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Download OverviewJuly2007 - Magdalena Ridge Observatory
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Overview of the MRO 2.4m Telescope Dr. Eileen V. Ryan 2.4m Telescope Project Manager/Project Scientist (NM Tech/Magdalena Ridge Observatory) July 11, 2007 The 2.4-meter Project: The 2.4 meter telescope has three basic objectives: July 11, 2007 • Classical astronomical research, with queue & remote observing (e.g., small bodies, transient phenomena). • DoD mission support: missile tracking, satellite signatures, sensor development. (The telescope will be fast-tracking). • Support & enhance NM education & public outreach. Focus Area: The MRO 2.4-meter is one of the largest telescopes in the world that has as its primary mission the study of small bodies (both natural and artificial) in the Solar System. July 11, 2007 Dedication Ceremony: October 26, 2006 July 11, 2007 Image of Saturn taken with the 2.4m telescope. July 11, 2007 April 2007 Public Events: Belen Middle School July 11, 2007 Telescope Operations: July 11, 2007 Asteroid Belt • Collisions are a fundamental process in the solar system & are not yet well understood. • Applications: planetary accretion, evolution of ring systems, evolution of the asteroid and Kuiper belts, planetary cratering, meteorite ejection and delivery, etc. • Also: Earth-Crossers (NEAs) are a potential hazard-Congressional metric issued. Locations of asteroids: April 8, 2003 July 11, 2007 Asteroids: Characteristics • Size Range: Power-law distribution from a few large (1000 km Ceres, 500 km Vesta) to many kilometer and metersized bodies. • Shapes: Most are highly irregular/ellipsoidal • Composition: Silicates, Irons, Stoney-irons July 11, 2007 NEA Eros NEA Itokawa • Size: 300 meters • Density: 1.9 g/cm3 (Packed more loosely than sand). • Gravity is so low (Vesc =10 cm/s), if you “shook” it gently, the pieces would fly apart. July 11, 2007 Impact Craters on Earth (~160) July 11, 2007 Meteorite Impacts on Earth Leonid Meteor Shower July 11, 2007 Impacts on the Earth Geologic & atmospheric weathering have covered the evidence of most impacts, but... • The Earth DOES get hit by asteroid fragments (meteorites) all the time (the atmosphere protects us from objects up to ~50 meters in diameter). • Objects >50 m but < 1 km would reach the Earth's surface and cause only local damage; Objects > 1 km are global killers! Chicxulub Crater 180 km diameter (65 million years ago) July 11, 2007 Meteor Crater 1.6 km diameter (50,000 years ago) 50 km Tunguska Airburst 50 km flattened area (95 years ago) Asteroid Hazards Issues: • Greatest risk: Objects large enough to perturb the Earth's climate on a global scale • How? Injecting large quantities of dust into the stratosphere • Result: Temperatures decrease around the globe, leading to massive loss of food crops • Threshold Diameter: 1 - 2 km (Explosion equivalent to a million megatons of TNT– Hiroshima was 17 kilotons.) July 11, 2007 Dealing with the Risks: For High-Explosive Mitigation of asteroid hazards: Need to derive the energy to fragment & disperse the object, which is dependent on: • Composition • Internal Structure (intact vs. porous) • Size July 11, 2007 Complication: Asteroid Porosity For High-Explosive Mitigation of asteroid hazards: Numerical simulations & laboratory studies indicate that more energy may be required to fragment porous bodies! And there is a “range” in porosities observed. July 11, 2007 Deep Impact Space Mission Crater size can reveal porosity & strength. In July of 2005, the Deep Impact spacecraft released a 370 kg impactor directly into the path of comet Tempel 1 (~14 km in size) at a speed of ~10.2 km/sec. The resulting collision produced an impact crater on the surface about 100 meters in diameter. NEO Comet Temple 1 July 11, 2007 ESA Don Quijote Mission Impactor: Hidalgo Orbiter: Sancho ESA's Don Quijote is an asteroid deflection precursor mission, designed to assess and validate the technology that one day could be used to deflect or destroy an asteroid threatening the Earth. July 11, 2007 Asteroid/Satellite Photometry • Asteroids/satellites shine from reflected sunlight– proportional to crosssectional area at small solar phase angles (0 is sun behind observer). • As the object rotates, the amount of light varies. • By measuring the light variation over time, we derive a rotation rate and constrain orientation & shape. July 11, 2007 Asteroid Ida (Rotation Images, Galileo Spacecraft) “Typical” Asteroid Lightcurve NEO Asteroid Lick over a 3 hour time period (moves from bottom center to upper left). July 11, 2007 Model Simulation Asteroid Kleopatra July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 Discovered on March 17, 2007 July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 • Orbital speed (relative to Sun): ~36 km/s • Speed (relative to Earth): ~ 8 km/s • Angular Speed (relative to observer): ~7.5"/min on May 14 Distance from Earth= 0.08 AU May 14, 2007 July 11, 2007 • Size based on an absolute visible magnitude H=20.1 150-470 meters. Tracking NEA 2007 FK1 Tracking 2007 FK1 with the 2.4m Telescope on May 14, 2007 July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Asteroid 2007 FK1 July 11, 2007 Find the Asteroid! July 11, 2007 Answer: July 11, 2007 Near-Earth Comet Linear VZ 13 Tracking Comet Linear VZ 13 with the 2.4m Telescope on July 6, 2007 July 11, 2007 Lucky Imaging Binary Star: Zeta Bootis (0.7" separation). Images taken with the 2.4m telescope on May 28, 2007. Before Conditions: 36 mph winds, 1.3 arcsec seeing, thin clouds, 1 second exposures. After Selected Image Reconstruction: 13 best of 1000 images taken with 0.001 second exposures, aligned and averaged. July 11, 2007 Radial plot Lucky Imaging Another Binary Star: Rotanev (0.6" separation). Images taken with the 2.4m telescope on May 28, 2007. Selected Image Reconstruction: 15 best of 1000 images taken with 0.001 second exposures, aligned and averaged using the MRO 2.4m telescope on May 28, 2007. July 11, 2007 Rotanev Binary Star System: Imaged at Starfire Optical Range using Adaptive Optics. Star Trails: Photo by Mark Vincent July 11, 2007