SETI bioastro: Fw: S&T's Weekly News Bulletin for July 2

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Jul 02 2004 - 19:29:53 PDT

  • Next message: LARRY KLAES: "SETI bioastro: Fw: Cassini Exposes Puzzles About Ingredients In Saturn's Rings"

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    From: bulletins_at_SkyandTelescope.com<mailto:bulletins_at_SkyandTelescope.com>
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com<mailto:ljk4_at_msn.com>
    Sent: Friday, July 02, 2004 8:15 PM
    Subject: S&T's Weekly News Bulletin for July 2

    ========================================================================

     * * * SKY & TELESCOPE's WEEKLY NEWS BULLETIN - July 2, 2004 * * *

    ========================================================================

    Welcome to S&T's Weekly News Bulletin. Images, the full text of stories
    abridged here, and other enhancements are available on our Web site,
    SkyandTelescope.com, at the URLs provided below. (If the links don't work,
    just manually type the URLs into your Web browser.) Clear skies!

    ========================================================================

    CASSINI'S PICTURE-PERFECT ARRIVAL

    Scientists, engineers, and space enthusiasts alike had much to celebrate
    this week: the Cassini orbiter, with its Huygens probe riding piggyback,
    is safely orbiting Saturn. In the process, the craft's cameras captured
    the closest-ever look at the planet's icy rings. The procedure went just
    as planned, says Cassini flight director Julie Webster (Jet Propulsion
    Laboratory). The spacecraft "couldn't have performed any better."

    Saturn orbit insertion, or SOI in NASA parlance, was hardly a simple
    task....

    > http://SkyandTelescope.com/news/article_1291_1.asp>

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    SATURN'S MAGNETIC MYSTERIES

    The first 61 pictures relayed by the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft after
    reaching Saturn show that there is much scientists don't understand about
    the planet's dazzling rings. But no less surprising were early returns
    from Saturn's vast magnetosphere, the invisible bubble of magnetic fields,
    electric currents, and trapped radiation far larger than the ringed planet
    itself....

    > http://SkyandTelescope.com/news/article_1292_1.asp>

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    ASTRO NEWS BRIEFS

    Happy Anniversary, FUSE

    June 24th marked the fifth birthday for the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic
    Explorer (FUSE). Since the craft launched in 1999 FUSE astronomers have
    used the satellite's four far-ultraviolet telescopes to produce
    revolutionary science. Some of the highlights include the first-ever
    observations of molecular nitrogen outside the solar system, an analysis
    of the molecular hydrogen in the Martian atmosphere, and the discovery of
    a hot gas halo surrounding the Milky Way.

    A New Step for SETI_at_home<mailto:SETI_at_home>

    A half million amateur hunters for alien civilizations are currently
    running the SETI_at_home<mailto:SETI_at_home> software -- which uses your computer's idle time to
    sift through cosmic noise from the Arecibo radio telescope for faint,
    artificial signals among the stars. Launched five years ago, SETI_at_home<mailto:SETI_at_home> is
    now broadening its scope to become a platform for other "distributed
    computing" projects, such as those that use volunteers' computers to
    crunch data in molecular biology, climate modeling, and mathematics. The
    new software is named BOINC, the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network
    Computing. It will give SETI_at_home<mailto:SETI_at_home> itself the flexibility to run additional
    searches using other radio telescopes and analysis strategies. Current
    SETI_at_home<mailto:SETI_at_home> users will eventually need to switch to BOINC.

    The change will also resolve an embarrassment that has dogged SETI_at_home<mailto:SETI_at_home>
    for all its life: the project has attracted so many volunteers that most
    of them are given needless duplicate make-work. BOINC will steer excess
    volunteers toward other projects instead.

    Phoebe Came in from the Cold

    Still ecstatic from Cassini's close flyby of Saturn's moon Phoebe on June
    11th, mission scientists have started poring over other data obtained by
    the spacecraft. New insight into the battered moon's character has come
    from a determination of its average density: at 1.6 grams per cubic
    centimeter, Phoebe must be a mixture of rock and ice in roughly equal
    amounts. Spectra from Cassini's Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer
    (VIMS) also show the surface to be a patchwork of water ice, frozen carbon
    dioxide, possibly clays, and unidentified organic compounds. Other large
    satellites in Saturn's system, such as Mimas, Tethys, and Rhea, also have
    compositions dominated by water ice, but VIMS team leader Robert H. Brown
    notes that only Phoebe shows a carbon-dioxide signature. Consequently it
    is definitely not a captured asteroid but instead is more akin to the
    cometary bodies that now populate the distant Kuiper Belt.

    Amateur Occultation Data Reveal Double Asteroid

    Only four observers, all using video recorders, saw asteroid 302 Clarissa
    pass in front of a 10th-magnitude star on the night of June 24th. But that
    was enough to reveal at least two surprises, reports David Dunham, head of
    the International Occultation Timing Association. His preliminary
    assessment suggests that Clarissa is about 64 kilometers long -- nearly
    twice its assumed diameter of 38 km. More importantly, Phil Dombrowski
    (Glastonbury, Connecticut) recorded a 0.25-second-long disappearance
    hundreds of kilometers from Clarissa's center. Instead, Dunham thinks it's
    likely due to a companion satellite perhaps 5 or 6 km across. He notes
    that Brad Timerton, watching closer to the occultation's centerline from
    Newark, New York, recorded a miss, indicating a gap between the two
    bodies. Of the 27 confirmed binary asteroids, none have been discovered
    during an occultation; Dombrowski's observation, if it holds up, would
    become the first.

    > http://SkyandTelescope.com/news/article_1288_1.asp>

    ========================================================================

    HIGHLIGHTS OF THIS WEEK'S SKY

    * Venus is coming into view low in the glow of dawn. Look for it above the
    east-northeast horizon about 45 to 60 minutes before sunrise.
    * Orange Antares brightened unexpectedly in July 2000 and has remained
    bright ever since, with fluctuations. It is now high in the south.
    * Last-quarter Moon on Friday, July 9th (exact at 3:34 a.m. EDT).

    For details, see This Week's Sky at a Glance and Planet Roundup:

    > http://SkyandTelescope.com/observing/ataglance/>

    ========================================================================

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    ========================================================================

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