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: http://star.arm.ac.uk/nibulletin/2007/Mar-02.html
Äàòà èçìåíåíèÿ: Fri Mar 2 15:11:06 2007 Äàòà èíäåêñèðîâàíèÿ: Tue Oct 2 04:16:02 2012 Êîäèðîâêà: IBM-866 Ïîèñêîâûå ñëîâà: atlantis |
From: TerryMoselaol.com Subject: Shuttle hailed, Moon grazes Saturn, Eclipse, LP Petition Date: 2 March 2007 00:08:05 GMT Hi all, ˆà 1. HAIL STORM DAMAGE GROUNDS ATLANTIS A sudden, explosive thunderstorm onˆàMonday battered the shuttle Atlantis' external fuel tank with wind-driven, golf ball-sized hail, causing extensive damage to the tank's protective foam insulation. NASA managers saidˆà engineers will have to move the shuttle back to the Vehicle Assembly Building for repairs, delaying launch on a space station assembly mission from March 15 to late April. ˆà 2. Moon Grazes Saturn We will have a spectacular near-miss on March 2 at about 02.36 when the almost full Moon will just skim past SaturnòÀÙs N Pole! It will be so close that in fact from N & E parts of Irelandˆàit will occult SaturnòÀÙs Moons Rhea and Iapetus, at about 02.36 and 02.37, but I doubt if youòÀÙll see them with the very bright Moon so close. Rhea will be magnitude 9.7, and Iapetus about mag 10.2. 3. Don't forget the Total Lunar Eclipse on Saturday night: Total Lunar Eclipse on 3 March: A Ruddy Moon for Ireland!ˆà ˆàA Total Eclipse of the Moon occurs when the Moon passes into the shadow of the Earth. It can only happen at Full Moon, but it doesn't happen every Full Moon because the Moon's orbit is tilted to ours by about 5 degrees, and so usually it passes above or below Earth's shadow, rather than through it. And sometimes it only passes through the edge of the shadow, giving a partial eclipse. The next total one visible from Ireland will be on Feb 21, 2008. ˆàˆà But this is a good one for Ireland, with all stages of the eclipse visible, and the main part occurs before midnight! If it's clear we'll see the Moon turn a glorious reddish colour - anything from a sort of ochre, to deep red. The exact colour can't be predicted, which is one of the fascinating things about such eclipses. The colour is due to the Sun's light passing through the Earth's atmosphere, which acts like a giant lens, focussing the light onto the Moon so that it never goesˆàtotally dark. The Moon starts to enter the Penumbra, EarthòÀÙs faint partial outer shadow at 20.18, and then begins to enter the darker main shadow or umbra at 21.30. It will be completely inside the umbra, i.e. the eclipse will be total, from 22.44 to 23.58, with Mid Eclipse at 23h 21m. ˆàˆà It will have left the umbra at 01.00, and will finally exit the penumbra at 02.24, marking the end of the eclipse. ˆàˆà The penumbral stages are barely noticeable, and it willˆàprobably be a few minutes after the start of the umbral phaseˆàbefore you'll notice the lower left side of the Moon start to darken slightly: say about 21.35. ˆàˆà This darkness will gradually spread across the Moon until by about 22.45 it will all be immersed in the shadow of the Earth. However, it won't all appear equally dark, as the Moon does not pass through the centre of the shadow, and even at mid-eclipse at 23h 21m you'll notice that the top left of the Moon won't be as dark as the bottom right, which will be closest to the centre of the shadow. ˆàˆà The Moonˆàwill be quite high up in Southern Leo, near Chi Leonis, with Saturn about 24 deg away to the upper right. ˆàˆà The Moon willˆàoccultˆà5th magnitudeˆà59 Leonis after the total phase ends, at about 00.43 for observers in Belfast, and about 00.30 for observers in Cork. That event would be visible in a small telescope. 4. LIGHT POLLUTION PETITION: ˆà"Save the night sky" Please sign this petition to save the night sky, andˆàsave vast amounts of wasted energy. Also please forward to anyone relevant and especially to science interest groups (You must be a UK resident) petitions.pm.gov.uk/starry-night ˆà Clear Skies, ˆà Terry Moseley
Last Revised: 2007 March 2nd
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