Search found 17392 matches

by Chris Peterson
Thu Apr 11, 2024 4:44 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Planets Around a Total Eclipse (2024 Apr 10)
Replies: 12
Views: 748

Re: APOD: Planets Around a Total Eclipse (2024 Apr 10)

This conversation about digital processing and imagery differences shrinking or enlarging high contrast components of an image brings to mind my experience of the eclipse only a few miles away from where this photo was taken. The eye, occipital lobe visual processing part of the brain and other pro...
by Chris Peterson
Thu Apr 11, 2024 4:42 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Eclipse in Seven (2024 Apr 11)
Replies: 7
Views: 559

Re: APOD: Eclipse in Seven (2024 Apr 11)

What's the time separation of the photos here: 30 - 40 seconds or so? Also, there's the slightest hint of a pink prominence at 6 o'clock. Why can't we see more of it? I'd say 20 minutes between each image. The prominences are washed out by the corona close to the Sun. To capture both them and the c...
by Chris Peterson
Thu Apr 11, 2024 2:02 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Eclipse in Seven (2024 Apr 11)
Replies: 7
Views: 559

Re: APOD: Eclipse in Seven (2024 Apr 11)

abgbpb00 wrote: Thu Apr 11, 2024 1:59 pm I'm interested if anyone captured a picture of the Pons-Brooks comet during the eclipse?
I had a camera set up covering the area, but don't see it in the images. I also looked for it with binoculars at totality and didn't see it visually.
by Chris Peterson
Thu Apr 11, 2024 2:00 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Planets Around a Total Eclipse (2024 Apr 10)
Replies: 12
Views: 748

Re: APOD: Planets Around a Total Eclipse (2024 Apr 10)

This conversation about digital processing and imagery differences shrinking or enlarging high contrast components of an image brings to mind my experience of the eclipse only a few miles away from where this photo was taken. The eye, occipital lobe visual processing part of the brain and other pro...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 10:14 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Colors of Twilight vs. Sunset/Sunrise
Replies: 28
Views: 2214

Re: Colors of Twilight vs. Sunset/Sunrise

Or if they're just into shadow, they may still pick up the red light reflected from clouds even further west. Or they may be in shadow, in which case they are likely to look blue (which some people see as purple) because they are reflecting blue sky. Chris, I don't understand to which shadow you ar...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 5:27 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Colors of Twilight vs. Sunset/Sunrise
Replies: 28
Views: 2214

Re: Colors of Twilight vs. Sunset/Sunrise

I think that if you see a color photo whose color balance seems surprising, chances are that it is the picture that is different, not the natural phenomenon that has taken on a strange hue. Very true... but possibly excepting flowers! The color of the petals of pink/red/blue/purple flowers is creat...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 4:12 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Colors of Twilight vs. Sunset/Sunrise
Replies: 28
Views: 2214

Re: Colors of Twilight vs. Sunset/Sunrise

Peter, you wrote about the purple color of the upper sky. As I said, I have never observed purple color in the sky, except on those rare occasions when pink clouds at sunset or sunrise momentarily seem to take on a purplish-pink hue. Otherwise, I've never seen it. Ann, thanks for putting me in the ...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 2:17 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: A Total Solar Eclipse over Wyoming (2024 Apr 07)
Replies: 11
Views: 864

Re: APOD: A Total Solar Eclipse over Wyoming (2024 Apr 07)

So, I'm too late to get either solar glasses or other eclipse viewing paraphernalia (I'm only in a 95% totality band anyway), but if I was interested in getting something to use with binoculars in the future, what's the best choice? I know there are specialty "solar-only" binoculars with ...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 2:11 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Planets Around a Total Eclipse (2024 Apr 10)
Replies: 12
Views: 748

Re: APOD: Planets Around a Total Eclipse (2024 Apr 10)

The dark spot is too small. At the time of the eclipse, the angular distance between Venus and Jupiter was about 45 degrees. I enlarged the photo on my screen until the distance was 45 centimeters. At that scale the sun/moon disk should be half a centimeter in diameter (5 millimeters), but the dark...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 1:58 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: CMB Dipole: Speeding Through the... (2022 Apr 03)
Replies: 64
Views: 28546

Re: APOD: CMB Dipole: Speeding Through the... (2022 Apr 03)

What does " scientific consensus " mean? The universe was thought to be 13 billion years old based on the dubious quality of the General Theory of Relativity equations. Ignoring that this is a far-reaching extrapolation of equations that have a questionable relationship to reality, in a s...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 1:25 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Detailed View of a Solar Eclipse Corona (2024 Apr 02)
Replies: 16
Views: 1129

Re: APOD: Detailed View of a Solar Eclipse Corona (2024 Apr 02)

The red/pink is H-alpha. Is that to say that upon seeing the red/pink during totality, we are seeing with our own eyes the actual H-alpha colours of distant pink/red nebulae? The Sun is made of hot hydrogen. That hydrogen is emitting the same red light we see in emission nebulas. But where its gas ...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 10, 2024 12:55 am
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: CMB Dipole: Speeding Through the... (2022 Apr 03)
Replies: 64
Views: 28546

Re: APOD: CMB Dipole: Speeding Through the... (2022 Apr 03)

It is hardly a guess. It is scientific consensus, and therefore what most people should consider the likely answer. What does " scientific consensus " mean? The universe was thought to be 13 billion years old based on the dubious quality of the General Theory of Relativity equations. Igno...
by Chris Peterson
Tue Apr 09, 2024 6:38 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: CMB Dipole: Speeding Through the... (2022 Apr 03)
Replies: 64
Views: 28546

Re: APOD: CMB Dipole: Speeding Through the... (2022 Apr 03)

The CMB is the edge of the observable universe, not the the entire universe. I doubt this is the case. There is no evidence that microwave background radiation was produced 13 billion years ago, when the universe was allegedly forming. These are guesses. In my opinion, microwave background radiatio...
by Chris Peterson
Fri Apr 05, 2024 5:59 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)
Replies: 21
Views: 1102

Re: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)

Thanks. Are these "greater than total Solar eclipses" less common than annular ones? I don't know. I guess you'd have to look at all the average distances involved (Earth to Sun, Earth to Moon) and figure out whether the angular size of the Moon- on average- is larger or smaller than the ...
by Chris Peterson
Fri Apr 05, 2024 5:32 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)
Replies: 21
Views: 1102

Re: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)

Another question about the upcoming eclipse. I know a big deal is made of how the remarkably coincidental almost exact same apparent size of the Moon and Sun allows for viewing the Sun's entire corona at once and provides the best opportunity for science to study it, but wouldn't any total eclipse ...
by Chris Peterson
Fri Apr 05, 2024 5:22 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)
Replies: 21
Views: 1102

Re: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)

Another question about the upcoming eclipse. I know a big deal is made of how the remarkably coincidental almost exact same apparent size of the Moon and Sun allows for viewing the Sun's entire corona at once and provides the best opportunity for science to study it, but wouldn't any total eclipse ...
by Chris Peterson
Fri Apr 05, 2024 3:42 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)
Replies: 21
Views: 1102

Re: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)

I suppose the Sun has no meaningfully permanent longitude map that would allow these two coronal un-wrappings to be matched up. Which makes sense since the Sun is just a ball of plasma! But I gather that the rotational north-south pole line should remain the same long term. Or does it? I know the r...
by Chris Peterson
Fri Apr 05, 2024 2:55 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)
Replies: 21
Views: 1102

Re: APOD: The Solar Corona Unwrapped (2024 Apr 05)

Can ths be done with a coronagraph image over time, so as to highlight changes in direction and latitude of emissions? To some extent, but no ground-based coronagraph can approach the dynamic range accessible during an eclipse. One tricky point is that what we're seeing here is transient. The Sun i...
by Chris Peterson
Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:25 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Comet Pons-Brooks at Night (2024 Apr 04)
Replies: 2
Views: 463

Re: APOD: Comet Pons-Brooks at Night (2024 Apr 04)

Yes, Pons-Brooks is a nice comet! :D https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/2404/12P_Pons_Brooks_2024_03_30_JuneLake_DEBartlett1024.jpg APOD 4 April 2024 annotated.png I still find it very interesting that Pons-Brooks is so "gassy", even though it has (or so I think) visited the vicinity of the...
by Chris Peterson
Thu Apr 04, 2024 1:23 pm
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: I have a question
Replies: 3
Views: 1264

Re: I have a question

Does the nebula from which the sun emerged still exist? Run 3 Even if the nebula has been dispersed, there would still exist highly detectable traces of the emission cloud would there not? No, it no longer exists at all. It's material ended up in the Sun and in the other bodies that make up the Sol...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 03, 2024 6:35 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Unusual Nebula Pa 30 (2024 Apr 03)
Replies: 15
Views: 796

Re: APOD: Unusual Nebula Pa 30 (2024 Apr 03)

Says ChatGPT: The radioactive decay of nickel-56 (⁵⁶Ni) typically proceeds through electron capture, where one of the atom's inner shell electrons is captured by the nucleus, resulting in the transformation of a proton into a neutron. This process converts the nucleus into iron-56 (⁵⁶Fe) through th...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 03, 2024 4:57 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Unusual Nebula Pa 30 (2024 Apr 03)
Replies: 15
Views: 796

Re: APOD: Unusual Nebula Pa 30 (2024 Apr 03)

With a temperature near 200,000 K, WD J005311 is the hottest star known. The extreme properties of the central star are being powered by the residual radioactive decay of ⁵⁶Ni, where the usual half-life of 6.0 days from electron capture is increased to many centuries due to the nickel being complet...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 03, 2024 4:36 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Origin of the Universe
Replies: 55
Views: 112569

Re: Origin of the Universe

I agree but even the experts had to start somewhere . :thumb_up: I wasn't making any objection to your comment here! Thank you for the clarity you offer to all of us. You class is bigger than just the students in school. We've all had teachers that changed our lives and pushed us to think better. :...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 03, 2024 4:19 pm
Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
Topic: APOD: Detailed View of a Solar Eclipse Corona (2024 Apr 02)
Replies: 16
Views: 1129

Re: APOD: Detailed View of a Solar Eclipse Corona (2024 Apr 02)

I should have commented on this APOD before, because it is really stunning! https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/2404/CoronaExmouth_Hart_1080.jpg APOD 2 April 2024 annotated.png So these are my questions. Are the long straight lines magnetic lines, where particles rush out away from the Sun into the ou...
by Chris Peterson
Wed Apr 03, 2024 5:22 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: I have a question
Replies: 3
Views: 1264

Re: I have a question

Does the nebula from which the sun emerged still exist? Run 3 Even if the nebula has been dispersed, there would still exist highly detectable traces of the emission cloud would there not? No, it no longer exists at all. It's material ended up in the Sun and in the other bodies that make up the Sol...