PMSP / Japanese site visit

C.A.A.S. Sky Commandos,
Very special thanks to Ron Salley and Brent Launius for authorizing us to be in the park after hours. You guys help make Arkansas a home run for our guests!

We all had a great time Friday night at PMSP visiting with each other and the 2 distinguished visitors from Japan. Mr Nakamura is a tour director, and Mr Shibayama is a Geology PhD/Director of the Natural Environmental Institute of Japan. They are doing the “initial site survey” for the big Japanese visit in August.

Who was there:
(see attached photo)
Mariko Cobb (Ar Tourism), Renee Robinson (Ar Tourism), Brent Launius (Park Ranger Extraordinaire!), Mr Nakamura, Mr Shibayama, Don and Carolaina Ferren, Carl Freyaldenhoven, Jim and Kathy Fisher, Paul Deeter, Jim Dixon and his daughter Samantha; John, Carol and their daughter Chelsea Reed; Don Lewis … and me…your humble scribe.

June and July:

Multiple Star parties at Pinnacle Mountain State Park mean that both CAAS monthly 7 p.m. meetings will be held at PMSP on June 12 and July 10

See http://www.caasastro.org for more details.

Blue Skies
Bill
Club Scribe

Ancient Supernova Riddle, Solved

By Dr. Tony Phillips

Australopithecus squinted at the blue African sky. He had never seen a star in broad daylight before, but he could see one today. Was it dangerous? He stared for a long time, puzzled, but nothing happened, and after a while he strode across the savanna unconcerned.

Millions of years later, we know better.

That star was a supernova, one of many that exploded in our corner of the Milky Way around the Pliocene era of pre-humans.  Australopithecus left no records; we know the explosions happened because their debris is still around. The Solar System and everything else within about 300 light-years is surrounded by supernova exhaust—a haze of million-degree gas that permeates all of local space.

Supernovas are dangerous things, and when one appears in the daytime sky, it is cause for alarm.  How did Earth survive? Modern astronomers believe the blasts were too far away (albeit not by much) to zap our planet with lethal amounts of radiation. Also, the sun’s magnetic field has done a good job holding the hot gas at bay.  In other words, we lucked out.

The debris from those old explosions has the compelling power of a train wreck; astronomers have trouble tearing their eyes away. Over the years, they’ve thoroughly surveyed the wreckage and therein found a mystery–clouds of hydrogen and helium apparently too fragile to have survived the blasts.  One of them, whimsically called “the Local Fluff,” is on the doorstep of the Solar System.

“The observed temperature and density of the Fluff do not provide enough pressure to resist the crushing action of the hot supernova gas around it,” says astronomer Merav Opher of George Mason University.   “It makes us wonder, how can such a cloud exist?

NASA’s Voyager spacecraft may have found the answer.

NASA’s two Voyager probes have been racing out of the solar system for more than 30 years. They are now beyond the orbit of Pluto and on the verge of entering interstellar space.  “The Voyagers are not actually inside the Local Fluff,” explains Opher. “But they are getting close and can sense what the cloud is like as they approach it.”

And the answer is….

“Magnetism,” says Opher. “Voyager data show that the Fluff is strongly magnetized with a field strength between 4 and 5 microgauss. This magnetic field can provide the pressure required to resist destruction.”

If fluffy clouds of hydrogen can survive a supernova blast, maybe it’s not so surprising that we did, too. “Indeed, this is helping us understand how supernovas interact with their environment—and how destructive the blasts actually are,” says Opher.

Maybe Australopithecus was on to something after all.

Opher’s original research describing Voyager’s discovery of the magnetic field in the Local Fluff may be found in Nature, 462, 1036-1038 (24 December 2009). The Space Place has a new Amazing Fact page about the Voyagers’ Golden, with sample images and sounds of Earth. After all, just in case one of the Voyager’s ever meets up with ET, we will want to introduce ourselves. Visit http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/en/kids/voyager.

Caption:

Left-over cloud from the Tycho supernova, witnessed by Tycho Brahe and other astronomers over 400 years ago. This image combines infrared light captured by the Spitzer Space Telescope with x-rays captured by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, plus visible light from the Calar Also Observatory in Spain.

Minutes from the May 2010 Meeting

by Bill Engberg;  siderolite-o-phile


Iridium Flare …and the police

Never saw an Iridium Flare before….whoooo hoooo!    -5 Magnitude (very bright) and one heckuva show when that satellite went over.  At appx. 9:13pm, for about 5 seconds, the perfectly focused reflection of the sun, which was on the other side of the horizon, lit up the sky like a torch! It brought cheers and long applause from our large crowd …and the yells and cheering might have brought the police. Good thing the neighbors know we are “a little bit crazy about astronomy.”

But I digress…

Carolaina Ferren presented the meeting info and was kind enough to mail David Reynolds (our hero!) his much earned and well deserved T-Shirt for helping track down and recreate the fantastic double logos which adorn the front and back of our groovy new T-Shirts. I handed out about ½ of the order of the exquisitely made T-Shirts and will give out the rest at future meetings.

Photos of the T’s are attached.

A few extras were made.  If you want one, the basic price is:

$17.10 for L

$18.50 for XL and

$20      for XXL and larger

$6   Flat Rate shipping anywhere in the U.S. No shipping needed if Andy and I can hand it to you at a meeting.

Please PayPal Andy Reed CAAS Treasurer if you want one. Simply go to PayPal.com, login, and click on “Send Money” and then send it to treasurer@caasastro.org

Special blessing and good karamel (apparently a hindu dessert for nice people) goes to Rocky Togni, Jim Fisher and Carl Freyaldenhoven for hosting the Boy Scout’s merit badge university, which was a huge success. That is right…the ACLU hasn’t destroyed the Scouts yet, so keep supporting your local Scout clubs! The University was held at the Federal building earlier that day and about 12 Scouts and their parents learned about the amazing sky above them. Jim said it was the best event yet for Scouts/CAAS. Then, the scouts were observing and sketching the planets and stars with us later, in order to earn their merit badge. Keep up the good work, Scouts!

We took some group photos of everyone at CAAS. I’ll post them to a Picassa/Google or other website (if someone will talk me through “how to post”). You don’t want me emailing a Gazillapixel-sized photo to you…

-Who was at the Meeting?

19 people were here tonight: Don and Carolaina Ferren, Carl Freyaldenhoven, Kevin Krug, Jim Fisher, Coy Scott, Rocky Togni, Paul Deeter, Allan Lee, John and Zachary Robins (father and son first time guests!…and Zachary is working on his Boy Scout astronomy badge. Their merit badge university was earlier in the day!), Jim Dixon and his daughter Samantha and her friend Emily (also a welcomed first time guest!), Darrell Heath (new member!), John Morrison and his 2 sons Jesse (merit badge university) and Caleb (all 3 were first time guests!)… and me…your humble scribe.

– PayPal is fixed! Try sending a $1 test gift just to try it out…

  • Order your spiffy new C.A.A.S. T-Shirts (all the cool kids are wearing them)
  • TAX DEDUCTABLE contributions to our fantastic club to help with school outreach and excite students about the sciences! (all the cool kids are donating a couple bucks)    I did…now I’m a cool teenager, too.
  • Annual dues (all the cool kids are joining C.A.A.S.)

People can still mail a check to our treasurer for any and all of the above.

Andy Reed, 312 Maranes Circle, Maumelle, AR  72113

-Upcoming Events

May:

Japanese “Advance Team” will be doing their site visit to Pinnacle Mtn State Park before bringing their large group of guests and visitors later in the year. CAAS will hold a Star Party in their honor at PMSP which is either May 29th (most likely) or 30th We’re confirming the dates right now.

June and July:

Multiple Star parties at Pinnacle Mountain State Park mean that both CAAS monthly 7 p.m. meetings will be held at PMSP on June 12 and July 10

See http://www.caasastro.org for more details.