Contents
AEA Astronomy Club News & Calendar p.1
Video(s) & Picture(s) of the Month p. 2
Astronomy News p. 6
General Calendar p. 8
Colloquia, lectures, mtgs. p. 8
Observing p. 10
Observing p. 10
Useful
Links p. 12
About the Club p. 13
Club News & Calendar.
Club Calendar
About the Club p. 13
Club News & Calendar.
Club Calendar
Club Meeting Schedule:
-- note the possible change of date in Sept. due to Labor Day holiday week
5 Dec.
|
AEA Astronomy Club Meeting
|
The Antikythera Mechanism, Part 2 (The Great Course
on Ancient Astronomies)
|
(A1/1735)
|
9 Jan.
|
AEA Astronomy Club Meeting & Pizza
Party
|
"Overview and Status of the Giant Magellan
Telescope,” Breann Sitarsky of GMT Corp. & Aerospace casual (works on the
design and specification of the telescope and its subsystems)
|
(A1/1735)
|
AEA
Astronomy Club meetings are now on 1st Thursdays at 11:45 am. For 2018:
Jan. 4 in A1/1029 A/B, Feb. 1 & March 1 in A1/2906 and for the rest
of 2018 (April-Dec), the meeting room is A1/1735.
Club
News:
Mercury Transit Viewing Mon. Nov. 11, 9-10am in Paulikas Mall
The club set up in the Paulikas
Mall to view the Nov. 11 Mercury transit.
And the clouds cleared for the last hour or so. Here are some photos, including a 40mm
H-alpha telescope, the SolarScope
projection system, and an 8-inch Dobsonian. Mercury is in the 4:30 and 7:00
positions in the H-alpha (orange) & white light photos.
We need volunteers to help with:
·
Assembling
our new 16-inch Hubble Optics Dobs
·
Installing
our new software on our tablet & laptop
·
Populating
our club Sharepoint site with material & links to the club’s Aerowiki
& Aerolink materials – Kaly Rangarajan has volunteered to help with this
·
Arranging
future club programs
·
Managing
club equipment & library (Kelly Gov volunteered to help with the
library)
Astronomy Video(s)
& Picture(s) of the Month
(generally from
Astronomy Picture of the Day, APOD: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html)
Spiral Galaxies Spinning Super-Fast
Image Credit: Top row: NASA, ESA, Hubble, P. Ogle & J. DePasquale (STScI);
Bottom row: SDSS, P. Ogle & J. DePasquale (STScI)
Explanation: Why are these galaxies spinning so fast? If you estimated each spiral's mass by how much light it emits, their fast rotations
should break them apart. The leading hypothesis as to why these galaxies
don't break apart is dark
matter -- mass so dark we can't see
it. But these
galaxies are even out-spinning this
break-up limit -- they are the fastest rotating disk galaxies
known. It is therefore further
hypothesized that their dark matter halos are so massive -- and their spins so fast -- that it is
harder for them to form stars than regular spirals. If so, then these galaxies may be among the most
massive spirals possible. Further
study of surprising super-spirals like these will continue, likely including
observations taken by NASA's
James
Webb Space Telescope scheduled for
launch in 2021. Image Credit: Top row: NASA, ESA, Hubble, P. Ogle & J. DePasquale (STScI);
Bottom row: SDSS, P. Ogle & J. DePasquale (STScI)
Hoag's Object: A Nearly Perfect Ring Galaxy
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble; Processing: Benoit Blanco
Explanation: Is this one galaxy or two? This question came to light in 1950 when
astronomer Arthur Hoag chanced upon this unusual extragalactic object. On the
outside is a ring dominated by bright blue stars, while near the center lies
a ball of much redder stars that are likely much older. Between the two is a gap that appears almost completely dark. How Hoag's Object formed, including its nearly perfectly
round ring of stars and gas,
remains unknown. Genesis hypotheses include a galaxy collision billions of years ago and the gravitational effect of a central bar that has since vanished. The featured photo was taken by the Hubble Space Telescope and recently reprocessed using an artificially intelligent
de-noising algorithm. Observations
in radio waves indicate that Hoag's Object has not accreted a smaller galaxy in the past
billion years. Hoag's Object spans about 100,000 light years and lies about 600 million light
years away toward the constellation of the Snake (Serpens). Many galaxies far in the distance are visible toward the
right, while coincidentally, visible in the gap at about seven o'clock, is another but
more distant ring galaxy. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble; Processing: Benoit Blanco
The Star Streams of NGC 5907
Image Credit & Copyright: R Jay Gabany (Blackbird Observatory) - collaboration; D.Martinez-Delgado(IAC, MPIA),
J.Penarrubia (U.Victoria) I. Trujillo (IAC) S.Majewski (U.Virginia), M.Pohlen (Cardiff)
Explanation: Grand tidal streams of stars seem to surround galaxy NGC 5907. The arcing structures form tenuous loops extending more
than 150,000 light-years from the narrow, edge-on spiral, also known as the Splinter or Knife Edge Galaxy. Recorded only in very deep
exposures, the streams likely represent the ghostly trail of a dwarf
galaxy - debris left along the
orbit of a smaller satellite galaxy that was gradually
torn apart and merged with NGC 5907
over four billion years ago. Ultimately this remarkable discovery image, from a
small robotic observatory in New Mexico, supports the cosmological scenario in which large spiral galaxies, including our own Milky Way, were formed by the accretion of smaller
ones. NGC 5907 lies about 40 million light-years distant in the northern
constellation Draco. Image Credit & Copyright: R Jay Gabany (Blackbird Observatory) - collaboration; D.Martinez-Delgado(IAC, MPIA),
J.Penarrubia (U.Victoria) I. Trujillo (IAC) S.Majewski (U.Virginia), M.Pohlen (Cardiff)
Galileo's Europa Remastered
Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, SETI Institute, Cynthia Phillips, Marty Valenti
Explanation: Looping through the Jovian system in the late 1990s, the Galileo spacecraft recorded stunning views of Europa and uncovered evidence
that the moon's icy surface likely hides a deep, global ocean. Galileo's Europa
image data has been remastered
here, using improved new
calibrations to produce a color image approximating what the human eye might
see. Europa's long curving fractures hint
at the subsurface liquid water. The
tidal flexing the large moon experiences in its elliptical orbit around Jupiter supplies the energy
to keep the ocean liquid. But more tantalizing is the possibility that even in the absence of sunlight
that process could also supply the energy to support life, making
Europa one of the best places to
look for life beyond Earth. What kind of life could thrive in a deep, dark,
subsurface ocean? Consider planet Earth's own extreme
shrimp. Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, SETI Institute, Cynthia Phillips, Marty Valenti
Astronomy
News:
NASA’s Solar Probe Found Things Near the Sun That We Can’t Explain
Scientists say the
unexplained rogue waves and high winds mean we are “missing something really fundamental
in our standard models of the Sun.”
04
December 2019, 10:10pm
THE SUN. IMAGE:
NASA/SDO
This article originally appeared on
VICE US.
The fastest object ever created by
humans has discovered intensely energetic rogue waves within our Sun, and
detected solar wind speeds beyond what any model had predicted. Neither
discovery was expected, or can be easily explained, suggesting that there are
significant gaps in our understanding of the Sun.
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe, launched in
2018, traveled closer to the Sun than any previous mission for several days
last November and in April 2019. Scientists revealed the incredible findings
from these first two close encounters from the swiftest spacecraft ever
in a batch of four papers published in Nature on Wednesday.
Though the Sun is the center of the
solar system and its radiation has nurtured life on Earth, it is one of the
most unexplored objects in space because of its intense heat and radiation.
“It’s been very exciting,” said Justin
Kasper, lead author of one of the
studies and professor of
space sciences at the University of Michigan, in a call. “It’s exploration at
the cutting edge.”
During its two encounters, Parker
traveled within 15
million miles of
the Sun’s surface, far surpassing the 25-million-mile record first set by
NASA’s Helios 2 mission in 1976. Parker has also claimed the title of the
fastest human-made object in history from Helios 2, as it surfed near the Sun
at over 153,000 miles per hour.
In a surprising discovery, Parker
detected new phenomena within a quarter of an astronomical unit (AU), the
distance between Earth and the Sun, of the solar surface. At that distance, the
probe reported that the solar wind, which is a stream of charged particles
emitted by the Sun, was rotating around the star at speeds far beyond what
models had estimated.
“To our big surprise,” Kasper said, “by
the time we got to our closest approach, [the solar wind] was flowing between
35 and 50 kilometers per second around the Sun. That’s something like 15 to 25
times faster than the standard solar models predict, so we’re missing something
really fundamental in our standard models of the Sun—how it rotates and how the
wind escapes—and that’s really interesting.”
Parker was also pummeled by a series of
extraordinarily intense “Alfven waves” in the solar wind. Interplanetary
missions have long observed less energetic Alfven waves, which are ripples that
flow through magnetized plasma from the Sun. But Parker is the first to brace
the “giant rogue waves” near our star.
“Every now and then, suddenly within
seconds, the speed of the wind would jump by about 300,000 miles an hour,”
Kasper explained. “Then, for seconds or hundreds of seconds, the spacecraft
would sit there washed by this spike in the speed of the wind, and then just as
quickly it goes away.”
These spikes are so violent that they
distort and twist the magnetic field as they pass through it. “It gives you a
sense of just how much energy is in these rogue waves as they go by compared to
the regular Alfven waves that we’ve seen before,” Kasper said.
Though the mechanism behind these waves
is still unknown, the sheer force of them may help explain two of the most
persistent mysteries about the Sun: Why is solar corona, or the atmosphere of
the Sun, about 1,000 times hotter than its surface? And why does the solar wind
suddenly accelerate to supersonic speeds at a certain distance from the Sun?
Scientists suspect that an enigmatic
process dumps heat and energy into the solar corona. The newly detected rogue
waves might be a part of this dynamic.
“We were looking for buckets of energy
when we got closer to the Sun, and we’re seeing some very large buckets going
by, so that’s good,” Kasper said. “In our initial analyses, they’re definitely
carrying a lot of energy so they are very promising as an energy source.”
“I’m not going to claim in any way that
we’ve solved the mystery but we’ve had some very surprising results to paint
the path to closing this question,” he added.
Parker’s new data challenges long-held
assumptions about the Sun, which will lead to better models of solar storms
that can affect Earth, as well as star evolution across the universe. Plus, the
mission is only getting started.
“We’re running out of unexplored territory
now,” Kasper said.
General Calendar:
Colloquia, Lectures, Seminars, Meetings, Open Houses & Tours:
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 2019 Astronomy Lecture Series
Each
year the Observatories organizes a series of public lectures on current
astronomical topics. These lectures are given by astronomers from the
Carnegie Observatories as well as other research institutions. The
lectures are geared to the general public and are free.
–
only 4 per year in the Spring www.obs.carnegiescience.edu. For more
information about the Carnegie Observatories or this lecture series, please
contact Reed Haynie. . Click here for
more information.
5 Dec.
|
AEA Astronomy Club Meeting
|
The Antikythera Mechanism, Part 2 (The Great Course
on Ancient Astronomies)
|
(A1/1735)
|
||||
6
Dec.
|
Friday Night 7:30PM SBAS Monthly General Meeting
in the Planetarium at El Camino College (16007 Crenshaw
Bl. In Torrance)
Topic: “The Failed Dream of a Rocket Scientist Or Be
Careful What You Wish For, It May Come True”
Shadan Ardalan, NASA
|
||||||
16 Dec. Monday,
CalTech Astro: Astronomy on Tap Series “Exploding Stars”. For directions,
weather updates, and more information, please visit: http://outreach.astro.caltech.edu
Jan. 23 & 24 (none in Dec.) The von Kármán Lecture Series: 2020
Spitzer: Final Voyage
The
Spitzer Space Telescope has been observing the universe in infrared light for
over 16 years. As the mission comes to a close, we’ll take a look at some of
the amazing highlights and the lasting legacy of this incredible observatory
Host:
Brian White
Brian White
Speaker(s):
Varoujan Gorjian, Spitzer Research Scientist, JPL
Robert Hurt, Spitzer Visualization Scientist, Caltech/IPAC
Suzanne Dodd, Former Spitzer Project Manager (2010-2016), JPL
Joseph Hunt, Spitzer Project Manager (Current), JPL
Varoujan Gorjian, Spitzer Research Scientist, JPL
Robert Hurt, Spitzer Visualization Scientist, Caltech/IPAC
Suzanne Dodd, Former Spitzer Project Manager (2010-2016), JPL
Joseph Hunt, Spitzer Project Manager (Current), JPL
Location:
Thursday, Jan. 23, 2019, 7pm
The von Kármán Auditorium at JPL
4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena, CA
› Directions
Friday, Jan. 24, 2019, 7pm
Caltech’s Ramo Auditorium
1200 E California Blvd.
Pasadena, CA
› Directions
› Click here to watch the event live on Ustream
* Only the Thursday lectures are streamed live.
Thursday, Jan. 23, 2019, 7pm
The von Kármán Auditorium at JPL
4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena, CA
› Directions
Friday, Jan. 24, 2019, 7pm
Caltech’s Ramo Auditorium
1200 E California Blvd.
Pasadena, CA
› Directions
› Click here to watch the event live on Ustream
* Only the Thursday lectures are streamed live.
* Only the Thursday lectures are streamed
live.
9 Dec.
|
LAAS General Mtg. 7:30pm Griffith Observatory
(private)
|
Dec. 21-Jan.1, 2019
|
UCLA Meteorite Gallery
Closed for winter break Dec. 21-Jan. 1
|
9 Jan.
|
AEA Astronomy Club Meeting & Pizza
Party
|
Pizza Party & "Overview and Status of the Giant
Magellan Telescope,” Breann Sitarsky of GMT Corp. & Aerospace casual
(works on the design and specification of the telescope and its subsystems)
|
(A1/1735)
|
Observing:
The
following data are from the 2019 Observer’s Handbook, and Sky & Telescope’s
2019 Skygazer’s Almanac & monthly Sky at a Glance.
Current
sun & moon rise/set/phase data for L.A.:
http://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/usa/los-angeles
Sun, Moon
& Planets for December:
Moon: Dec 4 1st
quarter, Dec 12 Full, Dec 19 last quarter, Dec 26 new
Planets:
Venus
visible at dusk all month. Mars visible at dawn all
month. Mercury
visible at dawn thru the 17th. Saturn visible at dusk until the 27th. Jupiter visible at dusk thru the 12th.
Other
Events:
7 Dec.
|
LAAS Public
Star Party: Griffith Observatory Grounds 2-10pm See http://www.griffithobservatory.org/programs/publictelescopes.html#starparties for more information.
|
4,11,18 Dec.
|
LAAS
The Garvey Ranch Observatory is open to the public every
Wednesday evening from 7:30 PM to 10 PM. Go into the dome to use the 8 Inch Refractor
or observe through one of our telescopes on the lawn. Visit our workshop to
learn how you can build your own telescope, grind your own mirror, or sign up
for our free seasonal astronomy classes.
Call 213-673-7355 for further information.
Time: 7:30
PM - 10:00 PM
Location: Garvey
Ranch Obs. , 781 Orange Ave., Monterey Park, CA 91755
|
11 Dec. Venus 1.8
deg. S. of Saturn
14 Dec. Geminids
meteor peak
21 Dec.
|
SBAS In-town
observing session – contact Greg Benecke to coordinate a location. http://www.sbastro.net/.
|
22 December Ursids
Meteor Shower Peak A minor shower radiating from near Kochab in Ursa Minor.
Can typically see about 10 meteors/hour.
22 December Solstice
28 Dec.
|
LAAS Private dark
sky Star Party
|
28 Dec.
|
SBAS
out-of-town Dark Sky observing – contact Greg Benecke to coordinate a
location. http://www.sbastro.net/.
|
29 Dec. Venus 1 deg N. of Moon
4 Jan.
|
LAAS Public
Star Party: Griffith Observatory Grounds 2-10pm See http://www.griffithobservatory.org/programs/publictelescopes.html#starparties for more information.
|
Internet
Links:
Telescope, Binocular & Accessory Buying
Guides
General
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, membership in The Astronomical League, 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, President & Program Committee Chairman, Walt Sturrock, VP, Kelly Gov club Secretary (& librarian), or Alan Olson, Resource Committee Chairman (over equipment, and club Treasurer).
Mark Clayson,
AEA Astronomy Club President