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Tuesday 26 February 2013

SPA ENB No. 348

                The SOCIETY for POPULAR ASTRONOMY
        Electronic News Bulletin No. 348  2013 February 24


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
using 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 visiting    http://www.popastro.com/


POSSIBLE NAKED-EYE COMET IN MARCH
NASA

Comet Pan-STARRS (C/2011 L4) was discovered by the Panoramic Survey
Telescope & Rapid Response System on the Haleakala volcano in Hawaii,
a 1.8-m telescope that is used to watch for Earth-approaching objects
that might pose a danger.  In 2011 it noticed a comet, that was named
"Pan-STARRS" after it.  In early March, the comet will pass about the
same distance from us as the Sun is, as it briefly dips inside the
orbit of Mercury.  It may become a naked-eye object, perhaps about as
bright as the stars of the Plough.  However, a new comet is always an
unknown quantity, just as capable of being a dismal failure as giving
a spectacular display.  Unaltered by warmth and sunlight, distant
comets are like time capsules, harbouring frozen gases and primitive,
dusty material drawn from the original solar nebula 4.5 billion years
ago.  When such comets occasionally fall towards the Sun they bring
their virgin ices with them.  This is thought to be Comet Pan-STARRS'
first visit to the inner Solar System, so it has never been assailed
before by the fierce heat and gravitational pull of the Sun.  On the
one hand, the comet could fall apart without much of a show, but on
the other it might throw off a lot of material and embellish our
night sky substantially.

Because it will go nearer to the Sun than Mercury, Pan-STARRS could
be quite active, but could still be difficult to see.  From here the
comet will appear very close to the Sun, only observable in twilight
when the sky is not fully dark.  The best dates to look may be March
12 and 13 when Pan-STARRS emerges into the western sunset sky not far
from the crescent Moon.  A comet and the Moon, together, framed by
twilight-blue, is a rare sight.  The primary feature visible to the
naked eye may be the gaseous coma around the head of the comet, but
any tail will probably require binoculars or a small telescope.

Comet Pan-STARRS should not be confused with another, even more
promising, comet coming in November, Comet ISON.


THERE MAY BE EARTH-SIZE PLANETS NEARBY
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

On the basis of a wild extrapolation from publicly available data from
the Kepler space telescope, some astronomers have asserted that 6% of
red-dwarf stars may have Earth-sized planets.  Since red dwarfs are
the most common stars in our galaxy, there could be Earth-like planets
quite 'nearby'.  An average red dwarf is only one-third as large and
one-thousandth as bright as the Sun; none is visible to the naked eye.
Despite their dimness, such stars are good places to look for
Earth-like planets.  A transiting planet gives a larger photometric
signal (light dip) if the star is small, as the planet blocks more of
the star's disc.  The Kepler catalogue of 158,000 stars was used to
identify all the red dwarfs, which were then re-analysed to calculate
more accurate sizes and temperatures.  95 planet candidates were
identified orbiting them.  That was claimed to imply that at least 60%
of such stars have planets smaller than Neptune.  [60% of 158,000 is
95 THOUSAND! -- ED]  However, most of the 95 weren't the right size or
temperature to be considered Earth-like.  Just three planetary
candidates were both warm and approximately Earth-sized.


RARE EXPLOSION MAY HAVE CREATED OUR GALAXY'S YOUNGEST BLACK HOLE
Chandra X-ray Observatory

New data suggest that a highly distorted supernova remnant may contain
the black hole formed most recently in the our galaxy.  The remnant
appears to be the product of a rare explosion in which matter is
ejected at high speeds along the polar axis of a rotating star.  The
remnant, called W49B, is about a thousand years old as seen from the
Earth and located about 26,000 light-years away.  W49B is the first of
its kind to be discovered in the Galaxy, and it appears that its
parent star ended its life in a way that most others don't.  Usually
when a massive star runs out of fuel, the central region of the star
collapses, triggering a chain of events that quickly culminate in a
supernova explosion.  Most such explosions are fairly symmetrical,
with the stellar material blasting away more or less evenly in all
directions.  However, in the W49B supernova, material near the poles
of the rotating star was ejected at a much higher speed than material
emanating from its equator.  Jets shooting away from the star's poles
mainly shaped the supernova explosion and its aftermath.  The remnant
now glows brightly in X-rays and at other wavelengths, offering the
evidence for a peculiar explosion.  By tracing the distribution and
amounts of different elements in the stellar debris field, researchers
were able to compare X-ray data from the Chandra satellite to
theoretical models of how a star explodes.  For example, they found
iron in only half of the remnant while other elements such as suphur
and silicon were spread throughout.  That matches predictions for an
asymmetrical explosion.  In addition to its unusual signature of
elements, W49B also is much more elongated and elliptical than most
other remnants.

The authors tried to discover what sort of compact object the
supernova explosion left behind.  Most massive stars that collapse as
supernovae leave dense, spinning cores -- neutron stars.  Astronomers
can often detect neutron stars through their X-ray or radio pulses,
although sometimes an X-ray source is seen without pulsations.  A
search of the Chandra data revealed no evidence for a neutron star in
W49B.  The lack of such evidence may imply that a black hole formed.
Because supernova explosions are not well understood, astronomers are
keen to study extreme cases like the one that produced W49B.  The
relative proximity of W49B makes it relatively accessible for detailed
study.


CLUES TO THE ORIGIN OF COSMIC RAYS
ESO

In the year 1006 a new star was seen in the southern skies and widely
recorded around the world.  It was much brighter than Venus and may
even have rivalled the brightness of the Moon.  It was so bright at
maximum that it cast shadows and was visible during the day.
Astronomers have identified the site of that supernova and named it
SN 1006. They have also found in the southern constellation Lupus a
glowing and expanding ring of material that constitutes the remains of
the explosion.  It has long been suspected that such supernova
remnants may also be where some cosmic rays -- very-high-energy
particles originating outside the Solar System and travelling at close
to the speed of light -- originate, but until now the way that that
might happen has been unknown.

A team of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy has now used the VLT
to look at the SN 1006 remnant to try to see what is happening where
high-speed material ejected by the supernova is ploughing into
quasi-stationary interstellar matter -- the shock front.  The shock
front is analogous to the sonic boom produced by an aircraft going
supersonic and is a natural candidate for a cosmic particle
accelerator.  There appear to be many very rapidly moving protons in
the gas in the shock region.  While the protons are not themselves the
sought-for high-energy cosmic rays, they could be the necessary 'seed
particles', which then go on to interact with the shock-front material
to reach the extremely high energies required and fly off into space
as cosmic rays.  There is evidence that there is a region that is
being heated in just the way that would be expected if there were
protons carrying away energy from directly behind the shock front.


SPA SOLAR SECTION JANUARY 2013
By Richard Bailey, SPA Solar Section Director
[see 'Explanation of Terminology', below]

Rotation Nos. 2132, 2133

WHITE LIGHT    MDF 4.85,  R 60.24
AR, MDF and R figures showed an increase over those of December, which
were lower than November's despite the approaching maximum of the
Solar Cycle 24.  There was a burst of activity in both hemispheres
from the 4th to mid-month, when as many as 13 ARs were visible on the
disc on the 5th and 6th; the usual number was about 4, with a NH
dominance.  ARs were mostly small-scale.  The best AR of the month was
NH AR 1654, on the 15th, spread lengthily across the centre just above
the equator with a double header and stream of about 16 small spots
behind.  On the 1st NH AR 1640, just past the centre, was a stretch of
19 small spots.  The third main AR was NH 1660 in the fourth week, a
cluster of about a dozen small spots on the 22nd, but it faded as it
approached the W limb.  The NH was more active, with about three times
more sunspots than in the SH.  Faculae were regularly observed.

H-ALPHA    MDF 5.95
Varied prominences were seen around the limb daily, large ones in the
SW on the 1st, NW on the 15th, and a strong 'hedgerow' in the SE on
the 28th, all making good sights.  Filaments were seen daily, but only
one small flare.

The full version of this Report, and selected pictures, can be seen on
the Solar link from the SPA homepage.


EXPLANATION OF TERMINOLOGY

White-Light Observations: of the Sun's surface as normally seen.

H-Alpha Observations: made through special filters that pass only the
6563-Angstrom wavelength of the very strong H-alpha spectral line of
neutral hydrogen, allowing prominences, plages, filaments and flares
to be seen.

Filaments: the same things as prominences (which are seen projected
beyond the limb of the Sun) (limb = edge of the Sun's disc) but are
seen within the Sun's disc.

Plages: bright regions often seen where sunspots occur.  Flares are
sudden, very bright and often short-lived bursts of energy and matter,
where ARs are seen.

NH, SH: Northern hemisphere, southern hemisphere.

CM: Central Meridian, the centre-line of the Sun's disc between the N
and S poles.

AR: Active Regions on the Sun where sunspots are seen.  Each is given a
number in sequence when it first appears.  It may last more than one
revolution and reappear round the East limb of the Sun about a fortnight
after passing out of sight round the West limb.

MDF: Mean Daily Frequency of active regions and prominences reported by
Section members.

R: Mean daily number of sunspots counted by Section members.

Umbra, Penumbra: Dark central area of sunspots; paler surrounding area.

Faculae: Regions brighter than the normal photosphere (surface of the
Sun), often where sunspots have appeared, or will appear.





Bulletin compiled by Clive Down

(c) 2013 the Society for Popular Astronomy



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Good Clear Skies
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Astrocomet
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Colin James Watling
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Various Voluntary work-Litter Picking for Parish Council (Daytime) and also a friend of Kessingland Beach (Watchman)
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Lyra Website: https://sites.google.com/site/lyrasociety/
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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)
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Information
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