Eclipse on the menu at next ‘Astronomy on Tap’ – Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

Photo by: Robin Scholz/The News-Gazette

University of Illinois Professor Joaquin Vieira is leaving Sunday, Aug. 20, 2017, for Goreville in Southern Illinois, where he and his sons will camp out and catch Monday's total solar eclipse.

URBANA If you want to brush up on your solar-eclipse facts and maybe pick up a pair of eclipse glasses here's your chance.

The ongoing "Astronomy on Tap" informational series continues today with a session devoted to Monday's big event.

It's scheduled for 6 to 7 p.m. at Pizza M, 208 W. Main St., U.

The University of Illinois Department of Astronomy launched the monthly series in 2016 to answer big questions about the universe and share scientific discoveries with the public in a fun way a conversation with beer, not a lecture, as Professor Joaquin Vieira puts it.

The venue holds about 100 people, and the department will have free eclipse glasses to hand out to folks who want to watch it on Monday, Vieira said.

Vieira and most of his colleagues in the department will be in Goreville, in southern Illinois, on Monday afternoon, one of the best places to view the eclipse. He's leaving Sunday and camping there with his sons.

"I've never seen one," Vieira said Wednesday. "I'm really excited. It's going to be a very poignant and powerful demonstration of our place in the cosmos."

He watched a total lunar eclipse a few years ago, and even that was more powerful than he anticipated.

"You realize we are just a little rock floating in space, going around a giant ball of gas, with another rock going around us," he said. "You get that feeling, 'OK, we're out here, too. We're part of the cosmos.'"

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Eclipse on the menu at next 'Astronomy on Tap' - Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

Dubai looks to the stars as Dh50 million Astronomy Centre to open next month – The National

Hasan Al Harriri founder of the Al Thuraya Astronomy Centre. A soft opening is expected in September 15. Anna Nielsen for The National

Dubais Dh50m astronomy observatory will open next month and a landmark astronomy resort in the Marmoun desert is planned for next year, as the city seeks to tap into an enduring fascination with the stars that draw in old and young alike.

After some delays, construction of Al Thuraya Astronomy Centre is complete and a soft opening is expected in September 15. The grand opening will be on National Day, December 2.

The centre will be home to a telescope with a one metre diametre mirror. First announced two years ago, it will have an academy with classrooms and labs, an outside observation deck, a 100-seat theatre an astronomy shop, a cafe and an library. The 2,696 square building located in Al Mushrif Park will have landscaped gardens in the shapes of constellations. Construction began in 2015.

The Dubai Astronomy Group currently has 7,000 general members and is in the process of recruiting 40 new employees for the new centre. The centre will be educate the public on the Mars 2117 Project, a national plan to build a city on Mars in one hundred years.

Thuraya will be a place where everyone to come and meet together, said HasanAl Hariri, the centres director and chief executive of the Dubai Astronomy Group. Its going to have lots of places where people come and enjoy themselves and create a road map to Mars.

Our Sheikh Mohammed has given us a mandate to go to Mars 2117 to build a Mars city so we want to pave the road for that. Our Sheikh Mohammed he is a very visionary man and when he says something like that it means we have to develop ourselves, we have to come up to do something which is beyond normal people. We have to go to Mars.

________

Read more on UAE astronomy

Love for the night sky leads Emirati to build private spacer observatory

Dubai astronomer's lifelong passion for stargazing

________

Mr Al Hariri envisions a Mars camp at the observatory that stimulates life on the Red Planet.

We want to give people the chance to live on Mars. They will have no atmosphere, they will have no food, they will have no soil. They will have to prepare everything for themselves.

Planning has already begun on the next project, the Marmoun Astronomy Resort, a dark sky reserve 40 km away from the city so that tourists and researchers can observe the skies in complete darkness. The municipality has designated land, said Mr Al Hariri.

We want to make it an astronomy resort so people can come throughout the year and enjoy the beautiful sky, he said. We are anticipating my 2018 we will have this available. At the moment its on the drawing board in collaboration with the municipality. We hope that to finalise it this year so we can start construction early next year.

The next project will be an observatory in the Hatta mountains, with a tentative 2019 opening.

________________

Related Stories

Perseid meteor shower to light up UAE desert skies this weekend

My UAE: Getting starry eyed with Hasan Ahmad Al Hariri

________________

Mr Al Hariri was speaking on the sidelines of a desert viewing of the Perseids meteor shower in Marmoun desert south of Dubai.

An estimated 500 people came out to a free talk and sightings on the Perseids hosted by the Dubai Astronomy at Al Mushrif Park. On Saturday night, about 40 people came to a closed event. There has been a growing interested in astronomy with the growing popularity of photography.

Mr Al Hariris 12-year-old daughter, Amna, helped visitors take photographs of the ringed planet Saturn through a 23cm telescopeusing iPhones.

The annual meteor shower is one of the most popular events in the celestial calendar but this years meteors were outshone by a three quarter moon that rose over the eastern horizon shortly after 10pm. Only a handful of meteors were visible but there will be another chance to watch meteors at the Leonids meteor shower in November and the Geminid meteor shower in December.

Al Hariri spoke about constellations, traditional navigation and stories learnt from his grandmother.

She used to tell us, dont switch on the air conditioning. Go sit outside. Live in nature. Touch and feel nature. Then you will be good, healthy.

By his grandmothers measure, Saturdays gathering was a success.

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Dubai looks to the stars as Dh50 million Astronomy Centre to open next month - The National

Couple to wed during ‘rare and wonderful’ total solar eclipse – ABC News

As the skies darken, temperatures drop and an eerie quietness fills the air during the total solar eclipse on Aug. 21, bride Samantha Adams and groom Cameron Kuhn will be saying I do.

The couple is holding their midday wedding ceremony in the path of totality in St. Joseph, Missouri.

It is perfect. It is totally 100 percent us, the astronomy-loving bride told ABC News.

Adams, 28, had already been over the moon about the upcoming total solar eclipse, the first in the contiguous U.S. in 38 years, when Kuhn proposed on Sept. 15, 2016, but it wasnt until they started discussing potential dates for their ceremony that she realized how much shed love to merge the two special occasions.

I was telling everybody about this eclipse coming up, the bride recalled. He was not surprised he was marrying someone that wanted to get married during an eclipse, on a Monday.

Ever since Adams was in third grade, she said shes been mind-boggled by space, even wanting to become an astronaut until seven knee surgeries derailed those plans.

Since then its completely fascinated me, she explained. We were told to pick a planet to do a report on and I picked Jupiter and it was the first time I started reading into space and once I realized the planets were out there and we were all suspended in this solar system, I couldnt wrap my head around it but I loved that. It completely fascinated me.

The bride-to-be even has a tattoo on her forearm of a minimalistic version of the Voyager Spacecraft.

Jutting out of it are all the planets and at the end of that is a pulsar map, a map of how you can find us in the Milky Way, she added.

Kuhn, 27, said its amazing how well the eclipse worked out for their upcoming nuptials.

While Sammy is undoubtedly more interested in astronomy, I've always liked the northern lights and dark starry skies, said the groom. We'd talked about someday road tripping to see a full eclipse but never imagined we'd get to merge our special day with such an awe-inspiring event.

The bride is sticking with the solar eclipse theme throughout the entire celebration, highlighting it with every decoration, bridal outfit accessory and party favor for her guests.

The couples save-the-date cards and formal invitations both reflect the solar eclipse theme. Adams, a graphic artist, designed them herself to help her guests get excited to take part in both epic events happening at once.

Were both pretty excited about how the ceremony will be customized for him and me. Were not very traditional, the bride said, adding there will be readings from her favorite book, The Count of Monte Cristo as well as from her favorite astrophysicist, Carl Sagan.

After their vows, the bride and groom have timed it perfectly to have their guests put on their glasses to join them in observing the suns special moment hiding behind the moon.

We will ask all of our guests to step out from under the pavilion and get their glasses on so we can start watching the beginning of the eclipse before totality, said Adams. The moon will be shading during this whole time but when totality hits, we can take off our glasses and take in the ambiance.

It will be much darker and much cooler. A lot of neat things will happen in those two minutes, she added. They say it confuses animals. Nocturnal animals start creeping out. Youll start hearing crickets. Because of the quick change in temperature, youll feel a breeze go through. Usually, theres this kind of eerie quietness. Its really surreal and Im really looking forward to it.

I have my shoes for both the reception and ceremony, she said of the outer space-inspired heels and lace-up flats.

My hair will be dyed blue and fuchsia and a little bit of turquoise, Adams continued. I got some hair extensions to give it more volume. I have a star metal hair piece that will wrap around the top of my head.

Adams bouquet will be white roses with glitter and rhinestones on them, with cascading blue and purple Dendrobiums pouring out of the roses so theyre spacey-looking.

The bride and her family have been crafting galactic-themed centerpieces such as glitter-filled Mason jars and fuchsia-colored tea light candle holders to help illuminate the tables.

They also ordered 500 origami silver stars that will light up for an out-of-this-world experience.

Kuhn said he never imagined theyd get to merge their special day with such an awe-inspiring event, but hes thrilled his space-obsessed fiance is getting the wedding of her dreams.

I can't think of a more genuine and interesting person to be in the spotlight surrounding something as rare and wonderful as an eclipse, the groom said of his beautiful bride-to-be.

In that moment, Im going to be crying for happiness and for thankfulness and just being appreciative, Adams added of her grooms love for her. Ill allow myself to take in that moment and feel that joy.

The couple is honeymooning in Colorado to continue their stargazing.

"Were hitting the road with our dog to stay in a cabin for five days," said Adams. "We got a big enough cabin that well be alone with our pup for two days then we have a bunch of friends that are going to meet us to stay with us for a few days."

To watch this couples magical total solar eclipse wedding, tune into ABC News on Monday, Aug. 21, at 1 p.m. EST.

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Couple to wed during 'rare and wonderful' total solar eclipse - ABC News

Seeing Einstein’s hand in stars orbiting a supermassive black hole – SYFY WIRE (blog)

Sitting in the middle of our Milky Way galaxy is a monster black hole. And by middle, I mean the exact center of the galaxy; it probably formed at the same time as the galaxy, itself, billions of years ago, and grew large as the galaxy did, too. It sits right there at the core, like a drain in the middle of a vast bathtub, mostly minding its own business but occasionally eating the odd star or gas cloud.

We think every big galaxy has one of these supermassive black holes in their hearts. Mostly, those are detected because they have disks of gas swirling madly around them, and observations can detect the motion of the gas via the Doppler shift as it orbits (we dont usually see the disks themselves, which are too small).

But our galaxy is different. Were in it, so were close to the black hole, and we have a better view. Not too close; were still halfway out to the edge of the galaxy, so were safe! But there are a few dozen stars that orbit the black hole far more closely, and because of our closer seat we can actually see them move as they do!

As an aside, this is one of the all-time coolest things I know about astronomy. It takes the Sun over two hundred million years to circle the galaxy once, but these stars are so close to the center, so close to the black hole, that they only take decades. That means that we can literally see them move year after year:

Scientifically, this is a very big deal. Weve known for centuries that if you can observe an object orbiting a more massive object, you can calculate the mass of that second object. If you know the first objects orbital velocity (how fast its moving as it goes around) you can also calculate the distance to them.

So, if we observe the stars orbiting that black hole in the center of the Milky Way (astronomers call it Sgr A*, literally pronounced Sagittarius A star or Saj A star if you feel more informal about it), we can, in principle, figure out the mass of the black hole and our distance from it.

Not that thats easy...but its been done. Powerful telescopes observing in the infrared (to make it easier to see the stars through all the dust and muck toward the center of the galaxy) have been able to watch these stars in their orbits, and also measure their Doppler shifts. That gives their velocities, too.

Using this method, weve been able to measure the mass of the black hole as being around 4 million times that of the Sun, and its distance as about 26,000 light years.

As amazing as that is, a team of astronomers decided they might be able to do more.

One of the stars orbiting the black hole is called S2. Its orbit brings it pretty close to Sgr A*, a hair-raising 18 billion kilometers, the equivalent of four times the distance from the Sun to Neptune. When its at that point in its orbit its screaming through space at the colossal speed of 6000 kilometers per second, 0.02 times the speed of light.

This is so close to the black hole that Einsteinian relativistic effects can kick in. There are quite a few, but one, in particular, is very interesting. If an object is in an elliptical orbit around something massive, the orientation of that ellipse will rotate over time. In other words, if you draw a line through the long axis of the ellipse, that line will rotate a little bit every time the object orbits. The effect is strongest at periapsis, the point when the orbiting object is closest to the object it orbits.

We actually have measured this effect; Mercurys orbit does this. The effect is tiny, and difficult to measure, because the Sun isnt very massive (in the relativistic sense) and mercury doesnt get that close. But we do see it, and its exactly as Einsteins equations of General Relativity predict.

This new team of astronomers thought that perhaps they could see this effect as the star S2 orbits Sgr A*. They looked at the observational data from 2002 (when S2 was last at periapsis) to 2015 and found that S2 maybe, barely, shows this effect. Their results certainly are at least consistent with what Einstein predicted.

Thats amazing. This has never been seen on this scale, before. And while their results are a touch iffy, well know better soon enough: S2 reaches periapsis once again sometime between April and July 2018 (the orbital characteristics arent perfectly known, so theres a bit of uncertainty there). During that time, telescopes will be peering intently at the center of our galaxy, very carefully measuring the position of the star.

...and a few others. S2 is just the nearest bright star to Sgr A*. Theres another thats closer but fainter, and harder to get accurate positions for it, but quite a few other stars have been seen orbiting the black hole as well. The team looked at them too, and by calculating their orbits were able to narrow down the mass and distance to the black hole: 4.15 million times the mass of the Sun, and at a distance from us of 26,700 light years (with some small uncertainties).

Again being able to do this is, quite simply, incredible, in the awe-inspiring sense of the word. Scientifically, its amazing enough; we know that there are characteristics of these supermassive black holes that seem to correlate with the galaxy around them (the way stars orbit the center, for example, seems to scale with the mass of the black hole), so being able to nail down the mass and distance our own local supermassive beastie is stunning.

But the fact of the matter is that its astonishing that we can do this at all. This is a ridiculously finicky set of observations coupled with ridiculously complicated mathematics describing the overall shape and character of space itself.

Yet, we can make these observations, and we can apply that math, and we can couple them to discover what a hole in spacetime 260 quadrillion kilometers away is doing as it tosses around multiple-octillion ton stars.

Why do we do this? Because were curious. Because were smart. Because we want to discover, and, most importantly, to understand.

This has driven us to investigate the Universe, itself...and to know our place in it.

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Seeing Einstein's hand in stars orbiting a supermassive black hole - SYFY WIRE (blog)

Check It Out: Eclipse party to cover the basics of astronomy – The Advocate

On Monday, the Slidell Branch of the St. Tammany Parish Library will be the place to be for astronomy lovers of all ages with a solar eclipse viewing party from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and a virtual trip through the galaxy at Armchair Astronomy at 6 p.m.

The viewing party will be held in the Herb Garden of the Slidell branch, 555 Robert Blvd., and will include crafts and an astronomy presentation before the eclipse begins. Eclipse glasses will be handed out for safe viewing. Participants should bring blankets and chairs to enjoy Mother Natures show.

Armchair astronomers can watch beautiful images of galaxies, planets and stars while learning about library resources that can help amateur astronomers on their learning journey.

For information about these programs, call (985) 646-6470.

LIT WITS BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Abita Springs Library, 71683 Leveson St. For information about the club, call (985) 893-6285.

INTERMEDIATE INTERNET: Adults who already know the basics of using the internet can build on their skills at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Covington Library, 310 W. 21st Ave. For information, call (985) 893-6280.

CHAPTER CHAT BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss Oleander Girl by Chitra Divakaruni at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Slidell Library, 555 Robert Blvd. For information about the club, call librarian Noelle Williams at (985) 646-6470.

COLLEGE FINANCIAL PLANNING: Teens and their parents can learn the ins and outs of college financial aid at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Causeway Library, 3457 U.S. 190, Mandeville. For information, call (985) 626-9779.

TRUTH BE TOLD BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss Lab Girl by Hope Jahren at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Covington Library, 310 W. 21st Ave. For information about the club, call branch manager Sue Ryan at (985) 893-6280.

BAYOU BOOKMARKERS BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss The Tigers Wife by Tea Obreht at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Lacombe Library, 28027 U.S. 190. For information about the club, call branch manager Rhonda Spiess at (985) 882-7858.

DROP-IN TECH HELP: Adults can get one-on-one help with downloading the librarys free apps at noon Wednesday at the Madisonville Library, 1123 Main St. For information, call (985) 845-4819.

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Check It Out: Eclipse party to cover the basics of astronomy - The Advocate

Tidally-Locked Planets More Common than Previously Thought, Astronomer Says – Sci-News.com

Dr. Rory Barnes, an assistant professor in the Department of Astronomy and Astrobiology Program at the University of Washington, arrived at this finding by questioning the long-held assumption that only those stars that are much smaller and dimmer than our Sun could host tidally-locked planets.

This artists conception shows a hypothetical tidally-locked planet with two moons orbiting in the habitable zone of a red dwarf star. Image credit: D. Aguilar / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

Tidal locking results when there is no side-to-side momentum between a body in space and its gravitational partner and they become fixed in their embrace.

Tidally-locked bodies such as the Earth and the Moon are in synchronous rotation, meaning that each takes exactly as long to rotate around its own axis as it does to revolve around its host star or gravitational partner.

The Moon takes 27 days to rotate once on its axis, and 27 days to orbit the Earth once.

Earths only permanent natural satellite is thought to have been created by an object the size of Mars, known as Theia, slamming into the proto-Earth at an angle that set the world spinning initially with approximately 12-hour days.

The possibility of tidal locking is an old idea, but nobody had ever gone through it systematically, Dr. Barnes said.

In the past, researchers tended to use that 12-hour estimation of Earths rotation period to model exoplanet behavior, asking, for example, how long an Earth-like exoplanet with a similar orbital spin might take to become tidally locked.

What I did was say, maybe there are other possibilities you could have slower or faster initial rotation periods.

You could have planets larger than Earth, or planets with eccentric orbits so by exploring that larger parameter space, you find that in fact the old ideas were very limited, there was just one outcome there,

He said: planetary formation models, however, suggest the initial rotation of a planet could be much larger than several hours, perhaps even several weeks.

And so when you explore that range, what you find is that theres a possibility for a lot more exoplanets to be tidally locked.

For example, if Earth formed with no moon and with an initial day that was 4 days long, one model predicts Earth would be tidally locked to the Sun by now.

The results of this work suggest that the process of tidal locking is a major factor in the evolution of most of the potentially habitable exoplanets to be discovered in the near future.

Being tidally locked was once thought to lead to such extremes of climate as to eliminate any possibility of life, but astronomers have since reasoned that the presence of an atmosphere with winds blowing across a planets surface could mitigate these effects and allow for moderate climates and life.

I also considered the planets that will likely be discovered by NASAs next planet-hunting satellite, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), and found that every potentially habitable planet it will detect will likely be tidally locked, Dr. Barnes said.

The results will be published in the journal Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, but have been published on arXiv.org ahead of time.

_____

Rory Barnes. 2017. Tidal Locking of Habitable Exoplanets. Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, in press; arXiv: 1708.02981

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Tidally-Locked Planets More Common than Previously Thought, Astronomer Says - Sci-News.com

New observatory telescope, free astronomy events come to Humble area – Chron.com

By Melanie Feuk, mfeuk@hcnonline.com

Photo: Photo Provided By Aaron Clevenson

The Insperity Observatory in Humble ISD recently received a newTakahashi 6-inch Refractor telescope, pictured here on the left.

The Insperity Observatory in Humble ISD recently received a newTakahashi 6-inch Refractor telescope, pictured here on the left.

New observatory telescope, free astronomy events come to Humble area

The Insperity Observatory in Humble ISD celebrated the arrival of a Takahashi 6-inch refractor telescope in March.

"It's awesome," said observatory director Aaron Clevenson during the Kingwood BizCom on Aug. 3. "Six-inches doesn't sound very big, but when you're talking about a refractor, and especially one of this quality, (you can see) incredible things."

Refracting telescopes differ from reflecting telescopes in that they use lenses instead of mirrors to form images.

"What that does for us is - views, especially of planets, like detail on Jupiter and Saturn, as well as detail on the moon, and even deep space objects, are just wonderful looking through that telescope," Clevenson said. "The images are really crisp. You get to see detail you wouldn't normally see on a much larger telescope. We have much larger telescopes, but the view is even prettier."

The new telescope was funded by Insperity, a human resources company based in Kingwood. Clevenson said this Takahashi refractor is top-of-the-line.

"The Takahashi is a company that makes, I would say, the best refractors in the world, and this was the largest one they commercially make," Clevenson said.

About Insperity Observatory

The primary role of the Insperity Observatory is as an educational resource for the students of Humble ISD. Humble ISD classes are able to visit the Insperity Observatory and learn about astronomy.

"I, without any hesitation, would say there is no school district in the US that has an observatory like this one. Not anything close to this one," Clevenson said.

The observatory also provides opportunities for Lone Star College's Kingwood, North Harris and Montgomery campuses to use it for educational purposes.

Upcoming Astronomy Events

Professional-grade telescopes aren't always required to appreciate the wonders of the cosmos.

Clevenson, who served as a past president of the North Houston Astronomy Club, said the club's annual Telescope Workshop is an opportunity for novice or prospective telescope owners to learn how to assemble and use their own telescopes.

The workshop will be held Friday, Aug. 25 in the Lone Star College-Kingwood CLA building from 6:30 to 9 p.m.

Astronomers will provide information and hands-on learning opportunities for people interested in furthering their understanding of telescopes and astronomy.

The workshop is free and does not require advance registration. Beverages will be available at the event. Attendees are welcome to bring their own food.

For more information about the workshop, visit http://astronomyclub.org/nhacwp/.

Public viewing nights are held at the Insperity Observatory on the first Friday of every month from sunset until 10 p.m.

Additionally, the observatory will be open during the partial solar eclipse on Aug. 21, which begins at 11:46 a.m. and ends at 2:45 p.m. The Insperity Observatory will be using its solar telescopes and offering eclipse glasses for people who want to view the eclipse.

The Insperity Observatory is at 2505 S. Houston Avenue in Humble.

For more information about the Insperity Observatory, visit http://www.humbleisd.net/observatory.

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New observatory telescope, free astronomy events come to Humble area - Chron.com

Astronomy experts talk about being prepared for the eclipse – KYStandard.com

Kentucky and other parts of the country have been abuzz recently as anticipation for the total solar eclipse Aug. 21 is on the rise. Locally, viewers will experience a partial eclipse, with about 97 percent of the sun covered.

The biggest Ive ever seen in my lifetime in this area was 65 percent, and that was 77 years ago, said Don Spain, a part-time astronomy consultant and volunteer with Bernheim Forest.

Spain said the last time an eclipse of this magnitude was visible across the United States was in the early 1900s. In 1979, a total solar eclipse was visible within the lower 48 states. Now, with more advanced technology, the event labeled then as unusual has been tagged as historic in 2017.

This is a solar eclipse, where we have the sun, the earth and the moon, Spain said. The moon is actually moving in front of the sun. This happens at least twice every year at some place on the earth, but there can be more, he said.

Spain said Kentucky would have another chance to view a total solar eclipse in 2024.

Viewing and safety

With the eclipse visible at different degrees across the United States, the event has been nicknamed by many as the Great American Total Solar Eclipse. Visibility of the eclipse will be partial in many areas, such as Nelson County and Louisville, but some places are within the path of totality for the eclipse and will experience a total darkness for a brief time.

Hopkinsville lies within that path.

They are expecting about 200,000 people now, said Ken Alderson, president of the Louisville Astronomical Society, who spoke about the eclipse at the library Monday night.

Because of the crowds, Alderson suggests researching alternative locations to view, such as downtown Bowling Green or Madisonville, which will also see brief total coverage.

Spain said he would be viewing the event from an airport in Russellville, where the University of Kentucky would be launching helium balloons to take sensor readings and photographs.

But whether someone chooses to view the eclipse from home or travel to another town, taking the appropriate safety measures for viewing is crucial.

During a total solar eclipse in which the sun is completely covered by the moon, it is safe to view the eclipse without eye protection. But since the visibility in this area and many others will be a partial eclipse, it is a must that ISO certified eye protection be worn to prevent injury and that does not mean sunglasses.

As it gets dark, you have a biological response in your eyeballs to make your pupils dilate, which lets more light in, Alderson said. All that ultraviolet light goes into your eye and you get a sunburn on your retina.

Approved viewing glasses made of the correct UV light blocking materials are being used by many schools and at some public events. For those who have yet to obtain a pair, there are other options for viewing the eclipse without exposing the naked eye.

Welders Glass No. 14 can be used to block harmful light and allow for the user to view the eclipse, Alderson said, but it must be No. 14. Other approved solar filters and devices are another option, but many places have sold out.

Homemade devices can also be used to indirectly view the eclipse, such as pinhole projector made from a small box, paper and foil. The craft is useful, Alderson said, because it allows the user to view the partial eclipse while facing away from the sun.

Alderson warned against using any sort of magnifying device, such as eyeglasses, binoculars or unfiltered camera lenses, as it could concentrate the harsh light into the eye and increase risk of damage. That includes using those devices with approved eyewear.

Staying safe during the eclipse is something Alderson stressed, but he also encouraged viewers who might be worried about capturing photos and using expensive equipment to just step back and enjoy the moment before it passes.

Locally, the partial solar eclipse will be visible between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m., with maximum coverage of the sun at about 2:28. PLG TV-13 plans to cover the eclipse live.

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Astronomy experts talk about being prepared for the eclipse - KYStandard.com

Local astronomy club leader counts down to eclipse – Casper Star-Tribune Online

The 12-year-old peered at the sun through the airport window as the moons shape slowly carved into the suns light.

Alan Corey and his family had brought cards with pinholes to cast the image of the disappearing sun, since looking directly at the sun damages eyes and can cause blindness.

But Coreys gaze kept returning to the sky to watch the 1991 annular eclipse when the moon partially blocks the sun. Though incredible, its nowhere near the experience expected to draw at least 35,000 to Casper for the total eclipse Monday, he said.

Corey doesnt remember seeing the peak of the annular eclipse, probably because it became too cloudy, he recalled last week. But he does remember the half-moon shape of the sun glowing against the shadow, the way the defined outline of a light bulb appears when you look at it long enough. The sky darkened a little, like it was a rainy day.

I clearly remember it being a phenomenal sight, Corey said.

He was so entranced by the view that he continued to look at the eclipse without eye protection, eventually burning a white circle into the center of his vision. An eye doctor later confirmed scar tissue on his corneas. Alhough eye exams sill reveal damage, he was lucky: The spot eventually went away.

But his eclipse-fueled enthusiasm for astronomy didnt.

Now Corey is president of the Central Wyoming Astronomical Society, which is preparing for the total solar eclipse and the expected influx of tens of thousands of visitors.

The societys members are planning day and night telescope viewings for the public the weekend before the eclipse. He said he looks forward to sharing astronomy with other aficionados and those exploring the science for the first time.

Its the precision found throughout the universe thats always intrigued him about astronomy, he said. Many might describe the universe as chaotic. That may be partially true, especially when thinking of the explosions on the suns surface and its geomagnetic storms that can wreak havoc on satellites.

But a closer look at how the suns fine-tuned physical system works and rules that govern nuclear fusion show its anything but chaos, he said. The movements of planets and moons are so predictable that we know down to fractions of a second how long it takes the Earth to orbit the sun in a year.

I think the same could be applied to the eclipse, Corey said. Scientists have predicted this eclipse down to the second. And while you could say thats just good mathematics, those calculations wouldnt work if the exact distance from the Earth the to moon wasnt known, nor would it be possible if the exact distance from earth to the sun wasnt known.

About seven years ago, Corey discovered in an astronomy book that the eclipses path of totality would pass through Casper. Even then before the hotels sold out and the events were scheduled he knew it would be a big deal.

People spend all their lives chasing total eclipses, Corey said.

Hes thought about chasing them himself. They happen all the time, but theyre often in the middle of the ocean and require expensive travel. However, he does plan on chasing the next total solar eclipse crossing North America in 2024, perhaps catching it in Newfoundland. He also hopes to see the 2035 eclipse in Japan.

But Coreys first total solar eclipse is coming to his front door.

Corey has researched, read hundreds of first-hand accounts, given viewing advice, planned events to prepare for the experience.

Corey looks forward to fostering the fascination with astronomy that he experienced as a child during the public telescope viewings. Participants will have chances to peer at planets, nebulae, moons and other sights in space. Saturn always is a big hit, and the planet this year is tilted to display all its rings, he said.

It impresses me every time, whenever a kid sees Saturn, Corey said. They kind of look at you, and they think youre messing with them. And then they look again and realize they really are seeing Saturn. Their eyes just light up.

After the weekend of astronomy activities, Corey plans to stay home for the eclipse. His house is close to the center line, which offers the maximum amount of time of totality in the area.

Hell watch with his wife and children, ages 4 and 6, along with other members of his family. Hes thought about heading directly to the center line a few miles away for an extra three seconds of totality. Then again, he has a perfect spot at home, on a street surrounded by prairie and eagles nests on the North Platte River.

Corey also plans to set up three telescopes outside his house the night before the eclipse to start tracking the sun and moon. He hopes to capture photos with cameras attached to the telescopes, using a shutter release cord to snap the photos so he wont have the distraction of looking through the telescopes.

He may glance into the telescopes a few times before or after totality, but the main show will be in the darkening sky.

Viewers are expecting a spectacular show as the sun glints through peaks and valleys in the moons surface as totality nears, he said. A black hole appears in the sky during totality, allowing earth in twilight to see the suns outer layer, called the corona, flowing into space in wispy-looking streams. The corona can only be seen during a total eclipse, Corey said.

That is the main event, he said. Thats what people are coming here for.

This time, hell be ready with eye protection to watch the moons shadow start to overtake the sun. But during the nearly two and a half minutes of totality, people can safely take off their eclipse glasses.

Corey will be able to look straight at the eclipse in wonder, just like he did 26 years ago.

After his years of planning, the excitement and restlessness is setting as he counts down the days.

If a total solar eclipse is what everyone says it will be, Monday will feature one of the most awe-inspiring sights hell ever see.

Coreys also determined not to be disappointed by weather this time. If theres any chance of clouds, hell be gone before sunrise to a backup location.

There is no force on this Earth that will keep me from seeing the eclipse, he said.

Follow reporter Elysia Conner on Twitter @erconner

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Local astronomy club leader counts down to eclipse - Casper Star-Tribune Online

Q&A: Astronomy professor prepared for Aug. 21 solar eclipse – Chippewa Herald

Menomonie On Monday, Aug. 21, central portions of the United States will experience a total solar eclipse when the moon blocks out the sun. Other areas, such as west-central Wisconsin, will have a partial solar eclipse.

Professor Alan Scott, who teaches astronomy and physics at University of Wisconsin-Stout, answered questions about the eclipse, which the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, calls one of natures most awe-inspiring sights.

Q: What is the solar eclipse?

A: Its the perfect alignment of the sun, moon and Earth. The moons shadow is projected onto the Earth, and the sun is totally blotted out in the region of totality.

Q: Where is the region of totality?

A: It will sweep across the U.S. beginning in Oregon and cut a swath thats about 71 miles wide of total darkness (diagonally through the middle of the country) and exit the U.S. in South Carolina.

Q: How much of the eclipse will be visible in west-central Wisconsin?

A: In west-central Wisconsin, the sun will begin getting a portion of its light blocked at 11:45 a.m. local time. It peaks in blocking about 80 percent of the sun at 1:16 p.m. The partial eclipse will end at 2:31 p.m.

Q: How long will it last?

A: In the region of totality, complete darkness will last about two minutes, and this region travels about 1,500 miles per hour across the surface of the U.S.

Q: How can people safely watch the eclipse?

A: You should not look directly at a partial solar eclipse because a good portion of the suns light is getting through, and it will burn your retina if you look at it for any extended period of time. One should never look directly at the sun. So you need special viewing glasses that are marked eclipse viewing that will protect your eyes. You can look toward the sun in the region of totality during the time of totality because only the outer atmosphere of the sun is observable. This outer atmosphere is not hazardous to directly view with your eyes.

Q: Where do you plan to watch it?

A: I hope to go to St. Joseph, Mo., which will experience the longest period of total darkness. It basically will become just like night. There will be no sun, although you can begin to see the suns outer atmosphere, the corona. The stars will come out. Insects might start chirping. We should see something like twilight 360 degrees around us.

Q: What else makes a total solar eclipse a special event?

A: In the region of totality, one can see star constellations that would never be observable during this time of the year. The planet Mercury will also be observable.

In west-central Wisconsin, unique patterns of crescent-shaped brightness will appear on the ground beneath some trees about the time of peak partial eclipse. This is a result of small openings through the canopy of trees allowing sunlight to pass, acting like a pinhole camera producing such patterns. This is most easily observed on pavement such as a sidewalk.

The last total solar eclipse in the U.S. took place in 1979, and the next one will be in 2024. For more information, go to https://eclipse2017.nasa.gov.

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Q&A: Astronomy professor prepared for Aug. 21 solar eclipse - Chippewa Herald

This supernova shock wave slammed into its companion star – Astronomy Magazine

Type Ia supernovae are one of the most important tools in an astronomers toolkit. These bright but brief events are one of just a few reliable standard candles that allow us to measure not only vast distances accurately, but also determine the expansion rate of the universe. However, because theyre both brief and unpredictable, its been difficult to catch a supernova in the earliest stages of occurring until now. This March, an astronomer at the University of Arizona managed to spot a supernova just a day old, and extensive follow-up observations are now telling us more about the event that caused it.

The supernova, called SN 2017cbv, was discovered by David Sand, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona, as part of the Distance Less Than 40 Megaparsecs or DLT40 survey. (One megaparsec is about 3 million light-years, so 40 megaparsecs covers a distance out to 120 million light-years.) SN 2017cbv went off in NGC 5643, a galaxy 55 million light-years away, making it one of the closest recently discovered supernova events. And because, as Sand says in a press release, it was one of the earliest catches ever within a day, perhaps even hours, of its explosion, astronomers were able to immediately turn the telescopes in a global network toward the event, recording information as the event unfolded thats never been seen before. The work will soon be published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

That information came in the form of a small bump, or short rise and fall in the supernovas light curve, which measures the brightness of the event over time. Typically, supernovae get very bright very quickly, then fade over the following weeks. The small bump in SN 2017cbvs light curve, which occurred within the first few days of observation, would have been missed if the supernova had been discovered later. And that bump is telling its the signal that, Sand says, likely comes from the explosion slamming into a nearby companion star.

Stellar remnants called white dwarfs are the progenitors of type Ia supernovae. These remnants are left over when a Sun-like star reaches the end of its life. But these white dwarfs dont explode without prompting. Thanks to the physics of the matter that comprises them, white dwarfs cannot grow more massive than about 1.4 times the mass of our Sun. If this happens, the white dwarf explodes as a type Ia supernova. Currently, there are two competing theories about the cause of type Ia supernovae: Either two white dwarfs in a binary system spiral inward, collide, and explode, or a white dwarf in a binary system with a normal star pulls matter off that companion until enough mass builds up that the white dwarf explodes.

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This supernova shock wave slammed into its companion star - Astronomy Magazine

System of super-Earths discovered around a nearby star – Astronomy Magazine

If you look up at Earths night sky and find the constellation Cetus it looks something like a sea monster you might also notice a rather average looking star called Tau Ceti. Its slightly smaller than our sun and sits just 12 light years from Earth.

Now, a new study suggests that the system has at least four planets, and two of them orbit on the edge of their habitable zones the region where liquid surface water might exist. All four are likely super-Earths, and some could potentially even be as big as Neptune.

The new paper, accepted for publication in theAstronomical Journal, compiles more than 9,000 measurements, finding two new planets and confirming two others from previous observations.

Tau Cetis proximity to Earth has made it a prime target for planet hunters since 1988. But the system isnt easy to study. Theres a vast amount of dust, and astronomers havent seen any planets pass in front of Tau Ceti, producing a telltale dip in light called a transit.

So researchers have instead relied on the radial velocity method, which can reveal minute wobbles as planets pull on their host star. In the past, astronomers have claimed to find super-Earths and even mini-Neptunes in the Tau Ceti system. TheAstronomical Journalstudy published this week built on 14 years of data to better map out Tau Cetis planets, discerning whats real and whats noise.

The four planets they found orbit Tau Ceti in 20, 49, 160, and 642 day orbits. All four are super-Earths, with the inner two (Tau Cetis g and h) at least roughly twice as massive as Earth. The outer two are both some four times bigger than Earth.

Fabo Feng, a research fellow at the University of Hertfordshire and lead author on the study, says that Tau Ceti is a tempting target because its more like our sun than other nearby stars, like Proxima Centauri Earths nearest star. Last year, scientists madeglobal headlineswhen they discovered Proxima b, an Earth-sized planet. But Proxima Centauri is a red dwarf star, which are prone to extreme flares that might extinguish life. Tau Ceti might be more stable.

If the planets are confirmed to be habitable, Tau Ceti may also be a target for manned interstellar travel, as seen in science fiction, Feng says. (Indeed, the Kobayashi Maru test in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan took place at Tau Ceti.)

The two new planets orbit in 20 and 49 days, respectively, while the others they confirmed are at 160- and 642-day orbits. Previous studies have also suggested planets at 14-, 35-, and 94-day orbits. This could mean that Tau Ceti has seven or more planets. The astronomers even spotted a potential planet in a 1,000 day orbit, but the signal was confusing and couldnt be confirmed or rejected.

Still, it may yet prove to be real, UC Santa Cruz astronomer Steve Vogt, a coauthor on the study, says of that particular world. We have certainly not ruled it out here. We merely point out its appearance, and give all appropriate caveats about its reality.

However, the study also couldnt detect the previously announced 14-day planet or the 35-day one, and found only weak evidence for the 94 day signal. Scientists say one of those previously suspected planets might have been caused by activity from the star itself.

There are weak signals corresponding to these three signals, Feng says. But they either vary with time or are not significant (enough) to be confirmed as planet candidates. So we only report four planets.

Theres also the issue of habitability. The 160-day planet is at the inner edge of the habitable zone like Venus while the 642-day planet is at the outer edge and could be a cold, Mars-temperature zone planet. And since the system is jam packed with debris, space rocks likely strike the planets 10 times more often than Earth gets hit.

Were thus left with a puzzle of a system. Theres one world that might be too hot, another that might be too cold, but both could somehow be both just right if their orbit is slightly eccentric. And those planets are likely rocky, but might not be, and if they are, may experience daily violent impacts. There are at least four but maybe seven planets there, or six and a solar storm. There may be others lurking somewhere, including ones closer to Earth in size.

Theres a world of possibilities in these worlds if we can just sort through the mess of conflicting data first.

This article originally appeared on Discover.

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System of super-Earths discovered around a nearby star - Astronomy Magazine

The planets orbiting TRAPPIST-1 may be older than Earth! – SYFY WIRE (blog)

How old is TRAPPIST-1?

This is a tough question to answer, but its actually important. Itll tell us a lot about how stable planetary systems are, and how likely it is well find more like our own solar system.

TRAPPIST-1, as you may recall, is a very low-mass and very dim red dwarf star about 40 light-years from Earth pretty close by, as stars go. In February 2017, astronomers made the stunning announcement that it had seven planets around it and, even more amazingly, all seven were roughly the same size as Earth!

On top of all that, three of the planets TRAPPIST-1e, f, and g orbit in the star's habitable zone, at the right distance from the star to have liquid water on their surface. Well, theoretically. We cant detect that directly, and it depends on a lot of factors. After all, Venus and Mars are technically in the Suns habitable zone, and look at them! Venus is hot enough to melt metal, and Mars is dry and cold and, as Ive heard, aint no kind of place to raise your kids.

All seven planets huddle pretty close to the star, too. The most distant, TRAPPIST-1h, is still just 9 million km from the star, far closer than Mercury is to the Sun. The star is so feeble, though, that the temperature on that planet is probably like Antarcticas! Even so, its year is a mere 19 Earth days long.

The planets are all so close together as they orbit the star that their gravity affects each other, too. As they pass one another their gravity speeds up or slows down the others, and this changes how quickly they orbit. These changes were actually detected in the observations.

You might think that sort of tugging would disrupt the planets orbits, sending the system into chaos. But a complicated physical process called resonance where the orbital periods of the planets are simple whole number ratios of each other, like 24/15 and 24/9 actually works to keep them stable, perhaps over long periods of time. One study indicated the planetary configuration can last for over 50 million years.

But how long can it stay that way? Its not clear, and thats why knowing the age of the star (and therefore, presumably, the planets) is important.

There are various methods to determine the ages of low-mass stars like TRAPPIST-1, but they can be really hard to implement and tend to yield huge ranges for the age. Sometimes you can only get a lower limit; for example, low-mass stars tend to use up all their lithium supply in about 200 million years or so; after that, its all fused into helium. So if you dont see lithium in a low mass star, its probably older than 200 million years.

There have been several papers published on the age of the system, but each one tends give a different age, and a wide range of possibilities. So a pair of astronomers (Eric Mamajek and my old pal, Adam Burgasser) decided to work it out. They used a series of age indicators to get the likeliest age of the star, including how fast it rotates (older stars tend to spin more slowly), how much heavy element abundance there is in it, and even its velocity through the Milky Way (that method is complicated, but the way the star moves as it orbits the galaxy is tied to how old it is).

When all was said and done, they found the best estimate for the stars age is 7.6 2.2 billion years older than the Sun! Our star and planets are about 4.55 billion years old, give or take, so if this research pans out TRAPPIST-1 was already billions of years old when the Earth was born.

... and thats pretty interesting. We dont really know if our own solar system is stable in the long term. Its been around a long time, sure, but things change. Our models now indicate that the outer planets moved around a lot, toward and away from the Sun over time, messing around with the dynamics of the solar system in the process. Id guess that were good for quite a long time yet, but this result about the age of the TRAPPIST system implies that multiple planetary bodies can exist for a substantially decent period.

Ill add that the resonance I mentioned above not only helps, but may be critical. As planets move around, that resonance helps shepherd them into safe orbits, ones that keep them from destabilizing the entire system and throwing it into chaos. Our solar system doesnt have that (though there are some resonances among the moons and other small bodies, the major planets are not in one; the gravitational interactions between them are currently very small, though). How important is this for long-term stability in a solar system? Knowing the age of TRAPPIST-1 is a step toward understanding that.

TRAPPIST-1 was discovered only in 1999, and the first three planets found in 2015, with four more just two years later. Weve really only just begun exploring it. Do the planets have moons? Are there more planets orbiting the star? What are the planets made of, and do they have atmospheres?

We still arent completely sure how big the planets are; this new research to find the age also revealed the star may be slightly bigger than previously assumed 0.121 times the Suns diameter, or about 168,000 km ... not much bigger than Jupiter. That, in turn, means the planets are probably somewhat bigger (by about 3%) but also less dense, by 11%. That means some are lower-density than Earth. Could that be because they have thick atmospheres, or oceans? These would help them survive the blasts of radiation TRAPPIST-1 sometimes puts out ... and while I wouldnt speculate overmuch about the actual habitability of these planets, thats something we may understand a lot more about over time as we study this weird little system.

And well have plenty of time. Low-mass stars are very conservative with their nuclear fuel, and TRAPPIST-1 may still be shining much as it is today for the next couple of trillion years. Yes, trillion. It existed before we did, and will shine on long after our Sun is a dead white dwarf and our planets either consumed by the long-deceased star or frozen due to its cessation of energy production.

Still, it would be nice to know more about it before then! I suspect that the James Webb Space Telescope will be used to take a look; it may even be able to detect the atmospheres of any of these planets, should they exist.

Patience is a virtue astronomers must have sometimes. Its a big Universe, and learning about everything in it will take some time.

P.S. In the research paper acknowledgment section comes this gem: The authors thank the Hon. John Culberson of Texass 7th congressional district, US House of Representatives, for asking about the age of TRAPPIST-1 during his visit to JPL in February 2017, which spurred the writing of this paper. Heh. How often has that happened?

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The planets orbiting TRAPPIST-1 may be older than Earth! - SYFY WIRE (blog)

Museum to host astronomers Sunday – Hastings Tribune

Hastings Museum guests can get an early education on the upcoming solar eclipse during Kool-Aid Days.

The Slooh astronomers and their mobile astronomy unit will be at the Hastings Museum from 1-2:30 p.m. Sunday.

Slooh, an organization with a primary focus on studying outer space, will be hosting free solar observing, explaining the science behind the eclipse and will be giving away free solar eclipse glasses.

The astronomers, which are based in Connecticut, are traveling across the country in advance of the solar eclipse Aug. 21. The group is making eight stops, including the one in Hastings en route to the Idaho Rocky Mountain Ranch and Elk Meadows Campground where they will be hosting a celebration and watching the eclipse.

During the eclipse, Slooh will be providing a broadcast live online with close-up views of it as it unfolds with commentary from some of the worlds leading solar experts.

The Slooh organization has been covered total solar eclipses, along with partial and annular eclipses, around the globe for years sending crews to Kenya, the Faroe Island and Indonesia.

For more information on Slooh, visit http://www.slooh.com or SloohLive on Facebook.

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Museum to host astronomers Sunday - Hastings Tribune

Stay up to date with the next big astronomical events with a new digital calendar – The Verge

Last week, The New York Times soft-launched a new feature called The New York Times Astronomy and Space Calendar, which previews some of the notable upcoming astronomical events. Theres a neat twist to this: you can sync it to your personal calendar on your computer or phone.

The Times calendar features a light range of upcoming events: meteor showers, notable anniversaries, and major events such as the August 21st solar eclipse. Each entry comes with a short blurb about the significance behind the event, as well as links to the Times coverage of each event.

The calendar isnt comprehensive, and thats by design, says Times Senior Staff Editor for Science editor Michael Roston, who was one of the calendars creators. He explained that while there are plenty of other science and astronomy calendars out there, such as the Jet Propulsion Laboratorys Space Calendar, we wanted to produce something that was curated with a more casual space and astronomy fan in mind.

One example he highlighted is SpaceXs flurry of activity. Theres a launch tomorrow, but thats not on the calendar. Roston explained that their focus us more on adding events that are of interest to the casual astronomy fan, and not to overwhelm the calendars of subscribers. So, when SpaceX eventually launches its Falcon 9 Heavy rocket that will likely pop up on the calendar, while some of the more routine satellite and commercial launches will be left off.

The project, Roston says, is intended to be a new format for service journalism, used as a conduit for the Times reporting on the field. Ben Koski, the Deputy Editor for Interactive News, also worked on the project, and explained that they are starting out slow, opting to launch with Google and Apple calendars, but theyve since added on a WebCal link for other users. The project launched last week, and the pair say that theyll integrate the feature into articles in the near future.

I synced up the calendar to my devices on Friday, and Im pleased to see entries for the Persied meteor shower alongside more mundane reminders for dentist appointments and bills. I never studied astronomy in college, but its a topic that Im endlessly fascinated by, and its a field that I follow, professionally and personally, and what I appreciate about this project is that its a simple way to work a bit of astronomy into your regular day. Its a good demonstration that you dont have to have a science degree to enjoy the universe: sometimes, you just need a heads-up that something cool is about to happen.

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Stay up to date with the next big astronomical events with a new digital calendar - The Verge

Astronomers are preparing to watch a star swing by our supermassive black hole – Astronomy Magazine

Theres a supermassive black hole in the center of our galaxy called Sagittarius A*, or Sgr A* for short. This massive but invisible object lies about 26,000 light-years away and weighs in at 4 million times the mass of our Sun. Although its challenging to observe the area around Sgr A*, its not impossible and now, Sgr A* is helping astronomers once again prove that Einstein was right.

The mounting evidence supporting Einsteins theory of general relativity has been recently published August 9 in the Astrophysical Journal. That evidence consists of precise measurements of the motion of a star, dubbed S2, which orbits Sgr A* closely, and seems to be deviating from the orbit expected if it wasnt affected by general relativity. This deviation indicates that Einsteins theory is indeed in play.

S2 is one of many stars known to orbit Sgr A*, but specifically it is the star that comes closest to the supermassive black hole. That orbit brings it particularly close to the black hole every 16 years an event that will take place in the middle of next year. As it passes through that region, S2s orbit is expected to change as a result of the warping of space-time due to Sgr A*s huge mass.

As 2018 approaches, S2 is already nearing that closest point. Astronomer Andreas Eckart of the University of Cologne in Germany is leading a team that has painstakingly compiled observations of S2 taken over more than 20 years to trace out its orbital motions. Although this data includes another close pass by the black hole 16 years ago, those observations were taken with instruments that dont have the precision available today. Thats why the upcoming pass is so important now, astronomers will finally have the resolution necessary to measure more definitively whether S2 is following a Newtonian orbit, which doesnt take into account general relativity, or an orbit predicted by Einsteins famous theory.

This artists concept shows the motion of stars close to Sgr A*, including S2. Credit: ESO/M. Parsa/L. Calada Eckarts team is already finding deviations in S2s orbit that are extremely close to the expected values according to general relativity, he said in a press release. Thats good news for Einsteins theory, which has held up to all previous tests, and looks like it will again pass with flying colors.

However, these results are only preliminary, and theyre still subject to significant uncertainty. Only continued monitoring as the star swings past the black hole next year will provide the precision necessary for a more confident measurement that will show whether general relativistic effects are truly at play near the massive black hole.

Those measurements will be taken with GRAVITY, a new instrument on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) array. Using this instrument and two of the VLTs 8.2-meter (27 feet) telescopes, Eckarts team will be able to produce images equivalent to those achievable with a telescope mirror 120 meters (nearly 400 feet) across; today, the largest telescopes available have mirrors 10 meters (33 feet) in diameter. Such high resolution could finally yield the measurements that will convince scientists once and for all that Einstein was right.

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Astronomers are preparing to watch a star swing by our supermassive black hole - Astronomy Magazine

Big asteroid to sweep close September 1 – EarthSky

Asteroid 3122 Florence named for the founder of modern nursing on August 27 at 11:50 pm CDT as seen from central U.S. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium.

The next attraction coming up in our skies after the spectacular total solar eclipse of August 21 might be an asteroid big enough to be seen in small telescopes, and maybe even in binoculars, as a small, very slow-moving star. Asteroid 1981 ET3 also known as 3122 Florence is a huge space rock at least 2.7 miles (4.35 km) in diameter. According to Paul Chodas at the Center for Near Earth Object Studies:

Florence is the largest asteroid to pass this close to our planet since the first near-Earth asteroid was discovered over a century ago.

Asteroid 3122 Florence will safely pass by our planet on September 1, 2017 at over 18 times the Earth-moon distance. The asteroid will not be visible to the unaided eye. It will, however, become visible in small amateur telescopes by late August, in the course of what will become the closest encounter to Earth by this asteroid since 1890.

It wont come this close again until after the year 2500.

Observers using a computerized or Go To telescope can point the instrument on August 27 a few minutes before 11:50 pm CDT to star HIP 106824 or to RA 21h39m 11.9 s / DEC -314109 and watch for about 5 to 10 minutes to detect the asteroids slow motion across the stars. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium.

Among the near-Earth asteroids classified as Potentially Hazardous, Florence is one of the biggest. Bigger asteroids include 1999 JM8 (4.3 miles or 7 km), 4183 Cuno (3.5 miles or 5.6 km) and 3200 Phaeton (3.2 miles or 5.1 km), which is thought to be the parent body of the Geminid meteor shower.

Of these, however, Florence is brightest, making it an excellent target for possible glimpses via small telescopes and binoculars.

Its size of about half the elevation of Mount Everest should allow it to reach a visual magnitude of +8.75 to +9, making it a relatively easy target for experienced observers at sites with dark skies.

Astronomers will study the flyby of the huge asteroid. Radar observations are scheduled from NASAs Goldstone Radar between August 29 to September 8, 2017. The Arecibo Observatory will also analyze Florence from September 2 5, 2017. Paul Chodas of the Center of NEO Studies said:

The September 1 flyby of Florence will provide astronomers with an excellent opportunity to make detailed measurements of a large near-Earth asteroid. In particular, radar scientists expect to obtain high-resolution images of Florence that could reveal surface features as small as about 10 meters (30 feet).

The asteroid rotates in about 2.5 hours and radar observations may reveal if Florence is a close or contact binary, or even if the space rock has its own small orbiting moon.

Closest approach to Earth is expected to occur at about 8:06 am EDT on September 1, 2017, but backyard observers using a telescope can try to get a glimpse of the space rock a few nights before that date.

On the night of August 27, the asteroid is in the constellation of Piscis Austrinus reaching about 19 above the southern horizon as seen from central U.S. Late in the night of August 29, the space rock gets into Capricornus and reaches an elevation of 33 as seen from Kansas.

Its distance will make it difficult to detect its slow motion across the stars, unless you are using at least a 5 diameter or bigger telescope and observe in the right direction.

Although asteroid Florence is travelling at 30,266 miles per hour (48,708 km/h), the distance will make it appear so slow that observers should keep watching the fairly bright asteroid for about 5 to 10 minutes to detect its movement across the stars.

Florence was discovered on March 2, 1981 from the Siding Spring Observatory in Australia. It is named in honor of Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), the founder of modern nursing.

Have a Go To computerized telescope? Point it to star HIP 104557 or to RA 21h11m57.45s / DEC -92333.6 a few minutes before 11:40 pm CDT on August 30, to see the asteroid forming a slowly changing triangle with these stars. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium.

Bottom line: Asteroid 3122 Florence will safely pass by our planet on September 1, 2017 at over 18 times the Earth-moon distance. Its the largest asteroid to pass this close to our planet since the first near-Earth asteroid was discovered over a century ago and might be visible to observers at dark sites using small telescopes, and even binoculars.

Read more about large Asteroid Florence from the Center for NEO Studies

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Big asteroid to sweep close September 1 - EarthSky

Moon on its way to the eclipse – EarthSky

This is a scene for the night between August 12 and 13, 2017 (Saturday and Sunday). Image via Guy Ottewell. Used with permission.

The image above is a scene for the night between August 12 and 13, 2017 (Saturday and Sunday).

The moon has eight-and-a-half days to go until its new phase the moment, this time, when it will stamp on the sun.

Each morning from now on, you could see it take one stride (of a bit less than an outstretched handspan) nearer to the sun. So you could each morning be up one hour later to see its dwindling crescent.

This morning, the Perseid meteors may still be streaking, 10 hours (at the time and place of our picture) after their presumed peak.

The later strides of the moon toward its appointment with the sun are shown in the detail below, from the sky-scene illustration in The Under-Standing of Eclipses.

Bottom line: Sky insights and charts from astronomer Guy Ottewell, related to August 21, 2017 eclipse.

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Moon on its way to the eclipse - EarthSky

‘Women computers’ often couldn’t use Harvard’s telescope. They changed astronomy anyway – The Boston Globe

Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff

Photos of women computers Williamina Fleming (top left) and Henrietta Swan Leavitt.

In the 1800s, it was unseemly for women to search the night sky with male astronomers. Instead, they worked in the Harvard College Observatory as assistants.

Between 1875 and 1927, more than 80 women were employed at the observatory as so-called women computers, that is, women who performed scientific and mathematical calculations by hand.

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For 25 to 30 cents an hour, their task was the meticulous study and care of black and white astronomical photographs of the night skies. In most images, the stars were tiny black dots on a white background.

Day in and day out, the women explored the cosmos without looking through a telescope. It was painstaking work. Using a simple magnifying glass, they studied the stars, work that eventually led to discovering their composition. Staring at these stellar clusters, chemically captured on glass plates, helped them gauge immense distances in space and measure the brightness of stars.

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Like the African-American women of the US space program depicted in Hidden Figures, they remained behind the scenes, holding stars in their hands.

Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff

Glass plates helped women computers gauge immense distances in space and measure the brightness of stars.

Not only did these glass plates change the study of science in general, said Lindsay Smith Zrull, curator of astronomical photographs at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, they changed who could do science.

Inside the archive, center staffers have been digitizing the collection of more than 500,000 stellar glass plates. There are three floors of metal closets that contain stacks of these images, spanning more than a century of sky gazing. But in the past year, the curator also unearthed 118 boxes of notes from the women computers.

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Most of these boxes sat untouched in a depository for decades.

Now, in partnership with the Smithsonian Transcription Center, volunteers around the world are transcribing scribbled logbooks and research notes from the women computers as quickly as theyre scanned and uploaded.

The effort is called Project Phaedra, which stands for Preserving Harvards Early Data and Research in Astronomy. Phaedra is a character in Greek mythology. Her name was derived from the Greek word phaidros, which meant bright, said Daina Bouquin, head librarian at the John G. Wolbach Library in the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

Its really important to bring to light what these women did, said Katie Frey, assistant head and digital technologies development librarian at the Wolbach Library. They made groundbreaking discoveries in astronomy. They really changed the course of astronomy.

Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff

Photos of women computers at Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

Newspaper articles from the time considered the women a novelty at best with headlines such as: Brainy Boston Women Learn Skys Profoundest Secrets. But Edward Pickering, the director of the Harvard College Observatory in the late 1800s, knew better. It was his mission to hire an entire corps of women computers to conduct scientific work.

Much of the funding [for the original glass plate work] came from women, most of the work was done by women, Smith Zrull said. Which made it a very unusual collection, unusual workplace back in the late 1800s, early 1900s.

One of the earliest women computers, Annie Jump Cannon, kept detailed letters and scrapbooks of the time with prolific annotations. She classified hundreds of thousands of stars. And of that first generation of women, she was the only one allowed to use Harvards Great Refractor telescope.

Williamina Fleming emigrated to the United States with her husband from Scotland in December 1878. He abandoned her when she was pregnant. She began working as a housemaid under Pickering. In Scotland, shed been a school teacher and had a talent for numbers. Fleming soon became the head of the computers.

She discovered the Horsehead Nebula, a dark nebula in the constellation Orion, in 1888.

In 1899, [Fleming] was the first curator of astronomical photographs, said Maria McEachern, a reference librarian at the Wolbach Library. And the first woman at Harvard to attain a professional position.

Henrietta Swan Leavitt discovered how to measure stellar distances by focusing on variable stars (that is, stars whose brightness fluctuates) in the large and small Magellanic Clouds, two dwarf galaxies. She discovered about 2,400 of them, plotting how light from the same star changed over time.

Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff

A 1934 glass galaxy count plate negative at Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

How do you find a variable star? Smith Zrull said. What you have to do is look at every single plate in the same region of the sky and compare each and every single one of them from different dates.

Perhaps the best known woman in the field was Cecilia Payne, a scholar from England and a woman computer who discovered the composition of the stars, according to Dava Sobel, author of The Glass Universe: How the Ladies of the Harvard Observatory Took the Measure of the Stars.

The University of Cambridge would not accept a female PhD student. She later came to the Harvard College Observatory and, in 1925, earned a PhD in astronomy for her work. In the 1960s, Otto Struve, at one point the director of Yerkes Observatory in Chicago, called her dissertation on stellar atmospheres undoubtedly the most brilliant PhD thesis ever written in astronomy.

Regardless of whether or not these women made discoveries, research is research, said Bouquin. You shouldnt just forget about it because it got old. This was cutting-edge science at one point.

In photographs the women computers sit together in long dresses, posing for the cameras or holding hands outside the observatory where many of them spent much of their lives.

Fleming was known to get weekly massages for the shoulder pain she developed from leaning over the glass plates for hours at a time. In 1900, she wrote about it in a diary she kept that ended up in a time capsule that was buried to mark the century. In her diary, she also complained about her pay and wrote of her responsibilities as a single mother.

Somewhere along the line, the women computers notes on glass plates, logbooks, and achievements disappeared into obscurity.

Until now.

I am not an astronomer, Smith Zrull said. I am just very much inspired by women especially women who overcame all sorts of obstacles to make a place in their field or in the world. What makes me most passionate about this is that were giving them the credit they always deserved.

Harvard College Observatory, circa 1890

A group of women computers, directed by Williamina Fleming, back center standing.

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'Women computers' often couldn't use Harvard's telescope. They changed astronomy anyway - The Boston Globe

Local astronomy professionals, fans will travel the country for solar eclipse – Press of Atlantic City

How far will someone travel for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity?

When it comes to a total solar eclipse, the answer is pretty far.

The first total eclipse over the mainland United States since 1979 (and the first to be visible coast-to-coast since 1918) has many astronomers and fanatics in South Jersey getting ready to hit the road to witness the event in its totality.

The sun, moon and Earth will line up perfectly in the cosmos Aug. 21, turning the daytime sky dark for a few wondrous minutes. The total eclipses path crosses the U.S. from Oregon to South Carolina.

There are an estimated 200 million people living within a days drive of the path. Paul Ostwald is one of them.

Ostwald, president of the South Jersey Astronomy Club, said he will be traveling Friday to Tennessee, where he will set up camp for the eclipse.

Ostwald said New Jersey residents will see only a partial eclipse about 75 percent and that the sky wont be as dark as it will be in the 14 states within the eclipses direct path.

He and his family are making a weeks vacation out of the trip, but Ostwald knows that the highlight will be next Mondays eclipse.

Its like a bucket list, he said. You ought to see one in your lifetime.

Ostwald gets excited describing what he has read about the process of a total solar eclipse: The moon covers the sun so quickly that the day appears to turn almost completely to night within a minute. The moon moves at more than 1,000 mph and temperatures drop 15 to 20 degrees, according to Ostwald. He will have a telescope and camera with him to capture the event.

Ive seen partial (eclipses), but never a total. Its something you only read about, Ostwald said.

Rich Dudek, of Asbury Park, comes down to South Jersey to take pictures of the moon. He will be traveling to the northern bank of the Missouri River in Columbia, Missouri, to capture a 360-degree pan of the eclipse.

Dudek will be shooting with multiple cameras, one on a 600mm telescope, another with a 200mm lens mounted on an equatorial head. Hell also have a high-definition camcorder with a GoPro mounted on a slow-panning head for the 360 view. Hell hook everything up to two golf-cart batteries to keep them running.

At 62, Dudek knows its now or never.

Im looking at pictures you see on the internet or in books. I just think it will be great with the darkness overcoming and the crickets, birds and clouds changing, Dudek said.

Harold Williams may have one of the best views, as he will be staying on the dead-center line of the eclipse in Nebraska. He has been planning the trip for more than a year.

Williams, of Galloway Township, plans to set up two video cameras one toward the shadow and one pointing away. He said he wont be taking photos, as he wants to experience the eclipse and not worry about the focus of a camera.

I can see it in my head and I know what to expect, but its like listening to a band play live as opposed to on TV: Yeah, its the same thing but its not, Williams said.

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Local astronomy professionals, fans will travel the country for solar eclipse - Press of Atlantic City