VenutianxSpring

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] VenutianxSpring 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm working my way through "Way of Kings" right now. I haven't had much time for reading lately, so it's going slow, but the book is fantastic.

 

Don't forget that tonight though this weekend the best meteor shower of the year will be occuring. The moon should behave and provide nice dark skies for observing.

Hopefully your skies are clear and your nights long.

[–] VenutianxSpring 1 points 1 year ago

Can't wait, should be clear tonight and tomorrow, plus the moon is behaving this year.

[–] VenutianxSpring 2 points 1 year ago

Like some gorgeous Eldritch portal

 

This mountain and night skyscape stretches across the French Pyrenees National Park on August 12 2017, near the peak of the annual Perseid meteor shower. The multi-exposure panoramic view was composed from the Col d'Aubisque, a mountain pass, about an hour before the bright gibbous moon rose. Centered is a misty valley and lights from the region's Gourette ski station toward the south. Taken over the following hour, frames capturing some of the night's long bright perseid meteors were aligned against the backdrop of stars and Milky Way.

 

What's happening in the night sky? To help find out, telescopes all over the globe will be pointing into deep space. Investigations will include trying to understand the early universe, finding and tracking Earth-menacing asteroids, searching for planets that might contain extra-terrestrial life, and monitoring stars to help better understand our Sun. The featured composite includes foreground and background images taken in April from a mountaintop on La Palma island in the Canary Islands of Spain. Pictured, several telescopes from the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory are shown in front of a dark night sky. Telescopes in the foreground include, left to right, Magic 1, Galileo, Magic 2, Gran Telescopio Canarias, and LST. Sky highlights in the background include the central band of our Milky Way Galaxy, the constellations of Sagittarius, Ophiuchus and Scorpius, the red-glowing Eagle and Lagoon Nebulas, and the stars Alrami and Antares. Due to observatories like this, humanity has understood more about our night sky in the past 100 years than ever before in all of human history.

 

In a photo from the early hours of July 29 (UTC), a Redstone rocket and Mercury capsule are on display at Cape Canaveral Launch Complex 5. Beyond the Redstone, the 8 minute long exposure has captured the arcing launch streak of a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket. The Falcon's heavy communications satellite payload, at a record setting 9 metric tons, is bound for geosynchronous orbit some 22,000 miles above planet Earth. The historic launch of a Redstone rocket carried astronaut Alan Shepard on a suborbital spaceflight in May 1961 to an altitude of about 116 miles. Near the top of the frame, this Falcon rocket's two reusable side boosters separate and execute brief entry burns. They returned to land side by side at Canaveral's Landing Zone 1 and 2 in the distance.

[–] VenutianxSpring 52 points 1 year ago

Damn, we really are on the bad timeline. I want my figs and orgies

[–] VenutianxSpring 4 points 1 year ago

I hope this isn't like the beer pods they installed in Cleveland for when the browns win a game. Those didn't get use for a very long time lol

[–] VenutianxSpring 14 points 1 year ago (3 children)

You know I'd glady share a drink with you in that day. It'd mean that there's still some hope left in this world.

[–] VenutianxSpring 130 points 1 year ago (20 children)

I really want to see something come of this and I have a sliver of hope that it will, but I'm too tired to get excited about it.

[–] VenutianxSpring 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, looks like it. I'm on lemmy.world, but I have accounts on a couple different instances just in case.

[–] VenutianxSpring 3 points 1 year ago

These are good for anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere. I can do one for the Southern Hemisphere as well, if there's enough interest. Or if someone in the Southern Hemisphere would like to put one together I can sticky it

 

This month will play host to a number of great celestial events, including a blue moon (the second of two full moons in a calendar month), which will also be the closest supermoon of the month, the Perseid meteor shower (arguably the best meteor shower of the year), and quite a few conjunctions of the moon and the planets of the solar system.

August 1: Full moon. This is the first of two full moons this month.

August 3: Moon near Saturn in the morning sky

August 8: Moon near Jupiter in the morning sky

August 9: Moon near the Pleiades in the morning sky. (These are some of the easiest groupings of stars to see and is a how many stars you can discern is a great test for how dark your skies are)

August 13: Perseid meteor shower peaks. This shower lasts from July 14 to September 1, but you can expect roughly 50-75 swift, bright meteors per hour. Best viewing will be after midnight and, with the waning moon, the viewing conditions should be excellent this year.

August 16: New Moon. New moons are always excellent times for observation or astrophotography, since you don't have to worry about the moon washing out the sky.

August 18: Moon near Mercury in the evening sky

August 19: Moon near Mars in the evening sky

August 30: Moon at perigee (closest to earth)

August 31: Blue Moon. This is the second full moon of August and will be the closest Supermoon of 2023, so let's hope for good conditions

As always, I recommend downloading a free sky map from SkyMaps or your site of choice to find celestial objects that are easily seen with the naked eye, or whatever viewing equipment you may have. Also, I highly recommend an app such as Stellarium to help you find the objects of the night sky, plan your observations and to learn more about all the beautiful celestial objects.

Happy observing and if you have any events that I missed, or any that you're particularly excited for (Perseids for me), let us know.

Photo Credit to Lorenzo Busilacchi

[–] VenutianxSpring 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, it'll never be this dramatic, but you'll be astounded by how many stars, and how large they seem, when you get to a dark site. Even getting to a Bortle 5 location like I live in and letting your eyes properly adjust to night vision, the amount of stars is pretty spectacular. Not sure where you live, by check out a site like DarkSkyMap and you may be surprised to find some areas with less light pollution not too far from you.

 
Hey everyone, I’m sorry for the bad news, but the instance lemmy.fmhy.ml is gone and all of the communites look to be gone with it. I’m not even positive that this post will work, but I’ve made a new community at lemmy.world/c/spacepics or [[email protected]](/c/[email protected]) and I hope that you will join me there.

This community was growing rapidly and developing some excellent community engagement and I hope that we can get that back. It's still possible to continue posting to this community, however it's impossible to add new moderators at this point, so I would feel more comfortable if we all just moved to the new location. I will add some spare accounts from different instances as moderators this time, so we can avoid having to do this in the future, but Lemmy.World is huge and I hope will not fail us too. 

Hope to see you all soon
 

South of Antares, in the tail of the nebula-rich constellation Scorpius, lies emission nebula IC 4628. Nearby hot, massive stars, millions of years young, irradiate the nebula with invisible ultraviolet light, stripping electrons from atoms. The electrons eventually recombine with the atoms to produce the visible nebular glow, dominated by the red emission of hydrogen. At an estimated distance of 6,000 light-years, the region shown is about 250 light-years across, spanning over three full moons on the sky. The nebula is also cataloged as Gum 56 for Australian astronomer Colin Stanley Gum, but seafood-loving deep sky-enthusiasts might know this cosmic cloud as the Prawn Nebula. The graceful color image is a new astronomical composition taken over several nights in April from Rio Hurtado, Chile.

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Phobos Over Mars (apod.nasa.gov)
 

Why is Phobos so dark? Phobos, the largest and innermost of the two Martian moons, is the darkest moon in the entire Solar System. Its unusual orbit and color indicate that it may be a captured asteroid composed of a mixture of ice and dark rock. The featured assigned-color picture of Phobos near the edge of Mars was captured in late 2021 by ESA's robot spacecraft Mars Express, currently orbiting Mars. Phobos is a heavily cratered and barren moon, with its largest crater located on the far side. From images like this, Phobos has been determined to be covered by perhaps a meter of loose dust. Phobos orbits so close to Mars that from some places it would appear to rise and set twice a day, while from other places it would not be visible at all. Phobos' orbit around Mars is continually decaying -- it will likely break up with pieces crashing to the Martian surface in about 50 million years.

151
Apollo 11 (apod.nasa.gov)
 

Bright sunlight glints as long dark shadows mark this image of the surface of the Moon. It was taken fifty-four years ago, July 20, 1969, by Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first to walk on the lunar surface. Pictured is the mission's lunar module, the Eagle, and spacesuited lunar module pilot Buzz Aldrin. Aldrin is unfurling a long sheet of foil also known as the Solar Wind Composition Experiment. Exposed facing the Sun, the foil trapped particles streaming outward in the solar wind, catching a sample of material from the Sun itself. Along with moon rocks and lunar soil samples, the solar wind collector was returned for analysis in earthbound laboratories.

 

The monsters that live on the Sun are not like us. They are larger than the Earth and made of gas hotter than in any teapot. They have no eyes, but at times, many tentacles. They float. Usually, they slowly change shape and just fade back onto the Sun over about a month. Sometimes, though, they suddenly explode and unleash energetic particles into the Solar System that can attack the Earth. Pictured is a huge solar prominence imaged almost two weeks ago in the light of hydrogen. Captured by a small telescope in Gilbert, Arizona, USA, the monsteresque plume of gas was held aloft by the ever-present but ever-changing magnetic field near the surface of the Sun. Our active Sun continues to show an unusually high number of prominences, filaments, sunspots, and large active regions as solar maximum approaches in 2025.

 

The protostar within dark cloud L1527 is a mere 100,000 years old, still embedded in the cloud of gas and dust that feeds its growth. In this NIRCam image from the James Webb Space Telescope, the dark band at the neck of the infrared nebula is a thick disk that surrounds the young stellar object. Viewed nearly edge-on and a little larger than our Solar System, the disk ultimately supplies material to the protostar while hiding it from Webb's direct infrared view. The nebula itself is seen in stunning detail though. Illuminated by infrared light from the protostar, the hourglass-shaped nebula's cavities are created as material ejected in the star-forming process plows through the surrounding medium. As the protostar gains mass it will eventually become a full-fledged star, collapsing and igniting nuclear fusion in its core. A likely analog to our own Sun and Solar System in their early infancy, the protostar within dark cloud L1527 lies some 460 light-years distant in the Taurus star-forming region. Webb's NIRCam image spans about 0.3 light-years.

Source: NASA

 

Have you ever seen the Pleiades star cluster? Even if you have, you probably have never seen it as large and clear as this. Perhaps the most famous star cluster on the sky, the bright stars of the Pleiades can be seen with the unaided eye even from the depths of a light-polluted city. With a long exposure from a dark location, though, the dust cloud surrounding the Pleiades star cluster becomes very evident. The featured 11-hour exposure, taken from the Siding Spring Observatory in Australia, covers a sky area several times the size of the full moon. Also known as the Seven Sisters and M45, the Pleiades lies about 400 light years away toward the constellation of the Bull (Taurus). A common legend with a modern twist is that one of the brighter stars faded since the cluster was named, leaving only six of the sister stars visible to the unaided eye. The actual number of Pleiades stars visible, however, may be more or less than seven, depending on the darkness of the surrounding sky and the clarity of the observer's eyesight.

Source: NASA

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