Saturday, January 25, 2014

Transcript for the Last week of January

PAUL
Welcome to Idaho Skies for the last week of January. We’re your hosts, Paul…

RACHEL
…and Rachel.

PAUL
If you’re out and about at 6:40 AM on Sunday, January 26th, then look for the thin crescent moon in the low southeast.

RACHEL
The moon will be above the star Antares, one of the largest stars in our galaxy.

PAUL
If this star replaced our sun, it would engulf all the inner planets out to Mars.

RACHEL
This is funny in a way, since the star’s name means rival of Mars.

PAUL
Antares is a red giant star and the heart of the constellation of Scorpius, the Scorpion.

RACHEL
Time for planet watching this week.

PAUL
Innermost Mercury reaches its greatest distance from the sun on the 31st.

RACHEL
Astronomers call this event its greatest eastern elongation.

PAUL
Although Mercury is 18 degrees away from the sun, a line between Mercury and the sun tilts strongly relative to the horizon.

RACHEL
This means Mercury only appears 9 degrees above the horizon.

PAUL
If you want to see this tiny planet, then go outside at 6:30 PM and look low in the west-southwest.

RACHEL
Mercury will be the only star visible near the horizon.

PAUL
For a second treat, search to the right of Mercury with your binoculars.

RACHEL
Less than a binocular’s field of view away, you will spy the one day old moon.

PAUL
It will appear as an incredibly thin crescent, if your can locate it.

RACHEL
United States entered the Space Age 56 years ago on the 31st.

PAUL
That’s when the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena and the US Army lofted the satellite Explorer 1 into orbit.

RACHEL
The rocket was the four stage Juno 1 rocket, which was a modification of von Braun’s Redstone missile.

PAUL
Explorer 1 weighed 31 pounds and was 81 inches long and 7 inches in diameter.

RACHEL
Its experiments included Geiger counters to measure radiation, a microphone to listen to micrometeoroid strikes, a temperature gauge to determined how the sun’s light affected the satellite, and radio.

PAUL
Explorer 1 was the third spacecraft into Earth orbit.

RACHEL
The other two were the Soviet Sputnik 1 and Sputnik 2.

PAUL
However, unlike the Sputniks, Explorer 1 made the first discovery of the Space Age.

RACHEL
It was the existence of a belt of radiation surrounding Earth.

PAUL
Since physicist James van Allen built the Geiger counters responsible for this discovery, we call the belts the Van Allen belts.

RACHEL
Explorer 1 remained in orbit until 1972 when air friction finally brought it back to Earth.

PAUL
That’s Idaho Skies for the last of January. Join us next month for the space and astronomy events for Idaho.

RACHEL
Be sure to follow us on Twitter at Idaho Skies for this week’s event reminders and sky maps.

For Idaho Skies this is Rachel…

PAUL
and Paul.

RACHEL
Dark skies and bright stars.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Transcript for Feb 19 - 25

RACHEL
Welcome to Idaho Skies for the fourth week of January. We’re your hosts, Rachel…

PAUL
…and Paul.

RACHEL
The gibbous moon is due south at 3:45 AM on the morning of the 20th.

PAUL
If you have some free time and a pair of binoculars or small telescope, you can watch the moon cover a 7th magnitude star named Hipparcos 54260.

RACHEL
Magnitude 7 stars are fainter than we can see with our unaided eye, but easily bright enough to see in binoculars or a small telescope.

PAUL
The star will disappear on the bright side of the moon, or to our east just after 3:45 AM.

RACHEL
Happy birthday Buzz!

PAUL
Buzz Aldrin is 84 years young on the 20th.

RACHEL
Buzz was the second man to set foot on the Moon when Apollo 11 landed on July 20, 1969.

PAUL
English mathematician John Couch Adams was born 224 years ago on the 21st.

RACHEL
Why is Adams important to the history of astronomy?

PAUL
Well, after the 1781 accidental discovery of Uranus by William Hershel, astronomers noticed that the planet wasn’t orbiting the sun as Newton’s Laws predicted.

RACHEL
That gave astronomers two choices.

PAUL
Either Newton’s Laws failed at large distances from the sun or that an unseen planet was tugging on Uranus.

RACHEL
Adams assumed the latter and began calculating the position of this unknown planet beyond Uranus.

PAUL
Unfortunately, before Adams could convince English astronomers to search in his calculated position, French mathematicians and astronomers did the same thing.

RACHEL
Their calculated position was nearly identical to Adam’s and they found Neptune after less than an hour of searching.

PAUL
The Italians get the last laugh however.

RACHEL
That’s right. We have since learned that Galileo recorded Neptune in his notes about Jupiter’s moons, not realizing that the “star” near Jupiter was actually Neptune.

PAUL
As the moon rises on January 23rd, you’ll see the star Spica located just to its right.

RACHEL
The moon just missed covering Spica before it rose over Boise.

PAUL
Spica is the brightest star of the large and faint constellation, Virgo.

RACHEL
The constellation represents Demeter, the goddess of the harvest.

PAUL
And Spica represents a sheaf of wheat that she’s holding in her hand.

RACHEL
Spica is 260 light years away. So the light you see tonight left in 1754 or at the beginning of the French and Indian War.

PAUL
Look for Spica to the right of the rising moon just after it rises at 12:30 AM.

RACHEL
The planet Mars a little above the moon.

PAUL
Mars appears about as bright as Spica, but it has a noticeable yellow-orange tint.

PAUL
That’s Idaho Skies for the fourth week of January. Next week tiny innermost Mercury makes its last appearance for the year.

RACHEL
Be sure to read our blog for additional information. It’s at idahoskies dot blogspot dot com For Idaho Skies this is Rachel…

PAUL
and Paul.

RACHEL
Dark skies and bright stars.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Transcript for Jan 5 - 11

RACHEL
Welcome to Idaho Skies for the second week of January. We’re your hosts, Rachel…

PAUL
…and Paul.

RACHEL
Earth reaches perihelion on January 4th.

PAUL
As many people know, Earth’s orbit around the sun is not perfectly circular.

RACHEL
It follows a mathematically-precise oval shape called an ellipse.

PAUL
Because of Earth’s elliptical orbit, we’re 3 million miles closer to the sun on January 4th than in July.

RACHEL
The laws of gravity dictate that Earth’s orbital speed around the sun will also be at its greatest today.

PAUL
This means winter in the northern hemisphere is several days shorter than its summer.

RACHEL
Mighty Jupiter reaches opposition on the 5th.

PAUL
Opposition is a point in space opposite the sun, that is, relative from our perspective.

RACHEL
At opposition, a planet beyond Earth is its closest to us.

PAUL
This makes the planet its largest and brightest in our sky.

RACHEL
Speaking of Jupiter, one of astronomy’s most momentous events occurred 404 years ago starting on the 7th.

PAUL
In 1610, Galileo Galilei turned his new telescope towards Jupiter and discovered that four large moons circled the planet.

RACHEL
Up until this time, most learned people believed that all heavenly bodies orbited around the Earth.

PAUL
This view of the world is called the geocentric model.

RACHEL
The geocentric model made sense because no one figure out how moons can remain in orbit around a planet while the planet is orbiting the sun.

PAUL
It also helped that no one felt Earth move or spin.

RACHEL
Galileo’s observations of the four large moons orbiting Jupiter showed that it was indeed possible to have more than one center of motion in the universe.

PAUL
That observation, along with his later observation of the phases of Venus cleared the way for astronomers to accept a new model for the solar system.

RACHEL
Nicholas Copernicus advocated this new model and it placed the sun at the center of the solar system.

PAUL
Although Copernicus did have some competition.

RACHEL
That’s right. Astronomer Tycho Brahe argued for a model that combined both the geocentric and heliocentric models.

PAUL
His mixed model had two benefits. First, it still left Earth stationary at the center of the solar system.

RACHEL
And second, it didn’t require the stars to be fantastically far away.

PAUL
You can see the Galileo’s Jovian satellites yourself with a pair of binoculars.

RACHEL
You’ll need to hold the binoculars steady against something, like a tree.

PAUL
Jupiter rises in the east-northeast at 6:00 PM this week.

RACHEL
You can’t miss it; Jupiter will be the brightest star in the sky.

PAUL
Happy birthday Stephen Hawking.

RACHEL
He celebrates his 74th birthday on the 8th.

RACHEL
That’s Idaho Skies for the second week of January. Next week is the birthday of the man most responsible for the Space Race of the 1960s. 

PAUL
Be sure to read our blog for additional information. It’s at idahoskies.blogspot.com. For Idaho Skies this is Paul…

RACHEL
...and Rachel.

PAUL
Dark skies and bright stars.