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YOUNG ASTRONOMERS NEWSLETTER Volume 18 Number 8 STUDY + LEARN = POWER HAYABUSA RETURNS Japan celebrated the homecoming of a space hero not an astronaut, but a battered machine limping back from a seven-year odyssey to a distant space rock. With only one of it's four engines still running and three years behind schedule, it was still the longest voyage in space. In a final achievement, Hayabusa ejected a container that landed safely in Australia. About the size of a soccer ball, It may contain the first fragments of an asteroid ever brought to Earth. EUROPA Europa, which is roughly the size of Earth's moon, is enveloped by a global ocean that may be about 100 miles deep. This ocean has an icy crust that may be only a few miles thick. Recent findings even suggest the ocean could be loaded with oxygen, enough to support millions of tons worth of marine life like the type that exists on Earth. To see if any kind of life actually evolved on Europa, future missions may drill through its outer shell, perhaps using heat to melt through the ice and spinning blades. After clearing away rocks, robot subs could explore the ocean. Astrobiologists also envision landers scooping up the ice and analyzing it. MILKY WAY'S "BUBBLES" Just as Earth has an atmosphere, the Milky Way is surrounded by a thinner halo of stars, gas and 'dark matter'. The halo clouds are 400 to 10 000 light-years outside the Galactic disk. Researchers have found that "bubbles" in the galaxy burst and leave flecks of material in the form of clouds of hydrogen gas. The region with lots of thick clouds is where lots of stars form, while the region with fewer clouds also forms fewer stars. But the halo clouds aren't found exactly where stars are forming right now. Instead, they seem to be linked to earlier star formation. MOON ROBOT CONTEST A Montana State University student-built robot won a national contest at the Kennedy Space Center by digging the most simulated-Moon dirt in 15 minutes. Defeating robots from 21 other colleges and universities, the robot removed 21.6 kilograms from a giant sandbox. That was far above the 10 kilograms required to qualify in the contest and far ahead of the nearest competitor. EARTH VISITOR A small object that safely passed Earth on May 21 was more than likely an upper-stage of a rocket that carried a spacecraft on an interplanetary trajectory. Its characteristics do not match any of the known asteroid types, and it was probably only a few feet in size. UNUSUAL ORBITS Astronomers discovered a planetary system in the constellation Andromeda where the orbits of two planets are at a steep angle to each other. This surprising finding will affect theories of how multi-planet systems evolve and shows that some violent events can happen to disrupt planets' orbits after a planetary system forms. July 2010 STUDENT DISCOVERY Sixteen seventh-graders in the science class at Evergreen Middle School in Cottonwood, California discovered a mysterious cave on Mars. It was part of their research project to study images taken by a NASA spacecraft orbiting the red planet. They found what looks to be a "Martian skylight"— a hole in the roof of a cave where a small part of the roof or a lava tube collapsed and opened the area below the surface. It was their class project in ASU's Mars Education Program, which is run out of the Mars Space Flight Facility on the Tempe campus. More than 50,000 students have participated since 2004. EXTREME LIFE Researchers have discovered that methane-eating bacteria survive in a highly unique spring located on Axel Heiberg Island in Canada's extreme North. The subzero water is so salty that it doesn't freeze despite the cold, and it has no consumable oxygen in it. There are, however, big bubbles of methane that come to the surface, which had provoked the researchers' curiosity as to whether the gas was being produced geologically or biologically and whether anything could survive in this extreme hypersaline subzero environment. They were surprised to did find very unique organisms that survive by essentially eating methane and probably "breathing" sulfate instead of oxygen. It has been very recently discovered that there is methane and frozen water on Mars, so this discovery also provides a model of how bacteria could form in frozen planets like Mars and also extra-solar planets. BRIGHTEST GALAXIES Astronomers discovered that the brightest galaxies tend to be in the busiest parts of the Universe. Thousands of these galaxies are packed together in the center of large galaxy clusters. Their proximity means that many of the galaxies will eventually collide with one another. It is these collisions that stir up the gas and dust in the galaxies and cause the rapid star formation. EXOPLANET For the first time, astronomers have been able to directly follow the motion of an exoplanet as it moves from one side of its host star to the other. The planet has the smallest orbit so far of all directly imaged exoplanets, lying almost as close to its parent star as Saturn is to the Sun. Scientists believe that it may have formed in a similar way to the giant planets in the Solar System.. Because the star is so young, this discovery proves that gas giant planets can form within disks in only a few million years, a relatively short time in cosmic terms. SALLY RIDE On June 18, 1983, a young physicist from California took her seat aboard the space shuttle and launched into history. Sally Ride became the first American woman in space as a mission specialist on STS-7. What’s in the sky tonight? See - http://www.skymaps.com/downloads.html ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss Puzzles D L U O C F J M D D I P P E B N S T Y U N A A I R T A S N S V N K G E S G C I W N L L N E L I P A R ANGLE BURST CAUSE DIPPER DISKS FAINT FEWER FLECKS GIANT LYING R T I P I T K E E Y S W E A A C T N A N I N A G S O H I M I C O O S D T A I H L I V L S I O L F V C MODEL NIGHT OTHER RAPID SALLY SICKLE SPACE STARS STATE VISION UNIVERSE IN THE CLASSROOM The Astronomical Society of The Pacific has an electronic educational newsletter for teachers and other educators who want to help students of all ages learn more about the wonders of the universe through astronomy. See: http://www.astrosociety.org/ education/publications/tnl/tnl.html PUT YOUR FACE IN SPACE ! NASA is inviting members of the public to send electronic images of their faces into orbit aboard one of the final remaining space shuttle missions. Visitors to the "Face in Space" website can upload their portrait to fly with the astronauts aboard shuttle Discovery's STS-133 mission and/or shuttle Endeavour's STS-134 mission. Participants will receive special certificates from the Internet site once the mission is completed. To submit your image, visit: http://faceinspace.nasa.gov "JOURNEY TO THE STARS" Supernovas will soon be going off in classrooms around the country - no safety glasses required. It's done via a DVD called Journey to the Stars. Teachers can request a free copy along with supporting lesson plans and activity sheets at: http://journeytothestars.org. Scrambled Astronomy - In space MECSOT __ __ __ __ __ __ TRSSA __ __ __ __ __ SNOMO LESOH __ __ __ __ __ REMTESO __ __ __ __ __ __ __ ****** INTERNET SITES __ __ __ __ __ (Answers on page 4) ****** ISS passes in front of the Sun - http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/image_feature_1677.html - http://www.spacedaily.com/images-lg/vista-ngc-253-spiral-galaxy-lg.jpg ****** JULY MOON ****** Last Quarter: 7/4 New Moon: 7/11 First Quarter: 7/18 Full Moon: 7/26 Apogee: 7/1 6:13 AM 251,056 mi. (404035 km) The July Full Moon was called the Full Buck Moon, Perigee the Full Thunder Moon, and The Full Hay Moon Apogee 7/28 7:51 PM 252,627 mi. (404954 km) Total Solar Eclipse 7/11 -- Southern Pacific area Best observing nights: 7/3 - 7/17 ****** PLANETS IN JULY ****** VENUS shines very brightly, low in the west and is setting about 2 hours after the Sun. MARS in the west-southwest west at dusk, fading and moving lower each evening. SATURN is a bright object in the west-southwest this month and is moving lower each night The rings are about 3º from edgewise. JUPITER rises in east about 4 hours after sunset and is high in the southeast at dawn. MERCURY is very low in the east-northeast morning twilight. It will be behind the Sun on the 28th (superior conjunction). URANUS is an easy binocular sight this month. It stays about 2º to the west of Jupiter. Look for a faint blue"cloud". ****** METEOR SHOWERS ****** NAME DATES BEST NIGHT PER HOUR PEAKS WHERE TO LOOK DELTA AQUARIDS 7/12 - 8/19 7/28-29 20+ After midnight Low in the southeast. This is a southern shower with Aquarius below the horizon. July has minor showers that produce less than 5 meteors per hour. Best view of a meteor shower? Away from the glow of city lights and toward the constellation where the meteors will appear to radiate. Find a dark, secluded spot where car headlights will not ruin your sensitive night vision. Look for state or city parks or other safe, dark sites. Is it dark enough? If you can see each star of the Little Dipper, your eyes have "dark adapted," and your chosen site is probably dark enough and you will see plenty of meteors. ========================================================================================================================================== LOOK FOR: >>>>> Venus, Mars and Saturn now spanning 8º by July's end. >>>>> Leo's Sickle above Venus on the 4th. >>>>> Regulus only 2º left of Venus on the 8th.. >>>>> Saturn, Mars and Venus forming a small group in the west 50 minutes after sunset on the 30th. . BLACK HOLE 'SMOKING GUN' The Swift satellite has helped astronomers solve a decades-long mystery about why only about one percent of black holes emit vast amounts of energy. The new findings confirm that black holes "light up" when galaxies collide, and the data may offer insight into the future behavior of the Milky Way black hole. The intense emission from galaxy centers, or nuclei, arises near a supermassive black hole containing between millions and a billions of the Sun's mass. Some are the most luminous objects in the universe and include quasars and blazars, MARS ICE CAP Data from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has helped scientists solve a pair of mysteries dating back four decades and provided information about climate changes. It also revealed subsurface geology that allowed scientists to see the formation of a large canyon and a series of spiral troughs on the northern ice cap. The canyon is about as long as Earth's Grand Canyon but deeper and wider. The northern ice cap is a stack of ice and dust layers up to two miles deep, covering an area slightly larger than Texas. The data now points to both the canyon and spiral troughs being created and shaped primarily by wind, rather than being cut into existing ice very recently. To view images and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter info, see: http://www.nasa.gov/mro MARS PHOENIX LANDER NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has ended operations after repeated attempts to contact the spacecraft were unsuccessful. Earth-based research continues on discoveries Phoenix made during summer conditions at the far-northern site where it landed May 25, 2008. The solar-powered lander completed its three-month mission and kept working until sunlight waned two months later THE HEART & SOUL NEBULA The Heart and Soul nebulae is located about 6,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cassiopeia. It is a vast star-forming complex that makes up part of the Perseus spiral arm of our Milky Way galaxy. The nebula to the left is the Heart named after its resemblance to a human heart. To the right is the Soul nebula, also known as the Embryo nebula. The two nebulae are both massive star-making factories, marked by giant bubbles that were blown into surrounding dust by radiation and winds from the stars. In cooler and dustier crevices of clouds like these, gas and dust are just beginning to collect into new stars. These stars are less than a few million of years old youngsters in comparison to stars like the Sun, which is nearly 5 billion years old. See: http://www.nasa.gov/ images/content/457046main_wise20100524-full.jpg CLUE TO MARS' PAST Rocks examined by the Spirit Mars Rover hold evidence of a wet, non-acidic ancient environment that may have been favorable for life. An outcrop that Spirit examined in late 2005 revealed high concentrations of carbonate which originates in wet, near-neutral conditions but dissolves in acid. The ancient water indicated by this find was not acidic. WISE NASA's WISE space telescope is surveying the infrared sky, building up a catalog of cosmic specimens everything from distant galaxies to "failed" stars - brown dwarfs. The mission is also providing an impressive collection of asteroids and comets, some known and some never seen before. Most are in the Main Belt between Mars and Jupiter, but a small number pass within about 30 million miles of Earth's orbit. So far, the mission has observed more than 60,000 asteroids - most were known but more than 11,000 are new. THE SUN AWAKENS, NASA IS WARY The Sun is waking up from a deep slumber, and the next few years could bring much higher levels of solar activity. NASA is keeping a wary eye on the Sun as officials meet in discuss the potential consequences of stormy space weather. AGE OF THE MOON AND EARTH The Earth and Moon are the result of a giant collision between two planets the size of Mars and Venus and is thought to have happened when the solar system was 30 million years old - 4,537 million years ago. But new research shows that the Earth and Moon must have formed much later - perhaps up to 150 million years after the formation of the solar system. FALCON 9 LAUNCH SpaceX announced that the inaugural flight of the Falcon 9 launch vehicle successfully launched and achieved Earth orbit right on target, marking a key milestone for SpaceX and the commercial space flight industry. SpaceX currently has over 30 contracted missions, including 18 to deliver commercial satellites to orbit. NASA contracts call for the Falcon 9 launch vehicle and Dragon spacecraft to carry cargo (including live plants and animals) to and from the ISS. CARBONATE ON MARS An outcrop of rock rich in carbonate minerals has been found in the Columbia Hills of Gusev Crater on Mars. Scientists have been searching for Martian carbonate rocks for decades because such minerals are crucial to understanding the early climate history of Mars and the related question of whether the planet might once have held life. Scientists said, "Small amounts of carbonate minerals have been detected on Mars before but the difference this time is that we're seeing a couple of large outcrops of rock poking through the soil of the Columbia Hills. The rocks are about 25 percent carbonate by weight, by far the highest abundance we've seen on Mars." LUNOKHOD 1 A Soviet robot lost on the Moon for 40 years has been found by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and is returning surprisingly strong laser pulses to Earth. Scientists sent pulses of laser light zeroing in on the target coordinates provided by Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. A laser retroreflector on Lunokhod 1 intercepted the pulses and sent a clear signal back to Earth. Almost forgotten in the lore of the Apollo-era space race, Lunokhod 1 was one of the greatest successes of the old Soviet lunar exploration program WASP-12B Like a moth in a candle flame, a doomed Jupiter-sized planet in the constellation Auriga has moved so close to its Sun-like parent star that it is spilling its atmosphere onto the star. This happens because the planet gets so hot that its atmosphere puffs up to the point where the star's gravity pulls it in. The planet will likely be completely devoured in 10 million years. The planet, called WASP-12b, is the hottest known world ever discovered, with an atmosphere seething at 2,800 degrees Fahrenheit. JAPAN'S VENUS PROBE Japan has launched IKAROS, a Venus probe, and a kite-shaped "space yacht" designed to float through the cosmos using only the power of the Sun. It is designed to be propelled by the pressure of sunlight particles. Similar to an ocean yacht pushed by wind, the device has a square, ultra-thin flexible sail, measuring 46 by 46 feet. It is only a fraction of the thickness of a human hair, and is coated with thin-film solar cells to generate electricity. A CRATER ON EARTH Australian scientists discovered a crater deep beneath the Timor Sea made during a heavy meteor storm which may have altered the Earth's climate. Australian scientists said seismic activity led experts to Mount Ashmore and a study of fragments showed a large meteorite hit just before the Earth's temperatures plunged about 35 million years ago. A meteorite hit Siberia at the same time, along with one in Chesapeake Bay, followed by a large field of molten rock fragments over northeast America. JUPITER SPOT In July 2009, an amateur Australian astronomer discovered the presence of a large, black spot close to the southern polar region of Jupiter. An unknown object's impact had taken place 3 or 4 hours before the spot was seen on Jupiter's dark side (at night), and this prevented it from being observed directly. According to studies since then, the main spot, a very black cloud comprising the waste materials produced by the impact, reached a size of about 3000 miles in Jupiter's atmosphere. It was surrounded by a halo caused by the falling of material expelled from the atmosphere of up to 5000 miles. BINARY STARS Our Sun may be an only child - most stars in the Milky Way are actually twins that circle around each other, but how twin stars form is an ongoing question in astronomy. Do they start out like fraternal twins or do they begin life in one cloud that splits into two? Astronomers generally believe that widely spaced twin, or binary, stars grow from two separate clouds, while the closer-knit binary stars start out from one cloud. But how this latter process works has not been clear. MESSIER 83 ESO has released a new image of the Messier 83 galaxy in infrared light. The camera created one of the sharpest and most detailed pictures of Messier 83 ever taken from the ground. Messier 83 is one of the brightest galaxies visible using binoculars. See: http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1020/ EARLY GALAXIES For more than a decade, astronomers have been puzzled by bright galaxies in the distant universe that appear to be forming stars at phenomenal rates. Scientists mapped the skies as they appeared 10 billion years ago and discovered that these galaxies occupy regions of the universe containing more dark matter and that collisions probably caused the abundant star production. The project will continue to collect images over larger areas of the sky to build up a more complete picture of how galaxies have evolved and interacted. SOLAR STORMS Solar storms have been recognized as a cause of technological problems on Earth since the invention of the telegraph in the 19th century. Researchers discovered that even minor solar events are never truly small scale. A large eruptive prominence on the Sun's edge was followed by a filament eruption a third of the way across the star's disk from the eruption and they also observed a number of very small flares that have generated magnetic instabilities. Solar storms produce disturbances in electromagnetic fields that can induce large currents in wires, disrupting power lines and causing widespread blackouts. The storms can interfere with global positioning systems, cable television, and communications between ground controllers and satellites and airplane pilots flying near Earth's poles. Radio noise from solar storms also can disrupt cell phone service. NGC1313 The starburst galaxy NGC 1313 is a stellar incubator delivering stars on a scale rarely seen in a single galaxy of its size. Now a striking new Gemini Observatory image reveals the multitudes of glowing gas clouds in the galaxy's arms. Because the clouds of gas in stellar nurseries emit light from ionized gas they shine brightly and are the tell-tale sign of star-formation. NGC 1313 is unusual in that it is a "drifter," without neighbors, and far away from any other packs of galaxies. The cause of its deformed shape and high rate of star formation is not obvious. But, in radio studies of the gas distribution to solve the mystery of this galaxy's active star growth it appears that the edge of an expanding "superbubble" is causing gas to pile up and spur the star formation. See: http://www.aao.gov/ images/deep_html/n1313_d.html BLACK HOLE DISPLACED A team of astronomy researchers find that the supermassive black hole at the center of the most massive local galaxy (M87) is displaced from the galaxy's center. The most likely cause is a previous merger between two older, smaller black holes. It is commonly believed that supermassive black holes can become active as a result of the merger between two galaxies. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX The YOUNG ASTRONOMERS Newsletter is distributed by the Forsyth Astronomical Society. And is on the Internet through the courtesy of The Summit School, Winston-Salem, NC and FAS SROETEM ,SELOH ,SNOOM , SRATS , STEMOC DELBMARCS :YMONORTSA