ISS Transit of the Moon Imaged

Amateur astronomer Ed Morana is one happy guy or should be. This image is a composite of his video and is the best image of the shadow of the ISS on the face of the moon ever taken. Look at that detail!

He took eight frames of video attached to a Meade 10 inch LX200 from a viewing location in Livermore, CA located 50 miles from his home. He did make the trip especially for the attempt.

More details are on his website along with more images, videos and how he did it.

Wow! Nice Job Ed!

Image Credit: Ed Morana

[tags]transit of moon, Moon, astronomy[/tags]

Filed under: General

Have a Look at Mercury

Time is running out to get a look at Mercury, at least for a while. The best time to look is just as the sky is getting dark. Look towards the setting sun (wait until it is below the horizon!). That little speck of light will be Mercury. March 1st will be a nice sight as the crescent moon will move past the planet; should be a nice pairing.

ClickMercury is normally hidden in the glare of the sun and every now and then moves into a position where it is visible to us. While everybody most people know Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun, not many know the planet is likely shrinking. Shrinking? In 1974, NASA’s Mariner 10 spacecraft flew by Mercury and took some images of the surface. Among the features that were imaged were what planetary geologists call “lobate scarps” – those are wrinkles to the rest of us. The “wrinkle” in the image to the right are named Discovery Rupe. It is thought Mercury has an oversized iron core that is shrinking due to cooling and as the core shrinks so does the rest of the planet. Picture the wrinkles on a raisin, you get the idea.

Nobody knows what is behind the wrinkles for sure, just like nobody knows for sure what the “mystery-substance” is at the planets poles. Based on the Mariner’s images whatever the substance is, it is bright. Even more bizarre as a shrinking iron core, among the favorites is ice. You wouldn’t think ice would be on a planet where the temperature exceeds 700 F (400 C), but in places the sun doesn’t ever shine the temperature is lower than -212 F (-350 C), or so researchers believe.

We may learn more about these oddities when the Messenger space probe arrives in 2008.

Mercury is a planet not many people have seen or knew they were looking at it. Pity, we’re so busy with the hustle and bustle of our everyday lives we don’t even take the time to look around, be different – check it out.

Image Credit: NASA, Mark Robinson, Northwestern University via Science@NASA, Arecibo Radar (J. Harmon, P. Perrilat, and M. Slade).

[tags]Mercury, NASA, Messenger[/tags]

Filed under: General

Success

More or less….

Filed under: General

Downtime

The blog will be offline for maintenance tomorrow begining at about 5:30 am. Hopefully it will be something less than a couple of hours, unless it implodes then it will be longer. I just hope it doesn’t go supernova :)

Filed under: General

Sweet!


$ 279.00

Gee, that’s what I paid for my ’70. Really good scope though, excellent optics. So they come out with a larger arperture for the same price, my luck. Oh well if you’re looking for a decent scope for not a lot of money — this is it. Comes with everything, put it together and take it out. Click the image and check it out at telescopes.com.

Filed under: General

X-ray Image of the Galactic Center

This is a Chandra X-ray image showing the many X-ray sources in our galaxy’s center. Most of the sources are black holes and neutron stars, scientists have found most of the X-ray in our galaxy come from millions of dim sources that cannot be imaged, white dwarfs and stars without active coronas.

The story from NASA.

Credit: NASA/UMass/D.Wang et al.

[tags]Chandra,NASA[/tags]

Filed under: General

Next Page »