Archive for the ‘Tuesday Pictures’ Category

Perseids tomorrow night!

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

The Perseids are a shower of meteors which fall on Earth every year in July and August. The shower lasts for a while, but the rate is expected to peak tomorrow night, when you may be able to see a few meteors every minute if you’ve got a good clear sky. I’d definitely recommend going out to have a look - it’s probably the most impressive astronomical event you can watch with your bare eyes, unless you’re lucky enough to live in range of the Northern or Southern Lights. It’s also one of the oldest recorded events: there are Chinese writings documenting the shower at least as early as 36 AD.

A short guide on how to look for them is here, but really you can’t go far wrong by heading out to an open dark area and looking up!

The Perseids last year. This is a combination of 227 separate images taken throughout the night and combined, to show the circular paths across the sky the meteors take due to the Earth's rotation. Click for credit.

The Perseids last year. This is a combination of 227 separate images taken throughout the night and combined, to show the circular paths across the sky the meteors take due to the Earth's rotation. Click for credit.

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Tuesday video: Hayabusa’s fiery return

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

First, a video (you should definitely watch it in full-screen, or look at this high-resolution copy. The fireworks are beautiful):

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That was the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa (Japanese for “peregrine falcon”), returning to Earth two days ago after a seven year voyage. It went to explore an asteroid called 25143 Itokawa, which orbits the Sun at an avergae distance a bit further than the Earth but closer than Mars.

Lots of other spacecraft have flown close by asteroids to look at them before, but Hayabusa did something special: it actually landed on the asteroid briefly, so it could collect a sample and bring it back to Earth. This is the first time that a manmade machine has landed on a celestial body other than the Moon and returned home, which is a pretty exciting first.

The plan was for the craft to fire some metal pellets into the surface of the asteroid, and catch the debris thrown up by the impact to bring back for study. Unfortunately though, a problem with the firing mechanism may mean that the pellets weren’t fired (it can be hard to be sure what’s going on on a robotic craft a hundred million kilometres from home). But even if they didn’t fire, it’s possible that the craft itself threw up enough dust to catch - the pellets were to make absolutely sure - so there’s a chance we’ll have a usable sample anyway.

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Tuesday picture: a galaxy in a wind-tunnel

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

A month or so ago I wrote about the galaxy NGC 4522 undergoing the process of ‘ram pressure stripping’ as it falls through a cluster of galaxies. Although the space between the galaxies seems pretty empty it has a thin gas floating in it - and there’s enough there that a galaxy ploughing through at hundreds of kilometers a second feels an enormous wind in its face, with the result that is gas is blasted off it into a trailing cloud. This stripping is a fairly interesting process with profound consequences for the galaxy in question, so astronomers are obviously interested in studying it. But - as is often the case when you study such a vast and slow-moving beast as a galaxy - some questions can be difficult to answer just by looking through a telescope.

A simulated galaxy undergoing ram stripping. The image is about a million light years top to bottom.

A simulated galaxy undergoing ram stripping. The image is about a million light years top to bottom.

For example: what’s the most important property of the gas in determining the amount of stripping that goes on? Is it the density of the gas, or the speed at which the galaxy hits it? Then again, does the temperature of the gas have a bigger effect? To answer this question observationally we’d find lots of galaxies undergoing stripping, measure all the quantities we’re interested in, and look for a relationship. But it might not turn out to be as simple as all that. For instance, the gas tends to be hotter and denser in bigger clusters. So if we find a relationship between stripping and density, it could just be telling us about the cluster mass. Since cluster masses are often quite hard to measure accurately - and in fact we often measure them by looking at the gas temperature - sorting out which variables are affecting what can be tricky.

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Tuesday picture: two marbles

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Here is Earth with her Moon…

Earth and Jupiter with their moon systems. Credit: NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems.

Earth and Jupiter with their moon systems. Credit: NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems.

…and Jupiter with three of his.

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Tuesday picture: happy birthday Hubble!

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

The Hubble Space Telescope turned twenty years old this weekend. In those two decades it’s produced a huge amount of scientific output, with over 8,000 peer-reviewed papers based on Hubble data. Perhaps almost as importantly, it’s brought a great many beautiful pictures to an extremely broad audience; it’s contribution to astronomers’ outreach and education efforts through these pictures and the Hubble Office for Public Outreach is incalculable.

This is a stunning picture released by NASA and ESA to celebrate the anniversary. It’s of a nebula - a cloud of gas and dust - called Carina, which is forming new stars at one of the highest rates in our galaxy. And that means that, just as I’ve said of other nebulae, it’s a pretty violent place. I’m posting this on the move, so I encourage you to go to the Hubble site for a full description.

A star-forming region in the Carina Nebula, 75,000 light-years away

A star-forming region in the Carina Nebula, 75,000 light-years away

Tuesday picture: a Hexagon on Saturn

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Here’s a picture of the North pole of Saturn, taken by the Cassini spacecraft in 2006 from a distance of half a million miles. The colours aren’t what you’re used to because this is an infrared image, showing heat given off by the planet. The white parts are clouds which block that light - in the original image they’d have been black, gaps in the pattern of observed light, but this is essentially a negative.

But after the colour another obvious feature jumps out: clouds in the shape of a hexagon. What’s that doing there?

A hexagonal pattern of clouds at Saturn's North pole

A hexagonal pattern of clouds at Saturn's North pole

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Tuesday video: water detected on Earth

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Courtesy of Bad Astronomy’s Phil Plait, here’s a video of Earth taken by NASA’s Deep Impact probe some 18 million kilometers away. The pictures are taken in infrared light, just outside our visible range, and shifted into visible light to make a video we can watch. The half of the planet’s surface facing the Sun is lit up; the other half, of course, is in night.

Although the whole day-time half of the Earth is lit, there’s one point on its surface which occasionally shows up with a bright flash (watch the middle of the black circle in the video). That’s caused by sunlight reflecting off water! It shows up in only one spot because the angle between Sun, water and spacecraft needs to be exactly right. (By way of analogy, imagine a small mirror being held up in a brightly sun-lit room. You can see the mirror no matter which angle its held at, but you only get blinded by a flash of reflected sunlight if it’s angled just right.) As the Earth turns a different part of its surface moves into that correctly-angled spot, which always remains in the same part of the spacecraft’s view of view.

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Tuesday picture: the winds of change

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Galaxies are gregarious creatures: many of them live in clusters. Our own Milky Way and its neighbour Andromeda are the core members of a ‘Local Group’ of some 30 smaller galaxies. But that’s small fry compared to the Virgo cluster, by far the biggest object in the nearby universe: the cluster’s about 60 million light-years away, 2 million or so in radius, and contains between 1500 and 2000 galaxies. Here’s one of them, NGC 4522. Notice how the disc seems almost to be bent upwards, with a sprinkle of blue stars above it as though they were floating off from the galaxy? As it turns out, that’s exactly what they are doing.

NGC 4522 descends through the Virgo cluster

NGC 4522 descends through the Virgo cluster

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Tuesday picture: spot the odd one out

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Just a short one this week, as I’m very busy at work. I’m also working on a couple of astronomy podcasts, the first of which will be online in a few weeks. I’ll let you know when they’re up.

Stephan's Quintet, by Hubble

Stephan's Quintet, by Hubble. Click to enlarge.

This beautiful group is a cluster of galaxies called Stephan’s Quintet. Its members are orbiting each other in a slow dance which, many millions of years in the future, will most likely end with a series of mergers to form a single super-galaxy. Two of them, near the centre, are already quite easy to mistake for a single object.

But one of the galaxies here is an odd one out, not really part of the cluster at all: in fact it’s about seven times closer to Earth than the others, at a mere 40 million light years instead of 290 million. Can you tell which one?

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Tuesday picture: recycled Christmas trees

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Although five gold rings would be perhaps more appropriate, here’s a somewhat late Christmas tree on the fifth day of the festival:

The Christmas Tree Nebula, NGC 2264

The Christmas Tree Nebula, aka NGC 2264

Unlike the names of some nebulae, the ‘Christmas Tree Nebula’ is one which actually fits pretty well. Both the shape and the colour used to represent the light in this image are evocative of a tree, and it’s even complete with baubles - hot new stars forming from gas collapsing out of the clouds in the nebula.

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