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Wednesday 29 June 2011

LIVE coverage of tonight's rocket launch from Virginia

NEWSALERT: Tuesday, June 28, 2011 @ 1645 GMT
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  The latest news from Spaceflight Now


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Own a piece of Space History with The Space Shuttle Commemorative Coin.
Limited edition coins made with metal flown in space on the very first
Space Shuttle mission: STS-1. History you can hold in your hands. Get
yours today at:

http://www.SpaceShuttleCoin.com
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TACTICAL MILITARY SATELLITE DUE FOR LAUNCH TODAY
------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Air Force plans to launch a $226 million mission aboard a
Minotaur rocket tonight to reshape how deployed forces receive battlefield
imagery from space, a breakthrough in the Pentagon's program to field
tactical satellites on smaller budgets and faster schedules. Liftoff is
scheduled for 8:28 p.m. EDT (0028 GMT) from Wallops Island, Va.

PREVIEW STORY:
http://spaceflightnow.com/minotaur/ors1/110627preview/

LIVE UPDATES IN OUR MISSION STATUS CENTER:
http://spaceflightnow.com/minotaur/ors1/status.html


STATION CREW 'SHELTERS IN PLACE' FOR DEBRIS THREAT
--------------------------------------------------
The six-member crew of the International Space Station was told to seek
shelter in two Russian Soyuz spacecraft this morning because of a
predicted close approach by an unknown piece of space debris. But the time
of closest approach came and went harmlessly at 8:08 a.m. EDT.

http://spaceflightnow.com/shuttle/sts135/110628iss/


NEXT GPS SATELLITE MOVES TO CAPE CANAVERAL LAUNCH PAD
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A Global Positioning System satellite has been loaded aboard its ride to
space, arriving Monday at Cape Canaveral's Complex 37 for mounting atop
the United Launch Alliance Delta 4 rocket.

http://spaceflightnow.com/delta/d355/110627payload.html


SOYUZ ROCKET LIFTS OFF WITH RUSSIAN SPY SATELLITE
-------------------------------------------------
A Soyuz rocket launched Monday from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern
Russia with a top secret Russian photo reconnaissance satellite to spy on
strategic sites around the world.

http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n1106/27soyuz/


+++
FINAL SPACE SHUTTLE ASTRONAUT PATCH!
Emblem for STS-135 now available in our store.
http://www.spaceflightnowstore.com/
+++
--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
Various Voluntary work-Litter Picking for Parish Council (Daytime) and also a friend of Kessingland Beach (Watchman)
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Information:
http://www.clubbz.com/club/2895/LOWESTOFT---3054/Lowestoft%20And%20Great%20Yarmouth%20Regional%20Astronomers%20(Lyra
--
More Info:
http://www.localokel.com/event/666/good_clear_skies

Tuesday 28 June 2011

SPA ENB No. 312

 
              ***********************************
             The SOCIETY for POPULAR ASTRONOMY
              ***********************************
        ====================================================
         Electronic News Bulletin No. 312      2011 June 19
        ====================================================
 
 
Here is the latest round-up of news from the Society for Popular
Astronomy.  The SPA is Britain's liveliest astronomical society, with
members all over the world.  We accept subscription payments online
at our secure site and can take credit and debit cards. You can join
or renew via a secure server or just see how much we have to offer by
 
 
MARS IS SMALL
Science Daily
 
Certain American astronomers say that Mars developed in as little as
two to four million years after the birth of the Solar System, far
more quickly than the Earth, and that that helps to explain why it is
so small.  They claimed that they could refine the chronology of the
formation of Mars by using the radioactive decay of hafnium to
tungsten in meteorites as a chronometer, but their (or their
apologists from 'ScienceDaily's) explanation of the procedure is
incomprehensible and there is no point in reproducing it here.
 
 
NEW LOOK AT PLANET GLIESE 581 d
Astropublishing
 
The planetary system around the red-dwarf star Gliese 581, just 20
light-years away, has caught the attention of astronomers in search of
planets that could support life.  In 2007 two planets, called c and d,
were detected around Gliese 581; they are located at the inner and outer
edges of the 'habitable zone', which means merely the range of orbital
radii where a hypothetical rocky planet would be able to retain liquid
water on its surface.  Of the two, d was thought to be too cold, so
the atmosphere on the night side would freeze and be precipitated out
onto the ground, making the surface uninhabitable.  Later simulations
of c made that planet, too, seem less than hospitable owing to an
extremely strong greenhouse effect, like that of Venus, that would
boil any water.
 
Attention was shifted from both c and d when, at the end of 2010,
another small planet, g, was allegedly detected (like the others, by
the gravitational perturbations that the planets exert on the star),
with dimensions similar to the Earth's and located in the centre of the
'habitable zone'.  But follow-up work indicates that g may not exist,
the original 'discovery' being a mistake.  But now a new study has
appeared that suggests that d is somewhat similar to the Earth,
although with a mass seven times greater and a surface gravity double
the terrestrial value it is by no means a 'twin'.  In view of the past
mistakes involving the Gliese 581 system, however, it would be prudent
not to over-do the optimism.  The trouble with planets is that they are
very topical, and some of the people who are trying to find them feel a
need to publish premature and possibly erroneous conclusions for fear
that others will do so first.
 
 
'FREE-FLOATING' PLANETS
BBC News
 
Japanese astronomers claim to have found free-floating 'planets' which
do not seem to orbit a star.  The objects revealed themselves by
bending the light of more distant stars, an effect called
'gravitational microlensing'.  The mass of an object bends light, as
Einstein predicted.  If a massive object passes in front of a more
distant star, it can act as a lens, bending and distorting the light
of that star so it may appear to brighten significantly.  The
researchers examined data collected from microlensing surveys of the
central area of our own Milky Way and found evidence of ten Jupiter-
sized objects for which no parent star could be seen within 10
Astronomical Units (Sun-Earth distances) of them.  Wildly extrapolat-
ing from the number of such bodies in the area surveyed, the
astronomers said that such objects could be extremely common.
 
According to astronomical convention, planets orbit a star or stellar
remnant, so if those objects have not got a host star, then they are
not within the definition of planets, even if they may have formed in
the same way as what we call planets, which is open to question.
 
 
SN 1987A CONTINUES TO BRIGHTEN
Nature
 
Astronomers from the University of Stockholm report that the remains
of supernova 1987A, that exploded in the Large Magellanic Cloud 24
years ago, are continually increasing in brightness.  After the
explosion the remnant slowly faded, but about 2001 that tendency
reversed, and the structure continued to brighten in successive years,
until today, when the characteristic ring (about a light-year across)
which surrounds the site of the explosion is as bright as it has ever
been.  The reason seems to be that, thousands of years before
exploding, the progenitor star of the supernova became unstable and
threw off a lot of surface material.  After the star exploded, the
material that was expelled so violently is catching up with the slower
ejecta from the previous phase, compressing them and causing shock
waves where X-rays are emitted.  The interaction of the X-rays with
gas in the remnant results in the emission of ultraviolet and visible
photons.
 
 
SOLITARY SUPERSTAR DISCOVERED IN NEARBY GALAXY
ESO
 
An international team of astronomers has used the Very Large Telescope
to study the star VFTS 682 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. They have
found spectroscopically that it is about 150 times the mass of the
Sun.  Such stars have previously been found only in the crowded
centres of star clusters, but VFTS 682 exists on its own.  It was
observed earlier in a survey of the most brilliant stars in and around
the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud, which has a lot of
gas, dust and young stars and is a very active star-forming region.
At first VFTS 682 was thought to be hot, young and bright, but
unremarkable, but the new study indicates that much of the star's
energy is being absorbed and scattered by dust clouds before it can
reach us, so the star is actually more luminous than previously
thought and is among the brightest stars known in terms of candle-
power.
 
Red and infrared light emitted by the star can get through the dust,
but the shorter-wavelength blue and green light is scattered more and
lost.  As a result the star appears reddish, although if the view were
unobstructed it would shine a brilliant blue-white.  As well as being
very bright, VFTS 682 is also very hot, with a surface temperature of
about 50 000 C.  Although VFTS 682 seems now to be alone, it is not
very far away from the very rich star cluster R 136, which contains
several similar objects.  There is no agreement as to whether such a
massive star could have been formed in the cluster and then been
ejected, although a layman might imagine that a measurement of its
motion would be of more value than speculation.
 
 
JUST 4% OF GALAXIES ARE SIMILAR TO MILKY WAY
National Science Foundation.
 
Researchers at Stanford University compared the Milky Way to similar
galaxies and found that just 4% are like ours.  They were interested
in how the Milky Way fits into the broader context of the Universe,
and whether our Galaxy is typical or not.  They compared the Milky Way
to similar galaxies in terms of luminosity, and distance to other
bright galaxies.  They found galaxies that have two satellites that
are as bright and close by as the Milky Way's two closest satellites,
the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, are rare.  The findings are
based on analyses of data collected by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
 
 
BLACK HOLES SPIN FASTER
RAS
 
Two UK astronomers using radio, optical and X-ray data say that black
holes in the centres of galaxies are on average spinning faster than
they did long ago.  There is evidence that many galaxies have black
holes in their centres.  The holes have masses from a million to a
billion (10*9) Suns and are called 'supermassive'.  They cannot be
seen directly, but material swirls around a hole in a so-called
accretion disc before it falls in and is lost.  That material can
become very hot and emit radiation, including X-rays that can be
detected by space-based telescopes, whilst associated radio emission
can be detected by telescopes on the ground.  As well as radiation,
twin jets are often associated with the accretion discs.  There are
many factors that might cause jets to be produced, but the spin of the
supermassive black hole is believed to be important.  However, there
are conflicting predictions about how the spins of the black holes
should be evolving, and their evolution has not been understood.
 
The astronomers compared theoretical models of spinning black holes
with radio, optical and X-ray observations, and said that the theories
can explain the population of supermassive black holes with jets.
Using the radio observations, they were able to sample the population
of black holes, deducing the spread of the power of the jets.  By
estimating how they acquire material (the accretion process) the
scientists tried to infer how quickly the holes are spinning.  The
observations might also give information on how the spins of the holes
have evolved.  It seemed that, on average, supermassive black holes
are spinning faster now than they used to do.  It is suggested that
those holes that grow by swallowing matter will barely spin, while
those that merge with other holes will be left spinning rapidly; so
the idea that in 'recent' times some of the most massive holes have
spun up may indicate that they have merged with other holes of
comparable mass.
 
 
SPIRIT ROVER COMPLETES MISSION ON MARS
NASA
 
The Mars rover 'Spirit' last communicated on 2010 March 22, as Martian
winter approached and the rover's solar-energy supply declined. The
rover operated for more than six years after landing in 2004 January
for what was planned as a three-month mission.  NASA checked
frequently in recent months for possible reawakening of Spirit as
solar energy available to the rover increased, but got no reply.
NASA bosses are now concentrating on Spirit's still-active twin,
'Opportunity'.
 
Spirit drove 7.73 kilometres, more than 12 times the goal set for the
mission.  The rover crossed a plain to reach a distant range of hills
that appeared as mere bumps on the horizon from the landing site,
climbed slopes up to 30 degrees, and covered nearly a kilometre after
one wheel seized in 2006.  It sent back more than 124,000 pictures,
ground the surfaces off 15 rocks, and scoured 92 places with a brush to
prepare them for inspection with spectrometers and a microscope.  One
major finding came, ironically, from dragging the seized wheel as the
rover was driving backwards in 2007.  The wheel ploughed up bright
white soil, and Spirit's instruments identified the bright material as
nearly pure silica.
 
 
ROSETTA GOES INTO HIBERNATION
BBC News
 
Europe's Rosetta spacecraft, which is heading for a rendezvous with a
comet in 2014, has been put into hibernation by its controllers.
Nothing will be heard from the spacecraft for the next 2.5 years --
not even a reassuring beep.  Rosetta should wake up on 2014 January
20.  The spacecraft will then be just a few months away from its
appointment with Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko out near Jupiter.
The plan is for it to orbit that 4-km ball of ice and dust and put a
small lander on its surface.  Rosetta has actually seen the comet
already, even though it is still more than 150 million kilometres
away.  The probe's camera system, managed by scientists from the
Max-Planck-Institute for Solar-System Research in Germany, recently
succeeded in identifying the comet against a dense field of stars in
Scorpius.
 
The probe's instruments had already been powered down in recent
months.  Rosetta was turned so that its solar wings faced the Sun, and
was put in a gentle spin so that it no longer needed to use thrusters
to maintain a stable configuration.  The onboard computer has been
left running to monitor two functions -- the clock system that will
eventually wake it up, and a pair of heaters, which will come on
occasionally to ensure that the entire satellite does not freeze up.
The 31 months of sleep will see Rosetta fly an arc from some 660
million km from the Sun out to 790 million km and back.  The probe is
the most distant spacecraft to operate on solar power, but it is so
far away now that the solar panels are providing very little energy.
Putting the probe to sleep will draw minimum power.  Rosetta was
launched in 2004 and has taken a rather circuitous route, making a
number of flybys of the inner planets and using their gravity to pick
up sufficient speed for the eventual comet encounter.  It has already
delivered some fascinating science, particularly at the close passes
it made to two asteroids -- Steins in 2008 and Lutetia in 2010.
 
 
COSMIC DISTANCE RECORD BROKEN
BBC News
 
A cataclysmic stellar explosion may be the most distant single object
yet observed with a telescope.  Scientists believe that the blast,
detected by the Swift space observatory, occurred 520 million years
after the Big Bang.  That means that its light has taken 13 billion
years to reach Earth.  The event, which was picked up by Swift in 2009
April, has been designated GRB 090429B.  GRB stands for 'gamma-ray
burst' -- a sudden pulse of very-high-energy radiation usually
associated with extremely violent processes, such as the final
collapse of giant stars.  The star would have been perhaps 30 times
the mass of our Sun.  Swift, as its name implies, has to act quickly
to catch gamma-ray flashes because they often last only a few minutes.
Fortunately, an afterglow at longer wavelengths will persist sometimes
for days, which allows follow-up observations by other telescopes that
can then determine distance.
 
There are other competing candidates for the title of 'most distant
object'.  Hubble, for example, was given much more powerful
instruments during its servicing mission in 2009, and teams working on
new images from the famous space telescope have seen galaxies that
look not far short of GRB 090429B -- and some potentially even further
away.  Scientists are keen to observe at great distances because
they might learn how the early Universe evolved.  They are particularly
keen to trace the very first populations of stars -- hot blue giants
that would have formed out of the cold neutral gas that pervaded the
young cosmos.  Such stars would have had brilliant but brief lives,
producing the very first heavy elements.
 
 
VOYAGERS FIND 'MAGNETIC BUBBLES'
BBC News
 
The Voyager probes, which were launched in 1977, are now approaching
the very edge of the Sun's influence, more than 14 billion km away.
Sustained by their radioactive power packs, the probes' instruments
continue to function well and return data.  They are so far away that a
radio message now has a travel time of about 16 hours.
 
Their information has allowed scientists to build a better picture of
what conditions are like in the zone where matter blown out by the Sun
pushes up against interstellar space.  Computer modelling based on the
Voyager insights suggests that the edge of our Solar System is a froth
of activity, like an 'agitated jacuzzi'.  Magnetic-field lines carried
in the wind of material coming from the Sun are breaking and
reconnecting, a process that is sculpting the wind into discrete
bubbles that are many tens of millions of kilometres across.  It is
likely that the mass of individual magnetic structures actually makes
the Solar System more porous to cosmic rays.  Researchers say that it
is more like a membrane that is permeable to the galactic cosmic rays,
so they expect those rays to enter and wander through the sea of
magnetic bubbles until they can access field lines that connect back
to the Sun and quickly escape.  The observations are of interest not
just to physicists but also to astronauts, who must be protected
from the dangers of cosmic rays, and to spacecraft engineers who have
to 'harden' the electronic circuitry in satellites against the impacts
from high-energy particles.  Astronomers confess to being surprised;
they thought that the outskirts of our solar neighbourhood would be
more sedate -- that the Sun's field lines would simply turn round and
reconnect with the Sun.
 
 
CHEMISTRY OF CHONDRITES
Science
 
According to some scientists, the carbon-containing chemicals found in
meteorites played a fundamental role in the appearance of life on
Earth.  Given the presence of certain chemicals in meteorites, there
is little reason to suppose that they are unique to our own planet,
and a logical conclusion would be that similar compounds are found
throughout the Solar System.  That hypothesis is supported by such
evidence as the similarity between certain carbonaceous chondrites
(rich in silicates and carbon compounds originating from the birth of
the Solar System) and the tail of comet Wild 2, Antarctic micro-
meteorites and interplanetary dust.
 
Despite the similarities, there are large chemical variations within
the carbonaceous-chondrite group, thought to be due to processes that
acted on their parent bodies after their formation.  A study in that
field, led by the University of Alberta (Canada), shows that the
variations have their origin in hydrodynamic activity that occurred
when our Solar System was in its infancy, and the meteorites were part
of much larger bodies, such as asteroids.  Among the samples studied
are pieces of a meteorite that fragmented during its fall onto the
frozen Tagish Lake in Canada, in 2000 January.  After being recovered
they have been kept continuously below freezing temperature to
minimise possible terrestrial contamination.  The variations in the
chemical make-up within the samples supports the hypothesis of
chemical and hydrothermal alteration within a larger parent body.
It would seem, then, that some of the compounds essential for life
were widely distributed throughout the primordial cloud from which the
Solar System formed.
 
 
SPA SOLAR SECTION
By Richard Bailey, Solar Section Director
 
MAY 2011
Rotation Nos. 2109. 2110
 
WHITE LIGHT
 
As in April, parts of the UK had long periods of fine weather.  An
observer in Surrey saw the Sun on all 31 days.  Solar activity was
strong up to the 15th, then there was a quiet period to the 28th.  The
NH had a third more than the SH over the month, but was quiet from the
18th to the 26th,
 
Main features :
 
First week:  A good NH AR 1203 closely followed by AR 1204.
 
Second week:  NH AR 1209 by the E limb on the 8th as 1204 neared the W.
On the 14th. only 3 small NH ARs were seen across the disc, 1208, 1209,
1210.
 
Third week:  1208 was by the W limb on the 15th, and SH AR 1214, with a
good leader heading a trail of small spots, was by the CM, but then
faded.  Four small scattered SH ARs ended the week.  NH quiet.
 
Fourth week: The best AR of the month, SH 1226 was in from the E limb
on 29th, small SH AR 1223 just past the CM and a row of NH ARs,
1224, 1225 and 1228 showed well.  1226 developed into a longish cluster
of mixed spots with a strong leader which had split into five spots in
the same penumbra by the 31st.  Faculae were regularly observed.
 
MDF  3.35      R  43.05
 
H-ALPHA
 
H-a observers were rewarded with views of many varied, often large and
complex, prominences during the month, spread around the perimeter.
Filaments were observed regularly.  A large prominence developed
between 0927 and 1102 UT on the 9th.  Many of the large prominences
were described as spectacular.  On the 1st three close small black
dots (not sunspots) developed into a filament, suggesting that the
dots could have been line-of-sight small prominences.
 
MDF  4.94
 
 
 
Bulletin compiled by Clive Down
 
(c) 2011 the Society for Popular Astronomy
 
 
The Society for Popular Astronomy website:   
 
 
 
--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
--
 

Big Comets Of The Past...

Comets were seen as Perculiar Apparitions back then and people thought they were the forerunners of doom....
--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Information:
http://www.clubbz.com/club/2895/LOWESTOFT---3054/Lowestoft%20And%20Great%20Yarmouth%20Regional%20Astronomers%20(Lyra
--
More Info:
http://www.localokel.com/event/666/good_clear_skies

Seaside Sunrise

Seaside Sunrise

The sun rises over the Atlantic Ocean silhouetting space shuttle Atlantis' external fuel tank and solid rocket boosters on Launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida in the image taken on June 23, 2011.

Image Credit: NASA/Jim Grossmann

--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Information:
http://www.clubbz.com/club/2895/LOWESTOFT---3054/Lowestoft%20And%20Great%20Yarmouth%20Regional%20Astronomers%20(Lyra
--
More Info:
http://www.localokel.com/event/666/good_clear_skies

Monday 27 June 2011

Discovered far out from the Sun C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS)

 
Jun 08  Pan-STARRS discovers comet 2011 L4
 
2011 L4 (Pan-STARRS)
Richard Wainscoat, Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii, reported to the MPC that an object discovered on four CCD images taken with the 1.8-m "Pan-STARRS 1" telescope at Haleakala on June 6.39 appeared to show slight non-stellar appearance; three follow-up 30-s r-band exposures were then acquired by M. Micheli and Wainscoat with the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on Mauna Kea (queue observer Lisa Wells) on June 7.44 UT, showing that a coma is definitely visible with a subtle hint of a faint tail towards p.a. 60 deg. After posting on the NEOCP astrometrists confirmed the cometary nature. [IAUC 9215, 2011 June 8]. The preliminary orbit gave perihelion at 0.4 AU in March 2013, however the accuracy quoted in the IAUC was rather great for the short arc of only 15 days. There is likely to be significant refinement as observations accumulate. The latest orbit gives a February perihelion at 0.3 AU. Based on this orbit, the comet could be a naked eye object from the UK in February 2013. Maik Meyer points out the the initial orbit also indicates a close approach to the orbit of Jupiter. There is clearly an uncertainty of several months in the actual date of perihelion, which will make quite a difference to the observational circumstances.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Information:
http://www.clubbz.com/club/2895/LOWESTOFT---3054/Lowestoft%20And%20Great%20Yarmouth%20Regional%20Astronomers%20(Lyra
--
More Info:
http://www.localokel.com/event/666/good_clear_skies

Friday 24 June 2011

Close Asteroid Flyby on June 27th


Space Weather News for June 24, 2011
 
http://spaceweather.com

ASTEROID FLYBY: Newly-discovered asteroid 2011 MD will pass only 12,000 kilometers (7,500 miles) above Earth's surface on Monday, June 27th. NASA analysts say there is no chance the space rock will strike Earth. Nevertheless, the encounter is so close that Earth's gravity will sharply perturb the asteroid's trajectory.  Details at:
 
 http://spaceweather.com .

GEOMAGNETIC OUTLOOK: A fast-moving stream of solar wind is buffeting Earth's magnetic field. The combined effect of this stream plus a CME expected to arrive on June 24th has prompted NOAA forecasters to declare a ~30% chance of high-latitude geomagnetic storms during the next 24 hours. Storm alerts are available from Spaceweather.com in two forms: voice
 
(http://spaceweatherphone.com) or text (http://spaceweathertext.com).

--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Information:
http://www.clubbz.com/club/2895/LOWESTOFT---3054/Lowestoft%20And%20Great%20Yarmouth%20Regional%20Astronomers%20(Lyra
--
More Info:
http://www.localokel.com/event/666/good_clear_skies

Wednesday 22 June 2011

Charts-info Astrosite Groningen (June 22, 2011) C/2009 P1 (Garradd):

Dear comet observers,

 
We have prepared the following new charts for our homepage:
 
 *  C/2009 P1 (Garradd): 
  • three 4.5x6.0 degrees charts for the period 24 June - 28 July 2011.
 
These new charts can now be downloaded from the charts section of our mainpage:
Here you can also download charts from earlier updates....
 
Reinder Bouma/Edwin van Dijk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2009 P1 (Garradd) will come into view for UK observers in 2011 June
 
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
--
Real Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator (Astrogator) of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Information:
http://www.clubbz.com/club/2895/LOWESTOFT---3054/Lowestoft%20And%20Great%20Yarmouth%20Regional%20Astronomers%20(Lyra
--
More Info:
http://www.localokel.com/event/666/good_clear_skies