Monthly Archive for 三月, 2006

Celestia

If you think Starry Night Pro 5 is just too expensive, here is another killing application for you! Celestia =d>

This astronomy simulator is able to be runned on multiplatforms such as Windows, Mac OS X and Linux (X86). Therefore, it covers a big area!

Jupiter & Europa

Continue reading ‘Celestia’

Starry Night Pro 5

I am really sorry for not updating AstronomyNotes for 10 days. I have been busy with my school activities and homeworks. :-<

Anyway, I am here to introduce a very nice astronomy simulator, Starry Night Pro 5! In my opinion, it’s the greatest astronomy simulator in the world! Most of the astronomers use astronomy simulators to simulate the moving of any celestial object. More than that, it can be used as a learning guides. It can tell you the science information of the specified celestial objects. What’s more are you expecting from this? It also has fantastic “Sky Guides” which lead you to the sky events! =d>

Furthermore, you can choose where to observe the celestial objects. For example, on the surface of 9 Major Planets, their Moons and spaceship! It can control your telescope as well! It’s really wonderful, I am sure you want to give it a try!

Starry Night Website

Moonquakes?

Do you know what is a moonquake exactly? It’s just like the earthquake on earth but normally they last longer. The longest earthquake was just lasting less than 2 minutes but most of the shallow moonquake can last more than 10 minutes! :o

Just another question is raised. What is a shallow moonquake? There are at least four types of moonquakes. According to NASA, they are

  • Deep moonquake
  • Vibrations from the impact of meteorites
  • Thermal quakes
  • Shallow moonquakes

Deep moonquake is happened about 700KM below the surface of moon and most probably caused by tides. Thermal quakes are caused by the expansion of the frigid crust when first illuminated by the morning sun after two weeks of deep-freeze lunar night. Shallow moonquakes are only happened 20KM or 30KM below the moon, thus, it’s the most dangerous. :-s

According to NASA, between 1972 and 1977, the Apollo seismic network saw twenty-eight of them; a few “registered up to 5.5 on the Richter scale,” says Neal. A magnitude 5 quake on Earth is energetic enough to move heavy furniture and crack plaster. :-ss

The scientists are not sure about the cause of the shallow moonquakes as well as the place where they happen. They have to know this as the lunar bases must be built on the safest spots. They are going to implement 10 to 12 seismometers around the whole moon to find the safest spots.

MRO Successfully Enters Mars’s Orbit

March 10, 2006: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has successfully entered Mars’s orbit.

Below are the events it has completed:

Eastern Time
4:07 p.m.: Turn to burn attitude
4:24 p.m.: Orbit insertion burn begins
4:46 p.m.: Behind Mars / expected loss of signal
4:51 p.m.: Expected end of orbit insertion
5:16 p.m.: Emerges from behind Mars
5:16 p.m.: Re-acquisition of signal
5:30 p.m.: Health and status report

About MRO
It has traveled 500 million km to reach Mars since it is launched from Florida on August 12, 2005. It needed to use its main thrusters as it neared the planet in order to slow itself enough for Mars’ gravity to capture it. The thruster firing began while the spacecraft was still in radio contact with Earth, but needed to end during a tense half hour of radio silence while the spacecraft flew behind Mars. Scientists are now having 6 months to adjust the orbit to the right size and shape.

After it goes into the prime orbit, it will start observing the atmosphere, surface and subsurface of Mars in incrediblely high details!

The instruments on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter will examine the planet from this low-altitude orbit. A spectrometer will map water-related minerals in patches as small as a baseball infield. A radar instrument will probe for underground layers of rock and water. One telescopic camera will resolve features as small as a card table. Another will put the highest-resolution images into broader context. A color camera will monitor the entire planet daily for changes in weather. A radiometer will check each layer of the atmosphere for variations in temperature, water vapor and dust.

Thanks to MRO, we’ll know more about Mars soon! :yeah:

More on Nasa- Mars Reconnasissance Orbiter

Solar Storm Is Coming

March 10, 2006: It’s official, Solar minimum has arrived. Sunspots have all but vanished. Solar flares are nonexistent. The sun is utterly quiet.

Like the quiet before a storm.

This week researchers announced that a storm is coming–the most intense solar maximum in fifty years. The prediction comes from a team led by Mausumi Dikpati of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). “The next sunspot cycle will be 30% to 50% stronger than the previous one,” she says. If correct, the years ahead could produce a burst of solar activity second only to the historic Solar Max of 1958.

Dikpati’s prediction is unprecedented. In nearly-two centuries since the 11-year sunspot cycle was discovered, scientists have struggled to predict the size of future maxima—and failed. Solar maxima can be intense, as in 1958, or barely detectable, as in 1805, obeying no obvious pattern.

The key to the mystery, Dikpati realized years ago, is a conveyor belt on the sun.

The sun’s conveyor belt is a current, not of water, but of electrically-conducting gas. It flows in a loop from the sun’s equator to the poles and back again. Just as the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt controls weather on Earth, this solar conveyor belt controls weather on the sun. Specifically, it controls the sunspot cycle.

Solar physicist David Hathaway of the National Space Science & Technology Center (NSSTC) explains: “First, remember what sunspots are–tangled knots of magnetism generated by the sun’s inner dynamo. A typical sunspot exists for just a few weeks. Then it decays, leaving behind a ‘corpse’ of weak magnetic fields.”

sun conveyorbelt

Enter the conveyor belt.

Right: The sun’s “great conveyor belt.”

“The top of the conveyor belt skims the surface of the sun, sweeping up the magnetic fields of old, dead sunspots. The ‘corpses’ are dragged down at the poles to a depth of 200,000 km where the sun’s magnetic dynamo can amplify them. Once the corpses (magnetic knots) are reincarnated (amplified), they become buoyant and float back to the surface.” Presto—new sunspots!

Source: Solar Storm Warning

Liquid Water On Enceladus

March 9, 2006: NASA’s Cassini spacecraft may have found evidence of liquid water reservoirs that erupt in Yellowstone-like geysers on Saturn’s moon Enceladus. The rare occurrence of liquid water so near the surface raises many new questions about this mysterious moon.

“Other moons in the solar system may have liquid-water oceans covered by kilometers of icy crust,” said Andrew Ingersoll, imaging team member and atmospheric scientist at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. “What’s different here is that pockets of liquid water may be no more than tens of meters below the surface.”

“As Cassini approached Saturn, we discovered the Saturnian system is filled with oxygen atoms. At the time we had no idea where the oxygen was coming from,” said Candy Hansen, Cassini scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena. “Now we know Enceladus is spewing out water molecules, which break down into oxygen and hydrogen.”


Above: Cassini’s infrared spectrometer took the temperature of a tiger stripe. The fissure is at least 15 degrees K warmer than its surroundings–a sign of geothermal activity.

Scientists still have many questions. Why is Enceladus so active? Might this activity have been continuous enough over the moon’s history for life to have had a chance to take hold in the moon’s interior? In the spring of 2008, scientists will get another chance to look at the geysers–and another crack at answering these questions–when Cassini flies within 350 kilometers (approximately 220 miles) of Enceladus.

Source: Radical! Liquid Water on Enceladus

Sunspots Are Vanished – Solar Minimum Has Arrived

Sunspots come and go with an 11-year rhythm called the sunspot cycle. At the cycle’s peak, solar maximum, the sun is continually peppered with spots, some as big as the planet Jupiter. But for every peak there is a valley, and during solar minimum months can go by without a single sunspot.

“That’s where we are now—at minimum,” says Hathaway.

Actually, we’re at the beginning of the minimum. February 2006 was the first month in almost ten years with mostly no sunspots. For 21 of February’s 28 days, the sun was blank. Hathaway expects this situation to continue for the rest of 2006.

Sun without sunspot

No sunspots means low solar activity. Sunspots are sources of solar flares and coronal mass ejections that can disrupt radio communications and even cause power outages on Earth during severe magnetic storms. These problems should subside during the year ahead. Auroras, a beautiful side-effect of magnetic storms, should subside, too. “Too bad,” says Hathaway, who enjoys Northern Lights.

By the way, solar storm is coming soon.

Summarised from Solar Minimum has Arrived

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Blog name is changed from Astronomy,Photography,Life to Astronomy Notes.

M101, A Spiral Galaxy Beyond The Milky Way

NASA and the European Space Agency released one of the the largest and most detailed photos ever seen of a spiral galaxy beyond the Milky Way on 27 February 2006. The image shows the glorious face-on spiral M101, located 25 million light-years from Earth in Ursa Major off the handle of the Big Dipper. The image is a mosaic of 51 Hubble Space Telescope frames and several ground-based shots. The Hubble images used to make this 16,000-by-12,000-pixel composite were assembled from archival data, which were taken for a variety of research projects dating from 1994 to 2003. The galaxy itself is roughly twice the size of our Milky Way and contains about 1 trillion stars.

You’re advised to visit the press released website for higher resolution pictures.

Comet Pojmanski Is Fading

Each morning, Comet Pojmanski will rise a little higher and become easier to see from northern latitudes, but at the same time it’s fading. On March 1st it’s only 8° above the horizon at the start of dawn as seen from 40° north latitude, but the comet gains altitude every day: to about 20° on March 8th. By then, however, it will be starting to fade, probably dimming to magnitude 6.2 by March 11th and losing 0.1 magnitude per day thereafter.

The information above is taken from Sky and Telescope.

I am going to observe Pojmanski tomorrow about 90 minutes before sunrise. I just updated my precious Meade 8″ LX90 with the latest database! :yeah:




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