12/11/12

Near Earth Asteroid


Earth's Close Encounter...




A giant asteroid will fly by Earth during the next few days, and we can watch this event live via our computers.

This near Earth asteroid named 4179 Toutatis, is approximately 3 miles wide, and will pass close to 4.3 million miles of Earth Wednesday morning December, 12. Toutatis is too far away for any impact threat yet near enough to see through professional telescopes, which will track The asteroid trajectory. The online Slooh Space Camera and Virtual Telescope Project, will both stream live, free footage of the asteroid.

Slooh's webcast is from a telescope in the Canary Islands beginning at 3 p.m. EST today (Dec. 11). Another showing will follow at 10 p.m. EST tonight, with footage from Arizona. You can watch them at Slooh's website: http://www.slooh.com

Both will feature commentary from Slooh president Patrick Paolucci and Astronomy Magazine columnist Bob Berman. "The asteroid will appear as an obvious streak or a moving time-lapse dot across the as a tiny pointlike object, while Earth's spin makes the background stars whiz by as streaks," Berman added. "Both methods will make the asteroid's speedy orbital motion obvious as it passes us in space."

The Virtual Telescope Project — which is presented by Gianluca Masi of Bellatrix Astronomical Observatory in Italy — will offer a free webcast Thursday, December 13 at 3 p.m. EST, complete with commentary from astrophysicists.

Watch the video stream here: http://www.virtualtelescope.eu/webtv/

Toutatis would cause catastrophic damage if it ever did hit into Earth. Scientists think a collision by anything 0.6 miles (1 km) wide could have global consequences, most likely by altering the world's climate for many years to come. For comparison, the asteroid thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was an estimated 6 miles (10 km) across.

Information provided by SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall and on Yahoo.com.


Exciting stuff! Go and watch. Then come back and tell me -- what your thoughts are on near miss objects that could possibly impact Earth? 

Kaye

12/5/12

Shadow of the Dark Rift


Here we are in December and it's getting closer to the winter solstice...

Isn't this the year the world ends? According to several alignment theories,
and also the Mayan calendar, it is predicted to be so.



Thick dust clouds block our night-time view of the Milky Way, creating what is sometimes called the Dark Rift. The fact that -- from the viewpoint of Earth -- the sun aligns with these clouds, or the galactic center, near the winter solstice.  





Here is what Francis Reddy from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center has to say on this world ending idea: 

One of the most bizarre theories about 2012 has built up with very little attention to facts. This idea holds that a cosmic alignment of the sun, Earth, the center of our galaxy -- or perhaps the galaxy's thick dust clouds -- on the winter solstice could for some unknown reason lead to destruction. Such alignments can occur but these are a regular occurrence and can cause no harm and, indeed, will not even be at its closest alignment during the 2012 solstice.

The details are as follows: Viewed far from city lights, a glowing path called the Milky Way can be seen arching across the starry sky. This path is formed from the light of millions of stars we cannot see individually. It coincides with the mid plane of our galaxy, which is why our galaxy is also named the Milky Way.

Thick dust clouds also populate the galaxy. And while infrared telescopes can see them clearly, our eyes detect these dark clouds only as irregular patches where they dim or block the Milky Way's faint glow. The most prominent dark lane stretches from the constellations Cygnus to Sagittarius and is often called the Great Rift, sometimes the Dark Rift.

Another impressive feature of our galaxy lies unseen in Sagittarius: the galactic center, about 28,000 light-years away, which hosts a black hole weighing some four million times the sun's mass.

The claim for 2012 links these two pieces of astronomical fact with a third -- the position of the sun near the galactic center on Dec. 21, the winter solstice for the Northern Hemisphere -- to produce something that makes no astronomical sense at all.

As Earth makes its way around the sun, the sun appears to move against the background stars, which is why the visible constellations slowly change with the seasons. On Dec. 21, 2012, the sun will pass about 6.6 degrees north of the galactic center -- that's a distance that looks to the eye to be about 13 times the full moon's apparent size -- and it's actually closer a couple of days earlier. There are different claims about why this bodes us ill, but they boil down to the coincidence of the solstice with the sun entering the Dark Rift somehow portending disaster or the mistaken notion that the sun and Earth becoming aligned with the black hole in the galactic center allows some kind of massive gravitational pull on Earth.

The first strike against this theory is that the solstice itself does not correlate to any movements of the stars or anything in the universe beyond Earth. It just happens to be the day that Earth's North Pole is tipped farthest from the sun.

Second, Earth is not within range of strong gravitational effects from the black hole at the center of the galaxy since gravitational effects decrease exponentially the farther away one gets. Earth is 93 million miles from the sun and 165 quadrillion miles from the Milky Way's black hole. The sun and the moon (a smaller mass, but much closer) are by far the most dominant gravitational forces on Earth. Throughout the course of the year, our distance from the Milky Way's black hole changes by about one part in 900 million – not nearly enough to cause a real change in gravity's pull. Moreover, we're actually nearest to the galactic center in the summer, not at the winter solstice.

Third, the sun appears to enter the part of the sky occupied by the Dark Rift every year at the same time, and its arrival there in Dec. 2012 portends precisely nothing.


Enjoy the solstice, by all means, and don't let the Dark Rift, alignments, solar flares, magnetic field reversals, potential impacts or alleged Maya end-of-the-world predictions get in the way.

And please let me know your thoughts on this!

Kaye