Saturday April 25 is Astronomy Day, so here is the western sky as night falls this evening. Continue reading “The Spring Show”
Tag: astronomy
Reindeer procession and precession
We are at latitude 70 degrees north, longitude 23 east, docked at Alta, the world’s northernmost town, Continue reading “Reindeer procession and precession”
Nail-biting eclipse
Not that I’ve ever been a nail-biter, but this could be a term for the intermediate kind between triumphs, where a clear or sufficiently clear sky allows you to see all or most of the prelude and then the full glory of the total (or annular) eclipse; and failures, that is, cloud-outs. I’ve had two cloud-outs (1980 in Kenya and 2003 in Orkney), ten triumphs (of which one was annular), and two nail-biters, which in their way are the most exciting: 1979, my first eclipse, on the shore of the St. Lawrence, when a gap between rolls of cloud came along just in time; and 1997, in Mongolia, when by racing a snowstorm along a desert road we caught the moment of totality past the edge of it.
As we sailed north toward Faroe we expected to be clouded out: I think the average cloud cover at this time is 65 percent. We planned to go ashore into Torshavn town and watch the 20-degree-high sun with this huge ship in the foreground. But the captain announced that the wind (to us. there didn’t seem much of it) would not allow us yet to dock.
So Tilly and I stayed on the top deck with everyone else. The sun was at first in view, in a bright distant region below the roof of cloud. But that was before partial eclipse began. Then there was cloud, and some rain, and thin patches, through which (looking through our safety goggles) we could see the crescent of the sun dwindling) and fragments of white or blue that might move toward where the sun was but did not.
But at the last moment one did. You can see a black bulk of cloud moving away, crepuscular rays shooting upward from the almost unhidden sun.
Then the sun showed: the remaining sliver of it, but bright in contrast to the gathered darkness; then the diamond ring, and the complete ring of the corona. It was distinct but not outspreading, because still muted behind some thin cloud. You’ll be able to make it out, just, in the iPad photo, but this is a grainy travesty of what we could see. I’ll make a drawing of it at home, and I probably won’t try to post anything else during the rest of our voyage; it’s too difficult.
Petals of Light
If the Faroese sky is clear on the morning of March 20 we may see something like this: Continue reading “Petals of Light”
Scared of a shadow
Soon (Tuesday) we set sail for a sea voyage to the March 20 eclipse, so Continue reading “Scared of a shadow”
March madness
Two things happen to the Sun at this time of year: Continue reading “March madness”
Polyhedrons III
This is how the stellated stars in the cover picture of Astronomical Calendar 2015 look with the shading of their faces re-thought. Continue reading “Polyhedrons III”
Polyhedrons II
In case you’ve forgotten what those beasts are, here are the five regular polyhedrons Continue reading “Polyhedrons II”
Dim third
Another “trio.” On the evening of March 4, look for Venus, Mars, and Uranus, at their tightest grouping, in the after-sunset western sky. Continue reading “Dim third”