astroblog

Observing log 7/14/2010

by Steve Johns on Jul.14, 2010, under Main

Due to the bad images obtained of M51 on the last session, I targeted it again tonight, but the light over in that area of the sky is just too much. Forget Ursa Major until I am out in a dark area, such as the Nielson observatory. Anyway, here is another shot of…

The ring is 50 images at .77 sec. Vega at 4sec. with Photo Shop saturation maxed. Notice the absense of spider vane effect in the image of Vega, due to the design of the Schmidt-Newtonian – a corrector plate holds the secondary mirror instead, giving a sharp image. Whispy clouds started to roll in when these exposures were taken.

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Observing log 7/10/2010: Whirpool galaxy and the Ring

by Steve Johns on Jul.11, 2010, under Main

I’m no Photoshop expert, but here is a cleaned-up faint image of M51: the Whirlpool galaxy in Ursa Major and another image of the Ring Nebula (M57) in Lyra. At the time, the Whirlpool was in the brightest area of the sky-towards downtown, hence the grainy quality of the image due to light pollution. I had taken images both filtered and non, with an Orion light pollution filter, and the non-filtered image was a lot brighter. I then turned again to the Ring nebula and took an image of it, consisting of 50 stacked images with 0.775 sec exposure. Next taget: the constellation of Cygnus.

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Observing log 7/2/2010: Ring Nebula and Hercules globular cluster M13

by Steve Johns on Jul.03, 2010, under Main

Clear skies and steady seeing tonight. Bootes, Corona Borealis, and Hercules were at the zenith allowing good views of the large globular cluster in Hercules, M13. Later the camera was trained on the Ring nebula (M57) and the star Vega, in Lyra. The last image is an enhanced black and white image showing the nebula’s central star. The nebula images are 40 exposures unfiltered with the Meade DSI color CCD. Previous to obtaining these exposures I had to take a series of dark frames. This requires covering the telesope with the dust cover so no light enters the tube, and then taking the dark frames – this will calibrate the CCD and reduce noise in the images. The result is images with a clear, black background. I will slightly increase the exposure times at the next observing session to try to bring out more color. Click on images to enlarge.







Ring nebula with central star view

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Video Camera Will Show Mars Rover’s Touchdown

by Steve Johns on Jul.01, 2010, under Main

From Newsgroup: alt.astronomy
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-239
All images are copyright(c) NASA.

Video Camera Will Show Mars Rover’s Touchdown
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
July 19, 2010

Image 1. Installing the mast on Curiosity. Retrieved July 27, 2010 from
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-245

A downward-pointing camera on the front-left side of NASA’s Curiosity
rover will give adventure fans worldwide an unprecedented sense of
riding a spacecraft to a landing on Mars.

The Mars Descent Imager, or MARDI, will start recording high-resolution
video about two minutes before landing in August 2012. Initial frames
will glimpse the heat shield falling away from beneath the rover,
revealing a swath of Martian terrain below illuminated in afternoon
sunlight. The first scenes will cover ground several kilometers (a few
miles) across. Successive images will close in and cover a smaller area
each second.

The full-color video will likely spin, then shake, as the Mars Science
Laboratory mission’s parachute, then its rocket-powered backpack, slow
the rover’s descent. The left-front wheel will pop into view when
Curiosity extends its mobility and landing gear.

The spacecraft’s own shadow, unnoticeable at first, will grow in size
and slide westward across the ground. The shadow and rover will meet at
a place that, in the final moments, becomes the only patch of ground
visible, about the size of a bath towel and underneath the rover.

Dust kicked up by the rocket engines during landing may swirl as the
video ends and Curiosity’s surface mission can begin.

All of this, recorded at about four frames per second and close to 1,600
by 1,200 pixels per frame, will be stored safely into the Mars Descent
Imager’s own flash memory during the landing. But the camera’s principal
investigator, Michael Malin of Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego,
and everyone else will need to be patient. Curiosity will be about 250
million kilometers (about 150 million miles) from Earth at that point.
It will send images and other data to Earth via relay by one or two Mars
orbiters, so the daily data volume will be limited by the amount of time
the orbiters are overhead each day.

“We will get it down in stages,” said Malin. “First we’ll have
thumbnails of the descent images, with only a few frames at full scale.”

Subsequent downlinks will deliver additional frames, selected based on
what the thumbnail versions show. The early images will begin to fulfill
this instrument’s scientific functions. “I am really looking forward to
seeing this movie. We have been preparing for it a long time,” Malin
said. The lower-resolution version from thumbnail images will be
comparable to a YouTube video in image quality. The high-definition
version will not be available until the full set of images can be
transmitted to Earth, which could take weeks, or even months, sharing
priority with data from other instruments.”

Image 2. Curiosity. Retrieved July 27, 2010 from
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-245

The Mars Descent Imager will provide the Mars Science Laboratory team
with information about the landing site and its surroundings. This will
aid interpretation of the rover’s ground-level views and planning of
initial drives. Hundreds of the images taken by the camera will show
features smaller than what can be discerned in images taken from orbit.

“Each of the 10 science instruments on the rover has a role in making
the mission successful,” said John Grotzinger of the California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena, chief scientist for the Mars
Science Laboratory. “This one will give us a sense of the terrain around
the landing site and may show us things we want to study. Information
from these images will go into our initial decisions about where the
rover will go.”

The nested set of images from higher altitude to ground level will
enable pinpointing Curiosity’s location even before an orbiter can
photograph the rover on the surface.

Malin said, “Within the first day or so, we’ll know where we are and
what’s near us. MARDI doesn’t do much for six-month planning — we’ll
use orbital data for that — but it will be important for six-day and
16-day planning.”

In addition, combining information from the descent images with
information from the spacecraft’s motion sensors will enable calculating
wind speeds affecting the spacecraft on its way down, an important
atmospheric science measurement. The descent data will later serve in
designing and testing future landing systems for Mars that could add
more control for hazard avoidance.

After landing, the Mars Descent Imager will offer the capability to
obtain detailed images of ground beneath the rover, for precise tracking
of its movements or for geologic mapping. The science team will decide
whether or not to use that capability. Each day of operations on Mars
will require choices about how to budget power, data and time.

Last month, spacecraft engineers and technicians re-installed the Mars
Descent Imager onto Curiosity for what is expected to be the final time,
as part of assembly and testing of the rover and other parts of the Mars
Science Laboratory flight system at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif. Besides the rover itself, the flight system includes
the cruise stage for operations between Earth and Mars, and the descent
stage for getting the rover from the top of the Martian atmosphere
safely to the ground.

Malin Space Science Systems delivered the Mars Descent Imager in 2008,
when NASA was planning a 2009 launch for the mission. This camera shares
many design features, including identical electronic detectors, with two
other science instruments the same company is providing for Curiosity:
the Mast Camera and the Mars Hand Lens Imager. The company also provided
descent imagers for NASA’s Mars Polar Lander, launched in 1999, and
Phoenix Mars Lander, launched in 2007. However, the former craft was
lost just before landing and the latter did not use its descent imager
due to concern about the spacecraft’s data-handling capabilities during
crucial moments just before landing.

Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Guy.webster@jpl.nasa.gov

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NASA close-up view of protoplanetary disk

by Steve Johns on Jun.11, 2010, under Main

Magnificent shot. Creation of a solar system seen first-hand. See article at http://uanews.org/node/32352.

“By coupling both Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea in Hawaii with a specifically engineered instrument named ASTRA (ASTrometric and phase-Referenced Astronomy), Eisner and his colleagues were able to peer deeply into protoplanetary disks – swirling clouds of gas and dust that feed the growing star in its center and eventually coalesce into planets and asteroids to form a solar system” (Stolte,2010).

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Hubble Space Telescope image of Protoplanetary disk

by Steve Johns on May.19, 2010, under Main

I was blown away by this image. What is a protoplanetary disk you ask? It is a ring of dust and gas and other elements that encircle a star – the beginnings of a new solar system. This birth of a solar system lies within the great Orion nebula. Image credit: http://hubblesite.org.

Protoplanetary disk in Orion Nebula

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Crab Nebula: Photoshop edit.

by Steve Johns on May.01, 2010, under Main

A fresh edit of the Crab Nebula (M1) in the consellation Taurus. This image was captured via CCD in April 2010. A new image of the double star pair Mizar and Alcore in Ursa Major is below it.

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CCD Astrophotography: dark frames

by Steve Johns on May.01, 2010, under Main

I have discovered that dark frames make all the difference: images are clearer without all of the noise. I have tested the dark frame function on the Meade DSI CCD camera and it works well. Set it to create dark frames (it takes about five minutes), put the lense cap on the telescope, and go have a coffee. After it prompts you that it has completed, remove your lensecap and continue to take pics. The images are far clearer and the background is dark. I have dozens of pics that were enhanced by dark frames: I will post them soon after I edit them with my new install of Photoshop.

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Astronomy Day at the Lorain County Metroparks

by Steve Johns on Apr.24, 2010, under Main

Rainy, but interesting turnout for the Black River Astronomy Society Astronomy Day at the Carisle Reservation at the Lorain County Metroparks. Here a some pics of the equipment on display. Here we have a radio telescope picking up signal from the Sun, and a solar telescope.

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Lunar observing setup 4/22/2010

by Steve Johns on Apr.23, 2010, under Main

Meade LXD75 sn-10 Schmidt-Newtonian (GOTO mount) with Moonlight motorized focuser.

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