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Showing posts from December, 2012

The Geminids

The Geminid meteor shower is coming up! At 2:00 AM, on December 14 (that's Thursday night, or Friday morning), you can see anywhere from 100 to 150 meteors per hour - depending on the sky and weather conditions. That's more than 1 meteor per minute! This particular meteor shower comes from a 5.1 km wide asteroid called 3200 Phaethon. Flecks of debris fall off this asteroid in a trail around the sun. These bits are called meteoroids . Every year, in December, Earth passes through this stream of meteoroids; when one of them enters Earth's atmosphere, it burns up and we see a meteor. If the meteor is brighter than Venus, it's called a fireball. Fireballs are much less common than meteors. This year, viewing conditions will be especially good; the peak occurs only 1 day past new moon. If you live in an area with lots of light pollution, you will definitely want to drive into the country. If you think the weather will be bad, go out a day or two before or after the peak. Kee

Night Turns to Noon

You might want to check out my Blue Moon post before you read this one. It was late at night. The full moon lay high in the starry sky. Suddenly, everything started getting brighter and brighter, until the moon was as bright as the sun, and everything looked the way it does in the middle of the day - except for the glaring light pollution and the burning stars. Astounded, I pulled out a camera and snapped the photo above, and some others you can see in my Blue Moon post. About an hour later, everything went back to normal. Does that sound like a true story? Well, it isn't; that night was just like any other. To take the photos, I used a trick that I will explain in this post. When a digital camera takes a photo, this is what happens: a shutter on the front opens up, and a lens focuses light onto a tiny charge-coupled device (CCD) inside the camera. When the light hits the CCD, a small electric charge becomes present. As more and more light hits that part of the CCD, the charge ge