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Observatory News February 2013 513-321-5186 Published by the Friends of the Observatory www.cincinnatiobservatory.org Bill Cartwright, editor Coming Up At The Observatory.... FOTO Kids & Teens Feb 1 7p COC Board Meeting Feb 6 12-2p Mars! Fact or Fiction* Feb 6 7p Presenter’s Meeting Feb 7 6p FOTO Member’s Meeting Feb 7 7:30p Dance of the Planets* Feb 8 7p Astronomy Friday Feb 8 7p Cub Scout Badge Night Feb 9 6p History Tours Feb 10 1-4p A2Z+ Member’s Class Feb 10 7p Member’s Astro Class Feb 11 7p Behind the Scenes* Feb 12 7p Romance at Observatory Feb 14 7p Astronomy Friday Feb 15 7p Late Night @ the COC Feb 15 10:30p Teacher “Make It-Take It” Feb 16 12-2p Moonday Monday Feb 18 7p Stargazing 101* Feb 19 7p Astronomy Thursday Feb 21 7p History Tours Feb 24 1-4p Jupiter* Feb 25 7p NASA Mission Update* Feb 27 7p Astronomy Thursday Feb 28 7p *UC Communiversity The Word By Basil Rowe Social media, webinars, emarketing, e-learning, e-fundraising, the Internet. It’s amazing how the connectivity of the world has changed in the last few years. The Observatory has an incredibly strong connection to Cincinnati’s past (just ask Observatory Historian, John Ventre) and is utilizing these new technologies to connect to the future. In order for the Observatory to survive it is essential to connect to the next generation of FOTO members (today’s youth) in ways they are familiar with and expect. The “graying of astronomy clubs” is a reality and something to be wary of. The Observatory needs a constant influx of “new blood”. So, if you’ve got kids or grandkids that have never been to the Observatory I strongly encourage you to bring Volume 24 No. 2 [email protected] them to a meeting, an astronomy Thursday or Friday (not necessarily the “adults only” late night Fri), or any age appropriate program. If your kids or grandkids have been here before, please keep bringing them back! Try to get them on the website, “like” COC/FOTO on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Cincinna tiObservatoryCenter, and check out Dean on Stargazers http://www.cincinnatiobservatory.or g/stargazer.html. In addition to the next generation of FOTO members, there’s been a lot of recent discussion about how the Observatory can better connect with our community, members, donors, and potential new members and donors. Here are some things to look for in the future: A new COC/FOTO website A revised social media strategy and presence Webinar programs (using the Internet for programs, lectures, and classes) One final note: Congratulations to the Stonelick Lake Stargaze group for winning “Best Cheap Date Night” in the 2012 Best of Cincinnati magazine. Way to go and thank you! 1 FOTO's February Meeting By Dave McBride Our next meeting will be on Thursday, February 7, at 7:30pm in the west wing of the Herget Building at the Observatory. Steve Rismiller will present “How Amateur Astronomers can overcome turbulent seeing conditions for the Sun, Moon and Planets." modernized to allow both visual and photographic observations. Steve has always been interested in solar observing. When he was a kid only professional observatories had the equipment to observe the Sun in Hydrogen Alpha light. Then in 1999 he began observing prominences with a Lumicon filter. A few years later he acquired a Coronado 60 Ha filter. He has been using that filter ever since and is constantly surprised by how well it performs. FOTO's January Meeting Highlights By Michelle Lierl Gainey This topic will discuss and show the effects of "seeing" conditions – and how, with the use of a webcam style camera, you can create a much sharper image than is visible to the eye through the eyepiece. Steve will demonstrate how a few minutes of computer processing time can produce a very usable image from the original. Steve has been an amateur astronomer for more than 40 years. His interest in astronomy began just as the space age was beginning. He grew up on a farm in west-central Ohio where the skies were dark and the stars were bright. He built his first telescope with parts from the Edmund Scientific catalog and Sam Brown’s “All About Telescopes.” Since then he has assembled many telescopes ranging from 3 to 20 inches in diameter. He has always dreamed of building his own observatory to view deep sky objects. In the mid 1980’s that dream materialized with his Starfield Observatory. Today, Starfield is being upgraded and Speaker: Dr. Al Scheide: “Introduction to Radio Astronomy”. Dr. Scheide gave an excellent overview of the history, types of radio telescopes, the kinds of data they can gather, and what can be learned through radio telescopes. Announcements The FOTO Planning Meeting will be held on Thursday, 1/24/13, 6 PM at COC. Volunteer Opportunities 3/23/13: Beginner Star Gaze, needs volunteers. All other volunteer opportunities are currently listed on John Ventre’s schedule. John Ventre requested that all volunteers e-mail him with their estimated hours of volunteering for 2012, as this information is included in grant applications. COC Director: Craig Niemi thanked members for all their help in 2012. Programs run by or assisted by volunteers are vital to the operations of COC, and bring in a significant amount of income as well as contributing to the mission of public outreach and education. Library Committee: Frank Huss: Four people are working on cataloguing and shelving new books and journals. There is an honor system for signing out books. Dark Sky Committee: Aaron Eban has been organizing the Stonelick Park stargazes, along with Dean Regas. Scott Gainey will help and other members are needed for this committee. Please contact Scott Gainey or Dean Regas if you would like to be involved. The new Observatory/FOTO Representative election was held. Frank Huss was unanimously elected to the position of COC/FOTO representative. COC History Calendar: This calendar was created by John Ventre, COC Historian, and features historical photographs and information about the history of COC, along with notations of celestial events and Stonelick star gaze nights. Newsletters: Basil Rowe brought up the issue of the two versions of the FOTO newsletter. The electronic version, used by most members, includes color photographs and more articles of interest about astronomy topics. The printed version is printed in black and white and is an abbreviated version of the newsletter. This has been done for reasons of economy. The printed version requires volunteer hours and money for printing, collating, labeling and mailing. There was a discussion as to whether the printed version is still necessary. An inquiry will be sent to those members receiving the printed version to determine why they prefer this version. Did You Know…. Material being pulled into a black hole is accelerated to close to the speed of light and heated to over a million degrees. Extremely hot gas glows very brightly. 2 UC Communiversity Continuing Education Classes Beginners’ Stargaze Friday, March 23rd, 8-10 pm By Craig Niemi By Craig Niemi February 8th Dance of the Gods February 12th Behind the Scenes at the Observatory February 19th Stargazing 101 February 25th Jupiter: King of the Planets February 27th NASA Mission Update All classes $18 per person (+ any materials fees.)To register contact UC Communiversity at 513-556-6932 or online at www.uc.edu/ce/commu.html February FOTO Planning Meeting By Basil Rowe The next FOTO Planning Meeting is scheduled for Thursday, February 21, 2013 at 6pm at the Observatory. The meeting generally lasts a couple hours. The planning meetings are open to all FOTO members. We encourage your participation in the discussion of future FOTO activities. Calling all beginning stargazers! Want some hands-on practice using a portable telescope? Join us for an outdoor stargaze on the Observatory’s grounds. You can bring your own telescope if you have one… or, “rent” one of ours for the evening! A brief presentation will introduce you to the basics of how to use a telescope, and the best targets to look for in the sky that night. Simple star charts will be provided. The rest of the evening will be spent outside viewing (weather permitting). You’re in charge of your own telescope – or bring a friend and share – but staff and volunteers will be available to help as needed! Reservations are required. Please call 513-321-5186 to sign up. Admission - $7 / person. Telescope Rental - $10 / (Free for Members). Binocular Rental - $5 / binoculars Did You Know…. Neutrinos are electrically neutral, virtually mass-less elementary particles that can pass through miles of lead unhindered. Some are passing through your body as you read this. These "phantom" particles are produced in the inner fires of burning, healthy stars as well as in the supernova explosions of dying stars. Detectors are being embedded underground, beneath the sea, or into a large chunk of ice as part of IceCube, a neutrino-detecting project. History of the Observatory Sundays February 10th & 24th 1-4 pm By Craig Niemi No reservations needed, except groups. See the web calendar for any holiday updates. Our talented museum educators weave a fascinating story of the Cincinnati Observatory’s rich history and the unique cast of characters that made Cincinnati the Birthplace of American Astronomy. An ideal opportunity for our astronomy program volunteers to learn more about the Observatory and incorporate its history into your programming. Did You Know…. The Red Square nebula is among the most symmetrical objects ever observed in space . It was created by a dying star called MWC 922 spewing its innards from opposite poles into space. 3 Moonday Monday Monday, February 18, from 7-9 pm By Dean Regas then reported it into a national database called Globe at Night. FOTO Kids got some great views out of the Mitchel telescope of Jupiter. In February we will talk more about Orion and the bright constellations circling him. Sirius, the Dog Star will be up and we’ll show you the Winter Football (Dean’s giant, made-up constellation). If you have any questions please email Dean Regas at [email protected] Romance @ the Observatory "Turn the lights down low, the stars are out.” Thursday, February 14, 7 – 9 pm By Craig Niemi A2Z Astronomy Class Image courtesy Steve Rismiller Attention Moon lovers and Lunatics! This is one program you cannot miss. The Cincinnati Observatory will show you the Moon: phases, features, eclipses, rocks, missions, myths, and green cheese. Moonday Monday includes talks and tours by local Moon experts. Then, the Moon will hit your eye like a big pizza pie when you look through our historic telescope (weather permitting). This is also the night of the next Moon-Jupiter conjunction – don’t miss it! $7 for adults, $5 for kids No reservations required. For further information, please call 513-3215186. FOTO Kids and FOTO Teens By Dean Regas Look alive, because the next FOTO Kids and FOTO Teens meeting will be Friday February 1, 7pm at the Observatory. Last month we had clear skies and were able to see a lot with the telescopes. FOTO Teens took a survey of the stars in Orion and found that they could see stars as faint as fourth magnitude. We Radiation: In the dark without it By Dave Bosse The A2Z Astronomy class meets the second Sunday of each month at 7:00 P.M. in the West Wing of the Herget Building. Discussions cover contemporary Astronomical topics as well as those historic. No prerequisite knowledge of Math or Astronomy is necessary, just a desire to learn more. The group meets for about an hour or so and is free to any member of the Observatory. On February 10th at 7 pm this month’s A2Z class will cover the topic of Electro-Magnetic Radiation: light. Without “light” we would be more than just in the dark; we would be without any knowledge of the outside Universe. Every single bit of information we have gleaned from the Universe has come to us in the form of photons. Lots and lots and lots of photons and they come in a zoo of varieties. Understanding how this phenomenon works can help in understanding how we understand what we think we know. Did You Know…. Most galaxies have a super massive black hole at their center. The Heart Nebula by COC member Eric Africa There is nothing more romantic than the night sky. Starry-eyed lovers have been gazing upward in wonder for millennia. So, this year give your Valentine a true, out-of-this-world experience at the Cincinnati Observatory high atop Mt. Lookout. On Valentine’s night, the “Birthplace of American Astronomy” will offer music, drinks, chocolate, flowers and viewing of the Moon and Jupiter (weather permitting). Astronomer and co-host of the PBS program Star Gazers, Dean Regas, will give a presentation about red stars of passion in the winter sky and there will be tours of the buildings. This is your opportunity to “wish upon a star” and perhaps cuddle a bit beneath the Cincinnati Observatory's silvery domes. Cost: $50 per couple. Reservations are required. Space is limited. Call 513-321-5186 to reserve your space for the unique event. 4 Craig’s Corner By Craig Niemi Happy New Year! Solar cycle 24 is still ongoing BUT, solar maximum may have come and gone without observers realizing it. The sun on December 31st was recorded to have only 3 very small active regions and a sunspot count of only 37. What a fizzle! Then on New Year’s Day, the solar surface became active with 6 active regions and the count jumped to 87. By January 7th and 8th the active regions had more than doubled to 14 with the sunspot count up to 196. I had to go back to October 22, 2011 to find a higher sunspot count in Solar Cycle 24 and that was only 207. The chart below graphically shows the sunspot count for December and up to January 25, the time of this writing. Most of the sunspots did not develop into flare producers, However severial did produce C and M class flares. So, the sun was peppered with small sunspots and it was fun to observe in the telescope with a white light filter. If you missed seeing the spotted solar disk, check out Spaceweather.com and use the archives area in the upper right of the web page. Start at January 1st and scroll through the month to see the “re-run” of the sunspot show. The solar disk can be seen on the left side of the page. Dean and Leo have been busy filling the 2013 calendar with new programs and perennial favorites for schools, teachers and the public. The Observatory has always been a favorite for the star-struck. February 14th brings back Romance at the Observatory. Lyn and John recently added to this chapter of our history with their nuptials at the Observatory. Leo’s Late Nights at the Observatory have been very popular with an older audience, especially to young professionals out on a Friday or Saturday night. While the format is generally the same as the Thursday/Friday programs the later hour brings a different demographic and dynamic to the group. The next Late Night is coming up on the 15th. In addition to the core Astronomy Thursday and Friday Evenings, we are offering lifelong learners four UC Communiversity programs this month with topics ranging from behind the scenes at the Observatory to NASA’s explorations deep into the solar system. 2013 also brings us two possibly great comets (we’ll keep our fingers crossed), the ringed wonder Saturn, a Super Moon, a picnic under the stars and even ice cream sundaes. When you add all the school outreach and field trips, professional development sessions, history tours and programs, rentals and all the rest of our offerings, it’s a jampacked calendar. More than our small number of staff could possibly hope to handle by themselves. We’ve said it before; the Observatory could not serve the community with such wide array of exceptional programs without the substantial investment of time, talent and treasury from our volunteers. To help meet an ever increasing demand for programs we’d like to offer you some new and additional opportunities to contribute to both our public and school programming. Dean and Leo could use your help with several programs including the Late Nights, student field trips to the COC, off-site stargazes, and scout tour and viewings. If you’re new to these types of programming Dean, Leo and John are certainly willing and available to help get you started. For our more experienced presenters Leo and Dean can guide you in preparing or modifying your existing presentations to serve specific groups. Please feel free to contact them. And we encourage you to bookmark the Events tab on the website, mark your favorites on your calendar and visit your Observatory often this year! Dean’s Astronomy Classes for Members February 11, 7pm Dean Regas welcomes all members to attend his topics in astronomy classes. In February he will show you the motions of the heavens as seen from different places on Earth. Then we’ll zoom off to other planets to imagine the view from different places in the solar system. The class includes viewing through the telescopes if clear. If you’re a current member of the Observatory at the $50 Family Membership level or higher, the classes are free. Call 513-321-5186 to RSVP – space is limited. Did You Know…. The iron in the hemoglobin in our blood is made from the explosion of Type 1A Supernovas. 5 Welcome New & Renewing Members! Donna and Bill Anderson Aine Baldwin Nathan Barber Molly Bayer Bert & Barbara Becker Douwe and Caroline Bergsma Gene and Karen Bertke John and Tricia Bevan Jeff Blazey Danny Brever William and Lesley Bunn Burdette Family Tim and Patricia Burke Olivia Canada Jay Carroll Amanda and Tim Davidson Craig Davis Linda and John Deatrick Mike and Lisa Debbeler Charles and Linda Dehner Nathan Duncanson Charles Fairbanks Richard and Joan Finan Noah and Julie Fleischmann William & Dean Foster Gene and Dixie Gaffney John Gatch Michael S. George Jeff and Lynne Hamner Dr. Nancy Spence and Mr. Ben Hemingway Robert Heslar John Hisle Bruce Holtgren Lisa Manne and Mike Hood Clare Hubbell "Richard E. Hunter, Jr." Nancy & Steve Hurst Laura Murrer and Greg Jarvis James and Rachel Johnson Mike & Susan Karbowski Wayne and Darlene Kinney Evonne and Helen Kovach Marjorie Kuck Leslie Laine Kevin Langston Charles and Lorraine Maguire III John McHugh Harry and Pauline Moeller Rodney and Susan Moeller Thom and Sally Monahan James Morrow Robert W Myers Sr Pamela Nebel-Logsdon Craig and Valerie Niemi Scott Oldfield Sinan Ozyol Kathleen and Daniel Peters Valydon Philip Poonoosamy Alvin Roehr Doug and Laurie Ryan Fred and Janet Sanborn Robin Sargent Danielle Schaper Richard and Susan Schmidt Susan and Michael Schock Janice and Jeffrey Schroder Becky Shundich Henry and Jodi Stacey Barbara and Michael Stough Gary and Nancy Strassel Stuart and Barbara Sutphin Suzanne and Tom Terwilliger Terri Thomas Joe and Darlene Verkamp Chris & Nancy Virgulak Jason Voegele Vernon and Bernadette Walatka Courtney Wallace Kevin Wang Dwight Werren Marc & Nadine Whitsett Wes Houston and Sheri Wirtz Lawrence Yates Did You Know…. Our Sun has been getting 10% hotter every billion years since its creation. Stargazing at Stonelick State Park Saturdays - Feb 2nd & 9th By Craig Niemi Jupiter is blazing bright in the crisp clear nights. Dress warmly! Stargazing begins at dusk. Open to all ages. Bring your own scope for expert help setting it up. Stargazes are weather permitting. “Friend” the Stonelick Lake Stargazers Facebook page for weather and schedule updates. . Secret Life of Binary Stars Is Revealed A University of Alberta professor has revealed the workings of a celestial event involving binary stars that produce an explosion so powerful its luminosity ranks close to that of a supernova, an exploding star. Researchers have long debated about what happens when binary stars, two stars that orbit one another, come together in a common envelope. When this dramatic cannibalizing event ends there are two possible outcomes: the two stars merge into a single star or an initial binary transforms into an exotic shortperiod one. The event is believed to take anywhere from a dozen days to a few hundred years to complete -- an extremely fast time frame in terms of celestial events. More than half of all stars in the universe are binary stars, but it was not known what a common envelope event would look like until now. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releas es/2013/01/130124150812.htm 6 Late Night at the Observatory February 15 10:30 pm-12:00 am Beautiful View of Clouds of Cosmic Dust in Region of Orion MHSGC is a coalition of small museums, historical sites (including the Observatory) and societies in the Greater Cincinnati region. The organizations represented share the unique and fascinating history of our region. Through exhibits, programs, tours, lectures, and more, these sites offer a unique perspective on our past. On Facebook and the web. www.historicgreatercincinnati.org By Craig Niemi Looking for a unique night out? Come see what the Observatory is like after hours. You'll get to use the oldest big telescope in the U.S. to view astronomical objects that are not visible until late at night (weather permitting). These programs are recommended for adults only. If the weather does not permit viewing, we’ll have fun with some of the crazy science experiments and “adult” constellation mythology stories that we can’t share with family audiences. Admission is $10 per person The late nights sell out early. To make reservations please call 513321-5186 FOTO Board Members & Date Term Expires President: Basil Rowe / Oct. 2013 Vice President: Tiffany Groen Oct. 2013 Secretary: Michelle Lierl Gainey Oct. 2013 Treasurer: JoAnne Pedersen / Oct. 2013 FOTO/COC Representative: Scott Gainey / May 2013 Trustee: Dave McBride / Oct. 2014 Trustee: Al Scheide / Oct. 2014 Trustee: Dave Bosse / Oct. 2013 Trustee: John Blasing / Oct. 2013 Did You Know…. Saturn’s rings are almost 100% ice. Master of Arts in Public History www.nku.edu By Craig Niemi A new image from the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope in Chile shows a beautiful view of clouds of cosmic dust in the region of Orion. While these dense interstellar clouds seem dark and obscured in visible-light observations, APEX’s LABOCA camera can detect the heat glow of the dust and reveal the hiding places where new stars are being formed. The image shows the region around the reflection nebula NGC 1999 in visible light, with the APEX observations overlaid in brilliant orange tones that seem to set the dark clouds on fire. (Credit: ESO/APEX (MPIfR/ESO/OSO)/T. Stanke et al./Digitized Sky Survey 2) History majors often wonder what they can do with their degree other than teach in a traditional classroom. The Master of Arts in Public History offered at NKU gives those students a new direction to take with their careers. Public historians are trained to explain past human behavior in a variety of different contexts. It is history that is seen through museum exhibits, internet websites, documentaries, books, articles and audio-visual presentations. Over the past several years the Observatory has worked with NKU students on historical research, collection conservation and video documentaries. Did You Know… While Venus spins once, Earth spins 243 times. 7 “Make It-Take It” Teacher Workshops By Craig Niemi Make Your Own Astronomy Education Materials & Kits! Bring the universe to life in your classroom with hands-on, practical astronomy materials, designed by the experts and built by… you! In each workshop, you have the opportunity to make your own teaching tools, learn how to use them with lessons and activities, and then take your creations home with you! The workshop fee covers the cost of all materials. Reservations are required – call Leo at 513-3215186 to sign up! The Andromeda galaxy, also known as Messier 31, lies 2 million lightyears away, and is the closest large galaxy to our own Milky Way. It is estimated to have up to one trillion stars, whereas the Milky Way contains hundreds of billions. Recent evidence suggests Andromeda's overall mass may in fact be less than the mass of the Milky Way, when dark matter is included. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releas es/2013/01/130128224157.htm Space Instrument Adds Big Piece to Solar Corona Puzzle Upcoming Workshops: Moon Phases & Eclipses Kit Saturday, February 16, 2013 Time: 12:00-2:00 PM Cost: $35 Seasons, Sundials, & Solargraph Cameras Saturday, March 16, 2013 Time: 12:00-2:00 PM Cost: $35 Cool, New Views of Andromeda Galaxy The ring-like swirls of dust filling the Andromeda galaxy stand out colorfully in this new image from the Herschel Space Observatory, a European Space Agency mission with important NASA participation. This is one of the highest-resolution images ever taken of the solar corona, or outer atmosphere. It was captured by NASA's High Resolution Coronal Imager, or Hi-C, in the ultraviolet wavelength of 19.3 nanometers. Hi-C showed that the Sun is dynamic, with magnetic fields constantly warping, twisting, and colliding in bursts of energy. Added together, those energy bursts can boost the temperature of the corona to 7 million degrees Fahrenheit when the Sun is particularly active. (Credit: NASA) Strange Exoplanet's 'Backwards' Orbit Explained by Extra Star, Planet A perplexing alien planet locked in a "backwards" orbit around its parent star may finally be explained by the discovery of an extra planet and star near the oddball planetary system, scientists say. The discovery is centered on the so-called "backwards" planet HATP-7b, which orbits a star 1,040 lightyears from Earth in the constellation Cygnus. The planet, first spotted in 2008, has long defied explanation because of its orbit, which carries the world around its parent star in the opposite (or retrograde) direction of the star's spin. Long-term gravitational interference from the newfound star and alien planet, may be responsible for the strange retrograde orbit of HATP-7b, researchers said. While the planets of Earth's solar system all orbit the sun in the same direction as the sun's spin, astronomers have observed retrograde planets circling distant stars. How these exoplanets got on such unusual paths has remained a mystery. The newfound planet and star near the HAT-P-7b planetary system could change that. [The Strangest Alien Planets (Gallery)]http://news.yahoo.com/str ange-exoplanets-backwards-orbitexplained-extra-star-planet114556224.html 8 The 2013 Observatory History Calendar Phobos Flyby This year, Mars Express will make an extremely close flyby of Phobos, one of the Red Planet's two tiny moons. shows that the star will crash headlong into a trail of space dust while speeding through its part of the cosmos at a blistering 18.6 miles (30 kilometers) per second. That's about 66,960 mph (107,761 kph). http://news.yahoo.com/supergiantstar-betelgeuse-crash-cosmic-wall151545820.html Possible Solar System Orbiting White Dwarf All proceeds benefit the Cincinnati Observatory Center! The “History Calendar” features all the important dates you need to remember - Observatory programs, celestial events, and the significant events in the Observatory’s unique history. Plus lots of room to add your own significant events. Dozens of images from the Observatory’s archives grace the pages. Only $15.00! $13.50 for Observatory members. Ten or more copies $10 each. On Mars, Dry Ice 'Smoke' Carves Up Sand Dune The seasonal thawing of carbon dioxide ice near Mars' North Pole carves grooves in the region's sand dunes, three new studies reveal. The discovery, made using observations from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft (MRO), reinforces that the Red Planet's surface continues to be transformed today, even though Mars' volcanoes have died out and its liquid surface water apparently dried up long ago. http://news.yahoo.com/marsdry-ice-smoke-carves-sand-dunes143425987.html It is not just a flyby; it is almost within touching distance. The spacecraft's orbit around Mars will be altered so it flies past Phobos at a distance of just 36 miles (58 kilometers) — far closer than Mars Express' 2011 Phobos encounter, which brought it to within 62 miles (100 km) of the moon. http://news.yahoo.com/risky-marsmoon-flyby-tops-europes-2013space-133018481.html Supergiant Star Betelgeuse to Crash into Cosmic 'Wall' The red supergiant star Betelgeuse in the famed constellation Orion is on a collision course with a strange wall of interstellar dust, with the clock ticking down to a cataclysmic cosmic smashup in 5,000 years, scientists say. A new image of Betelgeuse by the European Space Agency's infrared Herschel space observatory, At 150 light-years from Earth, the Hyades cluster is the nearest star cluster to Earth's solar system and scientists have long wondered if some of those stars are home to alien planets. Now, that particular mystery might be solved. Astronomer Ben Zuckerman, a physics and astronomy professor at UCLA, has discovered evidence that the atmosphere of a white dwarf star in the Hyades cluster is "polluted" with rocky material from pulverized asteroids pulled into orbit around the dying, super-dense star. The presence of asteroid dust, Zuckerman said, suggests that larger objects like exoplanets, or possibly an entire solar system, may also be orbiting the white dwarf. http://news.yahoo.com/alien-solarsystem-may-exist-nearby-starcluster-133015130.html Did You Know…. In the winter of 2009 a 25 foot wide asteroid passed within 9000 miles or Earth. 9 10