Terry's Astronomy Thread.

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  • elvis236
    Puppercorn Branch
    • Nov 2005
    • 107

    #241
    Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

    Originally posted by Bluearrowll
    What did you use for solar observing? Must be quite neat to see the picture of the day for yourself
    I actually saw it through two separate telescopes. One of them was a really neat little Questar that the university has, and the other is one of the larger telescopes that they keep in a dome on the roof. I'm not really sure of the specifications of the telescopes since I don't work with them very often, but I'm pretty sure the Questar was filtered to be an H-alpha telescope while the other was viewing in a broader band.

    Comment

    • Bluearrowll
      ⊙▃⊙
      FFR Simfile Author
      • Nov 2007
      • 7376

      #242
      Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

      What's in the sky tonight?
      August 24, 2012
      -First-quarter Moon this evening. Look for Antares to its lower left. The other stars of upper Scorpius are scattered around them.

      Astro Picture of the Day:
      August 24, 2012
      Source:
      Rising in the dark hours before dawn, wandering Venus now shines as the brilliant morning star. Its close conjunction with the Moon on August 13 was appreciated around planet Earth. But skygazers in eastern Asia were also treated to a lunar occultation, the waning crescent Moon passing directly in front of the bright planet in still dark skies. This composite image constructed from frames made at 10 minute intervals follows the celestial performance (vimeo video) from above the city lights and clouds over Taebaek, Korea. The occultation begins near the horizon and progresses as the pair rises. Venus first disappears behind the Moon's sunlit crescent, emerging before dawn from the dark lunar limb.
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      Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
      PS: Cool AAA's Terry
      - I Love You


      An Alarm Clock's Haiku
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      • Bluearrowll
        ⊙▃⊙
        FFR Simfile Author
        • Nov 2007
        • 7376

        #243
        Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

        What's in the sky tonight?
        August 25, 2012
        -The Moon at nightfall shines about equidistant from Antares to its lower right and the Teapot of Sagittarius pouring to its left.

        -This evening — before the Moon becomes too bright for the rest of the week — you can still use binoculars to try for the Lagoon and Swan nebulae, M8 and M7, above the Sagittarius Teapot as shown here. To the naked eye, the Teapot is roughly the size of your fist at arm's length.



        Astro Picture of the Day:
        August 25, 2012
        Source:
        In cosmic brush strokes of glowing hydrogen gas, this beautiful skyscape unfolds across the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy and the center of the northern constellation Cygnus the Swan. Recorded from a premier remote observatory site (ROSA) in southern France, the image spans about 6 degrees. Bright supergiant star Gamma Cygni near image center lies in the foreground of the complex gas and dust clouds and crowded star fields. Left of Gamma Cygni, shaped like two luminous wings divided by a long dark dust lane is IC 1318, whose popular name is understandably the Butterfly Nebula. The more compact, bright nebula at the lower right is NGC 6888, the Crescent Nebula. Some distance estimates for Gamma Cygni place it at around 750 light-years while estimates for IC 1318 and NGC 6888 range from 2,000 to 5,000 light-years.
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        FMO AAA Count: 71
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        Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
        PS: Cool AAA's Terry
        - I Love You


        An Alarm Clock's Haiku
        beep beep beep beep beep
        beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
        beep beep beep beep beep
        - ieatyourlvllol

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        • Bluearrowll
          ⊙▃⊙
          FFR Simfile Author
          • Nov 2007
          • 7376

          #244
          Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

          What's in the sky tonight?
          August 26, 2012
          -The Moon shines above the Sagittarius Teapot in the south after dark.

          -Mercury (about magnitude –1.2) remains in view at dawn but lower each day. It's above the east-northeast horizon, far lower left of brilliant Venus. Look about 45 minutes before sunrise, the earlier in the week the better.

          Astro Picture of the Day:
          August 26, 2012
          Source:
          A human first set foot on another world on July 20, 1969. This world was Earth's own Moon. In honor of Armstrong's death, today's picture of the day is a digitally restored video of this milestone in human history. Pictured above is Neil Armstrong preparing to take the historic first step. On the way down the Lunar Module ladder, Armstrong released equipment which included the television camera that recorded this fuzzy image. Pictures and voice transmissions were broadcast live to a world wide audience estimated at one fifth of the world's population. The Apollo Moon landings have since been described as the greatest technological achievement the world has known.

          Source:
          On that same July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin became the first to walk on the Moon. This panorama of their landing site sweeps across the magnificent desolation of the Moon's Sea of Tranquility, with their Lunar Module, the Eagle, in the background at the far left. East Crater, about 30 meters wide and 4 meters deep, is on the right (scroll right), and was so named because it is about 60 meters east of the Lunar Module. Armstrong had piloted the Eagle safely over the crater. Near the end of his stay on the lunar surface Armstrong strayed far enough from the Lunar Module to take the pictures used to construct this wide-angle view, his shadow appearing at the panorama's left edge. The object near the middle foreground is a stereo close-up camera.
          Last edited by Bluearrowll; 08-26-2012, 09:37 AM.
          1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
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          9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
          10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
          10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

          FMO AAA Count: 71
          FGO AAA Count: 10

          Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
          PS: Cool AAA's Terry
          - I Love You


          An Alarm Clock's Haiku
          beep beep beep beep beep
          beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
          beep beep beep beep beep
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          • Bluearrowll
            ⊙▃⊙
            FFR Simfile Author
            • Nov 2007
            • 7376

            #245
            Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

            What's in the sky tonight?
            August 27, 2012
            -This is the time of year when the Big Dipper, swinging down in the northwest in evening, catches water dumping from the bowl of the dim Little Dipper high above it. Much of the Little Dipper is made of 4th- and 5th-magnitude stars and requires a fairly dark sky.

            Astro Picture of the Day:
            August 27, 2012
            Source:
            Three thousand light-years away, a dying star throws off shells of glowing gas. This image from the Hubble Space Telescope reveals the Cat's Eye Nebula to be one of the most complex planetary nebulae known. In fact, the features seen in the Cat's Eye are so complex that astronomers suspect the bright central object may actually be a binary star system. The term planetary nebula, used to describe this general class of objects, is misleading. Although these objects may appear round and planet-like in small telescopes, high resolution images reveal them to be stars surrounded by cocoons of gas blown off in the late stages of stellar evolution.
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            3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
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            9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
            10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
            10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

            FMO AAA Count: 71
            FGO AAA Count: 10

            Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
            PS: Cool AAA's Terry
            - I Love You


            An Alarm Clock's Haiku
            beep beep beep beep beep
            beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
            beep beep beep beep beep
            - ieatyourlvllol

            Comment

            • Bluearrowll
              ⊙▃⊙
              FFR Simfile Author
              • Nov 2007
              • 7376

              #246
              Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

              What's in the sky tonight?
              August 28, 2012
              -As twilight fades, spot Arcturus high in the west. Look far to its lower left for Saturn, Spica below it, and Mars to Saturn's left. This triangle is lengthening each evening Saturn and Spica move to the lower right.

              Astro Picture of the Day:
              August 28, 2012
              Source:
              Why is the sky near Antares and Rho Ophiuchi so colorful? The colors result from a mixture of objects and processes. Fine dust illuminated from the front by starlight produces blue reflection nebulae. Gaseous clouds whose atoms are excited by ultraviolet starlight produce reddish emission nebulae. Backlit dust clouds block starlight and so appear dark. Antares, a red supergiant and one of the brighter stars in the night sky, lights up the yellow-red clouds on the lower center. Rho Ophiuchi lies at the center of the blue nebula near the top. The distant globular cluster M4 is visible just to the right of Antares, and to the lower left of the red cloud engulfing Sigma Scorpii. These star clouds are even more colorful than humans can see, emitting light across the electromagnetic spectrum.
              1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
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              3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
              5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
              9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
              10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
              10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

              FMO AAA Count: 71
              FGO AAA Count: 10

              Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
              PS: Cool AAA's Terry
              - I Love You


              An Alarm Clock's Haiku
              beep beep beep beep beep
              beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
              beep beep beep beep beep
              - ieatyourlvllol

              Comment

              • Bluearrowll
                ⊙▃⊙
                FFR Simfile Author
                • Nov 2007
                • 7376

                #247
                Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                What's in the sky tonight?
                August 29, 2012
                -Fomalhaut, the "Autumn Star," rises in the southeast in mid- to late evening; the time depends on your location. Watch for Fomalhaut coming into view below or lower left of the Moon.

                Astro Picture of the Day:
                August 29, 2012
                Source:
                There is something very unusual in this picture of the Earth - can you find it? A fleeting phenomenon once thought to be only a legend has been newly caught if you know just where to look. The above image was taken from the orbiting International Space Station (ISS) in late April and shows familiar ISS solar panels on the far left and part of a robotic arm to the far right. The rarely imaged phenomenon is known as a red sprite and it can be seen, albeit faintly, just over the bright area on the image right. This bright area and the red sprite are different types of lightning, with the white flash the more typical type. Although sprites have been reported anecdotally for as long as 300 years, they were first caught on film in 1989 - by accident. Much remains unknown about sprites including how they occur, their effect on the atmospheric global electric circuit, and if they are somehow related to other upper atmospheric lightning phenomena such as blue jets or terrestrial gamma flashes.
                1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
                1st in I Love You`s 2009 New Year`s Tournament
                3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
                5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                FMO AAA Count: 71
                FGO AAA Count: 10

                Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                - I Love You


                An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                beep beep beep beep beep
                beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                beep beep beep beep beep
                - ieatyourlvllol

                Comment

                • Frank Munoz
                  Muein
                  • Nov 2007
                  • 2047

                  #248
                  Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                  There's so much stuff I do not know about in here... and the "Red Sprite" is freaking amazing... It's now another phenomenon I wish to see now.
                  Unknown and Unofficial
                  may the good arrow guide you

                  Comment

                  • Bluearrowll
                    ⊙▃⊙
                    FFR Simfile Author
                    • Nov 2007
                    • 7376

                    #249
                    Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                    What's in the sky tonight?
                    August 30, 2012
                    -Full Moon tonight and tomorrow night (exactly full at 9:58 a.m. EDT tomorrow morning). The Moon tonight is in dim Aquarius.

                    -As sunrise approaches Friday morning, bring binoculars or a wide-field telescope to a spot with a view of the east-northeast horizon to try for the difficult conjunction of Mercury with Regulus, illustrated here.



                    Astro Picture of the Day:
                    August 30, 2012
                    Source:
                    As far as pulsars go, PSR B1509-58 appears young. Light from the supernova explosion that gave birth to it would have first reached Earth some 1,700 years ago. The magnetized, 20 kilometer-diameter neutron star spins 7 times per second, a cosmic dynamo that powers a wind of charged particles. The energetic wind creates the surrounding nebula's X-ray glow in this tantalizing image from the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Low energy X-rays are in red, medium energies in green, and high energies in blue. The pulsar itself is in the bright central region. Remarkably, the nebula's tantalizing, complicated structure resembles a hand. PSR B1509-58 is about 17,000 light-years away in the southern constellation Circinus. At that distance the Chandra image spans 100 light-years.
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                    3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
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                    10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                    10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                    FMO AAA Count: 71
                    FGO AAA Count: 10

                    Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                    PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                    - I Love You


                    An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                    beep beep beep beep beep
                    beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                    beep beep beep beep beep
                    - ieatyourlvllol

                    Comment

                    • Bluearrowll
                      ⊙▃⊙
                      FFR Simfile Author
                      • Nov 2007
                      • 7376

                      #250
                      Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                      What's in the sky tonight?
                      August 31, 2012
                      -Full Moon (exact at 9:58 a.m. EDT). This is a "blue Moon," when the term means the second full Moon in a calendar month. Blue Moons come every 2.7 years on average. The next is in July 2015.

                      -This week, right after dark is the time when the Big Dipper descends to the same height in the northwest as Cassiopeia rises in the northeast. After this, it'll officially be Cassiopeia season.



                      Astro Picture of the Day:
                      August 31, 2012
                      Source:
                      The Cat's Eye Nebula (NGC 6543) is one of the best known planetary nebulae in the sky. Its haunting symmetries are seen in the very central region of this tantalizing image, processed to reveal the enormous but extremely faint halo of gaseous material, about 6 light-years across, which surrounds the brighter, familiar planetary nebula. Made with narrow and broadband data the composite picture shows the remarkably strong extended emission from twice ionized oxygen atoms in blue-green hues and ionized hydrogen and nitrogen in red. Planetary nebulae have long been appreciated as a final phase in the life of a sun-like star. But recently many planetaries have been found to have halos like this one, likely formed of material shrugged off during earlier active episodes in the star's evolution. While the planetary nebula phase is thought to last for around 10,000 years, astronomers estimate the age of the outer filamentary portions of this halo to be 50,000 to 90,000 years.
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                      5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                      9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                      10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                      10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                      FMO AAA Count: 71
                      FGO AAA Count: 10

                      Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                      PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                      - I Love You


                      An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                      beep beep beep beep beep
                      beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                      beep beep beep beep beep
                      - ieatyourlvllol

                      Comment

                      • Bluearrowll
                        ⊙▃⊙
                        FFR Simfile Author
                        • Nov 2007
                        • 7376

                        #251
                        Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                        What's in the sky tonight?
                        September 1, 2012
                        -Bright Vega passes the zenith as twilight fades away — if you live in the world's mid-northern latitudes. Vega goes right through your zenith if you're at north latitude 39°: near the latitudes of Baltimore, Kansas City, Lake Tahoe, Sendai, Beijing, Athens, Lisbon.

                        -Mercury is lost low in the glow of sunrise.

                        Astro Picture of the Day:
                        September 1, 2012
                        Source:
                        Rising at sunset, the gorgeous Full Moon of August 31 became the second Full Moon in a month. According to modern reckoning, that makes it a Blue Moon. In fact, parts of the Full Moon do look a little blue in this sharp lunar portrait. Taken just hours before the exact full phase in delightfully clear skies over Nottingham, UK, it features eye-catching bright rays extending from the prominent young crater Tycho in the Moon's southern hemisphere. The slightly color enhanced image also brings out subtle shades of blue, a real characteristic of terrain with a high content of titanium oxide and iron. The blue lunar terrain on the right includes the dark flat expanse of the Sea of Tranquility and the Apollo 11 landing site.
                        1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
                        1st in I Love You`s 2009 New Year`s Tournament
                        3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
                        5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                        9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                        10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                        10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                        FMO AAA Count: 71
                        FGO AAA Count: 10

                        Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                        PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                        - I Love You


                        An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                        beep beep beep beep beep
                        beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                        beep beep beep beep beep
                        - ieatyourlvllol

                        Comment

                        • Bluearrowll
                          ⊙▃⊙
                          FFR Simfile Author
                          • Nov 2007
                          • 7376

                          #252
                          Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                          What's in the sky tonight?
                          September 2, 2012
                          -The waning gibbous Moon rises in late twilight. It's beneath the uptilted Great Square of Pegasus.

                          -Mars (magnitude +1.2, in Libra) and Saturn (magnitude +0.8, in Virgo) are low in the west-southwest in twilight. This week they widen from 10° to 13° apart: a fist-width at arm's length or more. Look for them far lower left of bright Arcturus. Saturn is the one on the right. You may still be able to see Spica twinkling 5° below Saturn.

                          Astro Picture of the Day:
                          September 2, 2012
                          Source:
                          This graceful arc traces a Delta rocket climbing through Thursday's early morning skies over Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, USA. Snug inside the rocket's Centaur upper stage were NASA's twin Radiation Belt Storm Probes (RBSP), now in separate orbits within planet Earth's Van Allen radiation belts. Reflected in the Turn Basin from a vantage point about 3 miles from Space Launch Complex 41, the scene was captured in a composite of two exposures. One highlights the dramatic play of launch pad lighting, clouds, and sky. A subsequent 3 minute long exposure records the rocket's fiery trail. While most spacecraft try to avoid the radiation belts, named for their discoverer James Van Allen, RBSP's mission will be to explore their dynamic and harsh conditions.
                          1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
                          1st in I Love You`s 2009 New Year`s Tournament
                          3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
                          5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                          9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                          10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                          10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                          FMO AAA Count: 71
                          FGO AAA Count: 10

                          Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                          PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                          - I Love You


                          An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                          beep beep beep beep beep
                          beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                          beep beep beep beep beep
                          - ieatyourlvllol

                          Comment

                          • Bluearrowll
                            ⊙▃⊙
                            FFR Simfile Author
                            • Nov 2007
                            • 7376

                            #253
                            Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                            What's in the sky tonight?
                            September 3, 2012
                            -As twilight fades, spot bright Arcturus high in the west. Look far to its lower left for Saturn and Mars. They're about a fist-width at arm's length apart. Mars is the one on the left.

                            -Compare Mars with similarly bright and similarly colored Antares ("Anti-Mars" in Greek), three fists to its left and perhaps higher. Which of the two looks deeper orange?

                            Astro Picture of the Day:
                            September 3, 2012
                            Source:
                            Perhaps the most famous star cluster on the sky, the Pleiades can be seen without binoculars from even the depths of a light-polluted city. Also known as the Seven Sisters and M45, the Pleiades is one of the brightest and closest open clusters. The Pleiades contains over 3000 stars, is about 400 light years away, and only 13 light years across. Quite evident in the above photograph are the blue reflection nebulae that surround the brighter cluster stars. Low mass, faint, brown dwarfs have also been found in the Pleiades. (Editors' note: The prominent diffraction spikes are caused by the telescope itself and may be either distracting or provide aesthetic enhancement, depending on your point of view.)
                            1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
                            1st in I Love You`s 2009 New Year`s Tournament
                            3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
                            5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                            9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                            10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                            10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                            FMO AAA Count: 71
                            FGO AAA Count: 10

                            Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                            PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                            - I Love You


                            An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                            beep beep beep beep beep
                            beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                            beep beep beep beep beep
                            - ieatyourlvllol

                            Comment

                            • Bluearrowll
                              ⊙▃⊙
                              FFR Simfile Author
                              • Nov 2007
                              • 7376

                              #254
                              Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                              What's in the sky tonight?
                              September 4, 2012
                              -Face south soon after dark and look high. The brightest star there is Altair, with dimmer Tarazed a finger-width at arm's length above it and a bit to the right. Look left of Altair, by a bit more than a fist-width, for the dim but distinctive little constellation Delphinus, the Dolphin, splashing in the edge of the Milky Way.

                              Astro Picture of the Day:
                              September 3, 2012
                              Source:
                              Should you be worried about hurricanes? To find out, it is useful to know where hurricanes have gone in the past. The above Earth map shows the path of every hurricane reported since 1851, Although striking, a growing incompleteness exists in the data the further one looks back in time. The above map graphically indicates that hurricanes - sometimes called cyclones or typhoons depending on where they form - usually occur over water, which makes sense since evaporating warm water gives them energy. The map also shows that hurricanes never cross - or even occur very near - the Earth's equator, since the Coriolis effect goes to zero there, and hurricanes need the Coriolis force to circulate. The Coriolis force also causes hurricane paths to arc away from the equator. Although incompleteness fogs long term trends and the prevalence of hurricanes remains a topic of research, evidence is accumulating that hurricanes are, on the average, more common and more powerful in the North Atlantic Ocean over the past 20 years.
                              1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
                              1st in I Love You`s 2009 New Year`s Tournament
                              3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
                              5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                              9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                              10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                              10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                              FMO AAA Count: 71
                              FGO AAA Count: 10

                              Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                              PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                              - I Love You


                              An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                              beep beep beep beep beep
                              beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                              beep beep beep beep beep
                              - ieatyourlvllol

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                              • Bluearrowll
                                ⊙▃⊙
                                FFR Simfile Author
                                • Nov 2007
                                • 7376

                                #255
                                Re: Terry's Astronomy Thread.

                                What's in the sky tonight?
                                September 5, 2012
                                -One of the nicest star clusters for binoculars or a telescope is M11 in Scutum just off the tail of Aquila, the Eagle, as most amateur astronomers know. But can you also spot dimmer, more difficult M26 less than 4° below it?

                                -Jupiter (magnitude –2.3, in Taurus) rises in the east-northeast around 11 or midnight daylight saving time. Once it's well clear of the horizon, look for fainter orange Aldebaran twinkling 6° or 7° to its right. By dawn Jupiter shines very high in the south-southeast, 40° or 45° upper right of brighter Venus.

                                Astro Picture of the Day:
                                September 5, 2012
                                Source:
                                Does air glow? It does, but it is usually hard to see. When conditions are right, however, a faint glow about 90 kilometers up can be observed, most easily with a wide-angle long-duration camera exposure. The same airglow can also frequently be seen looking down - in pictures taken from Earth orbit - as a faint arc hovering above the surface. Pictured above between the beige clouds, above the curving Earth, behind the streaking airplane, and in front of the sparkling stars are some green bands of airglow. The glow is predominantly created by the excitation of atoms by ultraviolet light from the Sun, with the bands resulting from density fluctuations caused by upward moving atmospheric gravity waves. The above image was taken in mid-July above Weikersheim, Germany. Lightning and aurorae can also cause air to glow, but result from particle collisions and are more fleeting.
                                1st in Kommisar's 2009 SM Tournament
                                1st in I Love You`s 2009 New Year`s Tournament
                                3rd in EnR's Mashfest '08 tournament
                                5th in Phynx's Unofficial FFR Tournament
                                9th in D3 of the 2008-2009 4th Official FFR Tournament
                                10th in D5 of the 2010 5th Official FFR Tournament
                                10th in D6 of the 2011-2012 6th Official FFR Tournament

                                FMO AAA Count: 71
                                FGO AAA Count: 10

                                Bluearrowll = The Canadian player who can not detect awkward patterns. If it's awkward for most people, it's normal for Terry. If the file is difficult but super straight forward, he has issues. If he's AAAing a FGO but then heard that his favorite Hockey team was losing by a point, Hockey > FFR
                                PS: Cool AAA's Terry
                                - I Love You


                                An Alarm Clock's Haiku
                                beep beep beep beep beep
                                beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
                                beep beep beep beep beep
                                - ieatyourlvllol

                                Comment

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