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Report for 2003-01-17 |
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Brought to you from beautiful Park City, "View-tah". |
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Contents |
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Astronomical Times (Mountain Standard) |
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Full Moon Snow Shoe Event |
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| This weekend find will find us under a full moon... and clear skies! A full moon in the winter, especially up here in Park City is always a great time for an evening snowshoe. With that in mind, The Park City Recreation's Enrichment Class for January is Full Moon Snowshoeing, Saturday, Jan 18th from 6 – 8 pm. Bundle up the whole family and snowshoe under a full moon. There will be a scavenger hunt w/ prizes plus hot cocoa to keep you warm. Utah Skies will be on hand, offering telescopic views of the moon and other heavenly wonders. For more info or to sign up, stop by the Park City Racquet Club or call 435-615-5400. | |||||||||||||||
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Night of Observing at Keck on Auction Block |
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| The ultimate amateur astronomy joy ride is
currently up for bid on eBay... a night of observing at the Keck
Observatory with famed planet hunter Geoff
Marcy. The opening bid: $12,500. The winner will receive an all
expense trip for two to Hawaii with four nights accommodations...
including one night on the summit of Mauna Kea in the control room of the
Keck Observatory. The two Keck telescopes are the largest optical
telescopes in the world... with a diameter of 10 meters (33 feet)!
Additionally, the scopes can be configured to work together using a
technique known as interferometry.
Checkout Space.com
for more details. |
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Comet C/2002 X5 Kudo-Fujikawa:
As is often the case in astronomy, initial estimates and predictions of comet orbits and brightness may not be entirely accurate. This was true with Comet C/2002 X5 Kudo-Fujikawa, where nearly 40 independent observations confirmed that the comet isn't as bright as it was predicted to be. Go to Utah Skies' Kudo-Fujikawa page to find out more!. C/2002 X5 (Kudo-Fujikawa) continues to speed toward the sun and perihelion, "rising" later each morning. Appearing above the east-northeastern horizon in Park City, Utah by about 5:45am MST, the comet is photograph-able for only about 45 minutes before being obscured by twilight. At a disappointingly dim mag 6.8, Kudo-Fujikawa is only visible through binoculars and telescopes, and unless your fortunate enough to live under extremely dark skies, this will continue to be the case when the comet is its brightest at mag 6.5. Using a 4" Takahashi refractor at f/8 and the SBIG STV, 15 60-second images were captured and combined into the accompanying animated GIF. This image was obtained by Utah Skies own Don Brown. Don was shooting through a Takahashi FS-102 refractor hooked to an SBIG STV video ccd camera. |
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| Wow! What a tough week... Skies have been cloudy all week... but it hasn't snowed much either. This is the absolute worst of both worlds. I hope those outside of northern Utah took advantage of any clear skies they might have had. We'll try to live vicariously through you. | |||||||||||||||
The
Space Shuttle Columbia roared into space on Thursday 1/16. According to NASA
officials, this mission is dedicated solely to science. For more
information, checkout CNN.com/SPACE
The International Space Station and the Space Shuttle Columbia will make numerous passes over our area this weekend. To find out when, visit NASA's Space Flight Website. The ISS is orbits the Earth at about 17,000 miles per hour. At this rate, it circles the Earth 16 times per day.
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Dennis
Mammana captured this interesting shot from the side of a freeway in San
Diego, California. What could create such a beautiful cloud formation? It
turns out that a Delta II rocket had only hours before been launched from Vandenberg
Air Force Base. The resulting rocket exhaust was blown around in the
upper atmosphere and provided this beautiful sunset. The launch placed a new
NASA satellite called CHIPS into orbit. CHIPS will study the remnants of
nearby supernova explosions.
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Solar System |
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The Sun reached Perihelion on Saturday 1/4. Perihelion marks our planets closest annual approach to the Sun. Did you notice? Did the Sun look any bigger than usual :) Want to view the sun for yourself? Follow these Safe Viewing Techniques. |
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A solar flare erupted on Monday, January 13th. The orbiting Solar and Heliospheric Observatory captured this image of the huge flare. How big was it you may be wondering? Well, the blue dot represents the size of planet Earth.
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| In this section, we visit the planets in the order in which they are currently rising. Of course, we do our best to track down the finest images available. As an added feature, you may also click on any of the planetary images to view a planetary reference page filled with important facts about the planet. | |||||||||||||||
| Mercury, the 1st Planet | |||||||||||||||
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Mercury
passed inferior conjunction on January 11th. Inferior Conjunction
occurs when a planet passes between the Earth and the Sun. Mercury
is now visible in the east. It recently joined fellow solar
system members Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and Venus in morning sky. Best views of
the fleet-footed planet will be had in the next couple of weeks, but.. you
might be able to spot it by now. To do so, you'll need an unobstructed view
towards the eastern horizon. Head out as it is scheduled to rise and scan
the east-southeastern horizon. A pair of binoculars would be helpful at this
point. The next couple of weekends, will see Mercury rising by 6:30 and then
6:15. This will put it higher in the sky as dawn approaches.The accompanying image shows the planet Mercury cruising in front of the Sun. This event happened on November 15, 1999. I can remember the event well. Most of my neighbors were confused seeing me bring the telescope out in the afternoon, but... skies were clear and views were impressive. The next such event will occur on May 7th of this year. You'll need a solar filter on your telescope to view the event, so... start making plans. Mercury is quite the illusive object for amateur astronomers. Since it is the innermost planet, it never gets far enough away from the Sun to be seen in dark skies. Additionally, views along the horizon are typically the most turbulent. So... simply seeing Mercury is about the best you can hope for. Mercury is currently in the constellation Sagittarius. |
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| Venus, the 2nd Planet | |||||||||||||||
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Venus
reached greatest western elongation at 10pm on January 10th. Greatest
Elongation marks that point in a planets orbit where it reaches the greatest
angular distance from the Sun. Also at that point, it was exactly 50%
illuminated. Venus is now rising a little over 3 hours before the sun.
It is considerably past its maximum size and brightness now. It has shrunk
from over 1' in diameter to under .25'... less than 1/4 of it's largest. It has
also dimmed from over mag-4.6 to
about mag-4.4.This gorgeous image was taken by Japanese photographer Sho Endo on Jan. 5, 2003, at 3:45 a.m. JST. Sho used a Canon EOS D60 camera @ 50mm and f2.5 for a 60 second image made possible by mounting his camera on a motorized telescope. Wow! Venus has just moved into western Scorpio. |
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| Earth, the 3rd Planet | |||||||||||||||
![]() This incredible shot was taken from Park City, Utah in October of 2000 by Utah Skies own Don Brown. As you can clearly see, our planet Earth has an extremely dynamic environment. |
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The
moon will be full tomorrow... actually at 3:48am. So... we'll have a 99%
illuminated moon this evening. This month's full moon, the first of the year
is referred to as the Full Wolf Moon. "Amid the cold and deep snows of midwinter, the wolf packs howled hungrily outside Indian
villages." -- from the Farmer's Almanac, the meaning behind the name given the first full moon of the year.
The moon will reach perigee on Thursday 1/23. Perigee
marks the smallest distance between the Earth and the Moon. Apogee
marks the greatest distance. This proximity should make this weekends full
moon just a little bit larger than usual. See if you can notice the
difference. Visit our Lunar Information Page for even more images and information. |
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| Mars, the 4th Planet | |||||||||||||||
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Mars
continues to brighten. While still small, Mars is giving hints of things to
come. I viewed Mars last weekend through the big scope. Mars is currently 5" in diameter.
While no surface detail is yet visible, there are subtle hints that that
will be changing soon. Colors visible on the planet suggest that details
will soon be appearing
By the summer of 2003, Mars will be bigger and brighter than at any time in the last 5000 years. Get your telescopes ready, we are in for a treat! In the meantime, here's an awesome shot of the last
pass by a former Utah Skies Astrophotographer of the Month, Ed
Grafton. Mars is currently in Libra. |
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Jupiter's moons are currently involved in a rare
dance. I'm sure you know that the moons routinely drift in front and in back
of Jupiter. However, due to a chance alignment between Earth and Jupiter,
for the next few months the moons will actually be eclipsing each other. For
times when these events may be viewed, visit the Astronomy
Magazine website.
And speaking of Jupiter's moons... an astronomer using an observatory on top of a Hawaiian mountain peak, has detected a small moon orbiting Jupiter, bringing the number of known satellites around the king of planets to 40. How many can you see? Well, it depends mostly on aperture. For more info, checkout CNN.com/SPACE. Jupiter will pass within 4° of the moon on Sunday 1/19. This could be a good opportunity for a wide angle shot of the two.
Here's an awesome shot of Jupiter taken by Utah Skies own Don
Brown on Wednesday night, 1/8/03. That
evening, there was a double moon-shadow transit on Jupiter -- Ganymede's and Io's. This image was created from RGB exposures captured with an SBIG STV through a Takahashi FS-102 at f/24. The sky was rather turbulent during this event, though conditions improved later in the evening... |
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| Saturn, the 6th Planet | |||||||||||||||
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![]() Saturn recently cruised past The Crab Nebula. In fact, on Saturday night, it actually crossed right in front of The Crab. Saturn is now rising before 4:00pm and is well positioned for observing by about 8:30pm, giving planetary viewers a nice bedtime treat. Saturn can be found about 15° north of Betelgeuse... the alpha star in Orion. Did you know that the rings are visible in binoculars? It's true. You'll have to hold it extremely steady... or maybe even mount it on a tripod, but.. they are visible. This beautiful image of the planet Saturn was taken in August 1981 by the Voyager 2 spacecraft when it was 21 million kilometers from the planet. Saturn is one of the giant outer planets in our solar system, made mostly of liquid and gas. It has the most dramatic ring system among the four in our solar system. Such rings are made of large numbers of small icy and dusty pieces. Three of Saturn's icy moons (Tethys, Dione, and Rhea) are visible as small dots of light at the bottom of the picture. The shadow of Tethys can be seen under Saturn's rings. (Courtesy of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory/NASA) The moon passed just 4° to the north of Saturn on
Wednesday 1/15. |
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| Uranus, the 7th Planet | |||||||||||||||
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Is
this image labeled incorrectly? Nope! The planet Uranus has rings just like
Saturn. Well.. maybe not exactly like Saturn, but... it does indeed have
rings. The rings were not detected until 1977, when they were observed during a stellar occultation event. Just before and after the planet moved in front of the (occulted) star, the surrounding rings caused the starlight to dim for short intervals of time. Photos obtained from the Voyager-2 spacecraft in 1986 showed a multitude of very tenuous rings. These rings are almost undetectable from the Earth in visible light.
And that's the key... this image shows a near-infrared view of the giant planet Uranus with rings and some of its moons, obtained on November 19, 2002, with the ISAAC multi-mode instrument on the 8.2-m
VLT ANTU telescope at the
ESO Paranal Observatory (Chile).
The recent discovery of Uranus' 21st moon solidified its number three position in the moon count behind Saturn with 30 and Jupiter with 39. Uranus is currently about 2.6 light-hours away. That's right... Light hours... the distance light travels in 2.6 hours. Uranus is just about visible to the naked eye... depending on how dark your skies are of course. This means its an easy target for binoculars or a telescope. I saw Uranus recently. While sweeping for it using low powers Uranus looked like a strange star. The reason for this is that Uranus resolves to a disk... not just a point source of light like a star. As I increased the power I was able to determine without a doubt that I was observing the 7th planet. It appeared as a very pale blue disk. As it was less than an ideal night for observing, none of its faint moons were visible. I suspect that on a better night... from darker skies that I would have been able to spy at least the brightest moon Miranda... though at mag 16.5 it would certainly be a stretch. Uranus is another relatively easy target to find. It is just about at its highest as darkness falls. So... checkout Neptune and then move on the Uranus. Uranus is another tiny planet at only 4"... and given it's tiny size, It displays absolutely no surface detail. It does however show it's beautiful aquamarine color. Uranus also gets its beautiful coloring from a layer of Methane in its upper atmosphere. Located over 1.92 billion miles from Earth, Uranus has a huge orbit -- taking just over 84 years to orbit the Sun. It is categorized as a gas giant as is Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune. Uranus is roughly 14 times more massive than the Earth. Discovered by William Herschel in March of 1781, Uranus was the first planet to be "discovered". All the others are plainly visible, and hence have been known since antiquity. The name Uranus was suggested for mythological reasons. Since Jupiter was the father of Saturn, it made sense to name the next planet out Uranus -- the father of Saturn. For more information, checkout the Astronomy Picture of the Day. |
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| Neptune, the 8th Planet | |||||||||||||||
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How's
this for a cool shot? The passing Voyager 2 spacecraft zoomed in and snapped
this amazing shot of Neptune's Great
Dark Spot. Neptune has a huge spot similar to Jupiter's Great
Red Spot. Neptune's spot, however, is thought to be a hole in the
methane clouds which surround the planet... very similar to the hole in the
Earth's ozone
layer.
Neptune
is a relatively easy target when viewed at the right time... and that time
is winding down! Neptune has been at its best throughout the fall. It is
high in the western sky at dark, so... get on it early. Almost
star-like in binoculars, it shows it's beautiful blue color in telescopes. Neptune gets this beautiful
blue coloring from a layer of Methane in its upper atmosphere.
Located over 2.84 billion miles from Earth, Neptune
has a huge circular orbit -- taking just over 164 years to orbit the Sun.
In fact, Neptune's orbit varies by less than 1% from circular. Neptune has
a couple of other claims to fame... It has the fastest wind speeds in the
solar system with gust at almost 1500 mph.
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On
Monday, 1/13 astronomers announced the discovery of three new moons orbiting
the planet Neptune. This brings the total of satellites orbiting the 8th
planet to 11.The accompanying time-lapsed image shows one of those moons as it drifts across the face of the giant planet. These are the first moons orbiting Neptune detected from Earth since 1949. No doubt it required incredible optics to pull this off. The moons are only about 18-24 miles in diameter. At a distance of almost 3 billion miles away that's some sharp shooting. For more information, checkout MSNBC.com |
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| Pluto, the 9th Planet | |||||||||||||||
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Take
this bit of planetary information either as an interesting side note, or an
observing challenge. Pluto is in the constellation Ophiuchus, about 15
degrees north of Mars. At magnitude 13.9, Pluto is basically out of reach
of smaller telescopes. One way to verify that you have found Pluto is to
sketch the star patterns over several nights. If you have actually found
Pluto, one of the the faint star-like objects will have moved over the
course of a few nights. This is Pluto.
Pluto orbits the Sun at about 30 times the distance of the Earth - nearly 2.75 billion miles away. The image at right is one of the best ground based images I have ever seen so don't expect to see any surface detail. Merely seeing Pluto is an accomplishment. The accompanying image was taken by the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Need more information? Checkout the Pluto Home Page. |
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Deep Sky |
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The Hubble Space Telescope
has distinguished itself as a premier source of astronomical images.
Amazing HST images have graced the covers of major magazines and
newspapers worldwide. In recognition of the amazing advances in astronomy
and physics which have come from Hubble discoveries, we'd like to devote a
section of this report to some of these incredible images, and share some of them with you. Our
latest comes directly from the Hubble
Heritage Team.
We've got a special treat for you in this weeks Hubble Vision section. These are the first shots made public from the new camera installed in the Hubble Space Telescope. I'm sure you'll agree that these shots are even more impressive than previous Hubble products. |
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Biggest 'Zoom Lens'
Takes Hubble Deeper into the UniverseA massive cluster of yellowish galaxies, seemingly caught in a red and blue spider web of eerily distorted background galaxies, makes for a spellbinding picture from the new Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. To make this unprecedented image of the cosmos, Hubble peered straight through the center of one of the most massive galaxy clusters known, called Abell 1689. The gravity of the cluster's trillion stars — plus dark matter — acts as a 2-million-light-year-wide "lens" in space. This "gravitational lens" bends and magnifies the light of the galaxies located far behind it. Some of the faintest objects in the picture are probably over 13 billion light-years away (redshift value 6). Though gravitational lensing has been studied previously by Hubble and ground-based telescopes, this phenomenon has never been seen before in such detail. The ACS picture reveals 10 times more arcs than would be seen by a ground-based telescope. The ACS is 5 times more sensitive and provides pictures that are twice as sharp as the previous work-horse Hubble cameras. So it can see the very faintest arcs with greater clarity. The picture presents an immense jigsaw puzzle for Hubble astronomers to spend months untangling. Interspersed with the foreground cluster are thousands of galaxies, which are lensed images of the galaxies in the background universe. Detailed analysis of the images promises to shed light on galaxy evolution, the curvature of space, and the mystery of dark matter. The picture is an exquisite demonstration of Albert Einstein's prediction that gravity warps space and distorts beams of light. This representative color image is a composite of visible-light and near-infrared exposures taken in June 2002. Credit: NASA, N. Benitez (JHU), T. Broadhurst (Racah Institute of Physics/The Hebrew University), H. Ford (JHU), M. Clampin (STScI), G. Hartig (STScI), G. Illingworth (UCO/Lick Observatory), the ACS Science Team and ESA |
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If you are able to find all of these objects, you may be one of the
few, the proud, the Deep Sky Obsessed. |
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Stay up to date on astronomical happenings by regularly checking the Utah Skies website at http://www.UtahSkies.org |
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