AEA Astronomy Club Newsletter April
2013
Contents
AEA Astronomy Club News & Calendar p.1
Video(s) & Picture(s) of the Month p. 3
Astronomy News p. 7
General Calendar p.8
Colloquia, lectures, mtgs. p. 8
Observing p. 10
Useful Links p. 11
About the Club p. 12
Club News & Calendar.
Calendar
AEA Astronomy Club News & Calendar p.1
Video(s) & Picture(s) of the Month p. 3
Astronomy News p. 7
General Calendar p.8
Colloquia, lectures, mtgs. p. 8
Observing p. 10
Useful Links p. 11
About the Club p. 12
Club News & Calendar.
Calendar
Club Meeting Schedule:
16 April 2013
|
Corporate Colloquium
|
Einstein for
Everyone
|
Robert
Piccioni, UCLA
|
A1/Titan IV A
|
16 May 2013
|
Club Meeting
|
Cassini Update
|
Dave
Doody, JPL
|
A1/1735
|
20 June 2013
|
Club Meeting & Pizza
Party
|
The Chemical Makeup of Exosolar Planets
|
Dr.
Steven Naftilan,
|
A1/1735
|
AEA Astronomy Club meetings are on 3rd Thursdays at 11:45am. For all of 2013, the meeting room is A1/1735.
News:
The April club mtg. that would
normally have been April 18 is being combined w. the April 16 Corporate
Colloquium. We may have some of our new
equipment on display, also.
New club equipment: This past week we have begun receiving the items ordered below
that will be available for your use (if your dues are up to date). Some smaller apertures for those desiring
portability or intimidated by size or complexity.
We already received the 15x70 waterproof binoculars & case, and the
adjustable binocular mount that goes on the Paragon tripod we already
have. Also a smart phone bracket that
attaches to the binoculars, so that you can use your sky app to display and
identify what you're looking at. And a
scope cloak for the LX-200. I also have
& checked out the the Meade ETX80-AT (80mm) GoTo refractor with tripod. We got the ETX-80 backpack observatory package
that comes with its own backpack.
In
the next day or 2, we should have the Meade ETX90-AT (90mm) GoTo Maksutov with
portable tripod. The portable
observatory model we got comes in a hard shell case. The ETX’s are small and very easy to port
anywhere -- even as carry-on luggage.
One
nice thing about the ETX's is that their GoTo hand controller & computer
menu navigation is the same as our LX200's -- so if you learn one, you've
learned them all. Of course the ETX's
don't have the auto-alignment of the LX200.
We’re
also eyeing the Orion SkyScanner 100mm TableTop Reflector (Newtonian) as
another easy, basic, grab-and-go scope to add a 4-inch to our 8- and 16-inch
reflector inventory (a nice geometric series), and to add a 100mm aperture to
our 70, 80 & 90mm small apertures (an arithmetic series, not including the
40mm H-alpha).
A
smart phone eyepiece photography bracket is also on backorder.
Still
haven't decided on a portable equatorial drive mount for the H-alpha scope
(& for cameras or small scopes) -- inputs are appreciated. Or a quality wide-field eyepiece -- inputs
also appreciated. Otherwise, we're
continuing to make progress down the already-shared wish list, having spent
nearly half of our AEA allotment for the year.
I'm taking the lack of voiced preferences so far as consent to the
decisions made & items on the wish list.
Telescope, Binocular & Accessory Buying Guides – see the new links added to the links
collection towards the end of this newsletter & the club website. In response to requests.
The 45th annual RTMC Astronomy Expo will take place from
Thursday, May 23 through Monday, May 27, 2013. It will be held at YMCA Camp Oakes,
five miles southeast of Big Bear City ,
California on State Route 38 at Lake Williams Road
between mileposts 44 and 45. This location is about 50 miles northeast of Riverside in the San
Bernardino . For
more information & to pre-register (reduced price), go to mountains.http://www.rtmcastronomyexpo.org/. And let us know if you plan to go – we can
put you in touch with others going (already a couple I’m aware of).
Tom Paige
brought us up to date on the proposed cooperative amateur observatory in
Palos Verdes. Suggestions for the facility & equipment,
sponsors, etc. are still being collected and are appreciated.
Field Trip.
There have been few responses so far on the survey of interests in
candidate club field trips for the year.
Unless additional responses come in, we table it for now. Ideas
include: Mt.
Palomar tour & star party/camping,
JPL tour (or open house in June), Griffith Observatory, Calif.
Science Museum
(incl. Endeavor, IMAX,...), the Columbia
Memorial Space
Center in Downey (Apollo & Shuttle history),....
Other suggestions?
Membership Renewals.
Some still need to renew their club membership. See the club website for the many benefits of
membership. Please submit the renewal
form (available on Aerolink at https://aerolink.aero.org/cs/llisapi.dll?func=ll&objId=13659520&objAction=browse&viewType=1, or attached) with your payment ($12
check made out to AEA Astronomy Club) to Alan Olson at M1-107.
Astronomy
Video(s) & Picture(s) of the Month
(from Astronomy Picture of
the Day, APOD: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html)
Flying
Over the Earth at Night http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap130331.html
Video Credit: Gateway to Astronaut Photography, NASA ; Compilation: David Peterson (YouTube);
Music: Freedom Fighters (Two Steps from Hell)
Explanation: Many wonders are visible when flying
over the Earth at night. A compilation of such visual spectacles was captured recently from the International Space Station (ISS) and set to rousing music. Passing below are white clouds, orange city lights, lightning flashes in thunderstorms, and dark blue seas. On the horizon is the golden haze of Earth's thin atmosphere, frequently decorated by dancing auroras as the video progresses. The green parts of auroras typically remain below the space station, but
the station flies right through the red and purple auroral peaks.
Solar panels of the ISS are seen around the frame edges. The ominous wave of approaching brightness at
the end of each sequence is just the dawn of the sunlit half of Earth, a dawn that occurs every 90 minutesVideo Credit: Gateway to Astronaut Photography, NASA ; Compilation: David Peterson (YouTube);
Music: Freedom Fighters (Two Steps from Hell)
CME, Comet and Planet Earth
Image Credit: NRL / SECCHI / STEREO / NASA
Processing - Karl Battams (NRL and @SungrazerComets)
Explanation: After appearing in a popular photo opportunity with a young crescent Moon
near sunset, naked-eye Comet PanSTARRS continues to rise in northern hemisphere skies. But this remarkable interplanetary perspective from March 13, finds the comet
posing with our fair planet itself - as seen from the STEREO Behind spacecraft.
Following in Earth's orbit, the spacecraft is nearly opposite
the Sun and looks back toward the comet and Earth, with
the Sun just off the left side of the frame. At the left an enormous coronal mass ejection (CME) is erupting from a solar
active region. Of course, CME, comet, and planet Earth are all at different distances from the spacecraft. (The comet is
closest.) The processed digital image is the difference between two consecutive
frames from the spacecraft's SECCHI Heliospheric Imager, causing the strong
shadowing effect for objects that move between frames. Objects that are too
bright create the sharp vertical lines. The processing reveals complicated
feather-like structures in Comet PanSTARRS's extensive dust tail. Image Credit: NRL / SECCHI / STEREO / NASA
Processing - Karl Battams (NRL and @SungrazerComets)
Astronomy News:
New insights on how
spiral galaxies get their arms
Published: Tuesday, April 2, 2013 - 12:37 in Astronomy & Space
http://esciencenews.com/files/images/201304027622540.jpg
Published: Tuesday, April 2, 2013 - 12:37 in Astronomy & Space
http://esciencenews.com/files/images/201304027622540.jpg
Thiago Ize
& Chris Johnson (Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute)
Spiral
galaxies are some of the most beautiful and photogenic residents of the
universe. Our own Milky Way is a spiral. Our solar system and Earth reside
somewhere near one of its filamentous arms. And nearly 70 percent of the
galaxies closest to the Milky Way are spirals. But despite their common shape,
how galaxies like ours get and maintain their characteristic arms has proved to
be an enduring puzzle in astrophysics. How do the arms of spiral galaxies
arise? Do they change or come and go over time?
The answers
to these and other questions are now coming into focus as researchers
capitalize on powerful new computer simulations to follow the motions of as
many as 100 million "stellar particles" as gravity and other
astrophysical forces sculpt them into familiar galactic shapes. A team of
researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center
for Astrophysics reports simulations that seem to resolve long-standing
questions about the origin and life history of spiral arms in disk galaxies.
"We
show for the first time that stellar spiral arms are not transient features, as
claimed for several decades," says UW-Madison astrophysicist Elena
D'Onghia, who led the new research along with Harvard colleagues Mark
Vogelsberger and Lars Hernquist.
"The
spiral arms are self-perpetuating, persistent, and surprisingly long
lived," adds Vogelsberger.
The origin
and fate of the emblematic spiral arms in disk galaxies have been debated by
astrophysicists for decades, with two theories predominating. One holds that
the arms come and go over time. A second and widely held theory is that the
material that makes up the arms -- stars, gas and dust -- is affected by
differences in gravity and jams up, like cars at rush hour, sustaining the arms
for long periods.
The new
results fall somewhere in between the two theories and suggest that the arms
arise in the first place as a result of the influence of giant molecular clouds
-- star forming regions or nurseries common in galaxies. Introduced into the
simulation, the clouds act as "perturbers" and are enough to not only
initiate the formation of spiral arms but to sustain them indefinitely.
"We
find they are forming spiral arms," explains D'Onghia. "Past theory
held the arms would go away with the perturbations removed, but we see that
(once formed) the arms self-perpetuate, even when the perturbations are
removed. It proves that once the arms are generated through these clouds, they
can exist on their own through (the influence of) gravity, even in the extreme
when the perturbations are no longer there."
The new
study modeled stand-alone disk galaxies, those not influenced by another nearby
galaxy or object. Some recent studies have explored the likelihood that spiral
galaxies with a close neighbor (a nearby dwarf galaxy, for example) get their
arms as gravity from the satellite galaxy pulls on the disk of its neighbor.
According
to Vogelsberger and Hernquist, the new simulations can be used to reinterpret
observational data, looking at both the high-density molecular clouds as well
as gravitationally induced "holes" in space as the mechanisms that
drive the formation of the characteristic arms of spiral galaxies.
General Calendar:
Colloquia, Lectures, Seminars, Meetings, Open Houses & Tours:
Colloquia: Carnegie (Tues. 4pm), UCLA,
Caltech (Wed. 4pm), IPAC (Wed. 12:15pm) & other Pasadena (daily 12-4pm): http://obs.carnegiescience.edu/seminars/
Carnegie astronomy lectures – only 4 per year in the Spring www.obs.carnegiescience.edu.
This year April 8 & 22, May 6 & 20. Visit
www.huntington.org for directions. For more information about the Carnegie
Observatories or this lecture series, please contact Reed Haynie.
|
5 April
|
SBAS Monthly General Meeting at El Camino
College planetarium. 7:30 PM
Topic: “Mystery Moon Titan”,
Speaker: Dr. Michael J. Malaska, JPL
|
8 April
|
LAAS LAAS General Meeting.
|
Griffith
Observatory
Event Horizon Theater 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM |
April 11 & 12 The von Kármán Lecture Series: 2013
Regenerative Fuel Cells, Energy Storage Systems for Space Applications
A
recent thrust in the development of regenerative fuel cell systems has been led
by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Regenerative fuel
cell systems provide energy storage at a scale that is larger than what is
practical with advanced batteries. In a regenerative fuel cell system, energy
storage is achieved via the electrolysis of water to hydrogen and oxygen gas
during the storage phase. Consumption of gases then occurs during the energy
generation phase, with the subsequent generation of water. It is envisioned
that the energy for the electrolysis of water be supplied via solar power. The
regenerative fuel cell systems can be used to power robots, mobility systems,
and human habitats. This talk will provide an introduction of fuel cells and
regenerative fuel cell systems and highlight the features of this technology
for enabling future NASA missions to the moon, near-Earth asteroids, and Mars.
Speaker:
|
Thomas Valdez, Senior
Member Engineering Staff, Fuel Cell Group Lead Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
Locations:
|
Thursday, April
11, 2013, 7pm The von Kármán Auditorium at JPL 4800 Oak Grove Drive Pasadena, CA › Directions Friday, April 12, 2013, 7pm The Vosloh Forum at Pasadena City College 1570 East Colorado Blvd. Pasadena, CA › Directions |
Webcast:
|
We offer two options to
view the live streaming of our webcast on Thursday: › 1) Ustream with real-time web chat to take public questions. › 2) Flash Player with open captioning If you don't have Flash Player, you can download for free here. |
16 April 2013
|
AEA Astronomy Club mtg. & Corporate Colloquium
|
Einstein
for Everyone
|
Robert
Piccioni, UCLA
|
A1/1735
|
Observing:
The following
data are from the 2013 Observer’s Handbook, and Sky & Telescope’s 2013 Skygazer’s
Almanac & monthly Sky at a Glance.
A weekly 5 minute video about what’s up in the night sky: www.skyandtelescope.com/skyweek.
Sun,
Moon & Planets for March:
Moon: Apr 3 last quarter, Apr 10 new, Apr
18 1st quarter, Apr 25 full
Planets: Jupiter sets a few
hours after sunset. Saturn rises shortly after sunset & is visible for the rest
of the night. Mercury is visible briefly in the East before
sunrise. Venus is visible briefly in the West after sunset. Mars is
too near the sun to be visible.
Other
Events:
6
April
|
SBAS
out-of-town observing – contact Greg Benecke http://www.sbastro.net/.
|
13
April
|
LAAS Dark Sky Night :
|
14 April
Jupiter 2 deg. N of Moon
20
April
|
Public Star Party:
|
22 April Lyrid
Meteors peak The Lyrids generally begin on April 16 and end on April
26, with maximum generally occurring during the night of April 21/22. At
maximum, hourly rates can reach about 10
meteors per
hour. The Lyrids are particularly interesting for two reason. First,
observations
have been
identified back to at least 2600 years, which is longer than any other meteor
shower. Second,
the meteor shower occasionally experiences an outburst of about 100
meteors per hour and the reason is basically unknown.
27
April
|
SBAS Star Party (weather permitting): RPV at
Ridgecrest Middle School 28915 North Bay Rd.
|
28 April Saturn at opposition & closest
to earth for 2013
Internet Links:
Link(s) of the Month
Link(s) of the Month
A weekly 5 minute video about what’s up in the night sky: www.skyandtelescope.com/skyweek.
Telescope, Binocular & Accessory Buying Guides
General
Mt. Wilson Institute (www.mtwilson.edu/), including status for visits & roads
About the Club
Club Websites: Internal (Aerospace): https://aeropedia.aero.org/aeropedia/index.php/Astronomy_Club It is updated to reflect this newsletter, in addition to a listing of past club mtg. presentations, astronomy news, photos & events from prior newsletters, club equipment, membership & constitution. We have linked some presentation materials from past mtgs. Our club newsletters are also being posted to an external blog, “An Astronomical View” http://astronomicalview.blogspot.com/.
Club Websites: Internal (Aerospace): https://aeropedia.aero.org/aeropedia/index.php/Astronomy_Club It is updated to reflect this newsletter, in addition to a listing of past club mtg. presentations, astronomy news, photos & events from prior newsletters, club equipment, membership & constitution. We have linked some presentation materials from past mtgs. Our club newsletters are also being posted to an external blog, “An Astronomical View” http://astronomicalview.blogspot.com/.
Membership. For information, current dues & application, contact Alan Olson, or see the club website (or Aerolink folder) where a form is also available (go to the membership link/folder & look at the bottom). Benefits will include use of club telescope(s) & library/software, discounts on Sky & Telescope magazine and Observer’s Handbook, field trips, great programs, having a say in club activities, acquisitions & elections, etc.
Committee Suggestions & Volunteers. Feel free to contact: Mark Clayson, Program Committee Chairman (& acting club VP), TBD, Activities Committee Chairman (& club Secretary), or Alan Olson, Resource Committee Chairman (over equipment & library, and club Treasurer).
Mark Clayson,
AEA Astronomy Club President
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