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Smile! – Comet Tempel 1 gets its retakes

February 15, 2011 1 comment

Wow!  I was tipped off by Emily Lackdawalla‘s Planetary Society Blog.  She found the image of the Deep Impact site.  I pulled the image from the JPL site, enlarged it, tweaked the brightness levels, and sharpened it a bit.

I got the impact site wrong, since it hadn’t been pointed out yet.  I thought it was that bright spot, definitely not visible in the 2005 images.  In perusing the press conference images several hours later I saw the real impact.  A low crater that blends with the color and terrain around it.  It goes to show how fast the dust liberated by the comet’s out gassing covers the surface of the comet.  I’d bet it we ever pass the comet next time around the fresh impact would be covered too.

Impact crater on Comet Tempel 1.  Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell

Impact crater on Comet Tempel 1. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell. Image enhanced and annotated by Bob Moler

Categories: Comet, NASA Tags:

02/15/11 – Ephemeris – Kepler discoveres lots of planets

February 15, 2011 Comments off

Tuesday, February 15th.  The sun will rise at 7:43.  It’ll be up for 10 hours and 27 minutes, setting at 6:10.   The moon, 3 days before full, will set at 6:20 tomorrow morning.

Two weeks ago NASA announced the discovery of a possible 12 hundred and 35 planets around other stars discovered by the Kepler spacecraft mission, which has been staring at a single patch of the Milky Way for nearly two years.  It found 5 earth-like planets in the habitable zones of their stars.  It’s finding planets by their passage in front of their stars, something astronomers call transits.  A very useful technique but only a few percent of star systems are so perfectly oriented to our line of sight to produce these transits.  Most of these finds have to be verified by the Doppler wobble method of the planet’s effects of the motion of the star itself.  Kepler even found a six planet system all orbiting within a few million miles of their star.

* Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Categories: Ephemeris Program, NASA