Archive for March, 2006

Falcon 1 launch set for 2:30 p.m. Pacific

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Update (14:44 Pacific): It’s confirmed, the vehicle was lost. SpaceDaily.com has reported:

While Space X has yet to report was has happened to the rocket, SpaceX vice president of business development Gwynne Shotwell has told reporters that “We did lose the vehicle.”

Update (14:40 Pacific time): SpaceDaily.com is reporting the launch failed, but no details as yet.

Quick update: It launched! The video was very cool, but cut out less than a minute into the flight. I’m trying to find out what happened.

OK, so we have a final (?) launch time for the Space-X rocket Falcon 1– 14:30 Pacific time (about a half hour from now as I write this). You can view it live webcast from the Space-X website.’

March 24th, 2006 2:58 PM by Phil Plait in Cool stuff, NASA, Science | 12 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Find a Human

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This may be the most important page on the internets: how to cut through the endless phonemail systems of various businesses so you can get an actual human on the other end: GetHuman.

Of course, if you email me you just get a ‘bot that replies back saying, “404 Human Not Found.”

March 23rd, 2006 10:21 PM by Phil Plait in Cool stuff, Time Sink | 21 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Rep. Schiff speaks out against NASA budget cuts

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I was just notified by a coworker that California congressman Adam Schiff made a speech about NASA budget cuts on the House floor on March 16. This is an interesting speech; he makes some excellent points. It may not shock you after reading it to learn that NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab is in his district. :)

He specifically points out NuSTAR, a mission I’ve discussed in this blog before. I was on the NuSTAR team, and it was cancelled just two weeks before the final proposal was submitted to NASA. I don’t have time now to discuss this at length, but at some point I’ll tell that NuSTAR story.

March 23rd, 2006 1:04 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, NASA, Piece of mind, Rant, Science | 3 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Render a man unto the Moon

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BABlog reader Fernando Rodriguez at San Luis Potosí, México, pointed out to me an image (via digg.com) of Buzz Aldrin on the Moon… sorta. It’s actually an amazingly rendered computer graphic by Andrea Bertaccini, obviously a very talented computer artist. I could tell right away it was fake; on the real one you can see lunar dust all over Aldrin’s suit. There are other telltale signs. Can you figure them out? The comments on digg.com have lots of hints, and a side-by-side comparison of the real image and the artwork.

The computer image was posted on the CG Society of Digital Artists forum, and in fact they have a huge number of incredibly cool images there. Go take a look.’

March 22nd, 2006 11:03 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Humor, NASA, Time Sink | 34 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Half a million visitors

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‘I noticed today that the sitemeter on this blog (on the right hand side, near the bottom of the list of stuff there) says that the BA Blog passed the 500,000 visitors mark. I installed it on May 22, 2005, so it started counting at that time. In fact, my own web statistics package says the number should be higher, but I’m not overly concerned about it. The point is, a lot of folks come here!

And in fact I know more people have visited, because I didn’t install the sitemeter for a couple of months after I started the blog. The first blog post was on March 13. I missed my first anniversary! :( I’m really not much for arbitrary celebrations, so it’s not a big deal to me, but it’s nice to know that after a full year plus some, the Bad Astronomy Blog is still going.

When I started it, I wanted to write about astronomy, the parts of it that enthrall me and make me want to learn more about it every day. But as time went on, things got more complicated. It’s almost impossible for me not to inject opinion into what I write, and from talking to people it seems that this is the very thing that they like about what I write. The Universe is cold, dark, and deep; yet for me astronomy is a very personal endeavor. So my own take on it is inevitably going to come out in my writing.

But then the attacks on science kept coming. Of course I would blog about the Moon hoax, or astrology, or the face on Mars. But as the attacks started coming from higher levels, from people who were not just gnats in a storm but actual wind-makers, I knew I had to speak out. My first few entries about this seemed pretty tame compared to what I’ve written lately, but at the time I felt really tentative about it– even nervous. I’m glad I did it though. Every day I am more appalled at what I see going on in the seemingly permanent war on reality, and every day I take a deep breath and feel the stronger for fighting it.

I’ll add that one of the main reasons I started writing for The Huffington Post is that I knew it would increase the audience, get more people aware of not just science, but of those who would destroy it. An entry I wrote the other day (mentioned here) got onto the front page of HuffPo as well:

These issues are not just the blatherings of some blogger somewhere; these are critical issues which affect us, our friends, our family, and our future. This is not hyperbole. This is cold, hard fact.

It’s been a year, and more than a half million visits. But I have a lot more to say, and you can count on me saying it here for some time to come.’

March 22nd, 2006 3:53 PM by Phil Plait in About this blog, Antiscience, Astronomy, Cool stuff, Piece of mind, Rant, Science, Skepticism, Time Sink | 23 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Space-X to try again Thursday 13:00 Pacific time

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Update (March 23, 2006): Space-X is taking another day to review data. Launch is now scheduled for Friday at 13:00 Pacific time.

The private rocket company Space-X will try once again to launch their first rocket, Falcon 1, Thursday at 13:00 Pacific time. They’ve tried several times before, but have had various engineering issues to deal with. Yesterday they tested the engine in what’s called a "static firing", where they ignite the engine but don’t launch the rocket. Everything went fine, so they are go to launch. I’ll be watching if I can find a live feed.’

March 22nd, 2006 11:53 AM by Phil Plait in Cool stuff, NASA, Science | 5 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Giving Vega a spin

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‘If you live in the northern hemisphere and go outside in the late summer, you’ll see a bright blue jewel of a star high in the sky. Named Vega, it’s one of the brightest stars (if it sounds familiar, it was the star Ellie Arroway, Jodie Foster’s character in Contact, detected alien signals from).

Vega is critically important to astronomers. Being bright and high overhead for many observers, it’s become a "standard star", a target you can use to calibrate your instruments. It was used in such a manner for years by astronomers around the world. I don’t think it’s used directly any more, but many astronomical brightness measurements are in some way based on Vega.

It therefore surprised astronomers years ago when it was discovered that Vega had way too much infrared light coming from it. It was quickly realized that the star was surrounded by a disk of dust. Heated by the star, the disk was warm, and emitted infrared light (just like you, a warm human, emit IR, which can be detected using heat-sensitive cameras).

But there have been some problems. Compared to similar stars, Vega appears to be too bright. Worse, high-resolution spectra seem to show anomalous features, what you might expect from a rapidly rotating star. But Vega shows no signs of rapid rotation.

Now a new paper puts all that into a tail spin. Literally.

Using interferometry, an amazing technique that allows incredibly high-resolution data to be taken, astronomers have discovered that Vega indeed spins quickly– very quickly. They took advantage of the fact that a star spinning really quickly will flatten out near the equator due to centripetal force; the same force that keeps water in a bucket as you swing it around. In a sense, this force acts against gravity, so if you were to stand on the equator of a spinning object, you’d feel like you’d weigh less (this is true on the Earth, too– you weigh about 0.3% less on the Equator due to the Earth’s spin).

In a star, this balance of forces makes the star cooler at its equator than at its poles, so in optical light its not as bright at the equator. Normally, stars are way too far away to detect this difference, but interferometry can make extremely high-resolution observations, and the astronomers were actually able to see this difference in Vega.

They determined we see Vega nearly pole-on– like we’re looking right down over its north (or is it south?) pole. The polar region is hot, while the equator is cooler. You can see that in this graphic:

The orange "plus" marks Vega’s pole the &subsolar point"* , the center of Vega’s disk as seen from Earth (incidentally, it’s known that the debris disk around Vega is circular in appearance, which matches the idea that we are "looking down" on an actual circle-shaped disk; if we saw it at an angle it would appear elliptical, like the rim of a glass as seen form an angle) , and hotter regions are in blue while cooler are in red. They also determined that to give this degree of uneven heating, Vega must be spinning really fast: about 275 kilometers/second at its equator– 620,000 miles per hour! If the Earth spun that fast, our days would be 90146 seconds long!* Incredible. In fact, if Vega spun much faster, the centripetal force would be stronger than gravity, and the gas on the equator would fly off. Vega would tear itself apart.

This affects a lot of calculations astronomers use, and it will be interesting to see how this new data will be assimilated into the body of knowledge. After reading the paper, my first thought, oddly enough, was not so much the impact on astronomy, but on the movie "Contact"– for a brief moment, we see Vega as Ellie Arroway stops there on her way to meet the aliens. We see Vega as a beautiful spherical blue star… but if it’s spinning as fast as the observations indicate, it would not be spherical at all: it will be highly flattened, like a basketball someone is sitting on. It will be 25% wider through the equator than through the poles.

It figures: a new observation comes along that affects almost all of observational astronomy, and I wonder how it’ll affect how I watch a movie.

Tip o’ the dew shield to Larry Klaes for the heads-up on this one.

* I made a couple of unrelated errors in this entry for some reason, which is annoying. The period error was because I didn’t convert from miles to kilometers! The thing with the orange plus was just misreading the plot. Duh.

March 21st, 2006 11:13 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Science | 37 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >