Friday, May 25, 2012

APOD 4.8 Scorpius in Red and Blue

Scorpius in Red and Blue

 Cosmic dust clouds dim the light of background stars. But they also reflect the light of stars nearby. Since bright stars tend to radiate strongly in the blue portion of the visible spectrum, and the interstellar dust scatters blue light more strongly than red, the dusty reflection nebulae tend to be blue. Lovely examples are the wispy blue reflection nebulae near bright, hot stars Pi and Delta Scorpii (upper left and lower right) in this telescopic skyscape from the head of the constellation Scorpius. Of course, the contrasting red emission nebulae are also caused by the hot stars' energetic radiation. Ultraviolet photons ionize hydrogen atoms in the interstellar clouds producing the characteristic red hydrogen alpha emission line as the electrons recombine. About 600 light-years away, the nebulae are found in the second version of the Sharpless Catalog as Sh2-1 (left, with reflection nebulae VdB 99) and Sh2-7. At that distance, this field of view is about 40 light-years across.

APOD 4.7 Herschel's Cygnus X

Herschel's Cygnus X

The Herschel Space Observatory's infrared view of Cygnus X spans some 6x2 degrees across one of the closest, massive star forming regions in the plane of our Milky Way galaxy. In fact, the rich stellar nursery already holds the massive star cluster known as the Cygnus OB2 association. But those stars are more evident by the region cleared by their energetic winds and radiation near the bottom center of this field, and are not detected by Herschel instruments operating at long infrared wavelengths. Herschel does reveal the region's complex filaments of cool gas and dust that lead to dense locations where new massive stars are forming. Cygnus X lies some 4500 light-years away toward the heart of the northern constellation of the Swan. At that distance this picture would be almost 500 light-years wide.

APOD 4.6 Shuttle Enterprise Over New York

Shuttle Enterprise Over New York


What's that in the background? Two famous New York City icons stand tall in the above photo taken last week. On the left looms the Statue of Liberty, a universal symbol of freedom, while on the right rises the Empire State Building, now the second largest building in the city. What's unique about this once-in-a-lifetime photograph, though, is the third icon that appears to Lady Liberty's left. High in the air and far in the background flies the space shuttle Enterprise -- perched atop a 747 jet -- on the way to its new home. New Yorkers and visitors to the Big Apple can visit the test space shuttle at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum on the West Side of Manhattan starting July 19.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Gerard Kuiper


Biography of Gerard Kuiper

On December 7, 1905 a small boy by the name of Gerrit Peter Kuiper was born in a small town in the Netherlands called Tuitjenhorn. His father was a tailor, and he himself was gifted with extraordinary eyesight that undoubtedly lead to his early proficiencies in the field of astronomy. Kuiper’s interest in astronomy would eventually lead him to make many discoveries including natural satellites, atmospheres, and binary stars, and produce a theory later to be proved true of a belt of comet-like debris existing in a ring just outside the solar system. All together this information caused Kuiper to become an astronomer with influence not limited to just his lifetime.
At first little Gerrit, who later was called Gerard, focused on his basic interest in the stars. This is not entirely surprising as he had eyesight that allowed him to see stars with a magnitude of 7.5, essentially four times dimmer than the average eye can see. By the time he reached the age of nineteen in 1924 Gerard began his studies with a number of other astronomers at Leiden University. He graduated in 1927 and completed his doctorate work- fittingly on binary stars- in 1933. At this time Kuiper moved to the United States and began work as a fellow in California under Robert Grant Aiken at the Lick Observatory. A few years later he left to work at the Harvard College Observatory.
            In 1935 while at this observatory, Kuiper met a young woman by the name of Sarah
Parker Fuller. The next year, they were married. The real successes for Kuiper, regarding the field of astronomy, comes in the years to follow as he joins the Yerkes Observatory in 1937 at the University of Chicago. This same year Gerard Kuiper became a naturalized citizen. As an official Dutch-American astronomer Gerard Kuiper, now thirty two, began the bulk of his studies of the skies. In the time between his observing Kuiper found time to be a director of the observatory twice: once in 1947 and once in 1957. In 1944 he was focused more on planetary research and was able to confirm the presence of methane in the atmosphere of Titan, a moon of Saturn. By 1947 the interest in planets continued and Kuiper correctly predicted carbon dioxide as the main ingredient in the atmosphere of Mars, as well as the rings of Saturn being composed of ice particles. His research extended as far as Uranus, of which he discovered the fifth moon, Miranda. Over the next seven years Kuiper discovered Nereid orbiting Neptune, proved the polar ice caps on Mars are made of frozen water and not carbon dioxide, and proposed three major theories/predictions. The first of these was an influential new theory on the origins of the solar system. Kuiper proposed that the planets had formed from the condensation of a large cloud of gas surrounding the sun. In addition to this he predicted that the surface of the moon would be like ‘crunchy snow’ to walk on- verified later by Armstrong and his description of the moon’s surface. Two years after his solar system origin theory he suggested the presence of a disk-shaped region of minor planets outside the orbit of Neptune. While he was not able to confirm this during his life, it was in fact proven to be true twenty years after his death with the presence of what is today called the Kuiper Belt.
            In 1960 Kuiper founded the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona and was the director for the next thirteen years, until his death in 1973. Kuiper died while on vacation with his wife, Sarah, in Mexico. In his honor were named: The Kuiper Airborne Observatory, craters on the moon, Mercury, and Mars, and the Kuiper belt itself- the most recognized of his influences.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Biography Sources- Gerard Kuiper

http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/profile.cfm?Code=KuiperG
http://www.biography.com/people/gerard-kuiper-9369878