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Thursday, July 18, 2019

New Instruments and Funding Expand Views of the Sun at Big Bear

Written by: Tracey Regan

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A solar telescope that captures images of the entire disk of the Sun, monitoring eruptions taking place simultaneously in different magnetic fields in both the photosphere and chromosphere, is now installed beside the Goode Solar Telescope (GST) at NJIT’s California-based Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO).

The telescope, SOLIS (Synoptic Optical Long-term Investigations of the Sun), collects images from three separate instruments over years and even decades, rather than minutes or hours, giving scientists a comprehensive view of solar activity such as flares and coronal mass injections over the long-term. It will complement the GST, which gathers high-resolution images of individual explosions at such detail that researchers are beginning to unveil the mechanical operations that trigger them.

“With this important addition, BBSO becomes a comprehensive observing site that offers not only high-resolution solar observations, but also global data of our star,” notes Wenda Cao, an NJIT professor of physics and BBSO’s director. “By monitoring variations in the Sun on a continuing basis for several decades, we will better understand the solar activity cycle, sudden energy releases in the solar atmosphere, fluxes in solar irradiance, or brightness, and their relationship to global change on Earth.”

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This summer, BBSO received a $2.3 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) that will fund continuing scientific study of the Sun using the 1.6-meter GST at Big Bear, which is currently the highest resolution solar telescope in the world.

“GST will continue to play a crucial, leading role in advancing solar studies until the end of this decade and beyond. We will obtain, analyse and interpret the highest resolution solar data ever taken, while developing and applying analytical tools to attack a number of critical, leading-edge problems in solar research,” says Cao, the grant’s principal investigator. “This NSF grant is extremely important; it allows us to maintain telescope operations, the current talented engineering team and advanced research at BBSO and on the NJIT campus. Along with other grants, it will provide the vital backbone funding to enable all of the science, instrumentation and education associated with the facility.”

“The addition of SOLIS at the Big Bear Solar Observatory greatly benefits the broader space weather community,” adds Andrew Gerrard, the director of NJIT’s Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research, which operates BBSO, the Owens Valley Solar Array near Big Pine, Calif., the NASA Van Allen Probes RBSPICE instrument, and geospace instruments around the world. “The data from this cluster of instruments will support both space weather forecasts and fundamental solar physics, which provide important components of the 2015 National Space Weather Action Plan.”

SOLIS, which was developed by the National Solar Observatory (NSO), an academic research consortium with backing from the NSF, is moving to Big Bear (below) from its current site in Tucson, Ariz., because the organization is relocating from its facilities in New Mexico and Arizona to new locations in Hawaii and Colorado. Big Bear was deemed an ideal location for SOLIS, because the lake suppresses ground-level atmospheric turbulence caused by heating thermals, offering exceptional “seeing” for long periods per day on its more than 286 sunny days per year.

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SOLIS is a suite of three instruments: a vector Spectro magnetograph that measures magnetic field strength and direction over the full solar disk within 15 minutes; a full-disk patrol that takes full-disk images of the Sun in various colours at a high cadence; and an integrated sunlight spectrometer that measures minute changes of the spectrum of the Sun as if it were a distant star.

“SOLIS continues a 45-year record of data on the behaviour of the Sun’s magnetic field that originally began at Kitt Peak, Arizona. It is also the longest consistent provider of data on the direction of the magnetic field in the photosphere, stretching back to 2003. SOLIS now uniquely provides observations of the strength and direction of the magnetic field in the chromosphere, an important layer of the solar atmosphere where the magnetic field abruptly changes direction from primarily vertical to mostly horizontal,” says Frank Hill, associate director of the NSO.

He added, “This data improves our models of the behaviour of the solar corona, particularly when flares occur. The data is also an important input to models of the magnetic field direction inside a coronal mass ejection (CME) when it strikes Earth’s magnetosphere; this is a critical indicator of the strength of the subsequent geomagnetic storm that can adversely affect our technology.”

The variability of the Sun, particularly its cycle of activity, is increasingly important for life on Earth as society becomes ever more dependent on technology in daily life.

Telecommunications, GPS navigation, satellites, space flights with astronauts aboard, airline passengers and the power grid are all vulnerable to damage and disruption caused by solar activity. The Sun is also a driver of Earth’s climate, so its variability needs to be observed. Some aspects of the Sun’s changes are predictable, such as the 11-year sunspot cycle, but the details are not well modelled.

Last year, Haimin Wang, distinguished professor of physics at NJIT, and his colleagues released some of the first detailed views from the GST of the mechanisms that may trigger solar flares, colossal releases of magnetic energy in the Sun’s corona that dispatch energized particles capable of penetrating Earth’s atmosphere within an hour and disrupting orbiting satellites and electronic communications on the ground.

Earlier this year, a team of physicists led by NJIT’s Gregory Fleishman discovered a phenomenon that may begin to untangle what they call “one of the greatest challenges for solar modelling” — determining the physical mechanisms that heat the corona, or upper atmosphere, to 1 million degrees Fahrenheit and higher.

Invisible to the human eye except when it appears briefly as a fiery halo of plasma during a solar eclipse, the corona remains a puzzle even to scientists who study it closely. Beginning 1,300 miles from the star’s surface and extending millions more in every direction, it is more than a hundred times hotter than lower layers much closer to the fusion reactor at the Sun’s core.

Wang said recent technical advances at Big Bear will permit ground-breaking new measurements of the Sun’s magnetism.

“We have developed a way to process GST measurements of the Sun’s magnetic fields using sophisticated software that gives us spectrum profiles of the light emitted by atoms transitioning from one energy state to another. When inverted, these profiles allow us to obtain the strength and direction of magnetic fields,” notes Wang, adding, “Both the BBSO and SOLIS observe the solar chromosphere through the spectrum lines formed by excited hydrogen atoms, which allows us to monitor solar activities such as filaments, sunspots, bright regions of the Sun and flares. But the two instruments capture images of solar structures in different wavelengths.”

An assistant to U.S. Rep. Donald M. Payne, Jr. of New Jersey sent his congratulations on the funding renewal, noting, “Our office is proud of the work you’re doing to help the world better understand our Sun.”

Big Bear is open to scientists around the world, while a third of its observation time is reserved for NJIT researchers and students. Data from SOLIS will be posted on the Internet for all to view. Cao said he expects the telescope to obtain first light this fall.





Monday, June 3, 2019

VLT observes a passing double asteroid hurtling by Earth at 70 000 km/h



The unique capabilities of the SPHERE instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope have enabled it to obtain the sharpest images of a double asteroid as it flew by Earth on 25 May. While this double asteroid was not itself a threatening object, scientists used the opportunity to rehearse the response to a hazardous Near-Earth Object (NEO), proving that ESO’s front-line technology could be critical in planetary defence.

The International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) coordinated a cross-organisational observing campaign of the asteroid 1999 KW4 as it flew by Earth, reaching a minimum distance of 5.2 million km [1] on 25 May 2019. 1999 KW4 is about 1.3 km wide, and does not pose any risk to Earth. Since its orbit is well known, scientists were able to predict this fly-by and prepare the observing campaign.

Friday, May 17, 2019

NEW: Guide to the Planets by Richard Pearson FRAS

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Up to date, and full of fascinating information about the worlds of our Solar system. The book focuses on water-worlds and the search for life.

The night sky is a wonder, from the fixed and almost changeless stars to the brief appearances of comets it offers a universe of fascinating objects to view. With little more than a pair of binoculars or a small telescope millions of light years of space are available to all. Guide to the Planets has been written by Richard Pearson with amateur astronomers in mind. This book will guide you through space and introduce you to the pleasures of amateur astronomy.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

The history of Nottingham Castle by John Hicklin

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Read this book FREE online

Purchase a copy of this book      £16.95  plus P&P

In this volume John Hicklin describe the history of Nottingham Castle from the Danish invasion to the destruction by rioters. On the evening of Monday 10 October 1831, people gathered by the banks of the River Leen to watch the spectacular sight of Nottingham Castle, ablaze, sparks flying.

Thoroton’s History of Nottinghamshire Volume 1


This book is the first volume of Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire. Dr. Robert Thoroton (4 October 1623 – c. 21 November 1678) was an English antiquary, mainly remembered for his county history, The Antiquities of Nottinghamshire (1677). In 1667 Thoroton, aided by a band of helpers, began to work upon his great county history, The Antiquities of Nottinghamshire. This was published in London in 1677; it was dedicated to the eminent antiquarian William Dugdale and was illustrated by engravings by W. Hollar. It was Dugdale who had urged Thoroton to complete the work of history begun by Thoroton's father-in-law.


Thoroton’s History of Nottinghamshire Volume 2


Purchase a copy of the book     £20  plus P&P

ROBERT THOROTON (1623–1678), historian, was son of Robert and Anne Thoroton, née Chambers. His ancestors had long held considerable property in Nottinghamshire. This volume published in 1797 was extended by John Throsby Thoroton commenced his ‘Antiquities of Nottinghamshire’ in 1667. He first worked on some transcript notes from ‘Domesday Book’ which were made by his father-in-law Gilbert Boun of Newark, and were made over to Thoroton by Gilbert Boun's son-in-law, Gervase Pigot of Thrumpton. Thoroton did not conduct all his researches personally, but employed paid assistants at great expense to himself. The magnificent result of his labours appeared in the folio volume of ‘Antiquities’ printed in London in 1677, and illustrated with engravings by Hollar after Richard Hall.

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece & Rome

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This fascinating book contains the legends of the best known constellations, and more besides.
an excellent read …

A Myth is a folklore genre consisting of narratives or stories that play a fundamental role in a society, such as foundational tales or origin myths. The main characters in myths are usually gods, demigods or supernatural humans. Stories of everyday human beings, although often of leaders of some type, are usually contained in legends, as opposed to myths.

Myths are often endorsed by rulers and priests or priestesses, and are closely linked to religion or spirituality.In fact, many societies group their myths, legends and history together, considering myths and legends to be true accounts of their remote past. In particular, creation myths take place in a primordial age when the world had not achieved its later form. Other myths explain how a society's customs, institutions and taboos were established and sanctified. There is a complex relationship between recital of myths and enactment of rituals.

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Full biography of John Flamsteed with documents, letters and observations

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The Rev.d John Flamsteed was the first British Astronomer Royal

This volume is a rare addition for those with a keen interest in the history of Astronomy. It contains an Account of the life of the Rev.d John Flamsteed FRS., compiled from his own manuscripts, and other authentic documents by Francis Baily Esq. As Astronomer Royal, Flamsteed spent some forty years observing and making meticulous records for his star catalogue, which would eventually triple the number of entries in Tycho Brahe's sky atlas.