Sunday, January 16, 2011

APOD 2.8

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Ah, Stockholm. I have never been, but the progressiveness and much amplified awesomeness of Sweden has made me quite a big fan. The halo around the sun depicted in this image is actually the sun's light being reflected off of ice chrystals. Water that freezes in the upper atmosphere forms small, six-sided ice chrystals which are falling to the ground. They fall with their faces flat, or parallel to the Earth. An Earthly observer may pass through the same plane as the falling ice chrystals at sunrise or sunset. When this occurs, the ice chrystals act as a miniature lens and refract the light creating "sundogs". Neat-o!

Friday, January 14, 2011

APOD 2.7

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The Cosmic Web of the Tarantula Nebula. I mean... I guess it looks spidery? Whether or not this nebula is indeed deserving of its arachnidan classification, it's still the largest star forming region in the entire galactic neighborhood. Doesn't that diction make it sound like the National Aeronautic Space Association is calling this nebula the 'big kid on the block'. Well, it is. It's located in the Large Magellenic Cloud which is merely a satellite galaxy to the Milky Way. It spans about 1.000 lightyears across. From NASA's description of the photo, "Were it placed at the distance of Milky Way's Orion Nebula, only 1,500 light-years distant and the nearest stellar nursery to Earth, it would appear to cover about 30 degrees (60 full moons) on the sky." So good, I had to include it.


Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Quarter 2 Astronomer Post -- William "Eagle Eye" Rutter Dawes

Astronomer Project: William Rutter Dawes

            Dawes was born in West Sussex, London in 1799. His mother died when he was very young and his father was a very accomplished man who was often called away from the home. William Rutter Dawes’ father, William Dawes, was an Officer of the Royal Marines, an astronomer, engineer, botanist, surveyor, explorer, abolitionist and colonial administrator. Needless to say, our William Rutter Dawes was not always cared for by his immediate nuclear family, entrusted instead to relatives and friends. His father wished that he would become a clergyman, but Dawes had other intentions. He studied medicine at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital and then opened a country practice in Berkshire. When his sister died in 1826, he moved to Liverpool and took control of a small congregation in Ormskirk. It was in Liverpool that Dawes found his lifelong friend and companion, William Lassell. Dawes began documenting his observations of the sky in 1829, specifically the study of binary stars. According to Lassell’s notebooks, they had been studying together for some time.
            Dawes had been interested in astronomy as a boy, so by striking a friendship with astronomer William Lassell, Dawes’ fate was secured. He started out using a small refracting telescope to make his observations. In a letter to Sir John Herschel, he recalls how he obtained a copy of Rees’s Encyclopedia and copied from it Sir William Herschel’s catalogue of double stars and sat down each night to locate them and diagram them. He soon began work on a small observatory at Ormskirk. With his five foot Dolland refractor set at an aperture of 3.8 inches, Dawes was able to make extremely precise measurements of the binary stars that fascinated him so much. Between the period of 1830 and 1833, he measured 121 double stars, published in 135. Between 1834 and 1839 he measured 100 more, which were published in 1851. The discoveries helped to christen him William “Eagle Eyes” Dawes. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1830, but in 1839 with the death of his wife, ill health had caught up with him and he was forced to give up pastoral work and move to London.
            Friend George Bishop had amassed a large fortune from the production of wine and had become a patron of science, thus erecting a large private observatory with a seven inch refractor in London. Bishop allowed Dawes to continue his astronomical study until 1844. Studying at Bishop’s he measured and published 250 binaries in 1852 in Bishop’s Astronomical Observations at South Villa. Dawes married again in 1842 to a wealthy woman and was able to erect an observatory of his own, installing a 6.5 inch Merz refractor. With it, he co-discovered Saturn’s crepe ring. WC Bond had also found the ring at the Harvard Observatory, but before news had crossed the Atlantic, Dawes had made his claim. Dawes had established himself as a leader in the observation of Saturn, carefully studying the planet and its rings.
            He received the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1855. He moved in 1857 to Haddenham where he continued observations despite rapidly deteriorating health, especially worsened when his second wife died in 1860. His extensive drawings of Mars during its 1864 opposition helped Richard Anthony Proctor’s mapping of Mars in 1867. He died at Haddenham on February 15, 1868. Dawes lends his name to certain craters on the Moon and Mars as well as a gap in Saturn’s C Ring. The Dawes limit is a formula discovered by W. R. Dawes used to describe the optical phenomenon that expresses the maximum resolving power of microscope or telescope.

Monday, January 10, 2011

The Works Pertaining to Sir William "Eagle Eye" Rutter Dawes that I Intend to Use to Research my Astronomer Project

"Dawes, William Rutter." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 9 Jan. 2011 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Dictionary of Science Biography. C. Gillispie, editor Charles Scribner's Sons. 1981.

Oates, Michael. "William Rutter Dawes (1799 - 1868)." The Home of Amateur Astronomy in the UK. 30 Nov. 2009. Web. 9 Jan. 2011. <http://www.mikeoates.org/astro-history/dawes.htm>.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

APOD 2.6


I am so glad to have stumbled upon this APOD. With the changing of seasons, summer to fall to winter, Alex and I observed with remorse as the Summer Triangle rose lower and lower in the sky. The Summer Triangle was the basis for everything. It was the compass to my rose and now I look at the night sky with confusion. "Oh, there's Orion." That's it. That's all I got. But wait! All hope is not lost! The Winter Hexagon exists. I once again have some sort of direction in my life. The six stars of the Winter Hexagon are Aldebaran, Capella, Castor Pollux, Procyon, Sirius, and Rigel. Armed with this knowledge I will be much more prepared to take on the Winter Sky!

The Night Sky 12/21/10

Well! Wasn't that fun! The lunar eclipse watch a Pine View was a grand success. My parents were pretty convinced that I was crazy to stay up until five, but hey, it's educational. Besides it's not like the moon is eclipsed every night. Speaking of the eclipse, I thought that it would be a brief moment's fun, but it wasn't. The gradual shadowing and reddening of the moon leading up to the peak was absolutely as good as the total eclipse! The night was very cold, I spent much of it under blankets and just looking at the stars. I braved removing myself from the blankets only twice, once to see a star cluster that I can no longer remember the name of (hence why we post as soon after observing as possible) and again to see Saturn's rings. Well worth the few minutes of freezing. The Pleaides continues to inspire, especially with binoculars and the Hyades is cool as well. Saw some constellations, Orion of course, Taurus, Canis Major, Pegasus, and Triangulum. Well, maybe I saw Triangulum, but it's very easy to pick any three stars and call it Triangulum. Life. Anyway, it was a good time for sure.

APOD 2.5


Okay, okay. You got me. This isn't actually an APOD post. It's an AVOD post. An Astronomy Video of the Day! Our friends at NASA rarely feature videos for their APOD so when they do, you know it's got to be good. Well, it is. The thirteen second video features a solar prominence which happened on December 6th and is really really cool. The prominence was almost a million km long. Astronomers note that this particular filament had been seen hovering above the Sun's surface for over a week before it exploded. A filament is a large region of dense, cool gas that is held in the chromosphere by magnetic fields. This image sequence was taken by the Solar Dynamics Observatory, an orbiter launched February last year to observe the sun for five years. The plasma cloud emitted by this coronal mass eruption missed the Earth and thus did not cause any auroras. But the sun is nearing Solar Maximum Activity so we'll being seeing more auroras and cool stuff like that soon enough.

APOD 2.4

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This is a photograph, exposed 1.5 minutes, taken in Iran in the Karkas mountains during the annual Geminid Meteor Shower. It makes me highly regret not waking up to see the meteor shower from my own home. The Geminids originate from a 3200 Phaethon, which is a large rocky object. This makes the Geminid meteors different from your average meteors as they originate from a comet. The arching trails of the meteroids reflect the Earth's rotation on its axis. This meteor changed color as it burned through the sky. You can see in the middle of the path a reddish glow that marks the change in hue.