Äîêóìåíò âçÿò èç êýøà ïîèñêîâîé ìàøèíû. Àäðåñ îðèãèíàëüíîãî äîêóìåíòà : http://star.arm.ac.uk/nibulletin/2008/Aug-05.html
Äàòà èçìåíåíèÿ: Tue Aug 5 13:22:59 2008
Äàòà èíäåêñèðîâàíèÿ: Tue Oct 2 04:24:46 2012
Êîäèðîâêà:

Ïîèñêîâûå ñëîâà: arp 220

From: TerryMoselat signaol.com

Date: 5 August 2008 01:38:52 BST

Subject: IAA Solar Day, Perseids, Sky at Night


Hi all,

á 

1. IAA SOLAR DAY. The first of this year's popular IAA 'Solar Days' will be held at Carnfunnock Country Park on Saturday 9 August, from 2 to 5 p.m. As usual, we'll have a good selection of solar telescopes & ordinary telescopes with special solar filters and/or Sun projection systems. Spots have been rare recently, but the solar telescopes will also show prominences on the limb, and faculae and plages on the disc.á Carnfunnock Country Park also has the best collection of sundials in Ireland, all of different types.á We'll have alternative entertainment if it's cloudy, so come along for some spectacular views of our nearest star.

á 

2. PERSEID METEORS. The 'Old Faithful' of meteor showers is with us once again, now building up to the maximum rate expected on August 12. Some Perseid meteors are already appearing, but the rate does not reach a really noticeable level until about August 7/8.

á á  The peak is forecast for about 09h on the 12th, so best rates will be seen on the night of 11/12, just before dawn starts to lighten the sky. The waxing gibbousá Moon will interfereá somewhat on the night of maximum, with First Quarter being on the evening of the 8th, and Full Moon on the evening of the 16th.á  But the Moon will set byá about 00.30 that night, giving a reasonable dark-sky window before dawn for keen observers.

á á  The radiant, from where the meteors appear to originate, is in NE Perseus, not far from the famous Double Cluster. It is above the horizon all night from Irish/British latitudes, so some meteors can be seen as soon as the sky gets dark enough - say by about 11.30 p.m.

á á  The maximum ZHR is forecast to be about 80, but please note that you won't actually see that rate! Why? The ZHR, or Zenithal Hourly Rate, is defined as the rate that would be seen by an experienced observer, in a very dark sky, with the radiant in the zenith.á Even though the Moon will set well before dawn, and even if you observe from a very dark location, there's one insuperable problem - the radiant does not reach the zenith before dawn! From Belfast, for example, it only reaches an altitude of about 65 degrees before the sky starts to brighten. So don't believe so-called experts and commentators who just blindly quote the official ZHR as the rate that the average person will see, ignoring all the other factors! I even heard one professional astronomer say that the ZHR rate could be seen by anybody, not just on the night of maximum, but during the whole 2 weeks or so that the shower is officially 'active'!

á á á  However, 65 degrees is still quite good, so if all other conditions are favourable, you might see 60 to 70 Perseids per hour during that moonless window from a very dark site. Add in about another 10 sporadic meteors per hour, and it starts to become quite a respectable show.

á  Rates drop off during the few days after maximum, and with the Moon brightening to Full on the 16th, you won't see so many on the nights after maximum. - But see below.....

á 

ECLIPSE OF THE MOON, 16 August: Many people in Ireland saw the partial eclipse of the Sun on 1 August. I watched it through filtered binoculars from the office, and colleagues there were quite impressed with the view just with binocs! Many IAA members got nice photos: see www.irishastro.org.

á á  Well, that was New Moon, and at the next Full Moon, on 16 August, there's also an eclipse - a lunar one this time, of course. It also will be a partial eclipse, but with a much greater magnitude that the solar eclipse. At maximum, almost 81% of the Moon will be in the Earth's shadow, and the rest will be dimmed by the outer fainter penumbral shadow. From Ireland, the Moon will rise already partially eclipsed, at about 21.45 from Belfast & Dublin, and a bit later the further West you go.

á á á  Maximum eclipse will occur at 22.10 BST. The Moon's altitude then will be less than 10 degrees, so you'll need a good clear SE horizon to seeá the eclipseá properly.

á á  The Moon will pass through the NNW part of the Earth's shadow, so it will be the SSE part of the Moon that will be deepest in the eclipse. The moon leaves the umbra, or theá main part of the Earth's shadow, at 23.44.

á á á  Eclipse Perseids?á  Although the eclipse won't be total, the Moon will be dimmed enough for the 15-20 minutes or so centred on maximum eclipse for us to be able to spot some late Perseids if we are lucky.

á 

3. The SKY AT NIGHT: Title: "Double Vision" (The Large Binocular Telescope).á á If you missed the first broadcast on the 3/4 August, it will be shown again as follows (thanks to Peter Paice for the info):

BBC 4 8 pm.á á á á á á  Tues.á  5 Aug.

Repeat: BBC 2á á  Sat. Aug. 9.

á 

Clear Skies,

á 

Terry Moseley

á 

á 

á