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    "results": [
        {
            "id": 12934,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12934/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2018-05-01T09:50:00-04:00",
            "title": "RXTE Photos",
            "description": "Technicians work on RXTE in 1995.Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center || 614636main_416240main_rxte-full.jpg (2307x2217) [7.1 MB] || RXTE_Crop_searchweb.png (320x180) [102.5 KB] || RXTE_Crop_thm.png (80x40) [7.2 KB] || Photos of the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer satellite in 1995, prior to its Dec. 30 launch. RXTE provided unprecedented views into the extreme environments around white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes until it was decomissioned on Jan. 4, 2012. || ",
            "hits": 28
        },
        {
            "id": 12003,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12003/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2015-11-12T14:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "Fermi finds the first extragalactic gamma-ray pulsar",
            "description": "Explore Fermi's discovery of the first gamma-ray pulsar detected in a galaxy other than our own.Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.For complete transcript, click here. || LMC_Pulsar_Multi.jpg (1920x1080) [634.9 KB] || LMC_Pulsar_Multi_print.jpg (1024x576) [191.7 KB] || LMC_Pulsar_Multi_searchweb.png (320x180) [72.6 KB] || LMC_Pulsar_Multi_thm.png (80x40) [4.8 KB] || LMC_Pulsar_ProRes_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [2.8 GB] || LMC_Pulsar_H264_Best_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [2.6 GB] || LMC_Pulsar_H264_Good_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [668.4 MB] || G2015-084_LMC_Pulsar_Final_youtube_hq.mov (1920x1080) [1.5 GB] || LMC_Pulsar_MPEG4_1920X1080_2997.mp4 (1920x1080) [176.4 MB] || G2015-084_LMC_Pulsar_Final_appletv.m4v (1280x720) [112.5 MB] || LMC_Pulsar_Multi.tiff (1920x1080) [15.8 MB] || G2015-084_LMC_Pulsar_Final_appletv.webm (1280x720) [24.1 MB] || G2015-084_LMC_Pulsar_Final_appletv_subtitles.m4v (1280x720) [112.6 MB] || LMC_Pulsar_SRT_Captions.en_US.srt [3.8 KB] || LMC_Pulsar_SRT_Captions.en_US.vtt [3.9 KB] || NASA_PODCAST_G2015-084_LMC_Pulsar_Final_ipod_sm.mp4 (320x240) [40.8 MB] || ",
            "hits": 166
        },
        {
            "id": 11804,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11804/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2015-05-14T14:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "RXTE Data Link Pulsar Pulses with a QPO",
            "description": "This animation illustrates the direct relationship between a pulsar's X-ray pulses and its quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO), a flickering signal that hovers around certain frequencies. The QPO is shown here as a bright patch near the inner edge of the disk of gas that feeds matter to the pulsar at the center, called SAX J1808. Guided by magnetic fields, gas streaming onto the neutron star forms bright hot spots. As the pulsar spins 401 times a second, telescopes detect X-ray pulses as these locations swing into view from Earth. When the QPO orbits more slowly than the pulsar’s spin, the neutron star’s magnetic field holds back flowing gas, dimming the X-ray pulses. But during an outburst, the inner edge of the disk is forced closer to the pulsar, resulting in a faster-moving QPO and compression of the pulsar's magnetic field. When the QPO matches or bests the pulsar’s spin, more gas streams onto the neutron star, and the pulses brighten. Gas may even flow directly onto the pulsar's equatorial region, producing extra hot spots. NASA’s Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer observed this relationship during outbursts in 2002, 2005, and 2008. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab || QPO_16bit_00728_print.jpg (1024x576) [96.1 KB] || QPO_16bit_00728_web.jpg (320x180) [16.6 KB] || QPO_16bit_00728_thm.png (80x40) [7.1 KB] || 1920x1080_16x9_30p (1920x1080) [0 Item(s)] || 11804_RXTE_QPO_H264_Good_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [45.4 MB] || 11804_RXTE_QPO_MPEG4_1920X1080_2997.mp4 (1920x1080) [28.0 MB] || QPO_16bit_00728.tif (1920x1080) [11.9 MB] || 11804_RXTE_QPO_H264_Good_1920x1080_2997.webm (1920x1080) [3.9 MB] || 11804_RXTE_QPO_H264_Best_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [240.9 MB] || 11804_RXTE_QPO_ProRes_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [416.6 MB] || ",
            "hits": 87
        },
        {
            "id": 11725,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11725/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2015-01-07T13:15:00-05:00",
            "title": "NASA Missions Take an Unparalleled Look into Superstar Eta Carinae",
            "description": "Explore Eta Carinae from the inside out with the help of supercomputer simulations and data from NASA satellites and ground-based observatories. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight CenterWatch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.For complete transcript, click here. || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL_1920.jpg (1920x1080) [804.4 KB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL_1920_print.jpg (1024x576) [52.0 KB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL.jpg (4928x2772) [874.1 KB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL.png (4928x2772) [36.6 MB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL_1920_web.jpg (320x180) [13.1 KB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL_1920_searchweb.png (320x180) [55.9 KB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL_1920_thm.png (80x40) [8.0 KB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL_1920.tiff (1920x1080) [11.9 MB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary_Final_appletv.webm (960x540) [30.5 MB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary_Final_ipod_lg.m4v (640x360) [43.2 MB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary.en_US.vtt [5.2 KB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary.en_US.srt [5.2 KB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary_Final_ipod_sm.mp4 (320x240) [22.8 MB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary_Final_appletv_subtitles.m4v (960x540) [103.9 MB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary_Final_appletv.m4v (960x540) [104.0 MB] || G2015-001_Eta_Car_Binary_Final_1280x720.wmv (1280x720) [107.6 MB] || 11725_Eta_Car_Binary2_MPEG4_1920X1080_2997.mp4 (1920x1080) [116.9 MB] || 11725_Eta_Car_Binary2_ProRes_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [3.5 GB] || 11725_Eta_Car_Binary2_H264_Best_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [2.6 GB] || 11725_Eta_Car_Binary2_H264_Good_1920x1080_2997.mov (1920x1080) [506.2 MB] || Eta_Car_Density_XY_R10_R100_STILL.tiff (4928x2772) [104.2 MB] || ",
            "hits": 194
        },
        {
            "id": 11625,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11625/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2014-08-18T15:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "NASA's RXTE Satellite Catches the Beat of a Midsize Black Hole",
            "description": "Astronomers from the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP) and NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center have uncovered rhythmic pulsations from a rare breed of black hole in archival data from NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite. The signals provide compelling evidence that the object, known as M82 X-1, is one of only a few midsize black holes known.Dying stars form modest black holes measuring up to around 25 times the mass of our sun. At the opposite extreme, most large galaxies contain a supermassive black hole with a mass tens of thousands of times greater. Just as drivers traveling a highway packed with compact cars and monster trucks might start looking for sedans, astronomers are searching for a middle range of the black hole population and wondering why they see so few.M82 X-1 is the brightest X-ray source in Messier 82, a galaxy located about 12 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major. While astronomers have suspected the object of being a midsize, or intermediate-mass, black hole for at least a decade, estimates have varied from 20 to 1,000 solar masses, preventing a definitive classification.Working with Mushotzky and Strohmayer, UMCP graduate student Dheeraj Pasham sifted through about 800 RXTE observations of M82 in a search for specific types of brightness changes that would help pin down the mass of the X-ray source.As gas streams toward the black hole it piles up into a disk around it. Friction within the disk heats the gas to millions of degrees, which is hot enough to emit X-rays. Cyclical intensity variations in these X-rays reflect processes occurring within the disk.Scientists think the most rapid changes occur near the inner edge of the disk on the brink of the black hole's event horizon, the point beyond which nothing, not even light, can escape. With such close proximity to the black hole, the effects of Einstein's general relativity come into play, resulting in X-ray variations that repeat at nearly regular intervals.Astronomers call these signals quasi-periodic oscillations, or QPOs, and have shown that for black holes produced by stars, their frequencies scale up or down depending on the size of the black hole.When astronomers study X-ray fluctuations from many stellar-mass black holes, they  see both slow and fast QPOs, but the fast ones often come in pairs with a specific 3:2 rhythmic relationship. For every three flashes from one member of the QPO pair, its partner flashes twice.The combined presence of slow QPOs and a faster pair in a 3:2 rhythm effectively sets a standard scale that gives scientists a powerful tool for establishing the masses of stellar black holes.A decade ago, Strohmayer and Mushotzky showed the presence of slow QPO signals from M82 X-1. In order to apply the tried-and-true relationship used for stellar-mass black holes, the researchers needed to identify a pair of steady fluctuations exhibiting the same 3:2 beat in RXTE observations. By analyzing six years of data, they located X-ray variations that reliably repeated about 3.3 and 5.1 times each second, just the 3:2 relationship they needed.This allowed them to calculate that M82 X-1 weighs about 400 solar masses — the most accurate determination to date for this object and one that clearly places it in the category of intermediate-mass black holes.Read the paper at http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature13710.html.Read the press release at http://www.nasa.gov/topics/universe/index.html. || ",
            "hits": 124
        },
        {
            "id": 11482,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11482/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2014-02-19T11:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "The Cloudy Cores of Active Galaxies",
            "description": "At the hearts of most big galaxies, including our own Milky Way, there lurks a supermassive black hole weighing millions to billions of times the sun's mass. As gas falls toward a supermassive black hole, it gathers into a so-called accretion disk and becomes compressed and heated, ultimately emitting X-rays. The centers of some galaxies produce unusually powerful emission that exceeds the sun's energy output by billions of times. These are active galactic nuclei, or AGN.Using data from NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite, an international team has uncovered a dozen instances where X-ray signals from active galaxies dimmed as a result of a cloud of gas moving across our line of sight. The new study triples the number of cloud events previously identified in the 16-year archive.The study is the first statistical survey of the environments around supermassive black holes and is the longest-running AGN-monitoring study yet performed in X-rays. Scientists determined various properties of the occulting clouds, which vary in size and shape but average 4 billion miles (6.5 billion km) across – greater than Pluto's distance from the sun — and twice the mass of Earth. They orbit a few light-weeks to a few light-years from the black hole. || ",
            "hits": 161
        },
        {
            "id": 3959,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/3959/",
            "result_type": "Visualization",
            "release_date": "2012-09-27T00:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "RXTE Views X-ray Pulsar Occulted by the Moon",
            "description": "On Oct. 13, 2010, NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE), a satellite in low-Earth orbit, observed a bursting X-ray pulsar as it was eclipsed by the Moon. This provided scientists with an unusual opportunity to calculate the precise position of the pulsar by timing its disappearance and reappearance at the edge of the Moon's disk.The story began a few days earlier, on Oct. 10, when the European Space Agency's INTEGRAL satellite detected a transient X-ray source in the direction of Terzan 5, a globular star cluster about 25,000 light-years away toward the constellation Sagittarius. This was the start of an extradordinary series of outbursts that ended Nov. 19. The object, dubbed IGR J17480-2446, is classed as a low-mass X-ray binary system, where a neutron star orbits a star much like the Sun and draws a stream of matter from it. As only the second bright X-ray source to be found in Terzan 5, scientists shortened the name of the system to T5X2. As shown in this animation, ingress (the moment when the pulsar disappeared) occurred on the Moon's eastern limb just above the equator. Egress, 8 minutes 32 seconds later, was near the south pole on the western limb. The timing of ingress and egress depended delicately on the shape of the terrain. In other words, it mattered whether the pulsar passed behind a mountain or a valley. So the calculation relied on the detailed topography measured by both JAXA's Kaguya and NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.The animation faithfully reproduces the angle of the Sun, the position of RXTE, the position and orientation of the Moon as seen from the satellite, the Moon's topography, and the starry background. RXTE's position was derived from the Goddard Flight Dynamics Facility ephemeris for day 6129 of the satellite's orbit, while the Sun and Moon positions came from JPL's DE421 solar system ephemeris. All of the positions and the viewing direction were transformed into Moon body-fixed coordinates, so that in the animation software, the Moon remained stationary at the origin, while the camera moved and pointed appropriately. The Moon, the stars, the pulsar, and the clock were all rendered separately and layered together. || ",
            "hits": 68
        },
        {
            "id": 3949,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/3949/",
            "result_type": "Visualization",
            "release_date": "2012-05-08T00:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Earth's Radiation Belts (side view)",
            "description": "This is a simulation of the Earth's radiation belts. In this version, we've kept the belts full structure. There is also a cross-section view of the belts in Earth's Radiation Belts (cross-section).The Earth's magnetosphere is a very large magnetic structure around the Earth, which gets stretched into a large, teardrop-shaped configuration through its interaction with the solar wind. A number of the magnetic field lines, which they may originate on the Earth, do not connect back to the Earth, but connect into the magnetic field carried by the solar wind. However, near the Earth, the dipole component of the field is stronger than the solar wind field, and this allows all the magnetic field lines to connect back to the Earth, forming (approximately) the classic magnetic dipole configuration. In this region, lower energy electrons and ions, many from the Earth's ionosphere, can become trapped by the magnetic field to form the radiation belts.The radiation belt model is constructed from particle flux information from the SAMPEX mission, with the flux mapped to constant L-shells of the Earth's dipole magnetic field. The model is anchored to the Earth's geomagnetic field axis, which is not perfectly aligned with the Earth's rotation axis. This creates a small wobble of the radiation belts with time, which can be seen in this visualization.The data driving the radiation belt structure is time-shifted from the 2003 Halloween solar storms, a series of strong solar eruptions that began in late October 2003 and continued into the first week of November. During this time, the particle content of the belts change rapidly due to the variation in the energetic particle flux from the Sun buffeting the Earth's magnetosphere. || ",
            "hits": 39
        },
        {
            "id": 10869,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/10869/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2012-01-10T11:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "NASA's RXTE Helps Pinpoint Launch of 'Bullets' in a Black Hole's Jet",
            "description": "Using observations from NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite and the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) radio telescope, an international team of astronomers has identified the moment when a black hole in our galaxy launched superfast knots of gas into space. Racing outward at about one-quarter the speed of light, these \"bullets\" of ionized gas are thought to arise from a region located just outside the black hole's event horizon, the point beyond which nothing can escape.The research centered on the mid-2009 outburst of a binary system known as H1743-322, located about 28,000 light-years away toward the constellation Scorpius. Discovered by NASA's HEAO-1 satellite in 1977, the system is composed of a normal star and a black hole of modest but unknown masses. Their orbit around each other is measured in days, which puts them so close together that the black hole pulls a continuous stream of matter from its stellar companion. The flowing gas forms a flattened accretion disk millions of miles across, several times wider than our sun, centered on the black hole. As matter swirls inward, it is compressed and heated to tens of millions of degrees, so hot that it emits X-rays.Some of the infalling matter becomes re-directed out of the accretion disk as dual, oppositely directed jets. Most of the time, the jets consist of a steady flow of particles. Occasionally, though, they morph into more powerful outflows that hurl massive gas blobs at significant fractions of the speed of light. || ",
            "hits": 71
        },
        {
            "id": 10875,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/10875/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2011-12-15T10:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "RXTE Detects 'Heartbeat' Of Smallest Black Hole Candidate",
            "description": "Data from NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite has identified a candidate for the smallest-known black hole. The evidence comes from a specific type of X-ray pattern — nicknamed a \"heartbeat\" because of its resemblance to an electrocardiogram — that until now has been recorded in only one other black hole system. Named IGR J17091-3624 after the astronomical coordinates of its sky position, the binary system pairs a normal star with a black hole that may weigh less than three times the sun's mass, near the theoretical boundary where black-hole status first becomes possible. Flare-ups occur when gas from the normal star streams toward the black hole and forms a disk around it. Friction within the disk heats the gas to millions of degrees, which is hot enough to radiate X-rays.The record-holder for ubiquitous X-ray variability is another black hole binary named GRS 1915+105. This system is unique in displaying more than a dozen highly structured patterns — typically lasting between seconds and hours — that scientists distinguish by Greek-letter names. Seven of these patterns are now seen in IGR J17091, including the so-called rho-class oscillations that astronomers describe them as the \"heartbeat\" of black hole systems.It's thought that strong magnetic fields near the black hole's event horizon eject some of the gas into dual, oppositely directed jets that blast outward at nearly the speed of light. The peak of its heartbeat emission corresponds to the emergence of the jet. Changes in the X-ray spectrum observed by RXTE during each beat in GRS 1915 reveal that the innermost region of the disk emits enough radiation to push back the gas, creating a strong outward wind that staunches the inward flow, briefly starving the black hole and shutting down the jet. This corresponds to the faintest emission. Eventually the inner disk gets so bright and so hot that it essentially disintegrates and plunges toward the black hole, re-establishing the jet and beginning the cycle anew. In GRS 1915+105, which at 14 solar masses is by for the more massive of the two, this cycle can take as little as 40 seconds. In IGR J17091, the emission can be 20 times fainter than GRS 1915, and the heartbeat cycle can occur up to eight times faster.Download the animations here. || ",
            "hits": 70
        },
        {
            "id": 10876,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/10876/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2011-12-15T10:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "Black Hole Pulse Animation",
            "description": "Animations associated with the RXTE Black Hole 'Heartbeat' release.View the short video using these animations here. || ",
            "hits": 104
        },
        {
            "id": 10708,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/10708/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2011-01-12T12:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "A Flickering X-ray Candle",
            "description": "The Crab Nebula, created by a supernova seen nearly a thousand years ago, is one of the sky's most famous \"star wrecks.\" For decades, most astronomers have regarded it as the steadiest beacon at X-ray energies, but data from orbiting observatories show unexpected variations, showing astronomers their hard X-ray \"standard candle\" isn't as steady as they once thought. From 1999 to 2008, the Crab brightened and faded by as much as 3.5 percent a year, and since 2008, it has faded by 7 percent. The Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on NASA's Fermi satellite first detected the decline, and Fermi's Large Area Telescope also spotted two gamma-ray flares at even higher energies. Scientists think the X-rays reveal processes deep within the nebula, in a region powered by a rapidly spinning neutron star — the core of the star that blew up. But figuring out exactly where the Crab's X-rays are changing over the long term will require a new generation of X-ray telescopes. || ",
            "hits": 100
        }
    ]
}