UAE- Sharjah Science Museum hosts astronomy event

(MENAFN - Khaleej Times) The event aims to enrich public knowledge of astronomy and present school students families and museum visitors with the latest developments in this science.

Sharjah: The Sharjah Museums Department (SMD) on Thursday launched its annual astronomy event a three day programme entitled Space Guiding Your Way at the Sharjah Science Museum.

Prof Humaid Al Nuaimi admires a showpiece during the astronomy event at Sharjah Science Museum.

The event was inaugurated by Professor Humaid Al Nuaimi Director of the University of Sharjah and President of the Arab Union for Astronomy and Space who was accompanied by several representatives of the Sharjah Museums Department.

The event which is organised for the 15th consecutive year aims to enrich public knowledge of astronomy and present school students families and museum visitors with the latest developments in this science. The event which ends today has seen participation from various astronomical entities and authorities from the UAE. Visitors were introduced to the latest advances in astronomy and had a chance to participate in many interactive planned activities. The SMD arranged advanced equipment enabling people to safely take a closer look at the sun. Various workshops introduced families to astronomy and gave visitors an opportunity to observe the planets of the solar system.

A number of competitions were also planned and open to all visitors. The competitions which combined fun with knowledge were judged by experts in the field. A special shop was also available on site to offer astronomy-related toys to help develop childrens attention and curiosity in astronomy and offer valuable information.

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UAE- Sharjah Science Museum hosts astronomy event

Public Lecture Series to Explain Wonders of Astronomy

Eight monthly talks have been scheduled at UC Riverside covering a range of topics in astronomy

By Iqbal Pittalwala on November 3, 2014

A gravitational lens mirage. Pictured above, the gravity of a luminous red galaxy (LRG) has gravitationally distorted the light from a much more distant blue galaxy. More typically, such light bending results in two discernible images of the distant galaxy, but here the lens alignment is so precise that the background galaxy is distorted into a horseshoe -- a nearly complete ring. Since such a lensing effect was generally predicted in some detail by Albert Einstein over 70 years ago, rings like this are now known as Einstein Rings. Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. The Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of California, Riverside is hosting a new series of eight public lectures aimed at making astronomy understandable to all. The free lectures will take place the first Thursday of every month (except the one in January 2015).

The first lecture of the series, scheduled for 6 p.m., Nov. 6, will address how gravitational lenses can be used to study the distant universe. Titled Einsteins Telescope: Using Gravitational Lenses as Telescopes to Reveal the Distant Universe, the one-hour talk will be given by Brian Siana, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at UC Riverside. It will take place in Room 3035 in the Physics Building on campus.

A century ago, Einstein predicted that massive objects bend space, causing light to change direction, Siana said. Today, astronomers are using this phenomenon to focus light and magnify distant galaxies. In this talk, I will explain this phenomenon and show how astronomers are using it to study everything from planets outside our solar system to the most distant galaxies ever seen.

The series will continue next month with a talk, scheduled for Dec. 4, on the evolution of galaxies. The first talk next year will take place on Jan. 8 (instead of Jan. 1). The series will conclude with the talk on June 4, 2015.

For now, the talks are being held in Room 3035 in the Physics Building, said Mario De Leo Winkler, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, who is organizing the lecture series. Depending on the turnout, we may move in the future to a larger room.

Archived under: Inside UCR, Science/Technology, astronomy, Brian Siana, CNAS, College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, lecture series, Mario De Leo Winkler, press release, public lecture, science lecture series

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Public Lecture Series to Explain Wonders of Astronomy

Ambitious 8.5m plan to build world's biggest public observatory in the North East

An ambitious 8.5m scheme to build the biggest public observatory in the world in the North East has been revealed.

It is the brainchild of astronomer Gary Fildes and a funding drive to get it up and running officially starts on November 7.

Called the Kielder Observatory Astronomy Village, it will contain a 60 seat planetarium, a specially built 500,000 telescope with a one metre wide aperture accessible to wheelchair users, and an accommodation block for visiting astronomers.

Special glass topped pods for use by members of the public to observe the night skies are also planned.

It will be based on the site of the already hugely successful Kielder Observatory which already boasts 25,000 visitors a year.

Once the village is opened, the existing classroom where Gary and volunteers host lectures and talks about the stars and the universe could see visitor numbers treble to 75,000.

Organisers hope it will be up and running within five years.

However Gary said: If the money came in tomorrow we could build it in two years.

There are a lot of hurdles - we need a design team and a project director to bring it together, which is not my skill set, but Id love to think within the next five years it will be developed on land right next to the observatory weve already got.

I want to create the worlds biggest and best centre for astronomical outreach, here in the North East.

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Ambitious 8.5m plan to build world's biggest public observatory in the North East

Astronomy – Ch. 6: Telescopes (7 of 25) Finding Resolutions of Craters on the Moon – Video


Astronomy - Ch. 6: Telescopes (7 of 25) Finding Resolutions of Craters on the Moon
Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will calculate the telescope #39;s resolutions of craters on the Moon.

By: Michel van Biezen

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Astronomy - Ch. 6: Telescopes (7 of 25) Finding Resolutions of Craters on the Moon - Video

Highlights of the Night Sky – November 2014 | Astronomy Space Science Video – Video


Highlights of the Night Sky - November 2014 | Astronomy Space Science Video
More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - what to look for in the night sky during November 2014. Please rate and comment, thanks! Credits: STScI.

By: CoconutScienceLab

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Highlights of the Night Sky - November 2014 | Astronomy Space Science Video - Video

Planet Hunting to Sky Surveys, Astronomy and Statistics Realign (Op-Ed)

G. Jogesh Babu is director of the Center for Astrostatistics at Penn State, and Eric Feigelson is the center's associate director and professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State. The authors contributed this article toSpace.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights

After a century hiatus, astronomy and statistics recently reconnected, giving rise to the new field of astrostatistics. Some of today's most important issues in astronomy require sophisticated statistical modeling. NASA's Kepler mission has detected several thousand planets orbiting other stars, but it was through statistics that astronomers inferred that most stars have planetary systems and hundreds of millions of Earth-like planets probably exist in the galaxy. And in cosmology, statistics refined the parameters of the Lambda Cold Dark Matter (Lambda-CDM) consensus model of the universe, which suggests the universe expanded following a Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago, slowed by dark matter and accelerated by dark energy.

Insights from the ancients

Such insights followed a long gap in the relationship between astrostatistics a term coined by us in our book of the same title published in 1996 and the broader field of astronomy.

Astronomy is perhaps the oldest empirical science quantitative measurements of celestial phenomena were carried out by many ancient civilizations. The geometric models of the Platonists in ancient Greece proposed a cosmological model involving crystalline spheres spinning around a static Earth, a vision that endured in Europe for 15 centuries.

It was another Greek natural philosopher, Hipparchus, who made one of the first applications of mathematical principles that we now consider to be in the realm of statistics. Finding scatter in Babylonian measurements of the length of a year, defined as the time between solstices, Hipparchus made the breakthrough decision to take guidance from the middle of a data range as the best value.

Centuries later, a debate emerged about whether it is better to gather many data points or a few. On one side, the Arabic astronomer Ab Rayn al-Brn argued for more measurements to compensate for the dangers of propagating errors from inaccurate instruments and inattentive observers. In contrast, some medieval scholars advised against gathering repeated measurements, fearing that errors would compound rather than compensate for each other. It was in the 16th century that the utility of the mean to increase precision a favored method today was demonstrated with great success by Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe.

In later centuries, some of the great thinkers of the day developed several elements of modern mathematical statistics specifically to address celestial mechanics, where Newton's Laws of Motion were producing astonishingly precise and self-consistent quantitative results for solar-system phenomena.

In the late 18th century, in order to model cometary orbits, Adrien-Marie Legendre developed a system to fit noisy data to a mathematical model, which is now called the L2 least squares parameter estimation. The least-squares method became an instant success in European astronomy.

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Planet Hunting to Sky Surveys, Astronomy and Statistics Realign (Op-Ed)

Antares Failure Casts Doubt On U.S. Commercial Launch Strategy

As Orbital Sciences Corporation looks for clues to Tuesdays catastrophic failure of its Antares launcher, three independent industry insiders tell Forbes that the blame squarely rests on one of two of the rockets Soviet-era engines.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a launcher engineer and industry expert told Forbes that before the Antares vehicle lost thrust it was evident that there was a lot of unburned kerosene going into the exhaust stream which he says suggests that it also lost engine pressurization.

It wasnt a failure in the fuel tanks, avionics, or navigation, but definitely with an engine, said the launcher engineer.

The Orbital Sciences Corporation Antares rocket seen on launch Pad-0A during sunrise, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2014, at NASAs Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky

The Antares two-stage launcher system, which NASA tasked with re-supplying the International Space Station (ISS), experienced a catastrophic failure which triggered a self-destruct scenario within seconds after liftoff at 6:22 PM EDT from NASAs Wallops Flight Facility on Virginias Atlantic shore.

The rockets two engines were modified Soviet-era hardware initially acquired from Russia in the late 1990s by the now defunct Kirkland, Wa.-based Kistler Aerospace Corporation. At the time, prior to its merger with Rocketdyne, the Sacramento, Ca.-based Aerojet Corporation had been subcontracted by Kistler to modernize the engines. However, Aerojet subsequently gained title to the engines as part of Kistlers bankruptcy settlement. They were originally developed by the Soviet Union for their N-1 manned lunar rocket which experienced several failures resulting in the Soviet cancellation of their manned lunar landing program, said Bill Ketchum, a retired General Dynamics General Dynamics Corporation aerospace engineer, familiar with such systems.

The Aerojet Rocketdyne modifications mainly were to allow the engines to gimbal (making them steerable); to inspect them for cracking and to integrate them with new control electronics, plumbing and wiring.

Aerojet Rocketdyne gave the engines the new AJ-26 designation number and eventually sold them to the Dulles, Va.-based Orbital Sciences; that is, shortly after Orbital Sciences entered into a commercial contract with NASA for unmanned cargo resupply missions to the ISS.

Those NK-33/AJ-26 engines had been stored in 1975 in a non climate-controlled warehouse, said Dennis Wingo, an engineering physicist and CEO of Skycorp Incorporated at Moffet Field, Ca. No one wanted them, until Orbital Sciences came along with their Antares vehicle.

Wingo says the most likely culprit in Tuesdays launch failure is hardware stress, corrosion and cracking leading to engine failure, but he notes it could have also been a fuel line crack or rupture.

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Antares Failure Casts Doubt On U.S. Commercial Launch Strategy

AWB Monthly Hangout for October – Astronomy for Tibetan Monks – Video


AWB Monthly Hangout for October - Astronomy for Tibetan Monks
This month we talk to Vivian White of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific about her adventure in India teaching astronomy to Tibetan monks. Vivian had some real surprises in store when...

By: Astronomers Without Borders

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AWB Monthly Hangout for October - Astronomy for Tibetan Monks - Video

Astronomy & Astrophysics: Planck 2013 results

Oct 29, 2014 The stack of images in the figure shows: in the center, the nine all-sky images ranging from 30 GHz (left) to 857 GHz (right); at far left, a combined view of all frequencies; at far right, the all-sky image of the temperature anisotropies of the CMB derived by Planck.

Astronomy & Astrophysics is publishing a special feature of 31 articles describing the data gathered by Planck over 15 months of observations and released by ESA and the Planck Collaboration in March 2013. This series of papers presents the initial scientific results extracted from this first Planck dataset.

The Planck satellite was launched in May 2009. With the highest accuracy to date, it measures the remnants of the radiation that filled the Universe immediately after the Big Bang. It is the oldest light in the Universe, emitted when it was 380000 years old. This light is observed today as the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Its maximum intensity is at about 150 GHz (2 mm), and its temperature about 3K. The study of the CMB is currently a very active field of research in cosmology because it provides strong constraints on the cosmological models. In particular, observations of the CMB confirms the key prediction of the Big Bang model and, more precisely, of what cosmologists call the concordance model of cosmology.

Planck was designed to measure the emission from the entire sky at nine distinct wavelengths, ranging from the radio (1 cm) to the far-infrared (300 microns). Several distinct sources of emission both of Galactic and extragalactic origin contribute to the features observed in each of the nine images shown here. Radio emissions from the Milky Way are most prominent at the longest wavelengths, and thermal dust emission at the shortest. Other galaxies contribute to the mix, mostly as unresolved sources. In the middle of Planck's wavelength range, the CMB dominates the sky at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes. The spectral and spatial signatures of all these sources are used to extract an all-sky image of the tiny temperature anisotropies of the CMB with unprecedented accuracy. The properties of these fluctuations are used to derive the parameters characterizing our Universe at early times.

Papers II to X in the series describe the huge dataset obtained from the Planck satellite and released in March 2013. Using this dataset, the Planck team established the new "cosmic recipe", i.e., the relative proportions of the Universe's constituent ingredients. Normal matter that makes up stars and galaxies contributes just 4.9% of the energy of the Universe. Dark matter, to date detected only indirectly by its gravitational influence on galaxies and galaxy clusters, is found to make up 26.8%, more than previous estimates. Conversely, dark energy, a mysterious force said to be responsible for accelerating the expansion of the Universe, accounts for 68.3%, less than previously thought. The Planck team also published a new value for the age of the Universe: 13.8 billion years (see Paper XVI).

The Planck team also studied the statistical properties of the CMB in great detail. Papers XXIII, XXIV, and XXVI explore the statistical distribution of its temperature anisotropies. There is no evidence of any deviations from isotropy on small angular scales. While the observations on small and intermediate angular scales agree extremely well with the model predictions, Planck has now provided the first indisputable evidence that the distribution of primordial fluctuations was not the same on all scales and that it comprises more structure than expected at larger scales. One anomalous signal appears as a substantial asymmetry in the CMB signal observed in the two opposite hemispheres of the sky, which is that one of the two hemispheres appears to have a significantly stronger signal on average. Among the other major results, Paper XXIII of the series explores how the Planck data can constrain theories of cosmic inflation; this paper currently puts the tightest constraints on inflation.

The CMB is not only a picture of the Universe taken 13.8 billion years ago, but it was also distorted during its journey because the CMB photons interacted with the large-scale structures that they traveled through (such as galaxy and galaxy clusters). In Paper XVII of the series, the team extracts from the Planck data a map of the gravitational lensing effect visible today in the CMB and covering the whole sky. The map published in this paper provides a new way to probe the evolution of structures in the Universe over its lifetime.

A byproduct of the Planck all-sky maps are catalogs of compact sources. Paper XXIX describes the production of the largest catalog of galaxy clusters based on the Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect, a distortion of the CMB spectrum caused by very energetic electrons in a galaxy cluster, which kick CMB photons to higher energies. This catalog was used to estimate cosmological constraints, as described in Paper XX.

With the 2013 release of the intensity signal measured during the 15 first months of observation, Planck data are providing new major advances in different domains of cosmology and astrophysics. In the very near future, the Planck Collaboration will release a new dataset that includes all of its observations in intensity and in polarization. This new dataset will be a lasting legacy for the community for many years to come.

Explore further: Evidence of gravity waves clouded by interstellar dust

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Astronomy & Astrophysics: Planck 2013 results