A Little Solar Activity

On A Snowy Day

It’s May 1st. Time for flowers and birds singing and all the lovely northern hemisphere things that we associate with spring. Except for where I live. Here, it’s snowing. A blizzard. Two days ago it was nearly 80° F.  So, it’s springtime where I live — with a twist.

Also, it’s media day here at TheSpaceWriter’s Ramblings. I thought I’d start with a great video of the Sun, fresh off the solar surface! Things are rockin’ and rollin’ as usual, with a BIG twist.  Check out this video from the Solar Dynamics Observatory, taken earlier today, of a huge coronal mass ejection.

 

The event as shown here is about two hours and forty minutes long and the ejection was not directed toward Earth. But, imagine if it had been!  We’d be getting ready for incredible auroral displays, and possibly even facing problems for ISS astronauts, satellites, and power grids as a swarm of charged particles swept through our region of the solar system.  Our Sun is a powerful lady, and every once in a while, she gives an incredible show of strength!

Want to know more about what effect the Sun can have on Earth and our technology? Check out the series called Space Weather FX, a project we worked on with MIT’s Haystack Observatory.  It’s a great outreach and classroom tool to teach about “living with a star” and was funded by an education and outreach grant from NASA.

Since it IS the first of May, it’s also time for Our Night Sky a project I create in collaboration with Astrocast.TV each month. It’s a short little introduction to the night sky, showing the Moon, planets (when visible), and a few introductory constellations for both northern and southern hemisphere observers in a four-minute-long format. I understand that the video gets used in classrooms and in a couple of observatories for visitors, so if you’re interested in displaying it in an exhibit, use the Contact Us form on the Astrocast.TV site and let the producer know what you want to do.  Happy viewing and, get out there and do some stargazing this month! (Weather permitting.)

All Hail Albertus Alauda

Uwingu Announces Contest Winner

for Popular Name of Alpha Centauri Bb

Back when I was a child my father took me out to see the stars and my mother encouraged me to read about as many things as I could. Without their guidance, I might not be as interested in astronomy and sharing the stars as I am today. When I look at some areas of the sky, such as the constellation Orion, I think of those early times when they were turning me on to the sky.  And, to me, some areas of the sky will always be associated with my folks. If I’d thought of it sooner, I might have nicknamed that region where the Orion Nebula reigns supreme after them:  caeli gloriosa domo Johannis Collins, et Maria (Latin for “the glorious sky home of John and Mary Collins”). It would be a fitting salute to two people who sacrificed a lot so I (and my siblings) could get ahead in life.

Interestingly, the winner of the Uwingu contest to suggest popular names for the planet orbiting Alpha Centauri B had a similar wish to honor a relative. The winning name, announced today by Uwingu, is Albertus Alauda, suggested by Jason Lark in honor of his late grandfather, Albert Lark. In the citation accompanying his nomination, Jason wrote, “His name in Latin means “noble” or “bright” and to praise or to extol. I think this is an apt description as my Grandfather was a noble man and bright of character and in this nomination, I wish to honour [extol] him.”

Jason’s nomination to salute his grandfather won out over more than 1,240 names that were suggested in Uwingu’s contest. While congratulations are due to Jason for his touching nomination, the real winners are also the people who took the time to enter the contest and learn more about exoplanets as they also shared their resources to help a worthy cause. The proceeds of the contest will go to fund space educators and their projects — a goal that Uwingu has long supported as it seeks to find new ways to fund STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) outreach in the United States. For more information on Uwingu and its ongoing mission, visit the group’s website here, and to learn more about its upcoming projects.

 

 

 

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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