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A February Valentine's Day Lovers Treat

January 24, 2012

To join star crossed hearts in love

February Astrophysics

During the month of February the human journey to the beginning of space and time takes lovers on a trip to experience the light fantastic in heart-shaped open cluster NGC 1662. Star crossed lovers can join the journey in the mighty Hunter’s shield, which many star travellers view as a golden lion pelt draped over Orion’s outstretched arms.

NGC 1662 lies farther north on the celestial sphere, 1.8 degrees west-northwest of Pi Orionis, right on top of Orion’s shield. Lovers journeying to NGC 1662 using a 5.1-inch (133mm) refractor at 23x can share a heart-in-the-sky outlined by 22 stars forming a heart with a loop where the lobes join.

Lovers viewing NGC 1662 will note the open clusters two brightest stars have a yellow hue. One is located on the loop of the heart, while the other adorns the top. The four stars along the loop are part of multiple star h684. A fifth stellar body will become visible if you turn up the viewing power on the telescope.

The light for your February Valentine’s Day lovers treat started its journey about two centuries prior to the original feast of St. Valentine. The light you both see and love you feel has travelled 1400 years to find you. True love really is eternal and written in the stars.

 

400th Anniversary of First Scientific Publication on Sunspots

April 2, 2011
The first recorded observations of sunspots are recorded in the texts of Chinese astronomers of thousands of years ago and we know England's Thomas Harriot mentions them in his recordings during December of the year 1610. This year marks the 400th anniversary of this first observation and to mark this occasion on the calendar of the human journey to the beginning of space and time we'll talk a little about the history of sunspot observations and observers.

The first recorded scientific publication on the subject of sunspots, titled De Maculis in Sole observatis et Apparente earum cum Sole Conversione Narratio (Narration on Spots Observed on the Sun and their Apparent Rotation with the Sun), was published by Johannes Fabricius in June 1611. Johannes had observed sunspots using the newly invented telescope that appeared during his time a few months earlier and his observations opened the door on four centuries of sunspot study and research that has shown us that our Sun goes through an eleven year sunspot cycle.

During the time of Johannes Fabricius scientists and people believed the Sun was unmovable, unchanging, the perfect celestial body, but this young man and astronomers like Galileo used their perception and intelligence to show that sunspots in fact travel around the surface of the Sun and the Sun actually rotates.

Breaking through thousands of years of teaching and belief using intense scientific method and trial and error experimentation Johannes Fabricius tracked sunspots across the surface of the Sun during sunset and sunrise using a simple technique that can still be used today. Johannes Fabricius allowed the sun's rays to enter a dark room through a pin hole opening and then observed sunspots on a sheet of paper. This simple technique is required because observing the Sun directly using a telescope, even a primitive one, is bad for your eye sight and could cause permanent damage and blindness.

Astronomers of the 1800s were clearly focused on sunspots and trying to delve deeper into the mysteries surrounding these dark areas observed on the Sun. Today were know these dark areas are temporary areas in the photosphere of the Sun that appear visibly as cooler dark spots compared to the hotter regions in the photosphere surrounding them. Expanding and contracting as they dance across the surface of the Sun at hundreds of meters per second, sunspots can be as large as 80,000 kilometers in diameter, which means they're large enough to view from Earth without the help of a telescope. We also know sunspot activity goes through an 11-year cycle of rising and falling, but at present we haven't figured out exactly why?

Astronomers on the human journey to the beginning of space and time started watching sunspot activity on a daily basis at the Zurich Observatory back in 1849. Recording the number and distribution of sunspots on the surface of the Sun in an effort to help map the observed sunspot cycle of the Sun and understand more about the reasons for and mechanisms behind sunspots. Daily observations of sunspots has also been recorded by the Royal Greenwich Observatory since 1874, and these observations contain information concerning the sizes and positions of sunspots as well. Astronomers believe the sunspot data collected since this time shows that sunspots are not randomly distributed, but are in fact mainly found in two latitude bands on either side of the equator of the Sun. Forming at mid-latitudes on the Sun at first, these bands widen and then move toward the Sun's equator as each 11-year cycle progresses.

The human journey to the beginning of space and time continues to study sunspot activity and all aspects of the Sun in an effort to understand more about the universe we live in on a daily basis. Join us again, another time, as we will continue to board our spaceship to the beginning of space and time on a nightly basis and travel to the reaches of the human universe in search of answers to questions we all hear.
 

Caelumi Plensaum gen Lumeninis " It's Full of Stars"

November 23, 2010
NASA photo. 
Take a walk deep into the darkness of a cold, clear night, far from the glare of interfering human light, and you can gaze upward at a night sky filled with stars-of-wonder, much like your first ancestors did for the first time thousands of years in the past. Lay the back of your head on the cold Earth for a few hours and stare deeply into the vastness of the night's sky before your eyes and watch the stars parade across the sky as they have since the birth of spaceshipearth1. Your mind will be sharing common thoughts and feelings of awe, wonder and smallness with the billions of humans that have witnessed this scene and thousands of generations of star-gazing ancestors that walked the Earth before you.
 
Thousands of years after the time of these star-gazing ancestors, modern science has managed too shine the light of discovery on many questions concerning the universe we live in and the true role humans play in the grand cosmic-play that's unfolding before your eyes. The relative age of the Earth has been determined in relation to the universe and scientists delve deeper into the mystery of how the seemingly simple starting ingredients of the cosmic-womb can lead to rich diversity of life on one dusty ball of water far from know where. We will embark on a cosmic journey of discovery from the beginning of time to the present day as we survey the contents of the night's sky close to spaceship Earth, measure the scale and majesty of the universe in human terms, and the relative motion of the Earth as it travels through space and time to its ultimate destination. This cosmic journey will allow your mind to develop a larger picture of the universe around you as human scientists understand it and provide you with the knowledge and understanding that can serve as a framework upon which you can build your mental model of the universe and determine your part in the grand cosmic play in which you find yourself.
 
After staring in wonder at the mystery of the stars above your head for a time it will be easy to understand how our ancestors looking upward at a sun, stars, moon and planets that relative to your point of view seem to revolve around spaceship Earth believed the Earth was the center of the known universe and all we survey. The heavenly bodies above your head will appear to circle above you as you stare upwards at the night sky and you won't feel the spinning motion of the moving Earth beneath you as it spins on its axis through the cold darkness of space and time. These facts make it easy to believe in and develop a belief system with the Earth at the center and humans standing on the pedestal of supremacy in the universe.
 
In the intervening years since our common star-gazing ancestors first starred upwards in wonder at the night's sky scientists have determined that spaceship Earth is a nondescript little ball of dusty-water circling an average sun among an infinity of space and time. Earth, the solar system and Milky Way galaxy have been taking part in a cosmic dance that has continued unabated for billions of years. The human journey through space and time to the present moment in the history of planet Earth and the universe has been filled with pitfalls we as a race have managed to avoid until this moment in the history of space and time. Humans have for the most part managed to change ancient beliefs in an Earth-centered universe that once seemed firmly based in common sense and logic to a more modern view of the universe around us. Science has provided the verifiable facts we need to determine the truth of human experience and strengthen natural bonds to the vast universe you see before your eyes in ways our first star-gazing ancestors could never imagine. This has allowed scientists to develop a cosmic-picture of the universe as our senses experience it that can allow us to create a mental picture of the real universe we journey through on a daily basis. Take a cosmic journey of discovery and wonder as we travel through space and time to the beginning of the universe and back again and shine the light of discovery on mysteries deep in the minds and hearts of all humans that have walked the Earth since mankind first starred upward in wonder and awe at the night's sky above your head and return to the place of our birth, the stars above us.
 
In terms of the part humans have played and still play in the big picture of the universe, the Earth we live on is one of a number of planets circling the sun we call Sol, along with thousands of asteroids and comets that make up our solar system and the uncountable number of dust particles floating between them. The universal address of the Sol system is the Milky Way galaxy, just past the half-way point from the center of the galaxy to the edge of the galactic disc. Just one of the billions or possibly a trillion stars or more making up the Milky Way galaxy that shine their energy into the cold darkness of space, Sol is an average sun, just like billions you can see looking up into the night's sky above you. A nondescript, average-looking ball of hydrogen and helium easily overlooked among the infinity of stars that make up the island of suns space scientists refer too as the Milky Way galaxy. The Milky Way is in fact a rather large galaxy in comparison to the galaxies that are part of what space scientists call the Milky Way's local supercluster of galaxies. Just one of a seeming infinity of galaxies space scientists see as they journey visually into the cold darkness of space and time before you, the Milky Way galaxy is part of the 40 or more galaxies space scientists refer too as the local group of galaxies in the part of the universe we reside.
 
 The night's sky you see above you might appear to be weblike in nature, with galaxies and clusters arranged in huge sheets and chains of stars that seemingly go on forever and ever. Pockets of stars are dotted across the sky before your eyes, forming giant stellar bodies called superclusters of galaxies that in the case of the Milky Way galaxy are referred too as the local group of the Milky Way galaxy, with vast voids of space and time separating them containing occasional lone galaxies. The universe before your eyes is made up of the sum total of the matter and energy contained within the superclusters and voids between them and there are humans that believe this fact makes human existence and the Milky Way galaxy relatively insignificant in the bigger picture of the universe and space and time. The human ability and desire to continuously delve into the mysteries of the universe around us and improve our place in the cosmic-picture could be the difference that tips the balance in favor of humans being a significant contributor to the universe, though, despite our relative insignificance in the cosmic picture before your eyes.
 
One question you might be pondering as you stare into the vastness of the night's sky above your head is how did the young human race come to be born amid the seeming infinity of space and time before your eyes? Modern science tells us we humans are a relative newcomer to the endlessness of space and time and the battle for survival on planet Earth. The journey upon which we embark will examine the evidence presented by scientists to support the belief in the relative insignificance of Sol, the planet Earth, and the miracle of the birth of sentient life on one little ball of dusty water in the universe. The first part of the journey we undertake will take us through the history of the development of present theories and evidence presented by space scientists to support their belief in the relative insignificance of all we know and believe to be true and important.
 
Looking upward into the vastness of space and time of the night's sky above you it isn't possible to ascertain that space scientists have determined the stars in the galaxies above you are speeding away from each other at a rate that has been measured relative to the universe you see. Scientists have measured the relative rate at which the distances between the galaxies above you're increasing with the passage of time. The important point in this fact is that if the universe around us is expanding, all of space and time you see above you must have once been closer together. Relative estimates calculated by space scientists indicates that this rate of expansion must have started at least 14 billion years in the past. This beginning of the universe space scientists have called the Big Bang, and while overall the universe has continued to expand unabated, there are areas in the vastness of space and time where the force of gravity has overcome the force of expansion created by the Big Bang. This is significant because it means that while the galaxies above you in the night's sky continue to speed away from the center of the Big Bang individually, the parts within galaxies are not expanding relative to one another. In contrast, galaxies and galaxy clusters continue to expand relative to one another, despite the force of gravity pulling them together and to form into larger clumps of gas and dust, which space scientists have dubbed stars and planets. The forming of large clumps of gas and dust is part of what space scientists call the life cycle of the stars, planets and galaxies, and although these stellar bodies are not life forms as space scientists define them, they do go through a life cycle of sorts that scientists have documented and analyzed at length.
 
 

Worshipping Sol

November 5, 2010
 The energy of the sun effects all life on Earth in ways we don't even imagine
Three separate instruments aboard Hinode will study Sol. NASA photos

The original source of energy for all life on Earth, Sol has always ruled the lives and minds of human beings in many ways. The ruler of the day time sky in ancient times and still today, Sol was worshipped by ancient humans of many cultures, and will always be a major force in the life of every human being on Earth. The Sumerians worshipped Utu as their sun god over two thousands years in the past and modern humans worship the sun in their own way. We send spacecraft toward Sol, to study the lifecycle and physical and chemical characteristics of our sun, and determine everything we can about the sun.

The Hinode (Solar B) is one spacecraft humans have sent out toward Sol in an attempt to delve deeper into the mysteries of the sun. A highly sophisticated observational satellite equipped with three solar telescopes, the Hinode has recently revealed that the solar corona isn't quite as static as solar scientists were first thinking. Hinode has surprised solar scientists of late with views of complex structures in the solar chromosphere, solar scientists use to think were static, but now believe to be dynamic structures flowing in time. This is making solar scientists rethink some of the previous ideas they had about the heating mechanisms and dynamics of the active solar corona.

What questions will solar scientists working with Hinode try to answer next? They'll be looking into why a hot corona exists above a cooler atmosphere? The origins and driving forces behind solar flares and the Sol's magnetic field? The changes that the release of solar energy in its many forms has on interplanetary space in our solar system and life on Earth? The answers to these questions could be a key to eventually answering many of the questions the first star gazers and all humans have been asking for thousands of years. Solar scientists are also interested in knowing how magnetic changes near Sol's surface effect the heliosphere, the outer atmosphere of Sol that extends beyond Pluto, and how severe changes in the heliosphere can cause satellites to malfunction and electrical blackouts on Earth.

 

Ancient Star Astronomy

November 1, 2010
Humans have been looking upward in awe and wonder at the skies during both the night and day time for thousands of years searching for answers to questions essential to life on Earth. This experience led them to devise whole belief systems based on the celestial bodies they viewed in the heavens above them and the effects the interactions of these celestial bodies has for humans and life on Earth.
Photo courtesy of Memo

Science has revealed that the Sumerians were one of the earliest recorded human civilizations to create whole belief systems based on myth and deities relating to celestial events and bodies in both the night and day skies, back in the fourth millennium BCE. The Sumerians lived in the southern regions of the alluvial basin formed by the rivers Tigris and Euphrates in modern-day Iraq and used a form of written communication scribed on clay tablets in wedge-shaped (cuneiform) characters in a complicated system comprising signs for words, syllables and vowels, unlike any other written language discovered.
Photo courtesy of Noetic Sciences

Archaeologists believe Sumerian theology used hymns, prayers and incantations to communicate myths that reflect the emergence of a coherent cosmic order represented by various deities, each fulfilling an essential role of divine harmony in the heaven and on Earth.
Photo courtesy of Freamasons

The creation and maintenance of a coherent cosmic order in the Sumerian civilization and its protection from the forces of chaos and rival cosmic orders are believed to be inherent in the creation of institutions, practices and rituals of the Sumerian civilization. Institutions, practices and rituals that have parallels in civilizations to emerge later in human history, like the Third Dynasty of Ur, when previously independent Sumerian cities came under the control of single political entities ruled by kings often assumed to have divine status by the people they ruled.
 

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A freelance writer, historian and amateur astronomer.

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