Pagina's

7/30/11

great picture

Another great picture from NASA

7/28/11

The Milky Way

On a clear, moonless night away from the city lights, you can see a pale white band stretching across the sky. This hazy band of light is our own inside view of the city of stars that form the galaxy we are part of, the Milky Way Galaxy.
There are many myths involving the formation of the Milky Way, but the best known is probably the Greek myth of Hercules. In Greek mythology, Hercules was the son of Zeus and a mortal woman. It was said that when Zeus’ wife, while suckling Hercules, found out that his mother was a mortal woman, she pulled her breast away and her milk flowed among the stars.
But what is the Milky Way really?It is a spiral shaped galaxy, a vast collection of stars, gas and dust of which the solar system with our Sun and its system of planets, is a part. We are located about halfway

7/26/11

Scorpius

Scorpius is one of the easier recognisable constellations, not to confuse with Scorpio, the name for the astrological sign of the Zodiac. At the moment Scorpius is right above us here in the southern hemisphere.
In the Greek mythology the scorpion was send by the gods to kill Orion, the great hunter, after he had boasted to kill all animals on Earth. They fought for a whole day and finally were exhausted. When Orion fell asleep the scorpion stung him, Orion woke up and killed the scorpion but then died from the poison. The gods placed them amongst the stars in the sky but far apart so they could not fight anymore.
The tail of Scorpius lies in the Milky Way, the city of stars in which we live. When we look at the tail of Scorpius

7/24/11

Distant galaxy

NASA regularly posts great pictures of the universe, with a short explanation. Like this picture of a distant galaxy called NGC 2403.

Regards from the bush
Miriam

7/21/11

Rings around the planets

Saturn is well known for its rings, but fewer people know that the other gas giants have rings as well. They are less spectacular and not visible with amateur telescopes. They were only discovered in the last decades of the twentieth century. Many of the mechanisms behind some of the ring’s properties still remain under debate. Planetary rings have always been incidental discoveries. They have fascinated and mystified for as long as we have known about them.
Jupiter
In 1979 the space probe Voyager 1 discovered the rings around Jupiter. Technically they are visible from Earth with the strongest telescopes, but they are faint and were therefore overlooked so far. The main ring is flat and about 7.000 kilometres (4.350 miles) wide and less then 30 kilometres (18 miles) thick. It is the brightest component of the ring system. Outside it lay

7/19/11

Our closest star, the Sun

The Sun is our very own star. It gives us light, energy and warmth and without it, life could not exist on Earth. But what is a star and what kind of star is our Sun?

A star is a huge sphere of very hot, ionised gas. Because of the pressure and temperature in the core of a star, a nuclear reaction takes place that forms helium from hydrogen. This generates enormous amounts of energy, which is slowly carried outward until it finally reaches the surface and radiates out into space in the form of heat, light and other forms of radiation. This journey of energy to the surface can take up to a million years. Our Sun is a quite small and average star in the main sequence. Its surface has temperatures of about 5.500 degrees Celsius, which results in a yellowish light. Hotter stars will appear

7/14/11

A Moon Corona

Yesterday evening, we sat a round the campfire with our guests. It was almost full Moon but it was quite clouded. A little later in the evening the sky became clearer, except for some fast moving, high clouds. Then we saw something beautiful; as the thin clouds passed the Moon, a darker ring formed around it at a little distance. At some point the ring had even some colours in it and almost looked like a pale, circular rainbow. When the clouds moved on, the corona disappeared again.
Corona’s are produced by refraction of the moonlight (which is of course reflected sunlight) from ice crystals in the upper atmosphere. The hexagonal (6 sided) shape of the ice crystals focuses the light into a ring. If there are few ice crystals, you will see no clouds but a thin ring

7/12/11

The edge of the universe

Distance does strange things to our perspective. Astronomers have found a galaxy at the astonishing distance of 13 billion light years. It was born soon after the Big Bang and since its light has travelled so long to reach us, we see it as it was just after it was born. So the image we see is of a very young galaxy, at the same time it is very old, 13 billion years to be precise. Viewing galaxies so far away in our ever-expanding universe, introduces several bizarre twists in understanding. The very old, yet young galaxy is one of the least bizarre. Another thing that happens when you look at something that far away is that it looks bigger than it should at that distance. At the same time it looks dimmer than one would expect. The reason for this is

7/8/11

Our closest neighbour, the Moon

The Moon is our only natural satellite. Despite its proximity to Earth and the fact that man has visited the Moon, there are still many questions about the Moon. Scientists still struggle to answer some fundamental questions like: What is the nature of the Moon’s core? What is the structure of the mantle? And, despite recent evidence of substantial water on the Moon, why is there so much less than on Earth? According to the most accepted theory, the Moon formed roughly 4.5 billion years ago, when a large body the size of Mars hit the young Earth. The debris of both the impacting body and the Earth’s outer layers formed our Moon. Almost immediately, gravitational forces

7/6/11

Breathtaking stars

As a child I already had a fascination for stars. I think I was about nine years old when my brother in law pointed out the Big Dipper to me for the first time, and from that moment I was hooked. Although I already owned a book about astronomy when I still lived in the Netherlands and had looked up to the breathtaking sky of the southern hemisphere during our travels, the real fascination came when I came to live here in South Africa. Especially in winter the sky here is so clear that you can see the Milky Way beautifully.
Corné also got interested and

7/3/11

Saturn, Lord of the rings

The planet Saturn can be seen beautifully now in the night sky. Saturn is one of the most fascinating planets because of its rings. Through our 10 inch telescope you can clearly see the rings sticking out on both sides of the planet. Some of the larger moons can be seen as well. Saturn is one of the gas planets and the second largest planet in our solar system, after Jupiter. The planet is about Milky Way. You can see Scorpio beautifully and Sagittarius is rising. The Southern Cross is getting lower now and Arcturus in the constellation Bootes is one of the brightest stars in the sky. It is a great time of year if you love astronomy like us.