaxies dating from the strongest burst of star formation in the universe.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>356</score><crdate>4/1/2008 8:58:43 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-04-01T20:58:43+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>52180</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/52180/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Galaxy portrait reveals a blaze of newborn stars]]></title><description><![CDATA[Newborn stars shine like celestial sparklers in a new portrait of the nearby Triangulum Galaxy &#8211; the most detailed ultraviolet image of a galaxy ever taken. Astronomers will use the image, taken by NASA's Swift telescope, to create an &quot;age map&quot; of the galaxy's components to understand how galaxies evolve over time.]]></description><comments>2</comments><score>272</score><crdate>2/26/2008 9:25:38 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-02-26T21:25:38+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>44542</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/44542/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Lifestyles of the galaxies next door]]></title><description><![CDATA[The &quot;lifestyles&quot; of 75 neighboring galaxies are illuminated in this poster from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Scientists say this fresh perspective of our cosmic neighborhood provides valuable insights into growth process of galaxies at a glance.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>223</score><crdate>12/17/2007 10:59:11 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-12-17T22:59:11+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>39987</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/39987/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Bonn astronomers simulate life and death in the universe]]></title><description><![CDATA[Stars always evolve in the universe in large groups, known as clusters. Astronomers distinguish these formations by their age and size. The question of how star clusters are created from interstellar gas clouds and why they then develop in different ways has now been answered by researchers at the Argelander Institute for Astronomy at the University of Bonn with the aid of computer simulations.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>166</score><crdate>10/30/2007 4:04:37 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-10-30T04:04:37+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>50349</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/50349/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Spitzer catches young stars in their baby blanket of dust]]></title><description><![CDATA[Newborn stars peek out from beneath their natal blanket of dust in this dynamic image of the Rho Ophiuchi dark cloud from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Called &quot;Rho Oph&quot; by astronomers, it's one of the closest star-forming regions to our own solar system. Located near the constellations Scorpius and Ophiuchus, the nebula is about 407 light years away from Earth.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>316</score><crdate>2/13/2008 12:20:44 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-02-13T00:20:44+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>46832</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/46832/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Two unusual older stars giving birth to second wave of planets]]></title><description><![CDATA[Hundreds of millions &#8212; or even billions &#8212; of years after planets would have initially formed around two unusual stars, a second wave of planetesimal and planet formation appears to be taking place.  &quot;This is a new class of stars, ones that display conditions now ripe for formation of a second generation of planets, long, long after the stars themselves formed.&quot;]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>252</score><crdate>1/11/2008 3:11:56 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-01-11T03:11:56+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>57473</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/57473/1/</url><title><![CDATA[AKARI captures birth of cosmic dust from supernova explosion]]></title><description><![CDATA[Detailed images of the birth of cosmic dust were captured for the first time. A star that is about to die after a supernova explosion expels materials like cosmic dust into space, which will be the raw materials for planets and other life.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>258</score><crdate>4/8/2008 11:31:45 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-04-08T23:31:45+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>39633</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/39633/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Hubble Spies Shells of Sparkling Stars Around Quasar]]></title><description><![CDATA[What has appeared as a mild-mannered elliptical galaxy in previous studies is revealing its wild side in new images taken with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The Hubble photos show shells of stars around a bright quasar, known as MC2 1635+119, which dominates the center of the galaxy. The shells' presence indicates a titanic clash with another galaxy in the relatively recent past.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>115</score><crdate>10/26/2007 6:13:08 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-10-26T06:13:08+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>17807</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/17807/1/</url><title><![CDATA[NASA captures image of birth of stars]]></title><description><![CDATA[A dazzlingly detailed image released by NASA scientists shows the chaotic conditions in which stars are born and die - in this case in a huge nebula in another neighbourhood of our Milky Way galaxy.]]></description><comments>1</comments><score>60</score><crdate>4/25/2007 8:59:38 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-04-25T08:59:38+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>73810</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/73810/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Giant galaxy cluster seen in early universe]]></title><description><![CDATA[Astronomers have glimpsed the largest cluster of galaxies ever seen in the distant, early universe. The discovery of this far-off group, estimated to contain as much mass as a thousand large galaxies, offers further proof of the existence of the enigmatic force called dark energy.]]></description><comments>1</comments><score>359</score><crdate>8/27/2008 9:50:45 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-08-27T09:50:45+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>57749</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/57749/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Spitzer spots ancient cosmic urban sprawl]]></title><description><![CDATA[The universe's first &quot;galactic cities&quot; did not sprout up randomly across space. On the contrary, a new statistical analysis of observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope confirms that these ancient galactic metropolises may have developed much like sprawling cities joining together into a larger urban whole.]]></description><comments>2</comments><score>232</score><crdate>4/10/2008 8:36:05 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-04-10T08:36:05+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>49559</id><url>http://www.plime.com/science/l/49559/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Gargantuan galaxy NGC 1132 &#8211; a cosmic fossil?]]></title><description><![CDATA[The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured a new image of the galaxy NGC 1132 which is, most likely, a cosmic fossil &#8211; the aftermath of an enormous multi-galactic pile-up, where the carnage of collision after collision has built up a brilliant but fuzzy giant elliptical galaxy far outshining typical galaxies.]]></description><comments>0</comments><score>297</score><crdate>2/5/2008 11:01:37 PM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2008-02-05T23:01:37+01:00</atomdate></link><link><id>40128</id><url>http://www.plime.com/plime-com/l/40128/1/</url><title><![CDATA[Hubble sees the graceful dance of two interacting galaxies]]></title><description><![CDATA[Two galaxies perform an intricate dance in this new Hubble Space Telescope image. The galaxies, containing a vast number of stars, swing past each other in a graceful performance choreographed by gravity.]]></description><comments>1</comments><score>150</score><crdate>10/31/2007 8:42:39 AM</crdate><rssdate></rssdate><atomdate>2007-10-31T08:42:39+01:00</atomdate></link></items></xml>