web analytics

Rss

Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Watching a Volatile Stellar Relationship

raqr_w11
 (Photo courtesy of Chandra X-Ray Center.)

Note: This is a press release from Chandra X-Ray Center and NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center.

Bob Eklund Looking Up Column

Bob Eklund
Looking Up Column

 

In biology, “symbiosis” refers to two organisms that live close to and interact with one another. Astronomers have long studied a class of stars—called symbiotic stars—that co-exist in a similar way. Using data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and other telescopes, astronomers are gaining a better understanding of how volatile this close stellar relationship can be.

R Aquarii (R Aqr, for short) is one of the best known of the symbiotic stars. Located at a distance of about 710 light-years from Earth, its changes in brightness were first noticed with the naked eye almost a thousand years ago. Since then, astronomers have studied this object and determined that R Aqr is not one star, but two: a small, dense white dwarf and a cool red, giant star.

The red giant star has its own interesting properties. In billions of years, our Sun will turn into a red giant once it exhausts the hydrogen nuclear fuel in its core and begins to expand and cool. Most red giants are placid and calm, but some pulsate with periods between 80 and 1,000 days like the star Mira and undergo large changes in brightness. This subset of red giants is called “Mira variables.”

The red giant in R Aqr is a Mira variable and undergoes steady changes in brightness by a factor of 250 as it pulsates, unlike its white dwarf companion that does not pulsate. There are other striking differences between the two stars. The white dwarf is about ten thousand times brighter than the red giant. The white dwarf has a surface temperature o.

Two Pair of Planets Perform in the August Twilight

Bob Eklund Looking Up

Bob Eklund
Looking Up

 Step outside as the stars come out, look southwest, and you’ll see an eye-catching pattern. For the next few days, bright orange Mars shines to the right of Saturn and the reddish supergiant star Antares. The three form a tall triangle that changes every night.

Note: This story is from Sky and Telescope

Mars is moving leftward on its way toward passing between the other two. On August 23 and 24, the triangle shrinks down to a nearly vertical line of three shining points.

The three have nothing to do with each other. Mars is the nearest of them, 7 light-minutes from Earth (79 million miles). Saturn is almost a dozen times farther away: 82 light-minutes (914 million miles). Antares, the lowest of the three in the sky, is about 550 light-years in the background, or 3.3 quadrillion miles into deep space.

Meanwhile, the two brightest planets—Venus and Jupiter—are going through a dance of their own. They’re very low in the sky, due west after sunset. Look for them close to the horizon, somewhat left of where the Sun went down, 20 or 30 minutes after sunset. If you have a very low view and clear air, you’ll see that Venus and Jupiter are drawing closer together every evening. Venus is the lower one. On August 27th, they’ll have such a close conjunction that you may need binoculars to see that they’re two objects, not one!

PR_2016Vic_Aug23ev-3-241x360 2

Venus-Jupiter

Rover Celebrates Fourth Year on Mars

Bob Eklund Looking Up

Bob Eklund
Looking Up

This month, NASA’s Curiosity rover celebrates four years on the Red Planet. The rover, with the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) aboard, hit the dusty Martian surface on August 6, 2012, and began its mission of finding evidence about whether ancient Mars offered environmental conditions conducive to microbial life. By March 2013, NASA reported that MSL had achieved its primary objective after scientists found evidence of oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, sulfur, phosphorous and carbon—all essential chemical elements for supporting living organisms. Now the mission, which was scheduled to end this year, has been given a two-year extension.

As part of the fourth-year celebration, NASA has released a smartphone game, which lets users navigate their own MSL across the rugged terrain of Mars searching for water. On their mobile devices, players challenge themselves to navigate and balance the rover while earning points along the way. For more information about the Mars Rover game, visit: mars.nasa.gov/gamee-rover

Here at home, we have good views of Mars in our southern sky, along with four other bright planets. Venus, now appearing as the “evening star,” is just above the southwest horizon after sunset. To the upper left of Venus, look for Mercury, Jupiter, orange Mars, and golden Saturn (in that order).

“X” Discovered In Center of Milky Way

Bob Eklund Looking Up

Bob Eklund
Looking Up

An enhanced, close-up view centred on the Galaxy’s bulge and the blue-tinted “X.” Credit: D. Lang/Dunlap Institute

An enhanced, close-up view centred on the Galaxy’s bulge and the blue-tinted “X.” Credit: D. Lang/Dunlap Institute

 

Note: This is a press release from Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics, University of Toronto.

Astronomers have uncovered the strongest evidence yet that an enormous X-shaped structure made of stars lies within the central bulge of the Milky Way Galaxy.

Previous computer models, observations of other galaxies, and observations of our own galaxy have suggested that the X-shaped structure existed. But no one had observed it directly; and some astronomers argued that previous research that pointed indirectly to the existence of the X could be explained in other ways.

“There was controversy about whether the X-shaped structure existed,” says Dustin Lang, a Research Associate at the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics, University of Toronto, and co-author of the paper describing the discovery, published this month in the Astrophysical Journal. “But our paper gives a good view of the core of our own galaxy. I think it has provided pretty good evidence for the existence of the X-shaped structure.”

The Milky Way Galaxy is a barred spiral galaxy: a disk-shaped collection of dust, gas and billions of stars, 100,000 light-years in diameter. It is far from a simple disk structure, being comprised of two spiral arms, a bar-shaped feature that runs through its center, and a central bulge of stars. The X-shaped structure is a part of the bulge.

Research Bolsters Case for a Subsurface Ocean—and a Habitat for Life—on Pluto

Pluto_faults

Note: This is a press release from Brown University.

Looking Up  By Bob Eklund

Looking Up
By Bob Eklund

When NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft buzzed by Pluto last year, it revealed tantalizing clues that the dwarf planet might have—or had at one time—a liquid ocean sloshing around under its icy crust. According to a new analysis led by Brown University, such an ocean, which could be a possible habitat for life, likely still exists on Pluto today.

The study, which used a thermal evolution model for Pluto updated with data from New Horizons, found that if Pluto’s ocean had frozen into oblivion millions or billions of years ago, it would have caused the entire planet to shrink. But there are no signs of a global contraction to be found on Pluto’s surface. On the contrary, New Horizons showed signs that Pluto has been expanding.

“Thanks to the incredible data returned by New Horizons, we were able to observe tectonic features on Pluto’s surface, update our thermal evolution model with new data and infer that Pluto most likely has a subsurface ocean today,” said Noah Hammond, a graduate student in Brown’s Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, and the study’s lead author.

New Planet Is Largest Discovered Orbiting Two Suns

Bob Eklund's Column Looking Up

Bob Eklund’s Column
Looking Up

Note:  This is a press release from San Diego State University.

If you cast your eyes toward the constellation Cygnus the Swan, you’ll be looking in the direction of the largest planet yet discovered around a double-star system. It’s too faint to see with the naked eye, but a team led by astronomers from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and San Diego State University used the Kepler Space Telescope to identify the new planet, Kepler-1647b.

Planets that orbit two stars are called circumbinary planets, or “Tatooine” planets, after Luke Skywalker’s homeland in “Star Wars.” To detect planets, the Kepler telescope looks for slight dips in brightness that hint a planet might be transiting in front of a star, blocking some of the star’s light.

Kepler-1647b is 3,700 light-years away and approximately 4.4 billion years old, roughly the same age as the Earth. The stars are similar to the Sun, with one slightly larger than our home star and the other slightly smaller. The planet has a mass and radius nearly identical to that of Jupiter, making it the largest transiting circumbinary planet ever found.

“It looks like more than 40% of circumbinary planets are in the habitable zones of their stars,” said Laurance Doyle, a coauthor on the paper and astronomer at the Carl Sagan Center, SETI Institute. “It seems that the scene from Star Wars where Luke Skywalker is watching the double sunset may not be so rare after all. But physics might be more difficult—everything from shadows to rainbows would come in pairs!”

Mars at Closest Approach to Earth in Last Ten Years

Note: This is a press release from Hubble/European Space Agency and Sloohmars
NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope picture of Mars.

Looking Up Column  By Bob Eklund

Looking Up Column
By Bob Eklund


During this month, the Earth and Mars get closer to each other than at any time in the last ten years. The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has exploited this special configuration to catch a new image of our red neighbor.

On May 22, Mars will be at opposition, the point at which the planet is located directly opposite the Sun in the sky. This means that the Sun, Earth and Mars are all lined up, with Earth sitting in between the Sun and the red planet. This is also the planet’s closest approach to Earth.

WATCH MARS LIVE ONLINE ON MEMORIAL DAY. On Monday, May 30th, at 6:00 p.m. PDT, the international astronomy-outreach organization Slooh will share brilliant live views of Mars at closest approach with the public, looking through a telescope at the Canary Island Observatory. During the live show, Slooh Astronomers Paul Cox and Bob Berman will be on hand to take viewers on a tour of the Red Planet, discussing everything from scientific study of the planet to its cultural significance in antiquity through to sci-fi movies, and even the possibility that it may have once harbored life.

Viewers are encouraged to make themselves a part of the show by sending their questions to @Slooh on Twitter, or by joining in on the live chat on Slooh.com.

Europa’s Heaving Ice Might Make More Heat than Scientists Thought

europa

Looking Up_edited-2

Jupiter’s moon Europa is under a constant gravitational assault. As it orbits, Europa’s icy surface heaves and falls with the pull of Jupiter’s gravity, creating enough heat, scientists think, to support a global ocean under the ice—an ocean that could be a habitat for life.

Now, experiments here on Earth involving the flexing and compressing of ice, done by geoscientists from Brown and Columbia universities, suggest that this flexing process, called tidal dissipation, could create far more heat in Europa’s ice—resulting in a thinner ice shell—than scientists had previously assumed.

The largest Jovian moons—Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto—were first discovered by Galileo in the early 1600s. When NASA sent spacecraft to Jupiter in the 1970s and 1990s, those moons proved to be full of surprises.

“Scientists had expected to see cold, dead places, but right away they were blown away by their striking surfaces,” said Christine McCarthy, a faculty member at Columbia University who led this new research as a graduate student at Brown. “There was clearly some sort of tectonic activity—things moving around and cracking. There were also places on Europa that look like melt-through or mushy ice.”

Starry Nite for Eklund’s Star Party

Eklund

Young and old gathered at Bob Eklund’s Star Party Saturday and saw the stars. Young and old got to see the Moon, Jupiter, and Mercury. Highlight of the night was the passing of the International Space Station across the sky. For some of the young it was their first time to look into a telescope and see the Moon up close. Eklund, who does the Looking Up column for the Update, has the party every year to share and encourage the love of astronomy.

1917 Astronomical Plate from Mt. Wilson Observatory Has First-Ever Evidence of an Exoplanetary System

Looking Up_edited-1

This is a press release from Carnegie Institution for Science.

carnegie
The 1917 photographic plate spectrum of van Maanen’s star from the Carnegie Observatories’ archive. The pull-out box shows the strong lines of the element calcium, which are surprisingly easy to see in the century old spectrum. The spectrum is the thin, (mostly) dark line in the center of the image. The broad dark lanes above and below are from lamps used to calibrate wavelength, and are contrast-enhanced in the box to highlight the two “missing” absorption bands in the star. Image courtesy of Carnegie Institution for Science.

You can never predict what treasure might be hiding in your own basement. For example, it turns out that a 1917 image on an astronomical glass plate from the Carnegie Observatories’ collection shows the first-ever evidence of a planetary system beyond our own Sun.

Astronomer Jay Farihi of University College London recently contacted Carnegie Observatories’ Director, John Mulchaey. He was looking for a plate in the Carnegie archive that contained a spectrum of van Maanen’s star, a white dwarf discovered by Dutch-American astronomer Adriaan van Maanen in the very year the Carnegie plate was made.

Stellar spectra are recordings of the light emitted by distant stars. Spectra spread out all of the component colors of light, like a rainbow from a prism, and they can teach astronomers about a star’s chemical composition. They can also tell them how the light emitted by a star is affected by the chemistry of the things it passes through before reaching us on Earth.

As requested, the Observatories located the 1917 plate, made by former Observatories Director Walter Adams at Mount Wilson Observatory’s 60-inch telescope. Other than a notation on the plate’s sleeve indicating that the star looked a bit warmer than our own Sun, everything seemed very ordinary.

However, when Farihi examined the spectrum, he found something quite extraordinary.

The clue was in what’s called an “absorption line” on the spectrum. Absorption lines indicate “missing pieces,” areas where the light coming from a star passed through something and had a particular color of light absorbed by that substance. These lines indicate the chemical makeup of the interfering object.

Carnegie’s 1917 spectrum of van Maanen’s star revealed the presence of heavier elements, such as calcium, magnesium, and iron, which should have long since disappeared into the star’s interior due to their weight.

Only within the last 12 years has it become clear to astronomers that van Maanen’s star and other white dwarfs with heavy elements in their spectra represent a type of planetary system featuring vast rings of rocky planetary remnants that deposit debris into the stellar atmosphere. These recently discovered systems are called “polluted white dwarfs.” They were a surprise to astronomers, because white dwarfs are stars like our own Sun at the end of their lifetimes, so it was not at all expected that they would have leftover planetary material around them at that stage.

“The unexpected realization that this 1917 plate from our archive contains the earliest recorded evidence of a polluted white dwarf system is just incredible,” Mulchaey said. “And the fact that it was made by such a prominent astronomer in our history as Walter Adams enhances the excitement.”

Planets themselves have not yet been detected orbiting van Maanen’s star, nor around similar systems, but Farihi is confident it is only a matter of time.

“The mechanism that creates the rings of planetary debris, and the deposition onto the stellar atmosphere, requires the gravitational influence of full-fledged planets,” he explained. “The process couldn’t occur unless there were planets there.”

“Carnegie has one of the world’s largest collections of astronomical plates with an archive that includes about 250,000 plates from three different observatories—Mount Wilson, Palomar, and Las Campanas,” concluded Mulchaey. “We have a ton of history sitting in our basement and who knows what other finds we might unearth in the future?”

The Mount Wilson 60-inch telescope, where this discovery was made, is now available for public observing. See: http://www.mtwilson.edu/60in.html