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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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Careers in Astronomy

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:
The Moon in Ancient History (Calendars)

The Future of Space Travel

The Planet Saturn

The planet Saturn resembles the planet Jupiter in many ways. Saturn is also a planet that has very little if any solid matter. It is believed that there is a hard rocky core, but that belief is unproven (albeit very probable) theory. Saturn, like Jupiter, is made up of gases and liquids. There is an internal heat source. We know this because Saturn radiates more energy than it receives.

Saturn rotates fast. It makes one complete revolution once every 10 or 11 hours. Saturn rotates around the sun once every 29.5 years. Because it rotates so fast, Saturn is flattened at the poles, making it an almost oblate planet.

The space probes, Pioneer 11, Mariner 11 and 12, and Voyager I and II, provide the best and most accurate information to astronomers about the planet Saturn, even though the Hubble space telescope takes very good images of Saturn. The space probes get "up close and personal," so to speak, and have provided information about Saturn that nothing else could have provided.

Wind velocity on Saturn is extreme. Wind speeds of more than 1,118 mph have been recorded. Unlike the winds on Jupiter, however, wind speeds on Saturn do not seem to be closely related to the positions of the belts and bands.

The rings around Saturn are one of the most interesting features. Really high-resolution pictures taken on the Voyager missions tell us that the rings are actually made up of hundreds of thousands of very small rings. The evidence suggests that the rings are composed of particles that are mostly ice crystals. A lot has been learned about the rings of Saturn over the last 20 or so years, but there is so much about them that is still a mystery.

 


More articles:

Astrology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Saturn - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St. Paul’s Cathedral
Astrological sign - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Earth and stars to scale.

Inspired by Maria Mitchell

NASA

In 1958, the Congress of the United States enacted, and the President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Act (NASA). The act begins with a very simple statement; "An Act to provide for research into the problems of flight within and outside the Earth's atmosphere, and for other purposes."

The Cold War between the United States and (what was) the Soviet Union was in full swing. With the passing and signing of the act that established NASA, what has come to be known as the "space race" was kicked off. The Soviet Union had launched Sputnik 1 and had an apparent head start in the race to space.

The United States caught up quickly. In January 1958, Explorer 1 (America's first earth satellite) was launched.

Then NASA launched human space flight initiatives with Mercury's single astronaut program (flights during 1961-1963) to determine if a human could survive in space.

The Project Gemini (flights during 1965-1966) with two astronauts to was used to practice space operations, like rendezvousing and docking spacecraft and extravehicular activity (EVA or space walks).

This was followed with Project Apollo (flights during 1968-1972) to explore the Moon. Since then NASA has conducted robotic missions to the Moon (Ranger, Surveyor, and Lunar Orbiter); Venus (Pioneer Venus), Mars (Mariner 4, Viking 1 and 2), and the outer planets (Pioneer 10 and 11, Voyager 1 and 2).

NASA has had its problems over the years. The space shuttle Challenger blew up on January 28, 1986, killing seven astronauts. The space program was grounded for two years. Another tragedy happened on February 1, 2003, when the space shuttle Columbia disintegrated on re-entry. All seven people on board were killed instantly.

Space travel is not without its dangers, but space in the next great frontier for mankind to conquer. You can be sure that the space program and NASA will continue into the foreseeable future.
 


Related Topics: Inspired by Maria Mitchell,  About Telescopes, The Hubble Space Telescope