Friday, May 20, 2011

Quarter 4 Biography - Bart Bok


          Bart Bok was born on April 28, 1906 in the Netherlands. He spent much of his childhood in the then Dutch East Indies, currently Indonesia.He studied at the Universities at Leiden (1924-27) and Groningen (1927-29) Universities in the Netherlands. He moved to the United States in 1929 and became naturalized in 1938. In 1929, he married fellow astronomer Dr. Priscilla Fairfield Bok. From the years 1929 to 1957 he worked at Harvard University, holding the position of director of astronomy from 1947 onward. Bok spent the period 1957–66 in Australia as director of the Mount Stromlo Observatory, Canberra, and professor of astronomy at the Australian National University. He returned to America in 1966 to become director of the Steward Observatory, Arizona, until 1970 and professor of astronomy (from 1974 emeritus professor) at the University of Arizona, Tucson.
          Bok's major interest was the structure of our galaxy, the Milky Way. With his wife, Priscilla, he published a survey of the subject: The Milky Way (1941). Although it had been long assumed that the Milky Way had a spiral structure it was not until Walter Baade identified in the 1940s the hot young O and B stars of the Andromeda galaxy as spiral markers that such a conjecture could be confirmed. The actual structure was first worked out in some detail by William Morgan. The existence of 21-centimeter radio signals from clouds of neutral hydrogen in the galaxy was predicted by Hendrik van de Hulst and their discovery in 1951 provided a second tracer. It was clear to Bok by the late 1950s that the radio data, which were expected to support the optical picture, instead contradicted it. He consequently attempted to harmonize the two structures by modifying Morgan's somewhat elliptical arms, making them much more spherical, and giving more emphasis to the Carina–Centaurus arm.
          Bok's name is also associated with his discovery in 1947 of small dark circular clouds visible against a background of stars or luminous gas and since known as Bok globules. Since they are thought to be precursors of stars, as Bok himself conjectured, they have received considerable attention in recent years.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Zooniverse 4/30/11

I tried a new thing today called "Old Weather." This one was really nice because I felt like it would be very difficult to mess this one up. Basically, you just decipher some cursive and keep track of weather and times and stuff. I looked at old ship's logs from like 1913! That's awesome. I might just stick with this weather watcher...

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

APOD 4.2

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.
In this picture, radio telescopes from the Australian Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) are seen in front of a full moon and the radio image of Centauri A is superimposed in the background. Centaurus A is an active galaxy that is presumably the result of the collision of two galaxies. The debris are being consumed by a black hole. It is this black hole that produces the fast moving radio jets this long exposure photograph captures. What I had assumed were stars are actually the glow of other radio bright galaxies in the far distant future. How crazy is that!

APOD 4.1

See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download
the highest resolution version available.

Depicted here are some baby stars in the Rho Ophiuchi Cloud along with some dust clouds at the infared wavelength. Rho Ophiuchi is one of the nearest star forming regions at 400 light years distant. The stars form against a cold hydorgen cloud and then in turn heat the dust around them, creating the infared glow. Something I didn't know! Stars in the process of formation have their own name, YSO's! young stellar objects are seen in the light pinkish nebula. The average age of these babes is 300,000 years. The redder region in the lower right corner surrounds the star Sigma Scorpii. Impressive. I like these stellar nurseries.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Zooniverse 4/24/11

So, I did some more solar storm watchin' today. I finished my training or what have you and moved on to bigger and better things. They had me watch videos and tag the ones I thought depicted a storm. I used the scan button to view the video at double speed. This made it easier to differentiate stuff.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Zooniverse 4/14/11

Today, I did the SOLAR STORMWATCH. It was sweet. They showed images of the sun and I had to tell if the solar outbursts were either light bulb shaped solar storm and it was fun. Then, I identified comets, particles, and optical effects.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Night Sky 3/18/11

So I was out the other night with my buddy and we were kind of looking for something to do. I remembered that I had my star charts in my vehicle as they always are and we brought them out and.... looked up. I'm so glad it happened to be a clear night. Very lucky indeed. We saw Orion of course. His belt as distinct as ever. We saw some planes. We saw the moon, waxing crescent, you see. We saw Taurus the Bull and the Hyades and the Pleiades. We saw Monoceros, I think. And Auriga. It was really nice.