Wallpaper Wednesday

22 06 2011
Barringer Meteorite Crater

Barringer Meteorite Crater. Photo credit: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Today’s wallpaper comes to us courtesy of ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer), an imaging instrument  that makes up part of the satellite Terra.  Terra was launched in December 1999 as part of NASA’s EOS (Earth Observing System). If you’re wondering why the photo of Barringer Crater looks so strange, it’s because you’re looking at a 3D perspective view created by superimposing an ASTER bands 3-2-1 image over a digital elevation model from the US Geological Survey National Elevation Dataset. This composite image is a decade old now, but ASTER is still going strong, as is evidenced by the data it sends back to earth showing some of our planet’s natural hazards, including debris from the March 2011 tsunami in Japan.





Wallpaper Wednesday

15 06 2011
'Curiosity,' aka the Mars Science Laboratory Rover.

'Curiosity,' aka the Mars Science Laboratory Rover. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Did you have a chance to watch the new Mars Rover move around its temporary home in the clean room at JPL before it drove itself out of camera range? Today’s wallpaper was taken during the June 3rd mobility testing, which I would have missed if I wasn’t a slave to my twitter feed. Try to catch up with Curiosity via JPL’s Curiosity Cam or follow the mission on twitter @CuriosityRover. Also, don’t be an idiot like me and instinctively type in the British spelling of ‘curiousity’ when you’re searching for mission data. That will turn into a #FAIL pretty quickly.

UPDATE:  The Rover make its final appearance on camera at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on Thursday, June 16, 7:30 to 10 a.m. Watch!





Wallpaper Wednesday

8 06 2011
James Webb Telescope Wallpaper

James Webb Space Telescope Wallpaper

Okay, I admit this isn’t the most stunning wallpaper but the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is on my mind today since NPR played their story on the cost of the instrument over and over and over this a.m.

As the wallpaper suggests, the JWST is going to be searching for the earliest galaxies, observing the formation of stars from the earliest stages to the development of planetary systems, and looking for signs of life in planetary systems. The telescope is designed to make its observations in the infrared (with limited capability for observations in the visible range of the spectrum) and will carry four separate instruments to do so: the Near InfraRed Camera (NIRCam), the Near InfraRed Spectrograph (NIRSpec), the Mid-InfraRed Instrument (MIRI), and the Fine Guidance Sensor Tunable Filter Camera (FGS-TFI). We already make infrared observations from Earth-based telescopes (at the Keck and Mauna Kea Observatories in Hawaii, for instance), but even at those high altitudes, the earth’s atmosphere can cause blurring. Thus, the need for a telescope outside our atmosphere, 1.5 million km outside our atmosphere, in this case.

To get the wallpaper, click the image and scroll down the downloads page. To get instructions for building a paper model of the telescope, visit the model page. To follow the telescope on twitter, look for @NASAWebbTelescp.





Wallpaper Wednesday

1 06 2011

Australia Compact Telescope Array at Night.

Australia Compact Telescope Array at Night. Photo credit: S. Amy, CSIRO


Obviously, I have a thing for the architecture of radio astronomy.  I blame my appreciation for the dish on COMSAT first, NRAO second, and only those who grew up in the Okanogan know why (unless you followed the links in this sentence). The image above shows four of the six 22-m antennae that comprise the Australia Compact Telescope Array at the Paul Wild Observatory near Narrabri, NSW, Australia. My favorite part of the observatory’s website is the ATCA Live! page, which tells me what the array is currently tracking (“As you read this astronomers are observing the source HD135344AB which has an azimuth of 247.3 degrees and an elevation of 60.1 degrees. The telescope is setup to observe at 17000 and 19000 MHz simultaneously.”). There’s also a nice archive of construction and upgrade photos available for public viewing online. I can’t see finding myself in Narrabri Shire anytime soon, but if you’re in the neighborhood (500 km northwest of Sydney), hit the Visitors Center:  always open, admission is free.





Wallpaper Wednesday

25 05 2011
Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2

Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2. Photo credit: NASA.

Today’s wallpaper shows the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 (AMS-02) holding steady in its new home on the integrated truss structure of the International Space Station. Delivered to the ISS on May 19th by STS-134 under the command of Mark Kelly, the AMS-02 will be the first magnetic spectrometer used in space.  From its orbital position, the instrument will gather and measure cosmic rays as part of the on-going search for primordial antimatter and dark matter in the universe.  At the heart of the AMS-02 is a large magnet, the field of which will be used to distinguish matter from anti-matter. As particles and anti-particles pass through a uniform magnetic field, they bend in opposite directions.  The specific particle curvature (positive or negative) identifies the particle as electron or positron.  In addition, the radius of the curvature allows scientists to measure the particles momentum at the time of collection. More on the science (dark matter, anti-matter, strangelets, and cosmic rays) and technology (instruments) of the AMS-02 can be found on the instrument’s website. You can also follow the instrument on twitter @AMS-02.





Wallpaper Wednesday

18 05 2011

Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) antennae

Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) antennae. Photo credit: ESO/José Francisco Salgado.


Today’s wallpaper comes to us courtesy of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in Chile.  What you see are four antennae completed as part of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). ESO and its international partners are in the process of constructing sixty-six of these antennae, all tuned to observe cold-body radiation with wavelengths of a millimeter or less. Radiation with such short wavelengths comes mostly from cold gas and dust clouds, in which stars are being born, or from early, cooling galaxies. Astronomers hope that the information gathered from these cold objects will bring us one step closer to understanding the origins of the universe.

ESO has provided a four-minute “trailer” about the project, available in multiple formats (HD always recommended if your system can handle it) in the video archive. Look for the brief glimpses of the construction equipment.





Wallpaper Wednesday

11 05 2011

Construction of Mark I Telescope. Photo credit: Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics, University of Manchester.

Today’s wallpaper is a photo taken during the construction of the 76-meter Mark I (Lovell) Telescope at Jodrell Bank.  Designed by Bernard Lovell and completed in 1957, the Mark I was designed for mobility. Lovell had been using a transit telescope, a 66-meter stationary dish pointed at the overhead sky, in his search for cosmic rays.  While the transit instrument was a suitable beginning, Lovell realized fairly quickly that his work was limited by an inability to re-direct the telescope’s attention to other parts of the sky.

The early construction photos are pretty stunning—the photographer(s) did a good job of capturing the complexity of the steelwork needed to support the dish, not to mention the intricacy of the scaffolding used by the construction workers.  Several alterations have been made to the instrument since its completion:  the railroad tracks on which it rotates have been replaced; the support structure has been shored up numerous times; it was given a new reflector in 1970-71 that significantly increased its functionality.  The dish was resurfaced as recently as 2000-2003.

If you’re interested in viewing the Mark I(a)/Lovell telescope in person, check out the Jodrell Bank Discovery Centre online (there is no public access to the research labs at Jodrell Bank Observatory, but you can take a web tour). If you’re curious as to what the Lovell is observing right this moment, you can see a live update on the Jodrell Bank Telescope Status page.  You can even follow the telescope on twitter (@LovellTelescope).

One last note:  if you want to see a truly impressive grant application, read The Blue Book, Lovell’s research and funding proposal submitted to the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research in 1951. Would that everyone could write such a clear explanation of his or her work and its broader impact.





Wallpaper Wednesday

4 05 2011

Kokino Megalithic Observatory

Now for something different. Older. Cooler. Rockier.

In 2001 CE, archaeologist Jovica Stankovski discovered a site that dated to the Bronze Age (roughly 1800-1600 BCE for Central Europe) near the village of Kokino in the Republic of Macedonia.*  Near the top of the site, terracotta objects dating to 1800 BCE were discovered in a naturally formed stone “room.”  Even more interesting that those remnants, however,was the disposition of the volcanic rock around the site. As you can see from the wallpaper linked above, the site occupies multiple levels on a hilltop and consists of both natural and human-made rock formations.  In 2002 CE, physicist Gjore Cenev began conducting an archaeo-astronomical analysis of the stones and turned up some interesting results.

In the right-center of the photo, you can see the roughly quadrilateral shapes of stone seats, or “thrones,” that have been crafted and positioned so that they face east.  Not readily visible in the image are the stone sets that Cenev argues were used to mark particular days in the solar and lunar calendars.  The survey team located three stone markers that indicated the location of the sunrise at the summer and winter solstice, as well as at the vernal and autumn equinoxes.  They also located four stone markers that indicated the position of the rising moon on when it was at maximum and minimum declination.  Two more stone markers were meant to measure the length of the lunar month in winter and summer.

Across several publications, Cenev has provided a great deal of information about his team’s approach to measurement and analysis (they basically extrapolated from Gerald Hawkins’ work at Stonehenge in the 1960s).  That anyone is capable of looking at a pile of stone put together 3800 years ago and figure out what’s going in terms of astronomical observation is amazing enough; that they were able to postulate certain societal behavior from their study is even more so.

For example, Cenev notes that the position of the lunar markers suggests that the Macedonians were aware of the metonic (19-year) cycle of the moon. [Briefly, it takes 19 years before a full moon to appear in exactly the same place again.]  However, to gather enough data to determine the metonic cycle conclusively, astronomers would have needed make lunar observations for some 38-57 years.  Given a life expectancy of forty years for ancient Macedonians, that means the society assigned enough importance to the calendar to conduct observations for at least two, and probably three, generations.

There’s more to be read in Cenev’s work:  a single stone seems to mark the location of the sunrise on a day not obviously associated with the calendar, giving rise to the speculation that the day was important for some ritual or another, probably associated with harvest.  The geology of the site is interesting, as the inhabitants took advantage of the local andezite’s tendency to fracture along straight lines, providing them with natural building blocks.  At least some of the observation points can be occupied only by a single person.  So, while it’s interesting to read about the calendrical calculations and how they compared to those made at Stonehenge, it’s even more intriguing to use the (admittedly fragmented) evidence to try and build a picture of the people who built the observatory at Kokino.

*I used three papers by Gjore Cenev for this post:

Cenev, Gjore. “Archaeo-astronomical characteristicsof the Kokino archaeological site.” Bulgarian Astronomical Journal 9 (2007): 133-1.147

________. “Kokino Calendar.” Publications of the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade No. 85 (2008): 87 – 94

________. “Megalithic Observatory Kokino.” Publications of the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade No. 80 (2006): 313-317.





Wallpaper Wednesday

27 04 2011

Superstructure of 305-meter Radio Telescope at Arecibo, Puerto Rico

An amazing view of the superstructure of the 305-meter radio telescope located near the town of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. This telescope caught my eye for a couple of reasons. First, well, just look at that engineering. Suspension cables, truss work, the lattice work on the Gregorian dome…the construction photos make for fantastic viewing

The image above shows five major components of the telescope’s superstructure:

1) We’re looking at the underside of a triangular “platform” that weighs some 900 tons. The platform is suspended on 18 steel cables. Six more cables connect the corners (two at each corner) to jacks used to adjust height of platform (millimeter by millimeter).

2) The circular structure on the underside of the triangular platform is the track on which the 328-foot azimuth arm rotates.

3) The azimuth arm (the bowed trusswork) is another track system. The carriage house travels on one end of the track, the Gregorian dome travels on the opposite end.

4) The carriage house serves as the terminus for various linear antennae tuned to a narrow band of frequencies. The antennae are directed downward, toward a massive reflector dish.

5) The Gregorian dome is a complicated beast but it essentially enables the spherical reflector of the telescope to behave as if it was a parabolic reflector (the most common shape used for radio telescopes). That odd hanging half-dome contains a multi-beam receiver that can look at seven reflected beams at simultaneously (as opposed to a single-signal linear antenna).

The second reason that observatory caught my eye is that it was designed to take advantage of the geological formations of the site. That huge dish is built on a natural karst (again, the construction photos tell a good story). It’s good to know karst land is good for something other than swallowing holes, collapsing mines, and breaking legs.

In recent years, the telescope has been scrambling for funding, but the NSF has decided to fund it through at least 2016. That gives me five years to figure out a way to go see this place in person.





Wallpaper Wednesday (Super-Kamiokande Neutrino Detector)

20 04 2011

Super-Kamiokande Neutrino Detector

We’ve been having a lot of discussions about neutrinos in our house lately, mostly because I’m forcing my partner to read F. E. Close’s Neutrino.

Neutrinos are elementary particles that are emitted with neutrons transform into protons during certain types of nuclear reactions or radioactive decay.  They are electrically neutral, meaning they have no electrical charge, negative or positive, and don’t react to electromagnetic forces.  They can travel through matter for great distances without being affected by the properties of that matter.  This means that once they have been produced/released as part of a cataclysmic event, neutrinos can travel the cosmos without being absorbed by matter or disturbed by electromagnetic forces.  In theory, this means that they travel across the entire cosmos to arrive at earth without having significantly changed since the moment of origin.

Some of the neutrinos at large in the universe are “man made,” in that they were produced at nuclear power stations, in particle accelerators, by nuclear bombs, and some were generated naturally, during the birth-to-death cycle of stars, for example.  Majority opinion in the astronomy world supports the claim that most neutrinos were created about 15 billion years ago, just after the birth of the universe.  The universe has been cooling and expanding for 15 billion years, yet the neutrinos are still hanging with us, unchanged, as cosmic background radiation.

Since neutrinos don’t change with time or distance, their current constitution should reflect their origin.  That is, extremely high-energy neutrinos should be connected to high-energy origins (supernovae, gamma ray bursts, black holes).  If we suddenly detect a huge number of neutrinos hitting our instruments, we can bet they were associated with a major event.  For example, the day before the core collapse supernova in the Large Magellanic Cloud was detected in 1987, astronomers noticed an usually high number of neutrinos hitting their detectors.  The neutrinos were emitted before the explosion, while the collapse was in process, so their arrival was actually a warning to astronomers, telling them a) that something big is happening; and b) what direction to look to find that big happening.  A great early warning system!

Trouble is, since neutrinos don’t really interact with anything, they’re hard to detect.  To observe them in sufficient number, you need an immense instrument.  For instance, the main collector of IceCube, the neutrino detector at the South Pole, consists of an array of 5,160 detectors frozen in one cubic kilometer of ice.

The image above is the Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector in Hida City, Gifu, Japan.  The Super-K detector, associated with the Kamioka Observatory, was constructed one kilometer underground in the Kamioka mine.  The detector consists of a stainless steel tank (bottom half of the image, with life raft!), 39 meters in diameter and 42 meters in height, filled with 50,000 tons of ultra pure water.  When the neutrino hits the water, its interaction with the electrons or nuclei of water can produce a charged particle. That charged particle (“Cherenkov light”) moves faster than the speed of light through the water.  It’s measured by some 11,000 photomultiplier tubes on the superstructure of the detector (top half of the image) as it moves, and is analyzed to determine the incoming direction and type of neutrino that hit the water.

Okay, technically, the linked images aren’t sized for wallpaper, but they are high-res, so quite adaptable.  The instrument was refurbished in 2005-2006 and those images are available for scrutiny as well.








Observatories and Instruments