Saturday, October 07, 2006

New Distant Planets
The Hubble telescope has captured a new set of Jupiter sized planets in the Sagittarius sky. One of the planets orbits its star in only 10 hours.

"The new planets, all roughly the size of Jupiter, orbit so close to their stars that they are heated to more than 1600 degrees, said Dr Sahu, adding that if their home stars were any bigger, the planets would evaporate." - Source



10/7/2006 3:03:04 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [68] 
 Friday, August 25, 2006

And then there was 8 planets...
It's official, there are only 8 planets in our solar system.

Yesterday, Pluto officially lost it's planet certificate and is now consider one of many "dwarf planets". Many thought pluto would become a "pluton". But that just wasn't the case. Now the textboxes have to be re-written.

Here is a great article, with pictures on why Pluto had to go.


Astronomy
8/25/2006 6:03:43 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [11] 
 Monday, August 21, 2006

More planets anyone?
Will Pluto remain a planet or become a Pluton? There is much debate as whether Pluto is really a planet. With an abnormal orbit, when compared to the other planets in our system, Pluto has always been an "odd ball"...and a smaller ball than most thought when it was discovered.

From the John Hopkins Gazette
* Karl Glazebrook, professor in Physics and Astronomy: "My take is that a physical definition like the one proposed makes sense: something large enough to be spherical and which is not a satellite. But if I were in charge, I would insist on a diameter of greater than 1,000 kilometers to define a planet in order to remove Ceres from the list, but that would be an arbitrary cut to preserve the order of the main nine and to save the hassle of rewriting textbooks. Definitions and naming really matter little physically, anyway."

* Richard Conn Henry, professor in Physics and Astronomy: "I think the notion that Pluto is a planet is absurd. When it was initially discovered, it was thought to be vastly more massive than it turned out to be. Its orbit is radically different from that of all the other planets. Down with Pluto is what I say!"

It should be interesting to see the results, when and if a decision is agreed upon.


Astronomy
8/21/2006 4:52:44 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [5] 
 Saturday, August 12, 2006

Bad Planet!

For the second time in a week, humanity watched in fear and awe as a mysterious arm, estimated to be some 3 million light years across, once again appeared to part the black fabric of space, point an angry finger directly at Jupiter, and shout "No!" - SatireWire

Funny article and the images do make it look like it is pointing to Jupiter.


Astronomy
8/12/2006 4:04:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [5] 
 Saturday, July 15, 2006

4 Moons of Jupiter

During July the Earth is at its furtherest position from the Sun when it reaches a point known as aphelion, during northern hemisphere summer.

Thursday night a telescope showed two of Jupiter's moons, Europa and Callisto, closely paired west of the planet, and Io closer in on the same side. Ganymede, the brightest, is by itself on the east side. Tonight, the two largest moons, Ganymede and Callisto, will appear far enough out to observe through binoculars as faint "stars" west (right) of the planet, while Europa will be closer in on the east. Also tonight, Io will remain hidden in Jupiter's shadow until 10:16 p.m. local time.


Astronomy
7/15/2006 10:48:00 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [15] 
 Friday, July 07, 2006

Jupiter's Storm

For over 340 years, we have been watching what may be the solar system's longest lasting storm, Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Since Cassini first discovered it in 1665, after Hans Lippershey invented the telescope in 1608, many have been intrigues with the great gas giant. The high-pressure storm rotates (in the opposite direction from low-pressure Earth hurricanes) due to Coriolis effects (just as on Earth) making a complete rotation every 6 days (2.5 times faster than storms rotate on Earth). Jupiter's fast rotation rate (a 10-hour day) helps drive the storm. See animation of the storm, courtesy of Wikipedia.


Astronomy
7/7/2006 2:03:39 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [20] 
 Thursday, July 06, 2006

Jupiter Profile

Jupiter: Planet Profile

Mass (kg) 1.90 x 1027
Diameter (km) 142,800
Mean density (kg/m3) 1314
Escape velocity (m/s) 59500
Average distance from Sun 5.203 AU (778,412,020 km)
Rotation period (length of day in Earth days) 0.41 (9.8 Earth hours)
Revolution period (length of year in Earth years) 11.86
Obliquity (tilt of axis degrees) 3.08
Orbit inclination (degrees) 1.3
Orbit eccentricity (deviation from circular) 0.048
Mean surface temperature (K) 120 (cloud tops)
Visual geometric albedo (reflectivity) 0.44
Atmospheric components 90% hydrogen,
10% helium,
.07% methane
Rings Faint ring.
Infrared spectra imply dark rock fragments.

Astronomy
7/6/2006 2:04:12 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [126] 
 Friday, June 30, 2006

More Clear Skies for Viewing the Planet Jupiter

Another great night of viewing Jupiter with clear skies in Florida. Jupiter is the brightest object after sunset, except for the moon. The planet shines brightly in the southern sky, high above the faint Saturn and Mars low in the sky to the west. Jupiter sets around 2 AM  right now and around midnight by mid-July.

Astronomy
6/30/2006 3:36:05 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [9]