Tuesday 20 September 2022

Lecture on Wed, Fireball, JWST talk, Photo comp, Women in Dark Skies, ISS, Planets, 100h of Ast, World Space Week, more

Hi all,

1 Opening IAA Lecture of new season, Wed 21 September, 7.30 p.m, LARMOR LECTURE THEATRE, Physics Building, QUB. We are delighted to be resuming live lectures again, after the break caused by the pandemic, when they were held by Zoom. "Last Horizons: The Solar System Beyond Pluto", by Dr Steph Merritt, Astrophysics Research Centre, QUB

ABSTRACT In 1930, Clyde Tombaugh's discovery of Pluto seemed to mark the furthermost boundary of our solar system. Here, it was thought, was the mysterious Planet X, the ninth planet responsible for inexplicable irregularities in the orbit of Uranus. The discovery of Pluto's small mass briefly gave Planet X new life: but the discovery that Uranus's orbit was not irregular after all seemed to kill it once more. There were nine planets in the solar system, with Pluto as the last: an idea that held for decades, an idea we were all taught in school. But now, with Pluto demoted to a dwarf planet, and several other Pluto-like objects discovered in the distant frontiers of the system, the Planet X hypothesis has been unexpectedly resurrected. What lies beyond Pluto? Is there yet another planet out there in the coldest, darkest reaches of our solar system? What is the evidence for this new Planet Nine?  And if it truly exists, might the upcoming Legacy Space and Time Survey at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory discover it?

Biography I was born to a Northern Irish family in Surrey. After moving to Belfast aged 17 and working a series of minimum-wage jobs, I decided when I was 22 that I would be an astronomer instead. Working part-time and living on savings, I completed an Access Diploma in Science and Mathematics at Belfast Metropolitan College, then three A levels in Physics, Maths and English Literature, before beginning my four-year undergraduate Master's degree in Physics with Astrophysics at Queen's University Belfast in 2012. After graduating in 2016 with a first class honours, I decided I liked QUB enough to stay, and undertook a PhD in exoplanet atmospheres, specifically characterising the atomic species present in hot Jupiters. I passed my viva in 2021 and QUB apparently liked me as much as I liked it, as they hired me to work as a research fellow in the same department: however, my research focus has shifted to the study of the outer solar system with the upcoming Vera C. Rubin telescope.

   NB: The lectures will be held in the LARMOR Lecture Theatre, also in the Physics Building, which is much bigger, and will allow greater distancing between attendees. Directions. The Larmor is at the other end of the Physics building to the entrance to the Bell LT, which we used previously. It's on the side of the Physics building which is closest to, and parallel to, University Road. There is a ramp to allow wheelchair axis. Please try to be there early, to facilitate a prompt start – access should be available from shortly after 7 p.m.

 

2. NB: IAA Subscriptions for the year 2022 – 2023 are now due. See section 13 below for details of how to pay.

 

3. 'Stunning' meteorite lights up UK night sky (aol.co.uk) and

Why a mysterious fireball in the skies has scientists puzzled | Watch (msn.com) and

Brilliant meteor lights up the skies over United Kingdom (video) | Space

The Fireball seen above UK was a meteor, experts say https://www.aol.co.uk/news/fireball-seen-above-uk-meteor-231037900.html?soc_src=social-sh&soc_trk=tw&tsrc=twtr So it wasn't space debris after all - I stand corrected! But it was certainly unusual for a natural object.

 

4. IAS Lecture, on JWST: Monday 26th September at 8pm in Ely House, Ely Place, Dublin 2.  Dr Paddy Kavanagh of DIAS will talk about the James Webb Space Telescope to tell us about his participation in the project. Live, plus Zoom option: https://ucd-ie.zoom.us/j/61942416557

 

5. RGO Astronomy Photographer of the Year, - winners and short list in each category. Some fabulous inages! Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2022 WINNERS (rmg.co.uk)

 

6. Women in Dark Skies:  The next event in this series will take place on Thurs 22nd September at 7pm (ONLINE).  We are delighted to welcome Etta Dannemann to the series.  Etta's talk is "Guided Stargazing - a new activity for Nature Parks and Resorts". In this talk, Etta Dannemann will talk about Guided Stargazing as a new activity for dark sky areas. She will explain how hosts and nature parks can use the concept to create value at their sites, and tell more about her motivation to contribute to the Dark Sky Movement. 

Etta is the founder of VISIT DARK SKIES GmbH, a publisher focusing on dark-sky experiences located in Berlin, Germany. She has been working in the lighting industry for over 10 years as a lighting designer, researcher and communicator. As an architect by education, she is interested in visual and atmospheric topics as well as in outdoor experiences. With VISIT DARK SKIES, she wants to inspire people worldwide to create their own intense experiences with light and darkness. Among her collaboration partners, there are hosts, nature parks and providers from the US, UK, Austria, Ireland and Germany.

Register in advance for this meeting:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwud-mppj4jGtPgtfjIFCvqP-tzf0c7BfqQ

 

7. Derek Heatly will be offering the following items for sale at the first meeting on Sep 21:

Mars & Universe books (Haynes Owners Workshop Manuals); Mars by Giles Sparrow (2022, 2 copies); Full Moon (Michael Light, 2002, 2 copies); Hubble Legacy (Jim  Bell, 2020); Project Hail Mary (Andy Weir, 2021); 12 small meteorites from Morocco/N. Africa; Hubble dvds (5 disc set); Curiosity Rover medallion with metal removed before launch; 4 metal badges containing flown Apollo command module metal; likewise 3 Apollo medallions; signed Chris Hadfield bio - Guide to astronaut's life on Earth, and 2 signed copies of his ''You are Here'' Earth views book. All items just £5 each for quick sale! 

 

8. ISS. The venerable space station started a new series evening passes over Ireland on 15 September, continuing until 2 October.

 

9. Saturn still well placed for observing.

Saturn has reached opposition and rises in the southeast as the Sun sets in the northwest. This marks the planet's closest approach to Earth this year at a distance of 1.324 billion kilometres. At magnitude +0.3, Saturn is easily visible in eastern Capricorn all night.

   Saturn still lies about 15 degrees south of the celestial equator, so northern observers need nights of good seeing to get the best view of the planet and its rings. At opposition, the rings spanned nearly 44 arc-seconds, with a tilt of about 13 degrees. The disk is about 19 arc-seconds in diameter.

 

10. JUPITER

The giant planet is approaching opposition on 26 September, and is already by far the brightest object in the night sky apart from the Moon. This is a particularly close opposition, in fact this will be the closest opposition in at least 70 years, with Jupiter at a distance of only 591,295,249 km and it will shine at mag -2.9. The 4 Galilean moons will be easy to see, even in binoculars.

 

11. 100 Hours of Astronomy, 1- 4 October

1 to 4 October 2022, the IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach (OAO) will continue the legacy of celebrating 100 Hours of Astronomy. For this year's theme, the programme draws inspiration from the OAO's motto: "Astronomy for Everyone". It aims not only to celebrate OAO's 10th anniversary but also to invite amateurs and professional astronomers, teachers, outreach professionals and astronomy enthusiasts from all over the world to collaborate and come together as a community to help make astronomy more inclusive of all Earth's people.
 
100 Hours of Astronomy project encourages our global community to host or participate in astronomy outreach events over these 100 hours. The goal is to enable as many people as possible, from children to senior people, to engage with the sky and gain a basic understanding of our astronomical surroundings. There are numerous creative possibilities for activities during these 100 hours, but we especially invite you to either organise a Meet the IAU Astronomers! meet-up or an outreach event as part of NameExoWorlds 2022.

  Be safe1, be inclusive and share your event on OAO's IAU Global Outreach Event Calendar!
   Win a telescope and other prizes
The 15 events that best connect communities will win a telescope kindly donated by OAO's partners 
Sterren Schitteren Voor Iedereen (Stars Shine For Everyone - SSVI), Leiden University, and BRESSER in a special edition of the Telescopes for All programme. The first 100 events registered for 100 Hours of Astronomy will receive IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach goodies, including printed versions of Communicating Astronomy with the Public Journal. For your event to be eligible, submit it to the IAU Global Outreach Events via this form before 31 September 2022, 23:59 your local time and implement the event during the 100 Hours of Astronomy (1-4 October your local time). More information on the contest can be found here
   When spreading the word about your event on social media, be sure to use #100HoursOfAstronomy and #IAUoutreach so we can help promote your activity too! 
   Stay tuned to OAO's social media channels (
Facebook and Twitter) as we release more information and resources in the upcoming weeks.
   Notes
[1] Covid-19 Safety Measures. Please follow the health measures recommended by your country or local area when joining the 100 Hours of Astronomy activities. 
  Contact: Suzana Filipecki Martins, International Outreach Officer, Tel: +81 905 9477 087

12. OPIS – Conversation with Oliver Jeffers, deadline 4 October

MEANWHILE BACK ON EARTH… IN CONVERSATION WITH OLIVER JEFFERS Tickets, Mon 24 Oct 2022 at 19:30 | Eventbrite

Teachers and educators are invited to take part in this virtual conversation, hosted by the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) in partnership with HarperCollins Children's Books and CLPE.

 

13. World Space Week, 4 – 11 October; more details later

 

14. Name Exoworlds competition, deadline 11 November

IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach (OAO)
nameexoworlds2022@oao.iau.org

 

 

 

 

15. Mayo Dark Sky Festival, 4-6 November, Newport, Mulranny and Ballycroy.

This year we will have talks by Brother Guy Consolmagno, head of the Vatican Observatory, Dr Sera Markoff of the University of Amsterdam, whose team was responsible for capturing the iconic first image of a black hole back in 2019, and renowned Irish botanist and broadcaster Dr Éanna ní Lamhna.  Professor Mark McCaughrean of the ESA will return to the festival with an update on the James Webb Space Telescope. 

   People can look forward to world class speakers in a friendly and welcoming atmosphere.  But it is not just about science and biodiversity - the festival offers curated performances and exhibitions that evoke the natural beauty of west Mayo. Cellist Patrick Dexter will perform on the opening night in Ballycroy on Friday 4th of November, and Ballycroy Visitor Centre will also play host to a stunning exhibition of night time photography.

Check out our website www.mayodarkskyfestival.ie  for all the latest updates.
Tickets will go on sale at the end of September when the full programme will be launched

 

16. Easy Teaser  - More Clues.

Time is fundamental to many aspects of astronomy. In that context: What comes before and after this sequence. Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten? And it's obviously NOT just Six, and Eleven!

   No answers yet, so here's a clue: Think of it in a different language.

  Another clue: The Moon is involved in the time aspect.

Do I have to spell it out for you? What unit of time is based on the Moon?

Right, this is going to be the last clue – the 'different language' is Latin. And don't say that you don't know Latin – you'll know these words OK.

 

17. DIFFICULT TEASER – Answered,

A S Z b R S, & T B D b J S. What's the space connection?

   Answered - first was Sara Beck at 03.27 our time on the 11th, who had the advantage of the time difference of being in Massachusetts, USA, where it was still evening when my email was sent.

Next was frequent winner, Peter Millar, who answered it at 09.48 the same morning, local time. Even allowing for the time zone difference, Sara was first – well done. And to Peter too: I've never kept a tally of winners, but off the top of my head, I think he's out in front.

   Next to get it was Stevie Beasant – a new name in the Hall of Fame; well done Stevie. Then Maurice McFadden got it too, well done also.

   It stands for "Also Sprach Zarathustra" by Richard Strauss & "The Blue Danube" by Johann Strauss", the two best known pieces of music in "2001: A Space Odyssey" (The latter was used as the shuttle was docking with the orbiting rotating wheel space station).

 

18. New Difficult Teaser:

What was relegated from 2nd to 3rd in 1989?

  Please send all Teaser answers to me at my aol address terrymosel@aol.com

 

19. INTERESTING WEBLINKS (Disclaimer - Use of material herein from various sources does not imply approval or otherwise of the opinions, political or otherwise, of those sources).  NB: If the title in the weblink does not indicate the subject matter, I give a brief simple intro before the link. I may also comment about the link afterwards.

 

ASTROPHYSICS:

James Webb Telescope rediscovers Earendel, the farthest known star in the universe (msn.com)
Do black holes explode? (msn.com)
1 million new galaxies discovered in just 300 hours https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/181461261045233/?sfnsn=scwspmo
 Two SMBHs to merge within the next 3 years – and we should be able to watch! https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/181298001061559/?sfnsn=scwspmo

Mysterious radio burst from space is unusually close—and especially baffling (nationalgeographic.com)

Black Holes explained. https://www.facebook.com/100045998303732/posts/644466443763293/?sfnsn=scwspmo

 

 

COSMOLOGY:

JWST's First Glimpses of Early Galaxies Could Break Cosmology - Scientific American

 

EARTH & MOON

NASA's Mars rover, Perseverance collects 'amazing diversity of samples' to be tested on Earth (msn.com) 
Startling find in meteorite that fell in UK (aol.co.uk)
China discovered a new type of Moon crystal that might lead to limitless energy (msn.com) 
Brilliant meteor lights up the skies over United Kingdom (video) | Space
New moon mineral discovered in China's lunar samples | Space
Dinosaurs weren't wiped out by an asteroid 66 million years ago, study suggests (aol.co.uk) 

 

EXOLIFE

Plants can photosynthesize with the light from M-Dwarf stars,  https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC2022/EPSC2022-495.html

NASA's Mars Perseverance rover finds samples of Microbial life on mars | Watch (msn.com)

 

EXOPLANETS

Earthlike exoplanets may not have oceans like ours https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EPSC2022/EPSC2022-506.html

Astronomers may be getting Webb Space Telescope exoplanet measurements wrong | Space

 

IMAGES & Videos

Perseverance snaps 'most detailed image ever taken' on Mars surface | Watch (msn.com)
Sizes of different galaxies – amazing! https://www.facebook.com/100045998303732/posts/644922800384324/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Graphic showing distribution of nearest stars https://www.facebook.com/1624145592/posts/10225631919097822/?sfnsn=scwspmo
HST's amazingly detailed image of M31 https://www.facebook.com/100057547862871/posts/502340721694186/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Blazing comet tail is whipped by solar winds in astonishing astronomy photo (msn.com) 
Brilliant meteor lights up the skies over United Kingdom (video) | Space
2.5-billion-pixel image is the most detailed view ever of Mars landscape (newatlas.com) 
Amazing Pluto flyover https://www.facebook.com/1306886536/posts/10229773202576745/?sfnsn=scwspmo

 

SOLAR SYSTEM

New Horizons spacecraft https://www.facebook.com/695105737/posts/10158231434610738/?sfnsn=mo

Space rock slams into Mars and explodes (msn.com)

Behold! Webb Telescope's first Mars image reveals a troubled planet (msn.com)

Perseverance Finds Strongest Signs Yet of Life on Mars | Watch (msn.com)

Lost moon may have spawned Saturn's rings | Science | AAAS

Mars sun halo seen by Perseverance rover was thought to be impossible | Space

 

 

SPACE

Congress wants transparency on Blue Origin launch failure | Space

The FCC Is Finally Taking Space Junk Seriously - Scientific American

SpaceX's Starship Super Heavy rocket just fired up 7 engines for the 1st time (video) (msn.com)

The Reason Why NASA's Artemis Program Doesn't Have Reusable Rockets (msn.com)

Record-breaking cosmonaut dies (msn.com)

NASA's Artemis 1 rocket launch hinges on fueling test on Sept. 21 | Space

Lunar Cruiser is sensational, prototype lunar vehicle will house man (msn.com)

NASA announces third launch attempt date for its 'mega moon rocket' | Live Science

NASA replaces leaky seals on Artemis 1 moon rocket, fueling test next | Space

Jeff Bezos's uncrewed rocket explodes in fireball during flight (msn.com)

 

SUN

Whip-cracking burst of energy from sun could explain solar wind | Live Science

Solar Orbiter sees carbon dioxide escaping Venus' atmosphere | Space

 

TELESCOPES, INSTRUMENTS, TECHNIQUES.

Can the James Webb Telescope see the past? | Live Science

 

20.  JOINING the IRISH ASTRONOMICAL ASSOCIATION. This link gives options to join the IAA.

https://irishastro.org/join-the-iaa/ If you are a UK taxpayer, please select the 'gift-aid' box, as that enables us to reclaim the standard rate of tax on your subscription, at no cost to you. You can also make a donation via Paypal if you wish: just click on the 'Donate' button. See also https://irishastro.org/  

 

The Irish Astronomical Association is registered with The Charity Commission for Northern Ireland NIC 105858

 

DISCLAIMER: Any views expressed herein are mine, and do not necessarily represent those of the IAA.

Clear skies,

Terry Moseley


 

Sunday 11 September 2022

Sun lecture by Lucie Green, IAA first meeting, Sky at Night, Sale, Occultations, ISS, Saturn, Jupiter, 100 hours of astronomy, OPIS, more


Hi all,

 

1 Tuesday 13 September 18:30: "Revealing the Sun's Mysteries" Public Lecture delivered by Professor Lucie Green. The lecture will take place at the Emeleus Lecture Theatre at Queen's University Belfast. This is a ticketed event with free admission. Please get your ticket through the link https://blogs.qub.ac.uk/so8belfast/public-talk/

 

2. Opening IAA Lecture of new season, Wed 21 September, 7.30 p.m.

We are delighted to be resuming live lectures again, after the break caused by the pandemic, when they were held by Zoom.

"Last Horizons: The Solar System Beyond Pluto", by Dr Steph Merritt, Astrophysics Research Centre, QUB

ABSTRACT In 1930, Clyde Tombaugh's discovery of Pluto seemed to mark the furthermost boundary of our solar system. Here, it was thought, was the mysterious Planet X, the ninth planet responsible for inexplicable irregularities in the orbit of Uranus. The discovery of Pluto's small mass briefly gave Planet X new life: but the discovery that Uranus's orbit was not irregular after all seemed to kill it once more. There were nine planets in the solar system, with Pluto as the last: an idea that held for decades, an idea we were all taught in school. But now, with Pluto demoted to a dwarf planet, and several other Pluto-like objects discovered in the distant frontiers of the system, the Planet X hypothesis has been unexpectedly resurrected. What lies beyond Pluto? Is there yet another planet out there in the coldest, darkest reaches of our solar system? What is the evidence for this new Planet Nine?  And if it truly exists, might the upcoming Legacy Space and Time Survey at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory discover it?

NB: The lectures will be held in the LARMOR Lecture Theatre, also in the Physics Building, which is much bigger, and will allow greater distancing between attendees. More details in the next bulletin.

Biography I was born to a Northern Irish family in Surrey. After moving to Belfast aged 17 and working a series of minimum-wage jobs, I decided when I was 22 that I would be an astronomer instead. Working part-time and living on savings, I completed an Access Diploma in Science and Mathematics at Belfast Metropolitan College, then three A levels in Physics, Maths and English Literature, before beginning my four-year undergraduate Master's degree in Physics with Astrophysics at Queen's University Belfast in 2012. After graduating in 2016 with a first class honours, I decided I liked QUB enough to stay, and undertook a PhD in exoplanet atmospheres, specifically characterising the atomic species present in hot Jupiters. I passed my viva in 2021 and QUB apparently liked me as much as I liked it, as they hired me to work as a research fellow in the same department: however, my research focus has shifted to the study of the outer solar system with the upcoming Vera C. Rubin telescope.

 

3. NB: IAA Subscriptions for the year 2022 – 2023 are now due. See section 13 below for details of how to pay.

 

4. September's The Sky at Night is on Monday (12th) at 10pm on BBC4 and deals with astrophotography and the Very Large Telescope.

 

5. Derek Heatly will be offering the following items for sale at the first meeting on Sep 21:

Mars & Universe books (Haynes Owners Workshop Manuals); Mars by Giles Sparrow (2022, 2 copies); Full Moon (Michael Light, 2002, 2 copies); Hubble Legacy (Jim  Bell, 2020); Project Hail Mary (Andy Weir, 2021); 12 small meteorites from Morocco/N. Africa; Hubble dvds (5 disc set); Curiosity Rover medallion with metal removed before launch; 4 metal badges containing flown Apollo command module metal; likewise 3 Apollo medallions; signed Chris Hadfield bio - Guide to astronaut's life on Earth, and 2 signed copies of his ''You are Here'' Earth views book. All items just £5 each for quick sale! 

 

6. Occultation by URANUS

On the 13th of September 2022 the Uranus system will occult the star UCAC4 535-005486. The stellar magnitude in the visible is around 11m9. This is a very big difference compared to the 5m7 of Uranus. However Uranus is significantly dimmer in the near infrared due to the methane
component in its atmosphere.
  This is a very special event and VERY hard to observe for all not having
a K-Band camera system and an appropriate telescope. Read more at https://www.iota-es.de/uranus_rings2022.html
If you are interested keep me informed.
Dr. Wolfgang Beisker
International Occultation Timing Association - European Section
Research and Development
www.iota-es.de,  www.CasaRosmaninho.pt
This will be a nice challenge for any expert imagers especially those with advanced timing features and filters.

 

7. Occultation of Uranus, 14 September.

By coincidence, the next evening Uranus itself will be occulted by the waning gibbous Moon. From Belfast, it starts at 22.35, with Uranus in Aries at an altitude of 11 degrees. Reappearance, at the dark limb of the Moon, will b e at about 23.24.Since Uranus has a small, but appreciable, disc (3.66 arcsecs), the actual disappearance and reappearance will each last about 8 seconds.

  Times will be slightly different depending on your location, so start observing about 10 minutes before these times. Disappearance will occur about halfway from the Moon's equator to its North Pole; reappearance will be at about 1/3 of the way from the Equator to the N Pole. There are no stars of similar magnitude in the area, so there will be no problem with identification.

  

8. ISS. The venerable space station will start a new series evening passes over Ireland on 15 September, continuing until 2 October.

 

9. Saturn still well placed for observing.

Saturn has reached opposition and rises in the southeast as the Sun sets in the northwest. This marks the planet's closest approach to Earth this year at a distance of 1.324 billion kilometres. At magnitude +0.3, Saturn is easily visible in eastern Capricorn all night.

   Saturn still lies about 15 degrees south of the celestial equator, so northern observers need nights of good seeing to get the best view of the planet and its rings. At opposition, the rings span nearly 44 arc-seconds, with a tilt of about 13 degrees. The disk is about 19 arc-seconds in diameter.

 

10. JUPITER

The giant planet is approaching opposition on 26 September, and is already by far the brightest object in the night sky apart from the Moon. This is a particularly close opposition, with Jupiter at a distance of only 591,295,249 km and it will shine at mag -2.9. The 4 Galilean moons will be easy to see, even in binoculars. There will be a nice transit of Ganymede and its shadow across the planet on Sep 13. The shadow crosses the disc from 21.05 until 24.00, and the satellite itself crosses from 22.40 to 24.09

 

11. 100 Hours of Astronomy, 1- 4 October

1 to 4 October 2022, the IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach (OAO) will continue the legacy of celebrating 100 Hours of Astronomy. For this year's theme, the programme draws inspiration from the OAO's motto: "Astronomy for Everyone". It aims not only to celebrate OAO's 10th anniversary but also to invite amateurs and professional astronomers, teachers, outreach professionals and astronomy enthusiasts from all over the world to collaborate and come together as a community to help make astronomy more inclusive of all Earth's people.
 
100 Hours of Astronomy project encourages our global community to host or participate in astronomy outreach events over these 100 hours. The goal is to enable as many people as possible, from children to senior people, to engage with the sky and gain a basic understanding of our astronomical surroundings. There are numerous creative possibilities for activities during these 100 hours, but we especially invite you to either organise a Meet the IAU Astronomers! meet-up or an outreach event as part of NameExoWorlds 2022.

  Be safe1, be inclusive and share your event on OAO's IAU Global Outreach Event Calendar!
   Win a telescope and other prizes
The 15 events that best connect communities will win a telescope kindly donated by OAO's partners 
Sterren Schitteren Voor Iedereen (Stars Shine For Everyone - SSVI), Leiden University, and BRESSER in a special edition of the Telescopes for All programme. The first 100 events registered for 100 Hours of Astronomy will receive IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach goodies, including printed versions of Communicating Astronomy with the Public Journal. For your event to be eligible, submit it to the IAU Global Outreach Events via this form before 31 September 2022, 23:59 your local time and implement the event during the 100 Hours of Astronomy (1-4 October your local time). More information on the contest can be found here
   When spreading the word about your event on social media, be sure to use #100HoursOfAstronomy and #IAUoutreach so we can help promote your activity too! 
   Stay tuned to OAO's social media channels (
Facebook and Twitter) as we release more information and resources in the upcoming weeks.
   Notes
[1] Covid-19 Safety Measures. Please follow the health measures recommended by your country or local area when joining the 100 Hours of Astronomy activities. 
  Contact: Suzana Filipecki Martins, International Outreach Officer, Tel: +81 905 9477 087

12. OPIS – Conversation with Oliver Jeffers, deadline 4 October

MEANWHILE BACK ON EARTH… IN CONVERSATION WITH OLIVER JEFFERS Tickets, Mon 24 Oct 2022 at 19:30 | Eventbrite

Teachers and educators are invited to take part in this virtual conversation, hosted by the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) in partnership with HarperCollins Children's Books and CLPE.

 

13. World Space Week, 4 – 11 October; more details later

 

14. Name Exoworlds competition, deadline 11 November

IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach (OAO)
nameexoworlds2022@oao.iau.org

 

 

 

 

15. Mayo Dark Sky Festival, 4-6 November. More details later.

 

16. Easy Teaser  - Another Clue.

Time is fundamental to many aspects of astronomy. In that context: What comes before and after this sequence. Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten? And it's obviously NOT just Six, and Eleven!

   No answers yet, so here's a clue: Think of it in a different language.

  Another clue: The Moon is involved in the time aspect.

Do I have to spell it out for you? What unit of time is based on the Moon?

 

17. NEW DIFFICULT TEASER

A S Z b R S, & T B D b J S. What's the space connection?

No answers yet, so here's a clue. It's similar in principle to another teaser posed some time ago.

 

  Please send all Teaser answers to me at my aol address terrymosel@aol.com

 

18. INTERESTING WEBLINKS (Disclaimer - Use of material herein from various sources does not imply approval or otherwise of the opinions, political or otherwise, of those sources).  NB: If the title in the weblink does not indicate the subject matter, I give a brief simple intro before the link. I may also comment about the link afterwards.

 

ASTROPHYSICS:

Can anything travel faster than light? https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/180042637853762/?sfnsn=scwspmo
A dense stellar nursery may feed on a spiral of stars, scientists say (msn.com) 
Black Hole births stars https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/179451341246225/?sfnsn=scwspmo
JWST images perfect Einstein Ring https://www.facebook.com/100045998303732/posts/636519251224679/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Webb spots alien planet shrouded in weird sand-filled clouds | Space  A Brown Dwarf is NOT a planet. It's classed as a special type of star, not shining by the normal nuclear reactions. But since it generates more energy than is falling on it from any external source, e.g. a binary star companion, it's NOT a planet. A Neutron Star is similarly classed as a star, even though it does not shine by nuclear reactions either. If the Brown Dwarf orbits with another star, then it would be classed as a member of a binary star pair, not as a planet of that other star. 
Astronomers Find the Oldest Planetary Nebula - Universe Today 
A Merger Completely Shut Down Star Formation - Universe Today 
Pulsars are Blasting out Cosmic Rays With a Million Billion Electronvolts - Universe Today 
'Birth cry of a baby star' will change our understanding of the early universe, scientists say (msn.com) 
Mysterious rings in new James Webb Space Telescope image puzzle astronomers (msn.com)
Astronomers have detected one of the biggest black hole jets in the sky (msn.com) 
Repeating FRB discovered https://blog.physics-astronomy.com/2022/08/astronomers-discover-mysterious-alien.html?m=1
How the Inside of a Black Hole Is Secretly on the Outside - Scientific American 
Has JWST Found Proto-Globular Clusters? - Universe Today 
The farthest star ever detected https://www.facebook.com/100045998303732/posts/624201639123107/?sfnsn=scwspmo
 

COSMOLOGY:

Scientists think they have found a solution to one of the oldest problems in the universe (msn.com)

The Big Bang no longer means what it used to - Big Think

The James Webb Space Telescope never disproved the Big Bang. Here's how that falsehood spread. (msn.com)

A New Study Confirms That Gravity has Remained Constant for the Entire age of the Universe - Universe Today

Surprise! Protons Contain a Subatomic Particle That's Heavier Than the Proton Itself (msn.com) Curiouser and curiouser, said Alice.

 

EARTH & MOON

How the Milky Way formed our continents https://spaceref.com/earth/movement-of-the-solar-system-through-the-milky-ways-ggalactic-spiral-arms-helped-form-earths-first-continents/ 

How NASA Biologists Plan to Grow Plants on the Moon | Watch (msn.com)

Rising seas could swallow millions of U.S. acres within decades (msn.com)

Earth's space debris crisis will not be solved until there 'have been enough disasters', astrophysicist says (msn.com)

Scientists find more answers on 66 million-year-old meteorite wildfire mystery (msn.com) Fascinating. But fires at the limit of the distances quoted could not have been caused directly by the fireball, as it would have been over the horizon at that distance – with one caveat. If the asteroid came in at a fairly shallow angle, then the fireball would have formed while it was still at an altitude of around 80km, which could have been several hundred km from the final impact site. So fires could have been started within a radius of 1-300km from the point where the fireball first formed.

   Otherwise, distant fires would have been caused by molten rock expelled by the explosive impact to great distances.

Earth's perilous journey through the Milky Way may shape geology | Space

How many meteorites hit Earth every year? | Live Science

'Ridiculously detailed image' of the moon honors Artemis 1 launch | Space The detail is not ridiculous, it's quite appropriate. Why not just say "amazingly detailed"?

Artemis 1: 10 wild facts about the NASA moon mission | Space

Would We Have Continents Without Asteroid Impacts? - Universe Today

 

EXOLIFE

Rocket Lab is Sending its own Mission to Venus to Search for Life - Universe Today

 

EXOPLANETS

Newly Identified 'Super-Earth' In Nearby Solar System May Be Habitable | Watch (msn.com) 
Scientists Just Took an Actual Picture of a Planet in Another Star System - The Space Academy 
New class of exoplanet! Watery worlds could be abodes for life | Space 
Planets with water are more common than previously thought, research suggests (msn.com)
Discovery of alien world with strange, tilted orbit puzzles astronomers (msn.com) 
James Webb Space Telescope discovers a new exoplanet that contains CO2 | Watch (msn.com)
Astronomers spot 2 intriguing alien worlds around ultracool star | Space 
Webb spots alien planet shrouded in weird sand-filled clouds | Space  A Brown Dwarf is NOT a planet. It's classed as a special type of star, not shining by the normal nuclear reactions. But since it generates more energy than is falling on it from any external source, e.g. a binary star companion, it's NOT a planet. A Neutron Star is similarly classed as a star, even though it does not shine by nuclear reactions either. If the Brown Dwarf orbits with another star, then it would be classed as a member of a binary star pair, not as a planet of that other star. 

A Planet has Been Found That Shifts In and Out of the Habitable Zone - Universe Today

Planet more hospitable to life than Earth is already been discovered - blog.sci-nature.com

James Webb Space Telescope snags its 1st direct photo of an alien world (msn.com) and

JWST Takes Its First Image of an Exoplanet - Universe Today

Why pummeled planets may be promising abodes for alien life (msn.com)

Carbon dioxide detected around alien world for first time | Science | AAAS

So that's where the dolphins went! Astronomers discover planet that could be completely covered in water (msn.com)

 

IMAGES & Videos

Far side of Milky Way imaged for the first time. https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/180478421143517/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Supernova imaged in real time https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/180501864474506/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Planet with the largest known ring system https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/180269507831075/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Sky image by JWST https://www.facebook.com/groups/221618226594414/permalink/410403541049214/?sfnsn=scwspmo&ref=share
 'Phantom Galaxy', M74 -0 amazing pic by JWST https://www.facebook.com/1335686280/posts/10222382739380744/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Farside of Moon, with Earth: https://www.facebook.com/100064785275866/posts/446061397563366/?sfnsn=scwspmo
JWST's fantastic image of Tarantula Nebula A Cosmic Tarantula, Caught by NASA's Webb | NASA 

James Webb captures Phantom Galaxy's spectacular spiraling arms (newatlas.com) and

Webb telescope captures 'Phantom Galaxy' in dazzling detail (msn.com)

'Ridiculously detailed image' of the moon honors Artemis 1 launch | Space Can anyone tell me what's ridiculous about it? I think it's actually quite appropriately detailed.

The most massive known star https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=3358866934342121&id=100006565414017&sfnsn=scwspmo and
R136 is the Most Massive Star Astronomers Have Ever Found. We Just got Some new Images of it - Universe Today
The first ever picture of an atom https://www.facebook.com/100082890504895/posts/128054463300903/?sfnsn=scwspmo
Map of the nearby universe. NB, the galaxies shown in blue are not moving towards us, they are just moving away at a lesser speed than those in red. 
https://www.facebook.com/groups/jameswebbspacetelescope/permalink/10160129139546170/?sfnsn=scwspmo&ref=share
HST still stuns – amazing image of Globular cluster near centre of Milky Way Hubble Space Telescope photo shows star-studded globular cluster | Space

 

LIGHT POLLUTION

Astronomers launch campaign to protect the dark night sky from light pollution (msn.com)

 

SOLAR SYSTEM

So why does the headline say 'they will have to dig deep'? That just not true. Space experiment suggests Mars rovers must dig deep to find life | Space
 Amazing image of Phobos https://www.facebook.com/100064785275866/posts/444504754385697/?sfnsn=scwspmo

If it's Dimorphos, why does the caption say Didymos. Very misleading heading.

Nasa's asteroid crashing mission returns first image of target space rock (msn.com)

The Geology at Jezero Crater is Even More Complex Than Scientists Were Expecting - Universe Today

New Perseverance Rock Samples Were Altered by Water. They'll be Coming Back to Earth in the Sample Return Mission - Universe Today

Rocket Lab is Sending its own Mission to Venus to Search for Life - Universe Today

This is What a Robotic Explorer Might See When it Reaches Europa's Oceans - Universe Today

New Research By Sabina Raducan Tells A Different Story About DART Impact - Asteroid Day
First underground radar images from Mars Perseverance Rover reveal some surprises (
Radar Imager for Mars Subsurface Experiment should really be RIMSex, not RIMFAX, but one can understand their reasoning.)

https://phys.org/news/2022-08-underground-radar-images-mars-perseverance.html

Perseverance Mars rover finds surprising volcanic rocks in crater that was once a lake (msn.com)

Cyanobacteria Will be our Best Partner for Living on Mars - Universe Today

 

SPACE

SpaceX fires up all 6 engines of Starship prototype (video) | Space

NASA's Future Spaceships Will Travel At 1 Million Miles Per Hour (physics-astronomy.com)

https://www.facebook.com/104764268714933/posts/180079487850077/?sfnsn=scwspmo 

US satellites in low Earth orbit to be deorbited in 5 years | Space Better late than never.  

Who wants a free trip to the Moon? https://www.facebook.com/100009056763302/posts/3094385910873271/?sfnsn=scwspmo

VP Harris congratulates astronauts during call to space station | Space

NASA targets Sept. 23 for next Artemis 1 launch attempt, but a lot has to go right (msn.com)

Astronauts' blood shows signs of DNA mutations due to spaceflight | Space

Astronauts could 3D print tools and parts from titanium and Mars dust (newatlas.com)

Nasa selects Axiom Space to build spacesuit for 2025 Moon walk (msn.com)

Dream Chaser spaceplane will carry 'ScienceTaxi' lab to space station | Space

International Space Station must be treated like a 'baby Earth' says former European Space Agency chief (msn.com)

Launch of NASA's 'mega moon rocket' delayed by more than a month | Live Science

Removing space debris from around the planet should be a 'priority' says Queen guitarist Brian May (msn.com)

Yeast Will Fill in for Humans on Artemis I, Soaking up a Lunar Mission's Worth of Radiation - Universe Today

Problem Solved! Voyager 1 is no Longer Sending Home Garbled Data! - Universe Today

Launch of NASA's 'mega moon rocket' delayed by more than a month (msn.com)

Rocket Lab is Sending its own Mission to Venus to Search for Life - Universe Today

Mechazilla Lifts a Super Heavy With all 33 Engines Onto the Launchpad - Universe Today

MIT's Mars oxygen factory is now matching the output of a small tree (newatlas.com) and

Breakthrough Device Could Be the First Step Toward Terraforming Mars | Watch (msn.com) and

MIT's Mars oxygen factory is now matching the output of a small tree (newatlas.com) and

OPINION - Tech & Science Daily: Breathing on Mars now possible (msn.com)

Artemis launch delays mean Moon probes' batteries are dying (msn.com)

NASA solves Voyager 1 data glitch mystery, but finds another (msn.com)

Why astronomical costs mean man may never set foot on Mars (msn.com)  - Lord Rees should have a debate with Elon Musk!

Artemis 1: 10 wild facts about the NASA moon mission | Space

Firefly Alpha Rocket Explodes In-Flight | Watch (msn.com) It gets interesting from about 2.30 onwards!

How long does it take to get to the moon? Nasa Artemis 1 mission schedule and moon's distance from earth (msn.com) No, No, NO!!! It is not going to the 'dark' side of the Moon! It's going to the far side. Surely you can at least get that bit right? There's no 'dark' side of the Moon, just like there's none on Earth. There's day and night, but they rotate around the Moon, just as they do on Earth.

Is SLS worth the cost? NASA's new megarocket comes with a mega price tag (msn.com)

Life on Mars: Construction giants unite to create Martian house in Bristol (msn.com)

NASA moon launch postponed after hydrogen leak (msn.com)

https://www.aol.com/news/nicole-mann-says-she-proud-211702974-011301680.html?soc_src=aolapp

New technique may bring moon's shadowy polar craters into the light (msn.com)

'World leading' UK to provide vital NASA support for Moon landing mission tomorrow (msn.com)

Moon vs. Mars: NASA's ultimate destination has varied over the decades (msn.com)

NASA Ready for Practice Mission to Redirect Potentially Deadly Asteroids | Watch (msn.com)

 

 

SUN

Amazing solar detail imaged by DKIST https://www.facebook.com/100000513466168/posts/6169085036451884/?sfnsn=scwspmo

A sunspot so huge that it's affecting the Sun: How will it impact Earth (msn.com)

NASA spacecraft hopes to catch a solar flare as it zips past the sun (msn.com)

ESA's Solar orbiter just got smacked by a coronal mass ejection (msn.com)

 

TELESCOPES, INSTRUMENTS, TECHNIQUES.

 

19.  JOINING the IRISH ASTRONOMICAL ASSOCIATION. This link gives options to join the IAA.

https://irishastro.org/join-the-iaa/ If you are a UK taxpayer, please select the 'gift-aid' box, as that enables us to reclaim the standard rate of tax on your subscription, at no cost to you. You can also make a donation via Paypal if you wish: just click on the 'Donate' button. See also https://irishastro.org/  

 

The Irish Astronomical Association is registered with The Charity Commission for Northern Ireland NIC 105858

 

DISCLAIMER: Any views expressed herein are mine, and do not necessarily represent those of the IAA.

Clear skies,

Terry Moseley