Posts Tagged ‘Night Sky’

The Sky Tonight: Aug 5 – Aug 11

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

This week’s “Look Up” report features the waning and waxing Moon, sunset planets, and a Perseids preview!  Audio and Text versions available, here.

Fun Facts: The Perseids!

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Fun Facts About the Perseids!

*The Perseid meteor shower is named for the constellation Perseus, from where the meteors appear to originate.

*The Perseid meteor shower is one of the most prolific showers of the year, with an average peak rate of 50-80 streaks per hour.

*Meteors are the visible paths of vaporizing space debris as it encounters our planet’s atmosphere.  This debris, known as meteoroids, ranges in size from dust particles to small pebbles, and occasionally larger stones.

*As a meteoroid enters the Earth’s atmosphere, it is heated by friction, which vaporizes the debris and causes the gases (both atmospheric and meteoritic) to glow.  Most meteoroids disintegrate at about 30-60 miles above the surface, but become visible at about 40-75 miles.

*Meteoroids orbit the Sun just like planets, comets, and asteroids.  They travel at speeds of about 26 mps, but, when combined with Earth’s orbital speed of about 18 mps, enter our atmosphere at a velocity rate of about 44 mps.

*The meteoroids associated with the Perseid meteor shower enter the Earth’s atmosphere at about 37 mps.

*Our planet encounters space debris every day, thus meteors are actually visible all year long.  Occasionally, Earth passes through thicker patches of debris, known as streams or swarms, resulting in a meteor “shower.”

*Meteoroid streams, or swarms, have orbits similar to those of comets, thus are believed to be fields of comet debris resulting from a comet’s closing approach of the Sun.

*The Perseid meteor shower has been associated with the ancient debris field of Comet 109/Swift-Tuttle.

*Comet Swift-Tuttle leaves new debris each time it passes our planet – every 130 years.  This debris field has the appearance of several streams, each measuring millions of miles long.

*The Swift-Tuttle debris streams are comprised of small widely-spaced particles.  Most of the meteoroids are about the size of sand grains, but some may be as large as small pebbles.

*With a core diameter of about 26km, comet Swift-Tuttle is the largest known object, and one of the oldest comets, to regularly pass closely to our planet.

*Comet Swift-Tuttle was originally recorded by Chinese astronomers in 69 BC and 188AD, but was formally discovered in 1862, by Lewis Swift on July 16, and by Horace Parnell Tuttle on July 19.  Three others also independently discovered this comet: Dudley Observatory’s Thomas Simmons; Antonio Pacinotti and Carlo Toussaint from Florence, Italy; and Danish Astronomer Hans Schjellerup.  (It is believed that Dudley Observatory’s “Comet Seeker” was the telescope used by Thomas Simmons in his independent discovery of Swift-Tuttle.)

*Comet Swift-Tuttle was “rediscovered” in 1992 by Tsuruhiko Kiuchi, ten years after its expected return of 1982.  That year, the comet reached 5th magnitude, making it easily visible through binoculars.

*Comet Swift-Tuttle will pass within 14-million-miles of our planet when it next returns in 2126.  Scientists believe that the comet will be even brighter than the 1992 pass, possibly even bright enough to be seen without binoculars.

*Astronomers once believed that comet Swift-Tuttle might, in the relatively near future, pass close enough to actually impact Earth or the Moon.  While continued observations and recalculations have dispelled that concern for at least the next 2,000 years, this comet remains one the greatest known solar system threats to our planet.

Source Material:

NASA Worldbook

JPL’s Solar System Dynamics

Gary Kronk’s Cometography

Astronomical Society of the Pacific

Space.com

Wikipedia

The Sky Tonight: July 29 – August 04

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

This week’s Look Up report features the sunset planets, the Moon with Jupiter, and a celestial coat hanger!  Click here for the full report, including helpful graphics and links.

The Sky Tonight: July 22 – July 28

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

This week’s Look Up report features July’s Full Moon and lunar footprints; three (maybe even four) sunset planets; and a fun asteroid challenge! Click here for the full report, including helpful graphics and links.

The Sky Tonight: July 15 – July 21

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Moon and Antares

This week’s sky report, July 15 thru July 21, features the deeps sky wonders of the Milky Way and the waxing Moon with Venus, Mars, Saturn, Spica, and Antares!  Text and audio versions available on our The Sky Tonight page, here.

The Sky Tonight: July 8 – July 14

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Morning Montage

This week’s sky report, July 8 – July 14, features Venus with Regulus; the waning and waxing crescent Moon; and a morning montage that includes two bright star clusters and Jupiter’s four Galilean moons!  Text and audio versions available on our The Sky Tonight page, here.