Monday, November 25, 2013

Comet Hale-Bopp Over Indian Cove

APOD 24 November 2013
Comet Hale-Bopp Over Indian Cove
This picture was actually taken on April 6 1997, it was imaged from the Indian Cove Campground in the Joshua Tree National Park in California. They used a flashlight to illuminate the rocks in order to get the six minute exposure. The comet was visible to the nake eye for an entire year before returning to the outer solar system and fading.

From California to the Pleiades

APOD 22 November 2013
From California to the Pleiades
This is a picture of the distance between the California Nebula over to the Pleiades. These colors would be too faint for anybody to see in the night sky. The California's reddish color comes from hydrogen atoms ionized by the blue star Xi Persei to its right. The Pleiades star cluster owes its blue color to the reflection of starlight by interstellar dust. In between the nebula and star cluster are the stars of the Perseus OB2 association. I think this provides a really cool view from across the Earth's sky and shows how some nebulae get specific colors.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Heavy Black Hole Jets in 4U1630-47

Heavy Black Hole Jets in 4U1630-47
APOD 20 November 2013
This is probably one of the coolest pictures I have ever seen so far about space. Black holes are surrounded by disks of gas and plasma gravitationally pulled from a nearby binary star. This material is expelled from the star system by jets from a spinning black hole. Astronomers discovered that some of these materials are not only electrons and protons but also dense materials such as iron and nickel. This black hole is a few times larger than the mass of our Sun. This was found by a Compact Array of radio telescopes in eastern Australia and the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

The Flash Spectrum of the Sun

APOD Nov 15 2013
The Flash Spectrum of the Sun
This is the flash of the visible spectrum of the Sun during the total eclipse that occurred on November 3. This image was caught while the solar eclipse was traveling over Africa. The visible spectrum is spread by diffraction due to the moon covering the solar photosphere. The strongest emission lines are due to Hydrogen atoms that produce the red alpha emission to the right and the blue beta emission to the left. The yellow emission comes from the helium atoms. This provides an awesome insight into what the visible spectrum of the Sun would look like during a solar eclipse.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Eclipse Over New York

APOD
4 November 2013
Eclipse Over New York
On November 3, a solar eclipse occurred during the morning in much of the Eastern North America and in Africa. Parts of the Earth saw the moon as too small to cover the sun so they saw a Ring of Fire. Some other parts of the Earth were able to see the moon completely cover the Earth, thus witnessing a total solar eclipse. In this picture, due to the location on Earth, the moon is only partly covering up the Sun, making it look as if somebody had taken a bite out of the Sun. The next solar eclipse that can be visible from New York City will happen on October 23, 2014 during sunset.

A Spectre in the Eastern Veil

APOD
30 October 2013
A Spectre in the Eastern Veil
The picture shown is a close up of the eastern part of the Veil Nebula, which is a large supernova remnant. The part of the nebula in this picture is only as large as the moon. This picture was recorded through narrow band filters, with the hydrogen emissions showing up in red hues while the oxygen emissions showing up in blue/green hues. This part is opposite to the western part of the Veil Nebula, named the Witch's Broom. I think this is really awesome due to the fact that it looks somewhat like a spectral bat and just has some pretty vivid colors.