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Learn About Earth's Nearest Neighbor -
The Moon
Predict Moon Phases And More, Past, Present or Future
this moon observer's software toolkit is designed to help you learn about the Moon and make your lunar observing sessions more productive...

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Would you like to understand more about your career, love life & undiscovered talents and skills?
Maybe you have questions concerning your health or the health of your family?
Learn how to read your birthchart from the comfort of your own home and at your own pace... learn more


A step-by-step how to guide to easily use the tried and tested signs in the heavens to understand the rarely understood art of Horoscope...
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Famous Meteorites

Test Your Astronomy Knowledge

So you think you know a lot about astronomy? Take this little test and find out. Do not scroll down to the answers until you have answered all five questions.

Question #1: One of the following is NOT a type of telescope. Which one?

A. Herschelian
B. Copernican
C. Gregorian
D. Newtonian

Question #2: What would be the magnification of a refractor telescope if the main objective lens had a focal length of 1200mm and the eyepiece had a focal length of 30mm?

A. 36x
B. 400x
C. 360x
D. 40x

Question #3: Only one of the following is a type of eye piece design. Which one?

A. Monocentric
B. Planocentric
C. Egocentric
D. Orthocentric

Question #4: You cannot see the Aurora Borealis in the Southern Hemisphere. True or False?

Question #5: If you are going to take extended exposure photographs of the sky, which mount is the best one to use?

A. Transit
B. Altazimuth
C. Equatorial
D. Dobsonian




Test Answers:

Question #1: The correct answer is B, Copernican. Nicolaus Copernicus was an astronomer, but no telescope was named after him.

Question #2: The correct answer is D, 40x. You calculate the magnification of a telescope by dividing the focal length of the lens or mirror by the focal length of the eye piece.

Question #3: The correct answer is A, Monocentric. Three glass elements are cemented together to make a monocentric eye piece.

Question #4:  The correct answer is true. The word "Borealis" means northern. In the southern hemisphere, Aurora Australis is visible.

Question #5: The correct answer is C, Equatorial. An equatorial has to be driven by only one axis to track stars as the earth rotates.

So how did you do on this little test? If you answered three of the five questions correctly, you beat the average. If you answered fewer than three questions correctly, perhaps you should either study or take up another hobby.

See Also:
For once the answer may really be in the stars.

Inspired by Maria Mitchell

The Planet Venus

Back in 1686, a French scholar by the name of Bernard de Fontenelle, wrote, "I can tell from here...what the inhabitants of Venus are like; they resemble the Moors of Granada; a small black people, burned by the sun, full of wit and fire, always in love, writing verse, fond of music, arranging festivals, dances, and tournaments every day."

Nice try, Bernard, but you had it all wrong. Back in those days, it was generally accepted that Venus was much like Earth. Venus is about the size of Earth, but that's pretty much where all resemblance ends.

Almost all of the planets in our solar system travel around the sun in a counterclockwise direction…all of them except Venus and Uranus, that is. Venus (as well as Uranus) travels clockwise. All of the planets except Venus and Uranus rotate on their axis in a counterclockwise direction. Venus and Uranus rotate clockwise.

Venus also rotates really slowly, too. A "day" on Venus would equal about 243 Earth days. Venus is covered by a thick layer of clouds that make studying the surface very difficult. In the last 30 years, however, astronomers have learned how to "see" through the thick cloud cover.

In 1962, Mariner 2 was the first spacecraft to go by Venus. Since then, there have been 20 more missions. The first hard landing on Venus was done by Venera 4 in 1967. The first soft landing was done by Venera 7 in 1970.

In 1989, the Magellan spacecraft probe was launched. Magellan rotated around Venus from 1990 to 1995. It then burned up in the atmosphere of Venus. Magellan bounced radar signals off the surface of Venus and transmitted the data back to Earth.

 


More articles:

Mirrors & Lenses
Astronomy For Kids - KidsAstronomy.com
Galaxies
A Second Earth in Our Solar System [Life On Other Planets]
Maple Leaf flag, USS & Galileo Galilei

Digital Astrophotography

Planting by the Moon

Ah, the moon! The moon has been studied by astronomers (both professional and amateur) for centuries. We even reached out and touched it when Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon 1969. The moon has been the subject of songs, movies, and poetry, and probably always will be. Astronomers have always been utterly fascinated by the moon, and mankind has been fascinated by how it affects the earth and earthlings since time began.

We do know without a doubt that the moon regulates the ocean tides. It is also a certainty that sleeping with moonlight on your head will not turn you into a werewolf or drive you insane. Some beliefs about the moon have been proven true while others have been proven not true.

Farmers have planted according to the moon for centuries, and more and more farmers are returning to those moon-planting axioms every year. Why? Because they work. Planting root vegetables when the moon is "waning" will produce more root vegetables like potatoes, carrots, turnips, beets, etc. Planting vegetables when the moon is increasing will produce more vegetables that produce above ground (beans, peas, lettuce, tomatoes, etc.).

Planting and gardening by the moon gets even more specific. For example, it is better to turn soil when the moon is in the last quarter. The moon tells farmers and gardeners when it is to their advantage to plant, as well as when it is to their advantage to pull weeds or turn soil.

There are many who doubt the validity of planting by the moon, but consider that the moon does have an effect on humans (you can get a lot of debate about that statement). We don't fully understand everything we know about those effects yet. You can ask any policeman, clergyman, doctor, or nurse and they will tell you that during a full moon, there are more crimes committed, more suicides, and more babies born.
 


Related Topics: The Planet Mars,  Asteroids, Comets and Meteors, Planting by the Moon