LAUNCH!!!

A Gorgeous Penultimate Shuttle Liftoff!

Space shuttle Endeavour lifts off at 8:59 this morning from the Kennedy Space Center. Image copyright 2011, Carolyn Collins Petersen.

I am a sucker for shuttle launches.  It’s in my blood as a space geek and I proudly admit it! Today was no different. After two other tries (a postponement and a launch scrub) the shuttle Endeavour leapt up from launch pad 39A in a blaze of fire from the solid rockets and a cloud of steam.  As usual, I forgot just how loud a launch can be.  And, as I wrote in a story for Yahoo’s Associated Content earlier today, the sound just shakes your bones. I will also have a story at Sky&Telescope.com sometime later today — talking about a unique observing opportunity I had this morning before launch. Check it out!

There was a filmmaker standing with us from Florida State University. He’d never seen a launch before, whereas I’d seen two others.  So, I warned him about the sound.  And the sight of a shuttle launch. And, much to my great appreciation, the launch was exactly as I described for him. Pretty much.

However, we weren’t quite prepared for the major difference between this flight and others I’d seen: the part of launch we were able to see was really short!  That was because about an hour before launch, a big set of clouds moved in. They weren’t thick enough to stop the launch, and in fact, the weather was actually quite good for launch!  So, when it was time for Endeavour to launch, we only saw it for about 22 seconds before it disappeared above the clouds. Oh, we could HEAR it for longer than that. And, we clapped and cheered for the successful launch, just the same.

So, now that we’ve witnessed history — the last flight of Endeavour and the next-to-last flight of the entire shuttle program, what’s next?  Good question. NASA has plans for new launch vehicles, which we are all watching anxiously. And, there’s a burgeoning commercial space fleet a-borning.  What fruit that will bear (and when) remains to be seen. For now, however, we’re facing the end of one part of NASA (and human) spaceflight, and looking anxiously for the new.  This launch may have to last me for a long, long time.  I hope not!

Getting up Early?

Check Out Some Planet Action!

Every day is Astronomy Day, although we officially celebrated it  last weekend. But, any day you can check out the Sun (or the Moon, if it’s up), or any night that you can step out and observe something cool in the sky makes it Astronomy Day.

These four bright planets cluster closely together in predawn skies during May 2011. Courtesy Sky & Telescope.com

We’ve been plagued with snow the past two days (although, as we say here in the West: “We need the moisture”), so haven’t been able to do much observing.  Today, there’s a big bright thing in the sky and it’s making water out of snow as I write this.  So, tonight should be a fairly clear night for some good viewing.

If you have occasion to get up early in the morning and you have a good view to the eastern horizon, you WILL be treated to a nice view of four planets, especially if you bring along your binoculars or happen to have a small backyard-type telescope handy. Hey — there’s got to be some reward for getting up before the crack of dawn, right?

Here’s what’s up:  Venus and Jupiter are visible in the pre-dawn sky, together with — if you can spot it (and here’s where the binos or scope come in handy) — Mercury. Together they make a little triangle in the eastern sky.  Venus and Mercury stay within 1.5 degrees of each other for another week, while Jupiter climbs higher into the predawn sky. By mid-May, you’ll be able to spot Jupiter before Venus despite the fact that it’sless than one-quarter as bright.

A week later, Venus and Mercury create a second planetary triangle with Mars, which is quite faint (just 1/100 as bright as Venus). The triad is tightest, just over 2 degrees wide, on May 21st. Venus and Mars close to within 1 degree of each another on the 23rd, by which time Mercury has begun a slide toward lower left.

To top off the solar system action, look for a thin crescent Moon nearby on May 29-31.

The friendly folks at Sky & Telescope.com have a cool animation of these sky events, so check it out!

While you’re out that early (around 4:30 a.m.), also take some time to check out some gorgeous stellar sights.  First off, the summer triangle is visible — look for bright Vega high in the sky. That also means the Milky Way is arcing across the field of view Arcturus is setting the west, and the Big Dipper is low in the northeast — for all you Northern Hemisphere viewers. If you’re in the southern hemisphere, the constellation Sagittarius should be high overhead and the Milky Way should look gorgeous!  If you need a star chart, go here or here to download Stellarium, a free star chart program.