Tag: space

  • The Moon Hits a Cosmic Bull's Eye Tonight: How to See It

    Moon Occult Aldebaran Septmeber 2015
    The moon will appear to eclipse the bright star Aldebaran on Friday, Sept. 4, 2015, in what astronomers call an occultation. Aldebaran is a bright star that forms the eye of the constellation Taurus, the Bull.
    Credit: Starry Night Software

    If you live in the eastern-third of the United States or southeast Canada and your local skies are clear on tonight (Sept. 4), take a good close look at the rising moon, which has a celestial date with a star this evening.

    The moon will appear 52-percent illuminated and be just hours before it reaches last quarter phase.  If the bright star Aldebaran isn’t right next to the moon, it may be directly behind the lunar disk and about to pop back out. In a sense this can be called an “eclipse” of Aldebaran by the moon, although the proper term for this celestial event is an “occultation.”

    Weather permitting, at least some stage of this occultation can be seen by North American observers living east and north of a line running from Duluth, Minnesota to Miami, Florida. [Video: What to See in September’s Night Sky]

    Orange Aldebaran marks the angry eye of the constellation Taurus, the Bull and is the brightest star that the moon can occult (other than the sun, of course!). Its abrupt disappearance or later, its reappearance (at the moon’s dark side) can even be seen with the unaided eye; the famed Polish astronomer Copernicus witnessed just such an event in the year 1497, as did Japanese astronomers in 640 A.D.  But the moon’s bright gibbous phase and low altitude at this impending event argue strongly for using binoculars or a telescope, if possible. This is especially true for the disappearance which will take place along the moon’s bright limb.

    Listed in the table below are the local times when the star will disappear and reappear at a number of cities (a dash indicates the star is already hidden at moonrise). These predictions were supplied by the International Occultation Timers Association (IOTA). Timetables for many more locations, plus a map showing the entire occultation visibility zone can be found here: http://www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/bstar/0905zc692.htm

    Take note that in many cases the altitude of the moon is less than 10 degrees; your clenched fist held at arm’s length measures 10 degrees. Obviously, if you intend to observe this occultation it is imperative that your view toward the east-northeast horizon does not have any tall obstructions such as buildings or trees, or else you will not be able to see the rising moon. The best views will be over an open body of water (a sea horizon) which will be flat and free of any obstructions.

    When Aldebaran reappeared from a similar occultation in 1978, astronomers at Iowa State University used high-speed photometry to confirm that this star has an apparent angular diameter of 0.02 arc second. That’s 90,000 times smaller than the average apparent size of the moon, or put another way, the size of a penny in Philadelphia if it could be viewed from as far away as Washington, D.C. As small as that it, it is actually much larger than most other stars subtend, so Aldebaran always takes at least 1/30th of a second to fade or brighten at a lunar occultation. Under special conditions, as when it grazes the lunar limb or encounters a lunar mountain or valley at just the right slope, the process can be more drawn out – enough so as to appear gradual even visually in a telescope.

    This occultation is the first of a series of Aldebaran occultations accessible to U.S. observers that will continue each month for the next 27 months. But since a particular occultation is visible for only a fraction of the Earth’s surface the actual number that will be visible from your hometown will number far less. Generally speaking from now until the end of 2017, most locations will be treated to about 8 to 10 “Aldebaran eclipses.”  Friday’s favor the Eastern U.S. and southeast Canada.  The next favorable one on Thursday morning, November 26th (Thanksgiving Day in the U.S.), will be visible from Alaska, all of Canada and the northern half of the contiguous (48) U.S.        

    Because Aldebaran lies 5 degrees south of the ecliptic in the constellation Taurus, the moon’s path across the sky carries it that far south only when the ascending node of the lunar orbit lies in Virgo, Leo or Cancer. The node is slowly regressing along the ecliptic in its 18.6-year cycle and the current series of Aldebaran occultations began on Jan. 29 of this year over the Arctic regions. The very last of the current series will be on Sept. 3, 2018 over Greenland and the Arctic regions.  

    Occultation of Aldebaran, September 4-5, 2015

    This chart lists the times of occultation for Aldebaran, as the moon blocks the bright star, as seen from several major cities across North American on Sept. 4 and 5, 2015.
    Credit: Joe Rao/Space.com

    Editor’s note: If you capture an amazing photo of the moon and the bright star Aldebaran, or any other night sky view, and you’d like to share it with Space.com, send images and comments in to managing editor Tariq Malik and the team at: spacephotos@space.com.

    Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer’s Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Sentinel-2 catches eye of algal storm

    The Sentinel-2A satellite has been in orbit for only a matter of weeks, but new images of an algal bloom in the Baltic Sea show that it is already exceeding expectations. Built essentially as a land monitoring mission, Sentinel-2 will also certainly find its way into marine applications.

  • Video: ESTEC on the move


    This spectacular time-lapse video depicts a composite day in the life of Europe’s largest space centre

  • Week In Images


    Our week through the lens:
    31 August-4 September 2015

  • Micro-sub Explores Buried Antarctic Lake Whillans

    Micro-sub Explores Buried Antarctic Lake Whillans | Video

  • Remarkable Time-lapse of Pacific Northwest Land and Skies

    Remarkable Time-lapse of Pacific Northwest Land and Skies | Video

  • The Painterly Mixing Of Aerosols In Our Atmosphere

    The Painterly Mixing Of Aerosols In Our Atmosphere | Video

  • 1% Cloud Lowering in 10 yeras

    The Clouds Are Lowering – Countering Climate Change? | Video

  • Antarctic Ice Melt

    Giga-Tons Of Ice Crawl Off Antarctica

  • Astronauts To Train In Caves For Space Voyages

    Astronauts To Train In Caves For Space Voyages | Video

  • How the Sun Will Die: And What Happens to Earth

  • Comets: Frozen Seeds Of Life From Beyond The Solar System

    Comets: Frozen Seeds Of Life From Beyond The Solar System | Video

  • Yellowstone Still Recovering From Fires Landsat Reveals

    Yellowstone Still Recovering From Fires Landsat Reveals | Video

  • How Mercury, Venus, Earth, And Mars Formed

    How Mercury, Venus, Earth, And Mars Formed | Video

  • Comets: Soot, Water and the Origin of Life on Earth?

  • GOOGLE-ing Our Carbon Footprints

  • Birth of a Giant Iceberg – Unprecedented Aerial View | Video

    Birth of a Giant Iceberg – Climate Change Evidence? | Video

  • Massive Ice Island Breaks Off Greenland Glacier

    Massive Ice Island Breaks Off Greenland Glacier | Video

  • Monster Storm on Saturn: SPACE.com’s Dave Brody on FOX NEWS

  • SPACEWATCH: Scanning for Cosmic Killers

  • Hurricane Isaac Spied By International Space Station

    Hurricane Isaac Spied By International Space Station | Video

  • Stunning Stargazing In Yosemite National Park

    Stunning Stargazing In Yosemite National Park | Video

  • Amazing Northern Lights Time-Lapse At Arctic Circle

    Auroral Ballet: Arctic Circle’s Northern Lights | Video

  • Historic Blizzard Seen From Space | Time-Lapse Video

    Historic Blizzard Seen From Space | Time-Lapse Video

  • The Moon: Earth's Little Helper

    The Moon: Earth’s Little Helper | Video

  • Bright Auroras Shine Through Clouds Over Sweden

    Bright Auroras Shine Through Clouds Over Sweden | Video

  • Asteroids And Meteoroids: Older Than Earth, Bringing Fire (And Life?) From The Sky

    Meteoroids: Older Than Earth, Bringing Fire (And Life?) From The Sky | Video

  • Future U.S. Weather Will Be Stormy and Drought Filled, Global Prediction Shows | Video

    Future U.S. Weather Will Be Stormy and Drought Filled, Global Prediction Shows | Video

  • Mission team ready for Galileo launch

    When the next pair of Galileo satellites is boosted into orbit next Friday, a team of mission control experts in Darmstadt, Germany, will spring into action, working around the clock to bring the duo through their critical first days in space.

  • Hubble Peers into the Heart of a Galactic Maelstrom

    Hubble Peers into the Heart of a Galactic Maelstrom

    This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows Messier 96, a spiral galaxy just over 35 million light-years away in the constellation of Leo (The Lion). It is the nearest group containing both bright spirals and a bright elliptical galaxy (Messier 105).

  • 'Citizen Mars' Web Series Features Would-Be Red-Planet Colonists

    Artist's Concept of Mars One Colony
    Artist’s concept of Mars One’s envisioned colony on the Red Planet.
    Credit: Bryan Versteeg/Mars One

    A new Web TV series follows the efforts of five people who hope to be among the first humans to set foot on Mars.

    The subjects of the new series, which is called “Citizen Mars” and airs on Engadget.com, aim to become astronauts with the Netherlands-based nonprofit Mars One. That group plans to land four people on the Red Planet in 2027, kicking off a permanent colony there.

    “There’s a tremendous amount of interest in the Mars One project, and many are skeptical about the mission’s feasibility, which is why we thought it an important story to tell, and why the subjects involved are so compelling,” Engadget Editor-in-Chief Michael Gorman said in a statement.

    “Citizen Mars” is billed as the first docu-drama to focus on the personal lives of Mars One contestants. It follows five astronaut hopefuls who range in age from 19 to 35 and come from diverse backgrounds. One has a Ph.D. in quantum biology, for example, while another works at a life-insurance company and also plays pro basketball in Egypt.

    The series launched Tuesday (Sept. 1) and will broadcast five episodes through its run at http://www.engadget.com/citizen-mars/.

    Available to Populate Mars T-shirt

    Space.com Exclusive T-shirt. Available to Populate Mars. Buy Now
    Credit: Space.com Store

    Mars One’s ambitious plans have attracted scrutinty and criticism. In 2014, for instance, a group of MIT graduate students published a study questioning the colonization project’s feasibility. The authors went head to head with Mars One representatives at a conference this August, arguing that the cost estimate Mars One has published — $6 billion to achieve the 2027 landing, with most of the funding to be raised by staging a global media event — is too optimistic.

    During the August debate, Mars One co-founder and CEO Bas Lansdorp said that the group’s plans are still in flux at the moment, and that cost estimates could indeed rise. But, he said, Mars One is committed to putting boots on the Red Planet and is organizing its efforts to meet that overall goal, even if the price tag tops $6 billion.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

    The Dutch nonprofit Mars One aims to land four colonists on the Red Planet in 2023. Do you want to be one of them?

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  • Flower Power: Giant 'Starshades' Prepped for Exoplanet Hunting

    Sunflower-Shaped Starshade
    An artist’s depiction of a sunflower-shaped starshade that could help space telescopes find and characterize alien planets.
    Credit: NASA/JPL/Caltech

    In an attempt to better characterize planets beyond the solar system, some scientists are turning to big, flower-shaped disks known as starshades.

    Intended to be used in space in combination with a separately flying telescope, a starshade would block the light from a parent star, allowing dim exoplanets to be observed and studied. But before the first starshade can be sent to space, the technology must be tested on Earth — and that’s not a trivial task.

    “The unique architecture of the starshade — namely, the size and separation needed — make it difficult to test cheaply,” Anthony Harness, a graduate student at the University of Colorado, Boulder, told Space.com. [The Strangest Alien Planets]

    Harness works with Tiffany Glassman and Steve Warwick, of the aerospace company Northrop Grumman, to test starshades on Earth in dry lake beds and on mountaintops. Harness presented some of the test results at the Emerging Researchers in Exoplanet Science (ERES) Symposium at Pennsylvania State University in April.

    Zeppelin

    A zeppelin was originally proposed to hoist the starshade into the air, but it proved unreliable.
    Credit: Anthony Harness

    Starshades in the air

    Earth-like alien planets are up to 10 billion times fainter than the stars they orbit, making it a challenge to study them.

    “When you point your telescope at a star, you’re just overwhelmed by starlight,” Harness said in his presentation.

    A starshade, also known as an external occulter, would counteract this effect by blocking the light from a star, similar to the way placing your hand over the sun can help you see other objects in the sky. Starshades could be a variety of sizes; a typical one might be 100 feet (30 meters) wide and would fly tens of thousands of miles from its partner telescope.

    And the starshade wouldn’t be a perfect circle. Instead, it would have flower-petal-like protrusions that would create a softer edge, resulting in less bending of light (and thus a darker shadow).

    Starshades could be used with any space telescope, from the James Webb Space Telescopeto a future instrument, advocates say.

    NASA recently conducted a study called Exo-S that evaluated a potential $1 billion starshade space telescope mission. But before that kind of money is spent, serious testing on Earth must be performed to verify that the starshade concept would work. [How the Planet-Hunting Starshade Unfolds in Space (Video)]

    Diagram of a Starshade

    Diagram of a starshade lofted by a rocket. A guiding telescope will direct the rocket while a science telescope studies the sky behind it.
    Credit: Anthony Harness

    “We want to get rid of that scare factor everyone thinks of when they think of a 30-meter (100 feet) disk in space,” Harness said.

    The basic concept of the tests involves a small telescope on the ground, with a starshade suspended a short distance away. Initially, the team started with the idea of suspending the disk from a zeppelin. However, it turned out that the airship was difficult to control with the necessary precision.

    “It turns out, you can’t hold a giant balloon to centimeter accuracy,” Harness said.

    Before the problems could be worked out, the company that manufactured the zeppelins went out of business.

    So the team plans to utilize reusable rockets during tests to be conducted soon. Two telescopes will sit on the ground. One will perform the necessary science while the other scope targets infrared lights on the rocket to help position it precisely. (A starshade launched into space would utilize the science telescope to help with its positioning, Harness said.)

    Starshade on a mountain

    Making starshades hover in the sky isn’t the only way to test the technology.

    “The next-best option is to get rid of these pesky vehicles and their stability, and just mount a starshade on a mountain,” Harness said.

    The team has run several starshade tests on dry lake beds in the desert, placing a starshade 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) from the telescope.

    No astronomy was performed in the desert tests. Instead, an extremely bright light source served as the “star,” while a far dimmer LED light functioned as the “planet.”

    “The whole purpose of these tests [was] to demonstrate we can get a billion times contrast,” Harness said.

    Mountain Top Telescope

    An unwound telescope could be placed on a mountain while a telescope on the ground moved along with the Earth to study the sky behind it.
    Credit: Anthony Harness

    As predicted, the starshade successfully blocked the “stellar” light, allowing the team to observe the “planet.” These results were published onlinein 2013 in Proceedings of the SPIE (Society of Photographic Instrumentation Engineers).

    Using a ground-mounted starshade to do astronomy required a slightly different approach. The team took the roughly circular starshade and “unwound” it, creating a picket fence on top of a hill. As Earth rotated, the background stars moved against the starshade fence, which was angled to follow the path they would take across the sky.

    As Earth moves, the observing telescope must also move to continue studying the same star. The team took an image of the star they wanted to observe and then moved the telescope down the road, where they waited for the star to line up behind the next petal.

    Studying the stars with the starshade on the ground proved difficult. Conditions constantly changed as light refracted through Earth’s atmosphere. To compensate, the telescope was placed on a motorized stage that allowed researchers to position the starshade in the star’s line of sight.

    The distances between the starshade and the observing telescope have been increased gradually. The goal is to successfully test the technology at a distance of 1.8 miles (3 km). At that distance, with the smaller Earth-bound starshade, the team should be able to resolve the debris disk around the star Fomalhaut, Harness said.

    Such resolution would be comparable to that required for studying an exoplanet, and Harness is confident the team will succeed.

    “We think that starshades are the only near-term solution for characterizing and determining the habitability of an Earth-like planet,” he said.

    Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • Kirk's Kisses: Women of 'Star Trek' Featured in Kickstarter Campaign

    'Ladies of Kirk' Book
    A new illustrated book, “Ladies of Kirk,” features drawings and descriptions of the many women encountered (and kissed) by Capt. James T. Kirk on “Star Trek.”
    Credit: Kelley McMorris/Kickstarter

    A famed “Star Trek” captain’s romantic conquests have come to life in a new illustrated book.

    The new book showcases all the women Capt. James T. Kirk of the original “Star Trek” kissed over the course of the show, which ran from 1966 to 1969. Advertised on the crowdfunding website Kickstarter, “Ladies of Kirk” more than quadrupled its $2,500 goal, reaching $11,253.

    “Part celebration of the women of Trek, part loving parody of our favorite Captain, ‘Ladies of Kirk’ is a fully illustrated original art book,” the project’s artist, Kelley McMorris, said on the book’s Kickstarter page.

    “Brilliant lawyer Areel, shape-shifting telepath Sylvia, wholesome Edith Keeler — they’re all here,” she wrote. “One captain, 19 women, one book.”

    The 6 inch by 9 inch (15 centimeters by 23 centimeters), 42-page full-color book includes 19 illustrations and a short summary of every character.

    McMorris describes herself as a professional illustrator who grew up loving “Star Trek.” “I was impressed by the sheer diversity of these women, in their personalities, employment, motivations and costumes,” she wrote.

    As the campaign progressed, McMorris added more perks for the backers: At $4,300 in total donations, all backers who contributed at least $15 were entitled to a bookmark with Kirk on one side and the crewmember Spock on the other. At $8,600, she added a downloadable coloring book.

    The campaign runs just weeks after the actor who played Kirk, William Shatner, tweeted a fan-driven pictorial tribute to Spock’s actor (Leonard Nimoy). Nimoy died earlier this year at age 83; the men were lifelong friends after co-starring in the series.

    “Star Trek” lives on through several fan campaigns (such as “Star Trek: Axanar“) and in Hollywood; a new film from the rebooted series is expected to be released in 2016.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • New arrivals


    Watch the replay of ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen, commander Sergei Volkov and Aidyn Aimbetov opening the hatch to the International Space Station after a two-day flight in space

  • ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen begins busy International Space Station tour

  • Docking replay


    After a two-day flight in space, ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen, commander Sergei Volkov and Aidyn Aimbetov arrived at the International Space Station at 07:39 GMT (09:39 CEST)