Friday, June 19, 2015

Jupiter and Venus in Incredible Conjunction


       Something extraordinary is happening right now in the evening sky after sunset that in another millennium would have the world turned upside down.
       It is somewhat amazing to me that there isn’t some minor hysteria and wild predictions as what might happen during the next two weeks of celestial “magic.”
       Because what’s going on in the stars after sunset is something that demanded attention thousands of years ago, and now it is being completely ignored except for the brethren of amateur astronomers poised to capture the event with their cameras.
       Just what am I talking about?
       Something no less than what might be the return appearance of the famous Star of Bethlehem…and I’m not kidding!
       On the night of Wednesday, June 30, 2015, the two brightest planets, Venus and Jupiter, will seem to merge as one star to the naked eye—exactly what happened on the night of June 17, 2 BC.
Jupiter, top, and Venus
photo by MarQ
       This “super” conjunction of the two planets that have been characterized as the King and Queen of many ancient mythologies has been one solid explanation for the most famous star of all, the Star of Bethlehem.  In our only source, the Bible Book of Mathew says guided “Wise Men” from the Far East to the manger in Bethlehem where the Christian Messiah was born. 
       Both the conjunction 2015 and 2 BC occurred in the regal constellation Leo the Lion, near the bright yellow star Regulus, known as the “Regal One.”
This might be the event that triggered a clan of wise skywatchers from Persia to saddle up the caravan and travel the 600 miles to a town called Bethlehem and an infant named Jesus.
       This beautiful night sky event has been playing out in our pre-Summer nights, just like they did 2,017 years ago. To the ancient cultures these god-like planets chased each other in the Zodiac house of stars that was considered the place for laws and royalty.
Venus below Pollux and Castor
Photo by MarQ

       Yes, amateur astronomers have been watching for six months the convergence of Venus towards Jupiter, with the bright yellow star Regulas nearby. Called a “conjunction” in astronomy talk, the meaning is when two celestial bodies are in the same proximity of the sky, usually within 5 degrees of each other. Five degrees is the distance an arm-length human fist covers in the sky, of the distance between the pointer stars of the Big Dipper.   
While Jupiter and Venus are near each other about every eight years, it is a rare event centuries apart that will have both planets visible in the same low power eyepiece of a telescope for a few hours.
The separation will be less than the width of the Moon, which is one-half degree—or the width of your outstretched pinky finger. During the conjunction of 2 BC, the planets were even closer, Venus nearly covering up Jupiter.  
       Though close in the sky, it is a line-of-sight perspective as the planets are actually more than 500 million miles apart.  Venus is close to the Earth at about 20 million miles away while Jupiter is on the other side of the Sun 600 million miles away and a month away from going behind our star and popping back up in the morning sky. 
       It was just a little more than 2,000 years ago that ancient star watchers also observed with fascination as the brilliant white Venus kept moving upward to the gold Jupiter under the scrutiny of nearby Regulus.  The significance was even more impressive to the ancient stargazers as the quick moving Mercury moved in and out of the scene during the two months of celestial cat-and-mouse in 
the Spring of 2 BC. 
       In the 21st Century we know that Jupiter is coincidentally the largest of the eight planets and named after the King of the Gods in Roman mythology.  And Venus is shrouded in clouds, giving it a pearly white and bright appearance that the ancients associated with virginity and birth.  Leo the Lion was one of 12 constellations where the planets, Moon and Sun are always found, and each was thought as a celestial house of influence on the lives of man. Leo was an authority figure and lawgiver in the ancient minds of astrology.
       This month’s spectacular conjunction of the two brightest planets is silently ignored by the astrologers of our millennium.  But 2,000 years ago there would be a buzz in the civilized lands about the King of the Gods being visited by the Queen of Fertility, and the news about it being reported by swift, mythical messenger Mercury.
       In fact, this dance of the special wandering stars among the royal house of the favored constellations had to be watched even more intently by the ancient Zoastrian priests of the ancient world.  For centuries they had been looking for signs in the sky that a Messiah of the Hebrews would be born, as predicted in ancient teachings from prophets like Abraham and Moses.
       And when the King and Queen of the night stars merged into one star for a few brief hours on June 17, 2 BC, skywatchers interpreted it as a sign from their God, and thus the famous story of the Bible’s Gospel of Matthew unfolded.
       But the reaction in the 21st Century is quite blasé.  There are no religious outcries that I can find anywhere on the Internet.  No wacko groups are professing that the end of the world is near.  I can’t find any predictions of the return of Jesus.  Nor any apocalyptic predictions of famine, drought or pestilence. 
       Gee, anybody remember Y2K fears of a computer melt-down? Or how about in 1997 Heaven’s Gate? There were 39 members of the cult who committed suicide in matching outfits and Nike shoes. They believed they were catching a ride to eternity aboard spaceship following Comet Hale-Bopp!
       Really? A re-creation of what could have been the most famous star in history—THE Star of Bethlehem and nobody wants a piece of it?  I can’t find a decent tabloid on the newsstands, any mention in the UFO magazine rack or any special discounts at the corner Palm Reader’s shack. 
       This beautiful conjunction of Venus and Jupiter is only talked about in the usual monthly publications of Astronomy and Sky & Telescope, as well as the 2015 almanacs and calendars of celestial events.

       Venus has been jumping up from the horizon to met Jupiter before it begins dropping back down to swing into the morning sky by the early Autumn.  Jupiter slips behind the Sun in August. In the September 2015, the planetary pair will dazzle the pre-dawn skies into morning twilight.
       Any doubters about the similarity of these conjunctions 2,017 years apart? You can check it out for yourself by downloading the popular desktop planetarium program, Stellarium.org.  It is free and takes about five minutes to install on your computer.   
       What will be amazing about this event should be the photos taken of both planets in the same field of view.  Venus will have a gibbous phase and be a little bigger than Jupiter with its squashed poles with several wide, dark bands of clouds cutting across the globe.  Jupiter will have three moons on one side and one on the other of its easily visible four moons discovered by Galileo.
       To prepare for any photos, or just to enjoy the peak of the conjunction on the night of June 30th, pay attention to where the planets are as they set over the upcoming nights. 
       You’ll have a ring-side seat to see celestial mechanics as played out by the laws of physics. 
It might not be a time for the return of any Messiah, but you can certainly enjoy the spirituality of the event with a knowledge that surpasses anybody living two millennia ago. 
       I’ll be watching, of course.  And just in case I can hitch a ride somewhere that night, I’ll be wearing my sneakers.

       

Monday, January 26, 2015

NASA’s DARKEST WEEK 

HAS SILVER LINING


       NASA's darkest week in its history ends with the lessons learned orbiting Earth in the incredible International Space Station.
       Within a week, NASA and space watchers mourn the loss of 17 brave spaceflight pioneers. It's just a coincidence that the sorrow of three American space fatalities is relived over such a short span of time. 
The mistakes causing the fatal disasters are well-known human blunders when looking with hindsight.  Acknowledged and corrected, there always lurks another failure that will, someday, claim the lives of more space travelers.
NASA's first astronaut fatalities in a spacecraft occurred during rehearsals on the launch pad when Apollo 1 caught fire and killed three spacemen eventually bound for the Moon.   That occurred on Jan. 27, 1967—48 years ago.
       Incredibly, 29 years have passed since the launch explosion of Shuttle Challenger claimed the lives of seven astronauts on Jan. 28th.  The dead included the Teacher-In-Space winner Christa McAuliffe. The 1986 space disaster was one of those “Where were you when?” events of a generation.
And the last NASA space fatality was 12 years ago on Feb. 1 when during reentry from a successful mission Space Shuttle Columbia was ripped apart over East Texas and Western Louisiana as it approached Kennedy Space Port for landing in Florida. Seven astronauts were killed, including Israel’s first astronaut and war hero Ilan Ramone.
       The Russian Space Program has claimed four lives in spacecraft during flight.  A cosmonaut died when a parachute failed after reentry of Soyuz 1 in 1967, and three cosmonauts suffocated when a valve opened during the reentry of Soyuz 11 in 1971.  But they’ve had their share of close calls, including a 1997 fire on their space station Mir.
       The newest player in human space flight, China, has safely launched 10 “taikonauts” on five spaceflights, including two women. Their small space station was occupied twice, and the world awaits the next Chinese space mission as they have boasted of going to the Moon.
       The American disasters could have been avoided and no doubt adversely affected those who were in charge:
Gus Grissom, Ed White, Roger Chaffee
·      The Apollo 1 fire occurred on the launch pad during a routine test.  Bare wires created a spark that ignited the 100 per cent oxygen cabin, creating a fire that suffocated Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee. 
    They died trying to open the hatch that normally took several minutes to unscrew.  Among the hundreds of changes to the Apollo spacecraft, the new hatch could be opened in less than 30 seconds.
Jarvis, Onizuki, McNair, Resnick, McAuliffe, Smith, Scoobee
·      Space Shuttle Challenger was doomed at liftoff when an O-ring seal broke on one of the segments of the right solid rocket booster, sending out flames like a blow touch that blew up the fuel tank just 70 seconds into launch as America watched on television.  Freezing temperatures compromised the  integrity of the rubber O-ring causing concern from technicians, but launch officials proceeded with the 9 am blastoff on a chilly Florida morning with a fatal outcome. The other astronauts who gave their lives on the 25th Shuttle launch were Commander Dick Scobee, pilot Mike Smith and mission specialists Christa McAuliffe, Judy Resnick, Ellison Onizuka, Ron McNair and Gregory Jarvis.
front: Chawla, Husband, Clark, Ramon; back: Brown, McCool, Anderson
·      Columbia was also doomed at liftoff when a suitcase-size chunk of insulation flaked off the huge, orange external fuel tank, busting a hole in the left wing. The damage was suspected by some technicians but not confirmed by orbiting spy satellites, though a request was made. And astronauts on board couldn’t see the wings out their windows. The 17-day science mission in the SpaceHab module in the cargo bay—planned without any spacewalks which might have seen the damage—was perfect.  That is until the fiery reentry penetrated the fist-size hole in the wig, starting the break-up of the Shuttle over California at the supersonic speed of 5,000-plus mph just minutes before landing. The astronauts who perished were Commander Rick Husband, pilot Willie McCool, Michael Anderson, David Brown, Kalpana Chawla, Laurel Clark and Israeli Ilan Ramon. 
       After 54 years of spaceflight, that probably isn't too bad of a track record.  All counted the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo flights total 30 space flights. Add the 135 Shuttle flights and that makes for 165 American blast offs, and only two failures.  That is just a 1.2 per cent failure rate, not bad for the most complicated machines ever made by man.
There have been several astronaut deaths in NASA aircraft, and even car wrecks. There is also a short list of technicians who died in accidents at NASA facilities. 
       What is incredible is that more people haven't died in the construction of the International Space Station. Taking 12 years to build and taking 35 Space Shuttle missions, a couple dozen Soyuz flights and another dozen unmanned ferry spacecraft, there have been no mishaps.  And the more than 150 spacewalks necessary to put it all together have also been error free.     
       As of Feb. 1. 2015, there have been 538 people who have orbited Earth.  The total time spent in space by humans is more than 125 years!  Add to the safety record the more than 300 spacewalks and 12 men walking on the Moon and it’s clear that all the intensive training and heavily tested spacecrafts have paid off in conquering outer space. 
Mercury 7 Astronauts 1960
Astronauts and cosmonauts are not heroes anymore. It's the human side of astronauts that have given them their new anonymity.  And in many ways, an astronaut is just a cool job, like an airline pilot or a boat captain. 
     Americans knew the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo astronauts by name.  Their missions, and sometimes their families, frequently appeared in newspaper and magazine stories. 
       Astronauts stopped being heroes when the Apollo 13 crew returned to Earth from their near-death disaster on the way to the Moon in April 1970. The Hollywood movie “Apollo 13” accurately portrayed the drama after the crippling explosion on the way to the Moon and made astronauts Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert household names to movie lovers.
        For the tremendous risk of space travel, astronauts aren’t paid as well as you might think. The paycheck of an astronaut is on par with that of other civil servants like firemen and policemen.  Many cash in on their fame after retirement—everybody loves hanging out with an astronaut! 
       At the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida is the giant mirror Memorial Wall to the fallen heroes of space travel. Their names are etched and illuminated for remembrance of the eternal light that shines on the manned space program. 
       Throughout America, public school buildings have been named for Grissom, McAuliffe and most of the other astronauts who've given their lives to push the envelope of manned space exploration.
       NASA and Russia have been good at minimizing fatalities and injuries during half a Century of human space flight.  The manned hours in space has been accumulated to into experience that has been used to
build the amazing International Space Station.
       The ISS, built over 12 years beginning in 1998 with more than 50 separate manned Shuttle and Soyuz rocket launches, has been a completed space laboratory for 5 years.  Making 17 orbits of the Earth every day, the space laboratory has united 16 nations of the world in a goal that took diplomatic cooperation as well as coordination in space construction. 
       And keeping ISS alive and well are men and women who have trained for years to spend three to six months in outer space, performing important science. Six people make up the three Expedition crews a year rotated out three at a time by the Russian’s Soyuz spaceship. In March 2015, an American and Russian be launched to spend a full year on the ISS, and the world will get to know space veterans Scott Kelly and Mikhail Kornienko on their long mission.
       With six people doing their jobs in relative anonymity, all is well aboard the ISS. But the next moment something goes awry, that is when you'll know another astronaut or cosmonaut by face and name. 
       Let's hope there isn't a fatality involved. 




Wednesday, October 8, 2014

AUTUMN SKIES DELIGHT FOR SENSES

       The autumn skies are one of the starry delights of the year, and the last time you might spend night time outdoors.
       Let’s face it, the days are numbered that you’ll be outside after dark as cold weather and busy holidays keep most of us inside when the day turns to night.
       And we don’t want to think about those January and February cold nights, when there are dark skies at 6 pm but not much gumption to brave the usually harsh weather.
       So make some time every week for an hour or so stargazing by just sitting outdoors in comfortable clothes on a comfy recliner and allowing your eyes to adapt to the night.
       I guarantee it won’t be wasted time.  I think you might be recharged a little bit, and for sure you’ll witness with eyes and ears a new perspective on your neighborhood.
       Most of us will be battling the security lights of the neighbors, so try and block yourself from annoying stray light.  Start relaxing outside in the deep twilight and see all kinds of nature stirring about as the stars come out to play with you
Your eyes take about 15 minutes away from white light to allow the pupils to open wider and allow a dramatically better night vision.  The human eye isn’t sensitive to red light, and flashlights with a red bulb or cellophane are what’s needed to look at a star map or equipment.  As your eyes open wide like an owl, use your ears to hear the night world around us coming alive. 
       You’ll hear crickets and other insects in their nocturnal cacophony, then a few bats will dart by, snagging flying insects that buzzed by you earlier. You realize car tires make a sound of their own on the streets, and somewhere overhead a propeller plane is heading to a twilight landing. A dog barks, quarreling cats howl and in the distance a train’s whistle moans. 
       All of a sudden, it’s dark.
       Even if the Moon is high and the lunar light drowns out the stars, there will always be a few dozen of the brightest to shine through. And maybe a planet or two. 
       Getting familiar with the night sky is like meeting neighbors that change as you drive down a road that repeats every 12 months. Seeing the Great Square of Pegasus in the northeast this Autumn time of the year is like seeing an old friend you haven’t talked to since February when the celestial horse was setting in the west.

A star chart is essential and fun to use when beginning to get curious about which star is which and the starry outlines of the constellations. A “planisphere” is a star wheel that can be moved to show you the star patterns at any date and time, and they can be found at most book stores. Libraries will have several books on constellations, and free sky charts are on the Internet, like StarMaps.com.
Hey! That 1965 edition of the New Encyclopedia Britannica you inherited from your parents—or snagged cheaply at a yard sale—will no doubt have a star chart for the North and South Hemispheres of Earth.  Even some world atlases will have star charts.  It doesn’t matter how old your star chart is, the constellations haven’t changed in millions of years, only the positions of the Sun, Moon and planets change.
To know the night sky is truly a rewarding experience that never gets old. There is so much to learn…and so little time. You can’t stargaze when the Moon is bright for a week or so around full phase, and then you have plenty of cloudy nights. 
Then everyone has a personal life that has lots of evening commitments.  So in reality, you might be lucky to seriously stargaze just five or six times a month.
Before you know it, the night sky has changed its characters, the constellations you were learning are setting, and new ones are rising in the east. After a season or two of steady stargazing, you’ll come to learn the rhythm of our Earth’s journey around our favorite star, the Sun. The rewards will be something you only measure inside your mind.
This October 2014 we are treated to an encounter by two stellar objects the ancient stargazers would have feasted about—the conjunction of Mars and its antithesis, Antares. 
Literally “not Ares,” the Greek god of war, this giant, old red star has few rivals in our nearby Universe. Mars is the Roman god of war, and that name has stuck to this red, wandering “star” that all cultures recognized as blood, a warrior or omen for conflict. 
This Autumn 2014, Mars is above and to the left (west) of Antares, which is the heart of Scorpius, a giant fish hook of stars that curve to the southern horizon. This rather small constellation (in the Zodiac, only Cancer is smaller) looks like its namesake, the stinger lying near the center of the Milky Way.  Mars will be visiting the Milky Way this fall as it goes from Scorpius than into the feet of the Snake Handler, Ophiuchus (the unrecognized 13th constellation of the Zodiac) and into Sagittarius by mid-November.
Milky Way photo by MarQ

The 2014 conjunction of Mars with Antares happens after summertime of watching Mars move back and forth in Virgo between planet Saturn and bright star Spica, This would be huge news in the astrology-fueled world of the ancient stargazers. Five thousand years ago, the plains of Mesopotamia and the valleys of Babylon would be abuzz trying to figure out the intent of the gods as the celestial scene played out over months.  Being the “Chief Astrologer” to a King would be a great gig in the ancient world—as long as your stargazing predictions came true! 
Both Mars and Antares have nearly the identical hue of red and brightness. Mars gets significantly brighter when near Earth every two years or so. But the similarities stop at the naked eye threshold when seeing these two red “stars. 
       They are two physically interesting worlds.  Antares is a super giant star, nearly 500 million miles in diameter, so huge it would swallow up the orbit of Mars if it replaced our Sun. It also has a bluish companion star orbiting it, easily seen in a telescope. Antares is 325 Light Years away, meaning the light we see tonight left this giant, dying star in 1689…the year Peter the Great became Czar of Russia!
       That’s a concept that ancient astronomers would never grasp—that we actually look back in time because the stars are so far away.  Even light traveling at 186,000 miles a second—6 trillion miles in a year—takes years to traverse the distance to even the closest stars to our Sun. 
       So take advantage of these mild Autumn nights that have so many starry friends awaiting your acquaintance. Look up and imagine each starry point as a world of its own, probably with several planets and maybe a companion star orbiting it.

       And just maybe you’ll find it so enjoyable that you’ll continue stargazing though the Winter and get in rhythm with the seasonal stars.  You won’t be disappointed. 

Friday, July 18, 2014


Apollo Moon Conquest 45 Years Ago

It was 45 years ago when a troubled America began turning its attention to a distraction from our problems—the first Moon landing. The year 1969 was an unforgettable time of triumph and tragedy. Racial strife...women's lib...President Richard Nixon...Vietnam...nuclear disarmament...Woodstock... But America's domestic woes and the unpopular war 9,000 miles away were nearly forgotten in the Summer of '69 when the historic events of Apollo 11 culminated in the footprints of Americans on an alien world 240,000 miles away. Mankind’s greatest adventure was set in full motion July 16 at 9:32 AM when three Apollo 11 astronauts were blasted off the Earth by the largest rocket ever built, the Saturn V. It was the culmination of a decade of technological innovation that spread world-wide and continues into the 21st Century.
MOON SHIP ATOP SATURN V AT LAUNCH PAD 
The first steps of the risky Moon voyage by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) began in 1961 with America’s first spaceflight in 1961 by Alan Shepard. And it was fueled by President John F. Kennedy's directive to “land and man on the Moon, and return him safely to Earth before the end of the decade.” Americans
weren't the only ones wanting to go to the Moon. Communist Soviet Union put the first man in space, and continued with propaganda-fueled space spectaculars of the first female and first two and three person crews in orbit. But the Russians were conducting their space program in secret, while Americans showed their triumphs and failures to the world. 
 The 1960s saw a logical progression of building blocks of knowledge about the unforgiving unknowns of outer space.  First were six one-man Mercury spaceflights, and then nine two-man Gemini missions.  Finally there was the three-man Apollo Command Module that was tested in Earth orbit with Apollo 7.  The bold, orbit-only mission to the Moon by Apollo 8 in December 1968 made the world see America was serious and almost ready to make those giant steps on our celestial neighbor 240,000 miles away.  
In March 1969, Apollo 9 tested in earth-orbit the moonship that would take two men to the surface.  Designed only to fly in space and land on the Moon, the Lunar Excursion Module resembled a giant four-legged spider and was called “LEM.” The Command ship 
Command Module and Lunar Lander
would orbit the Moon and return to Earth, the LEM would land with the leg section becoming the launch platform for the bulbous, pressurized cabin. Both vehicles would need code names chosen by the astronauts. The full dress rehearsal was made by Apollo 10 astronauts when “Charlie Brown” was in orbit May 21, 1969 and the moonship “Snoopy” flew to within 9 miles of the lunar target in Mare Tranquility. Despite a few problems in the landing radar system, the mission was an overwhelming success and NASA ramped up for the actual lunar landing. Finally, the Moon was within man's grasp. The stage was set, and every move of the principle characters were followed in the media for the next two months in the Summer of '69. It was a Thursday on July 16th when one million people lined the roads leading to Cape Kennedy, Florida to watch the morning launch of the mighty Saturn V moon rocket. Crammed in the tiny cockpit of “Columbia” were astronauts Michael Collins, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin and Commander Neil Armstrong, while nestled beneath them was the moonship, “Eagle.” The media coverage world-wide was unprecedented, rivaling the 24-hour coverage of the assassination of President Kennedy in November 1963. The morning and evening editions of newspapers, radio, and the three broadcasting networks—ABC, CBS and NBC—reported up-to-the-minute reports from NASA on the status of the moonship. The non-stop TV coverage began Saturday afternoon July 19th when the two docked spacecraft entered lunar orbit. ABC’s Jules Bergman and CBS’s Walter Cronkite spent the next 36 hours on the air with NASA astronauts and rocket scientists trying to explain and document the adventure. The moment of landing came at 4:17 pm EST Saturday, followed by Armstrong’s first footprint on an alien world at 9:28 pm EST. The two-hour moonwalk by Armstrong and Aldrin was broadcast live by a Black & White video camera on a tripod, and included a congratulatory conversation from President Richard Nixon.
Neil Armstrong's first step seen live on television
The lunar stay ended at 1:52 pm Monday afternoon when the “Eagle” spacecraft blasted off the alien world, meeting up two hours later with Collins orbiting in the moonship “Columbia.” The three day voyage back to Earth was all smiles, and splashdown at 2 pm Thursday July 24th saw the astronaut heroes picked up by the USS Hornet, with President Nixon on deck. America had won the Moon Race, and Kennedy’s dream was realized. Today, the year 1969 is a nostalgic, far away land of 35-cent gasoline in $3,000 new cars that were parked in the garages of average American homes that cost $26,000. A great steak dinner was $10, a gallon of milk was $1.25 and. And it seemed everyone was smoking 35-cent packs of cigarettes at their work desk, in restaurants and anywhere they wanted to light up. Minimum wage was $1.60 an hour. 
Tranquility Base from lunar orbit

 Americans were watching on new color televisions (and more black and white TVs) “Get Smart!,”  “Hogan's Heroes” and “Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In.” They were listening on transistor radios to “Mrs. Robinson” by Simon and Garfunkel, “Honky Tonk Women,” by the Rolling Stones and the Beatle's last album, “Abbey Road.” And at the $1.50 ticket movies, 1969 offered “Midnight Cowboy,” “Easy Rider” and “Chitty, Chitty, Bang, Bang!” 
 The Moon Race with the Soviet Union was decidedly won by the United States—but it was very close.  The Russian's lunar spaceship was ready, but their moon rocket had blown up twice in the spring of 1969, leaving their moonship grounded. The Apollo 11 moon landing was the ultimate fatal blow in the USSR Moon plans, and they turned to earth-orbiting space stations.  
 As incredible as the Apollo 11 triumph was—indeed the debatable #1 historic event of the entire 20th Century—the conquest of the Moon was achieved against the background of an America in chaos at home with racial desegregation and at war in Vietnam.
While civil rights showdowns became ugly and American soldiers fought the Communists in Southeast Asia, rocket scientists in the USA traded space spectaculars with the top secret Moon program of Communist Russia. The Moon Race, costing American taxpayers around $40 billion at the time ($200-plus billion in 2014 dollars) and the Vietnam War (another $50 billion or more) both had their detractors—and it was amazing both were financed at the same time. 
 Now, 45 years later, we know the Soviet space program was a lot of smoke and mirrors to make them look good.  Propaganda from the USSR in the 1960s was commonplace as the two Superpowers vied for the world's attention as the technologically superior nation.
 And when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed their moonship named “Eagle” on the shores of an ancient, frozen lava ocean named Tranquility, the Soviets responded by saying they had no desire to walk on the Moon. 
But the Russians were lying, their national pride hurt.  Their moonship, named Zond, was built for just one man, and was to be attached to the two-man Soyuz spaceship, as two cosmonauts were to make the lunar voyage. 
 Moonship Zond was the size of a bulky telephone booth with landing legs and rocket engines. One lucky cosmonaut was to land in this moonship, step outside quickly to gather rocks and take photos, then blast off after only a couple hours on the surface. The whole concept was crude, highly dangerous and had little room for spacecraft system failures. 
That was a far cry from the 10-ton NASA Lunar Module that took two men to the Moon's surface on July 20, 1969, and for some 20 hours on the surface fulfilled a dream of mankind.
 The American spirit was never stronger or filled with more pride than on that amazing Sunday summer night of July 20, 1969. Maybe as many as 1 billion of the Earth's 3.6 billion people were watching live television as Armstrong and Aldrin lopped across the Moon's dusty surface.  
 Five more successful Moon landings followed, including the last three with Lunar Rovers that allowed serious geological exploration during three-day stays on the surface. 
 Forty-five years after those first tentative footsteps on an alien world, it's questionable whether the United State of America has ever swelled with more pride—or ever will again.
 Some will argue that the orbiting $100 billion International Space Station is a greater accomplishment than the Apollo moon landings.  In many technical ways it is, but the Space Station lacks the attention and drama of the lunar voyage.  
 Four and a half decades later, the voyage of Apollo 11 is a distant memory to a generation, and a footnote in history to those too young to remember.   The crowning achievement of Space Age, the events at Tranquility Base on the Moon will forever be a benchmark in mankind’s quest to find our place in the Universe. 

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Mars Red Ruby of the Night


       Mars.
       The word brings to mind all the mystery and imagination by humans.  Since ancestral man began paying attention to the five wandering stars that moved among the fixed star patterns, Mars has beckoned.
       Tonight and all through the Summer of 2014, Mars beholds your attention with just a look to the south when twilight descends.  Far from its red brilliance when it was opposite Earth in April, Mars is still a ruby red eye-catcher in the Summer darkness.  Watch Mars move against the backdrop of stars during the next months by checking its relationship to the bright, white star Spica, both celestial objects in the sprawling lady of the night, Virgo the Virgin.

       When you look at Mars, you’re looking at the one celestial object that has inspired more science fiction and questions of science facts than any other stargazing sight. Sure, plenty has been written about the Moon, but it is Mars where the hope of life has tantalized the writers of books, movies and documentaries.
Percival Lowell's Martian "Canals"
       Everyone probably has a favorite Mars movies (mine being “War of the Worlds” 1953 and “Red Planet” 2000) and maybe a science fiction or fact book (again, my favs are “Stranger in a Strange Land” by Robert Heinlein and “Mars 3-D” by Jim Bell).  Just 100 years ago, a Boston aristocrat with eccentric ways, Percival Lowell, was enjoying the afterglow of his three best sellers: “Mars” (1895), “Mars and Its Canals” (1895) and “Mars As the Abode of Life” (1908). Lowell, who built his observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz. and later began the search for Planet X, aka Pluto, is responsible for popularizing the popular notion that Mars had a dying civilization calling to Earth for help. That was the inspiration for H.G. Wells and his Earth invasion by Martians in “War of the Worlds.”
       Mars is the only planet that we see the surface, easy to do with even a small, backyard telescope when the Red Planet is at opposition every two years. The white polar caps and dark, angular markings are apparent against the orange-red of the assumed deserts. Until the Space Age began in the 1960s, the exact nature of the dark markings was unknown.  Details in large, professional telescopes were often best seen with the naked eye instead of photography because of limits of the films being used and unsteady atmosphere of Earth. Yet hundreds of features were recorded and given exotic names from Martian mythology, like Elysium, Sineus Sabous, Hellus and Syrtis Major.
       Authors have continually imagined Mars as an abode for life—if only the visiting astronaut.  Edgar Rice Burrough’s series of planet Barsoom and hero John Carter is legendary; as are the terraforming concept books of Kim Stanley Robinson: “Red Mars” (1993), “Green Mars” (1994) and “Blue Mars” (1996).  A friend called me just the other day to ask if I’d read a new best seller, “The Martian” by Andy Weir, which he plowed through in a couple sittings—then re-read it! It’s on my list, and debuted 12th on the New York Times Best Selling Fiction list.
       And the movies are filled with Martian drama and comedy, from the 1964 “Robinson Crusoe on Mars” to the comedy “Mars Attacks” (1996). The movie rights to “The Martian” have been bought and Hollywood will soon bring us the story of an astronaut stranded alone on the Red Planet.  The fascination with Mars is timeless.
       The first Martian surface feature was sketched by Dutch Astronomer Christiaan Huygens in 1659, the triangular patch called Syrtis Major. This feature was rediscovered in the 1970s to be a plateau of a shield volcano form billions of years ago.
Mars from Hubble Space Telescope

With the 21st Century invasion of Mars by American spacecraft that are in orbit and crawling on the surface, the real Mars is just as fascinating and mysterious as anything written in fiction—minus the aliens, of course. 
Many people are surprised that Mars is half the size of Earth at just 4,200 miles wide.  It is a cold world, and without a protective, thick atmosphere and shield of a magnetic system, the surface is bombarded by damaging ultraviolet rays of the Sun and cosmic rays of the Universe.
Mars is more like Antarctica, super cold, yet windy with sand being blown around everywhere.  There are eight huge volcanoes larger than anything on Earth that once belched ash around the planet.  The iron dust rusted from moisture in the air, and everything on Mars is coated with it. NASA’s rovers have a brush to scrape off the paper-thin layer of rusted volcano ash—giving the Red Planet its name since antiquity.
Looking up at Mars in the Summer of 2014 is an amazing time.  With two American rovers, two NASA orbiters, and a European robot in orbit, never has so much data on one planet been accumulated with such continuity—the satellites watching the Earth an obvious exception.
We know Mars had a watery past with a hemisphere covered with oceans. The huge volcanoes dormant for maybe 3 billion years (we think?) must have created a vast network of tube caves.  The protection of caves from the harsh space environment sterilizing the Martian surface could allow all kinds of life to flourish.  And there is plenty of evidence of underground water seeping to the surface, not to mention the billions of gallons of water frozen at the poles and buried just a few feet beneath the surface.
       There is no rain on Mars, but the polar lander Phoenix detected snow in the atmosphere that didn't reach the ground. Another discovery of the 1998 stationary lander was the melting of ice in front of the cameras—sublimating from solid water to a gas without taking liquid form.
Yet, Mars is a lot like Earth—more so, of course, than any other world in the Solar System. There are clouds and dust devils that have left squiggly lines in the deserts (and cleaned off solar panels on rovers). Evidence of flowing water is everywhere, from tapered islands in ancient rivers to pebbles in a dry creek that was in the path of NASA’s latest billion-dollar rover, Curiosity.
The imagery of Mars from the surface and orbit is astounding.  So alien in form and style that a display of Martian space art is on display through September 14 at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC.  
The surface of Mars has rocks like Earth. Of course there’s lots of vesicular basalt from volcanoes. Breccias from water sediments are also easy to find. And there is rocky andesite, volcanic sulfur and hematite that have rolled up in millions of balls the size of blueberries across the Meridinia plains that Mars rover Spirit in its amazing eight year trek.
It’s true that the surface of Mars can get a warm as 60 degrees F. on a hot summer day.  But the thin atmosphere doesn’t hold the heat well, so at your knees it might be 40 degrees and at the top of your head six feet off the ground it’s only 20 degrees or less! The thermal changes might pose problems for large structures, though six landers have operated within their limits designed by spacecraft engineers.
Martians are big our minds, and though we know they won’t be waving at us, all the evidence to support life has been discovered by American robots.  It might take astronaut cave explorers to turn over a rock and see the first alien cockroaches scatter.
So there’s plenty to think about when looking at Mars in our Summer evenings this 2014.  Let your mind go wild and join some great thinkers who have brought us both Martian fact and fiction. 





Thursday, May 15, 2014

New Meteor Shower Could Be Big

Friday/Saturday May 23rd/24th 


       The astronomy community has been abuzz with the potential major meteor shower Saturday morning that might turn into a fantastic cosmic storm.
       Any time after sunset Friday May 23 and sunrise Saturday May 24, fragments of an ancient comet will be bombarding Earth for the first time, and the predictions range from 10 to 10,000 meteors an hour!
       Once again the unpredictability of celestial events has created an excitement that will play out as the laws of physics takes Earth through a stream of tiny rocks crossing our orbit. 
       Like looking out a car window at night in a snowstorm, the comet debris seems to radiate out of a point in space—like snowflakes in headlights of the moving car.
       The dust of comet P209/LINEAR has finally crossed into the path of Earth, barreling along its 800 million mile solar orbit at 30,000 mph.  This comet was discovered in 2004, but has been around since the 1800s in a five-year orbit that loops around the Earth and back to the Sun.
Lyrid Meteor Shower April 22, 2012  (NASA All Sky Camera)
       The May Camelopardalids have not occurred before, and they will emanate out of the constellation called the Giraffe.  This will be good as Camelopardalis is an indistinct star pattern in the north between the Big and Little Dippers—so it will be visible all night long. It is just an illusion that the meteors radiate out of the giraffe, that’s just the direction in space we are plowing through.
       The predictions come from the top meteor researchers in the world and range from 20 an hour (very respectable) to 200 a minute (a meteor storm!).
Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research Center (LINEAR), NASA and the US Air Force are partners in surveying the skies for comets and asteroids that could be hazardous to our planet.  Comet 209/LINEAR is just one of hundreds of objects under surveillance.
        In fact, there are 1,470 Near Earth Objects (NEA) being watched that might someday hit the Earth, and that number changes monthly.  Gravity interactions with our Moon and other planets might alter the predicted orbit, sending a harmless asteroid or comet into a collision course with Earth.
       Asteroids don’t trail debris as they are rocky bodies from a few thousand feet to a few miles in size.  Comets are bodies of rock and ice that have their surfaces stripped when warmed up as their orbit is nearest the Sun, called perihelion. The solar wind blows two tails away from the Sun, one of gases from the ice and the other of solid debris. A comet refreezes as it heads to the farthest point from the Sun, called aphelion.
       Comet P209/LINEAR isn’t passing by Earth, it’s on the other side of the Sun.  But Earth is intersecting the debris field of the comet’s orbit, which is above and below the plane of our solar orbit.  
A couple times a month the Earth encounters debris from other comets, but most of the time there isn’t much left. But there are still some thick streams of cosmic dust left, and they create the famous and reliable meteor showers of the Lyrids, Geminids and Perseids.
Most meteors are tiny, the size of sand grains. They disintegrate from the friction of the Earth’s atmosphere when slamming into us at thousands of miles an hour.  The energy is released as light, and sometimes there is a smoky trail called a train. When a big meteor, maybe the size of a small rock, strikes the atmosphere it can explode in several blasts, light the sky and even have sound.  These are called bolides, and are being captured nearly weekly on security cameras around the world.
Debris in space is called a meteoroid, when in the Earth’s atmosphere like a “shooting star” it’s a meteor and when found on the ground it’s a meteorite.  Incredibly, some 10 tons lands on Earth everyday—that’s 20,000 pounds of cosmic debris!
And, of course, larger pieces of meteoroids—some weighing tons—have made it through the atmosphere intact, often creating craters when hitting the ground.
The potential Camelopardalis Meteor Shower will be fun to watch as the shooting stars draw attention to the circumpolar constellations of the two bears, Cassiopeia the Queen, Draco the Dragon and Cepheus the King.  
The ancient Greeks believed in an animal that was had the head of a camel and spots of a leopard—a camel-leopard.  A “new” constellation drawn up by faint stars between Ursa Major and Cassiopeia, it first appeared in star charts in a 1624 book by the German mathematician Jakob Bartsch, a son-in-law of the great astronomer-mathematician Johannes Kepler.  
You don’t need any special equipment to observer a meteor shower, just patience and some creature comforts to get you though the long hours of surveying the night sky. 
Some of the essential equipment is lawn chairs, a light blanket, refreshments, snacks and maybe a radio.  Star charts, a red flashlight to read them and a pair of binoculars will help you learn the stars and constellations and some of the celestial treasures they contain. Meteor watching can be a great time to test the waters of the hobby, and see if the astronomy bug bites.
Photography of meteors is not easy, but you might catch a few if you have a camera that can have its shutter open for 10 minutes or longer.  Set the camera on a tripod, chose an ISO sensitivity of 800 or more, and set the time exposure.  The stars will trail as they move in the sky, and the meteors will be bright streaks of light.  Capturing a meteor with a camera is tough, but worth a try while your eyes record the fleeting streaks of light.
Stay up all night this Friday, May 23, or set your alarm clock for 2-3 am on Saturday May 24 to catch a falling star.  If the skies are clear, you won’t be disappointed.  

       

Sunday, May 4, 2014

RUSSIAN COUP AT THE SPACE STATION?      

          What a predicament!

          Russia can easily take control of the earth-orbiting International Space Station, shared by 15 other countries and built piece-by-piece with 37 American Space Shuttle missions.

         And in the midst of the Ukraine crisis, the head of their space program has posted on Twitter that threat of a coup in outer space.

          Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, whose bank assets have been frozen as a target of U.S. sanctions, twitted this on April 27th:

“After analyzing the sanctions against our space industry, I suggest to the USA to bring their astronauts to the International Space Station using a trampoline.”
In other words, Rogozin, the head of the Russian Space Agency, has told America to take a flying leap if it wants access to the ISS!
INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION     NASA Photo
          Along with the US sanctions against Russia, NASA has banned any contact with the Russian Space Agency’s headquarters at Star City, outside Moscow.  Exceptions are the training underway for American astronauts and their assigned missions with cosmonauts and other foreign space fliers.
The International Space Station orbiting Earth could become literally occupied by Russians only, as they have the only spaceship that can dock there.  Their three-man Soyuz spacecraft became the only ride when Congress and the Obama Administration decided to retire in 2010 the Space Shuttle program and its three veteran Orbiters.
          The tense international situation has repercussions all over the world, but 225 miles high in outer space, the drama seems written out of a blockbuster spy novel. The International Space Station is easy to see with the naked eye as a bright star moving across the night sky, a popular object for even casual stargazers.

          Aboard the ISS is the first commander from the Japan, Koichi Wakata.  The other five members of the Expedition 39 crew are Americans are Steve Swanson and Rick Mastracchio, and three Russians: Oleg Artemyev, Alexander Skvortsov and Mikhail Tyurin.
          The crews rotate out in groups of three, as two Soyuz space craft are always attached to the amazing research facility that space insiders simply call “The Station.”
          After 150 days in space, Commander Wakata, Russian Tyurin and American Mastracchio will return to Earth in their Soyuz TMA-11M spacecraft on May 13.  That will leave two Russian and an American on the ISS until the launch of the Expedition 40 crew in Soyuz TMA-13M on May 28th consisting of a Russian, an American and a European.
          When the Ukraine crisis spurred world sanctions, NASA said the science aboard The Station would continue with Americans as planned.  But as military actions escalated, so has the rhetoric about what could happen aboard the ISS. 
          NASA has been paying up to $70 million to a seat in the cramped Soyuz capsule, a spaceship design first flown in 1968 and modernized as technology progressed. 
Russian Soyuz spaceship docked at ISS  NASA photo

          America’s four to six person Orion space capsule is still three or four years away from test flights, let alone routine missions to the ISS. The only other spaceship in the world is China’s Shenzhou, a knock-off of the bulbous, three section Soyuz.
          China is not a partner in the $100 billion ISS, and has flown only five very ambitious human missions, including two to their own, small space station. But could China become a space partner of the ISS and supply rides?  Back in the 1970s, it seemed impossible that the USA and Russia would cooperate in outer space.
The Station has recently been granted a life extension until at least 2024. The orbiting outpost is the largest manmade structure in space, and rotating crews of astronauts and cosmonauts have manned it since 2000. Five space agencies representing 15 different countries helped build the space laboratory.
Could Russia take the ISS as hostage?
If Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to, it’s a real possibility.
Not only do the Russian’s have the only manned spaceships going to The Station, but they have the only weapons on-board, too!
That’s right, under the commander’s seat of both Soyuz spaceships now docked to the ISS is a combination rifle/shotgun/machete weapon that has flown on every manned mission. Called the TP-82, it is the bail-out gun for Russian military pilots. Because the Soyuz spacecraft lands on solid ground, an errant trajectory could necessitate a survival scenario for a day or two—which has occurred several times.
So, Russians could execute an actual armed take-over of The Station.  What repercussions would that create?
NASA Chief Charlie Bolden has noted that the space station has been through “multiple international crises” since crews began living there full-time on Nov. 2, 2000. That includes the 2008 war between Russia and Georgia over break-away regions Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
If Russia kicked everyone off the ISS and maintained it themselves, not just America would be affected.  Five space agencies are involved, the others being Canada, Europe and Japan, all contributing billions of dollars to the development and construction of The Station.
The crisis might accelerate the work being done by three private aerospace firms building manned spacecraft.  Already the firm Space-X has flown successful unmanned supply mission with their spaceship called Dragon, which is being modified for human travel.  Behind it are two other spaceflight firms, Orbital Science Corp. and Virgin Galactic.
          Currently there have been 212 individuals who have docked with The Station, including 31 women (none of which have been Russian). That represents a total of 355 “tickets” punched, with the multiple visits by single astronauts. Six people have made four flights, including current crewman Mastracchio. There are 26 persons who have made three flights and 76 people have lived on the ISS twice.
          As tensions continue between Russia and the Free World over their actions in the Ukraine, the politics will spill upward to outer space and the crown jewel of 50 years of space exploration—the International Space Station.
          Some facts about the ISS:
·       The covering the size of a football field, the entire complex weighs 816,000 pounds.
·       The acre of solar panels generates 110 kilowatts of power, and the panels move to face the Sun as The Station orbits.
·       Traveling at 17,500 mph (5 miles per second) at an average 220 miles high, the ISS takes 90 minutes to orbit the 25,000 mile circumference of Earth.
·       Keep in mind that the ISS orbit is in 45 minutes of daylight, then 45 minutes of night, creating 17 sunrises and sunsets each 24-hour period.
·       Eight tons of food is required to support a six person expedition crew for half a year. Because the sense of taste is somewhat suppressed in space, crews enjoy spicy foods, including shrimp cocktail, tortillas, barbecue beef brisket, breakfast sausage links, chicken fajitas, vegetable quiche, macaroni and cheese, candy-coated chocolates and cherry blueberry cobbler. Lemonade is the most popular drink.
·       There are 13 rooms on the ISS, the most popular being the seven-window cupola, where spacefliers have a breathtaking view of Earth and space.