Showing posts with label Just for fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Just for fun. Show all posts

Top Ten Things I Didn't Get For Christmas (That I Really, Really Want)


The Top Ten Things I Didn't Get For Christmas (That I Really, Really Want)

#10- Bluetooth headset for hands free phone calls in the car- I drive back and forth to Boston several times a year and have been driving a lot of 6-16 hour trips. Talking on the phone is actually a good use of my time when I'm stuck in the car. I can catch up with friends, family, and associates as the odometer spins and I blow past the state police.

#9- iPad or an Android tablet- I'd be happy with ether one, I think. An iPad would give me access to some of the cool Apple apps I don't have, but to be honest, I love my Droid phone so the ASUS Transformer Prime tablet would be fine.

#8- A new car- Hey, why not? So I can talk on the phone in comfort, right? I'm thinking maybe an mid-sized SUV like the Acura MDX or something with better mileage in a two wheel drive. It has to be sporty and fast. The S in SUV stands for sport. I won't give up my need for speed for the cargo room. My fall back position is to get a sexy red convertible that will advertise my full blown mid-life crisis.

#7- 15 x 70 binoculars- If I had a larger pair of binos and a stand I might just take them to the next star party, instead of lugging all that gear for a change. Then I could go around looking through everyone else's scopes at deep sky objects.

Wait... nah, that doesn't sound like me. No, I'd spend the night observing bright variables with the binoculars. Who am I trying to kid?

#6- Paramount MX- Advertised as slightly smaller than a Paramount with a 90 pound capacity, this mount is now about as much mount as you can buy without spending 6 figures.

#5- Celestron 14" SCT- It doesn't have to be one of the new EdgeHD optical tubes (although that would be nice, since I already have the CGE Pro mount). I'd settle for one of the older carbon fiber tubes or even an old orange beast. Just something slightly bigger to go on my new Paramount MX.

#4- Software- (TheSky, Maxim DL, ACP) This is the software suite I would need to make my system run unattended all night while I observe visually. Pretty sure I will never get there without a serious investment in software.

#3- Telelvue 10mm Ethos eyepiece (6mm and 17mm too!)- I tried one of these out at the Texas Star Party in 2011 and it blows away any eyepiece I have ever seen, used, tested or dreamed of. 10mm gives a high enough magnification that the sky background is truly nice and dark, enhancing contrast and making it easier to see faint stars and objects. The field is remarkably flat and the anti-reflective coatings so superior to even my best Nagler eyepieces that I was sold after about two minutes of a head to head comparison.

I think if I had the 17mm and 6mm Ethos I would never need any other eyepieces, so throw those in my Christmas stocking as stuffers too, please.

#2- More clear weather at home- My supporting evidence may be anecdotal and unscientific, but I swear winter has sucked twice as bad as ever the last five years. December has always been a crappy month for cloud cover, but January used to be one of my best months, and I was never completely skunked from October to March like the last few years. El Nino or whatever, please come back and clear up these long winter nights for me. I miss the winter sky!

#1- More time- More than anything else, what I really need is more time. There is so much I want to do. More time with my wife, son and grandkids. More time to futz around the garden and my house. More time to read and write research papers. More time to write blogs and podcasts. More time to visit with friends. More time to get all the things I want to do at work done and still have time to do anything else! My rough calculation is that I need about 42 hours in a day and 8 days in a week. I guess what I really need is to live long enough for us to discover and colonize a planet around another star with that rotational period.

Yup, more time. That's what I really need.

Congratulations, You've Been Elected!

One of my dearest friends, Roger Kolman, was on the ballot for the AAVSO Council this year, but he did not have high hopes of being elected. "People just don't remember us old-timers anymore," Roger told me.


So when the results of the council elections were announced this morning at the AAVSO Membership meeting, I was excited that he had made it, and wanted to be the first to congratulate him. I quickly fired off an email on my Smartphone, entitled- "You've Been Elected!"



"Dear Roger,
You were 5th in line, but since one councilor went into the 2nd VP
slot, they needed five out of eight, that's you!

Congratulations,

Mike"

About a half an hour later I received a reply:

"What?  I wasn't aware I was up for election for anything!  I certainly never put my name forward.

Cheers,
Roger Pickard"

In my haste to notify my friend in Illinois that he had been elected, I had inadvertently sent the email to the Director of the British Astronomical Association's Variable Star Section! You can imagine his surprise in being told he now held another post as an AAVSO councilor.

I hastily wrote him another note apologizing for the confusion and assuring him he did not have to be at the next meeting in Big Bear, CA in May. He was quite relieved.

John Greaves


A Simostronomy exclusive!

This is one of the only pictures of John Greaves known to exist. You can also see the remains of some unfortunate astronomer roasting on a spit in the background.

Messenger Pictures from Mercury


For those astronomy and space enthusiasts that also love LOLCats, here is the largest paw print known to man, from the surface of the planet Mercury.

Photo credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institute of Washington

Carnival of Space #124


The Carnival of Space #124 is hosted this week at We Are All In the Gutter Looking At the Stars. Stories this week feature the Nobel Prize for the invention of the charged coupled device; the newly discovered ring around Saturn; The Andromeda Galaxy in ultra-violet, (definitely do click on the image for a gigantic view of the image!); results from astronomers studying the recent Solar System visitor, Comet Lulin; a nice piece on the annual meteor shower caused by the debris trail from Halley's Comet, mounting your binoculars for easier views; sunspots; some astronomy nostalgia, book reviews and much more.

Head on over to the Carnival and be careful, or you might learn something!

The Summer We Flew to the Moon

In July this year, I gave a talk at my local astronomy club, the Warren Astronomical Society. Part of each meeting is set aside to discuss astronomy related news and upcoming events. One story was about Russian cosmonauts who had just emerged from an isolation experiment intended to study the effects of being cooped up together on a mission to Mars. The other big story was the approaching 40th anniversary of the historic Apollo moon landing.

These stories got me thinking about when I was 12 years old and my friend, Bob Dostie, and I decided to build our own isolation experiment. We had read about students building space capsules to test their ability to withstand the rigors of being confined in a small space, much like the Apollo astronauts of the day were enduring, for up to several weeks at a time. Most or all of the experiments we read about took place in schools with permission and support from the teachers, staff and parents. But it was summer vacation, so Bob and I decided to build our own capsule in the attic over the garage at my house.

Our home was a two-story colonial back then, with an attached two-car garage. My dad had a workshop and storage shelves, and he stored his boat and his dragster in there. The attic over the garage was accessed through an approximately 2x4 foot panel that you pushed up into the attic from on top of a stepladder. If you wanted to get up in the attic you had to lift yourself up from atop the ladder, and drag yourself onto the wooden floor, much like climbing out of a pool, except without the advantage of buoyancy.

Getting down was much more perilous. You had to hang out over the edge of the hole, line yourself up with the top of the ladder and lower yourself down onto a step with very little margin for error. I shudder to think about it now, but we were kids; we did it all the time. It was up and down this ladder we hauled all our materials and accessories for the space capsule.

We had the seat and back from an old car that we adapted into our space lounger. We angled the back to resemble the pictures we’d seen of the astronaut seats in the Mercury and Apollo capsules. We even had seat belts to secure us, for blast off and landings.

We scrounged together hundreds of electrical switches, knobs and lights and created a massive two-man control panel. Some of the lights and switches actually did things and lit up. We used the pitch of the attic roof to our advantage and had the control panel just over our heads as we laid on the astronaut lounger in space travel orientation.

Bob’s dad worked for the phone company, so we were able to ‘borrow’ a couple hundred feet of wire and two phones that we actually hooked up from the house to the space capsule so we could call ‘mission control’ for more soft drinks and sandwiches when we needed them. We had electricity; a cooler, a radio, a fan and we spent weeks working on our experiment getting ready for the big day.

We thought we could last for about a week, but decided we’d be happy if we made it for three or four days the first time we traveled into space. We calculated how many sodas, sandwiches, bags of chips, Twinkies and other snacks we would need to take with us to the Moon and back, and stocked up. All conditions were go and we triumphantly blasted off Monday morning after breakfast.

The first day wasn’t too bad. It was kind of like camping in the attic. We hung out, played astronaut, listened to the radio, ate our sandwiches and snacks and drank our sodas. It wasn’t long before we had to use our space toilet to eliminate those sodas, but we were pretty satisfied with the plastic bag we’d rigged up to be our space potty.

After the sun went down, we got the call from mission control to see if we were still okay. Things couldn’t be better as far as we were concerned, so we spent our first night in the dark in the attic over the garage.

The next morning we had to empty our bladders again first thing before breakfast, and we noted with some concern that we had seriously underestimated the volume of pee our space toilet could hold. It was shortly after lunch that our inadequate space potty became a serious threat to the mission. Bob had to poop.

I seem to remember that I had to poop too, but there was no way I was sitting on that thing, so I had resolved to just hold it until it was time to call off the mission, and I would just run into the house as fast as I could when we decided we just couldn’t take it any more.

But Bob really had to poop.

Finally Bob said, “the heck with this, let’s call it off. I have to go now.” So we pulled up the attic door and discovered to our horror that the ladder was not there any more. Someone had put it away, and there was no way we could risk jumping down from there while still within Earth’s gravity!

We sent out a desperate call to mission control, but no one was home. It was the middle of a fine summer day and everyone else was off doing summer things, outdoors, in the fresh air. We were not only jealous, we were stuck in the attic, I mean, space capsule.

Bob started to cry.

I tried to reassure him. “How bad can it be? C’mon, just get it over with and we can go on with the mission.” Eventually, reluctantly, Bob braved it and deposited several loud, stinky astronaut bombs into the space toilet.

Now we had a new problem. Our air supply was severely compromised.

The stench wafting out of the space toilet was overpowering, and it was getting worse as the mid-day sun beat down on the roof of the attic. We sat for a long time in quiet humiliation, listening to the fan pitifully trying to blow the astronaut stench out the attic vent above the astronaut control panel. I tried sealing up the bag and moving it closer to the door, and we thought about lowering the bag down with a rope to get it out of the spaceship, but we hadn’t thought to bring a rope on our lunar mission. So we just sat there with an alarmingly large bag of urine, tissue and feces waiting for mission control, or anyone, even aliens, to rescue us from our plight.

After what seemed like hours and hours, we heard someone open the garage door below us and cried out for help. It was my little brother, Dale. My God, I was never so happy to see him ever in my life as that moment. We begged him to get the ladder and come up to collect our ‘garbage’. We didn’t dare tell him what it really was, because the smell had subsided somewhat by now, and we had decided if he would just take the astronaut waste bag away we would continue the mission.

He pulled the ladder over to the hole, climbed up, and peered into the space capsule. He was only eight years old at the time, so his bespectacled blue eyes just barely cleared the opening to the attic from the top of the ladder. I told him if he would take out our garbage I would let him play spaceship with us sometime when we were done with the mission. He said okay and I carefully handed him the plastic kitchen bag full of bad things.

That was the day I learned never to lie to my little brother Dale. He took the bag and headed down the ladder. When he got half way down he promptly threw the bag out into the middle of the garage, thinking it was just solid waste. Bob and I stared at each other in horror, as we understood immediately what the sickening sound Ka-SPLASH meant.

The space potty receptacle bag had exploded in the garage like a water balloon full of sewage. There was pee and poop and tissue all over the floor, the boat trailer and my dad’s drag racer. Our mission was over.

We never did make it to the moon, and we didn’t spend a lot of time up in the attic after that. I guess the glow had worn off the idea. And even though we played baseball, rode our bikes, went swimming and exploring the woods together the rest of that summer, Bob and I never became the best of friends. I lost track of him and most of my neighborhood friends long ago, but I’ll bet Bob, wherever he is, remembers the summer we tried to fly to the moon.

Tracking Penguin Poop From Space


This was just too interesting at first glance to ignore when it whizzed into my Google reader.

British scientists studying emperor penguin colonies in Antartica have come up with a clever way of spotting the birds from space. Apparently, the penguins themselves are difficult to make out in satellite imagery, but the places on the ice that they call home for months at a time eventually get pretty dirty. Penguin poop can be seen from space!

"We can't see actual penguins on the satellite maps because the resolution isn't good enough," said mapping expert Peter Fretwell. "But during the breeding season the birds stay at a colony for eight months. The ice gets pretty dirty and it's the guano stains that we can see."

These guys are prety excited about poop. It has helped them locate 10 new colonies of penguins. Now that they know where the penguins are, they can get to the more difficult task of counting the birds in order to track population movements and changes over time. Amazing what you can do with satellites, isn't it?

Job Satisfaction

I swiped this image off Nicole Gugliucci's blog. I liked it so much, I have a copy hanging in my observatory control room now.

Send a message to space

I stumbled across this site on Twitter the other day. http://www.sentforever.com/index.cfm

Their ad reads, "SentForever transmits your personal message into deep space. Once that message starts traveling, it will continue for an eternity. If you've ever wanted to give someone special a personal and very unique gift, why not send them a message that will last forever."

The way it works is, you write your personal message and submit it to their website. Then they transmit the message into space via a large radio telescope. They send a certificate to the person you want to dedicate or send the message to, along with a personal tracking number so you can track how far the message has traveled into deep space. You can also receive e-mail updates to find-out when your message passes key milestones if you want.

This service normally costs £9.95 (approximately 20 US Dollars). Right now they are offering free messages, so I tried it out just so see how it works and what you get for your money.

It works pretty much as advertised. I wrote a message to send into space "You are not alone. There is life in the universe," submitted it and had it sent to my wife. The following day, they sent me an email notifying me of the transmission, along with a link to view the progress of my message into space at the speed of light. I checked in as I'm writing this and can see how far my message has progressed to date-

This message from Mike Simonsen was transmitted into deep space on 20 February 2009 at 04:47 UK time. Going at the speed of light, your message has traveled 37,639,662,291 miles to date.

I'm usually not in favor of doing stuff like this. I really have a problem with the companies that sell 'name a star' services. If you've ever had the uncomfortable experience of someone coming up to you at an observatory open house and asking to see 'the star named after my dear departed Aunt Mary', you know why. It's a scam, and one that can hurt people when they are told some anonymous star with an obscure catalog name can not really be named after Aunt Mary, no matter how much money they plunk down.

Then there are the people who sell real estate on the Moon or Mars. If this is done in good faith and humor as a fundraising tool for a non-profit, fine. But if it's done to make a profit off of gullible, uninformed people, I think they should be jailed.

This service though, is something different. These people actually can send a message into space that will travel forever. Sending a message that is verified electronically to a loved one as a gift or Valentine's Day card doesn't hurt anyone.

I can see how this could be used to demonstrate the scale of the solar system, our immediate stellar surroundings and the scale of the universe. How many miles are in a light year? How long will our message take to get to Pluto? How long to catch up to the Voyager spacecraft? How long to get to the nearest stars?

You could write a short eulogy for a friend or relative and have it transmitted into space, or write a message from the heart and send it to a girlfriend or spouse. Just remember, if you're going to send a love note, you can't take it back three years from now when you find out she has fangs and a mental disorder. A tattoo you can remove with some difficulty. This is forever...

And if you're going to send it to your wife, you might want to make your message a little more romantic than mine. Admittedly, I was trying to think of what it is I'd actually want to hear if I picked up a signal from deep space. Confirmation of alien intelligence, for sure!!

Now I may have to spring for the twenty bucks to send something romantic.

I Like Spam

My morning routine gets my brain working as the coffee begins to take effect. I open my email, CVnet, AAVSO, Astro-ph, Facebook and Twitter to see what is happening in my little astro world.

Lately, I've begun to find my spam folder some of the best entertainment of the day! Here is a sampling of today's provocative titles:

Release your fantasies tonight!- If I release them, whose will they be come? I think I'll keep mine, thanks.

If your marriage is on the vegre of break up, take some enhancers- First, why can't spammers spell worth a shit? Second, why does everyone think I need male enhancers or Viagra? I'm starting to take it personally.

January 78% off- Oh good, I've always wanted to own a month. I thought I could only afford Feburary, but now January is 78% off! Yay!

Hi Sweety- Is this supposed to fool me or confuse me? Am I supposed to be so intrigued I'll open it to see who thinks I'm a sweety? (It wasn't anyone I know)

Brand items at dirty cheap price- Yes, I want to buy my next Rolex from someone selling at a dirty cheap price. I'll take 'too'.

Your response needed urgently- Thank God I saw this in time!

Add more spice into your bedroom life- It's amazing what some people will say to sell nutmeg.

Get tips for better enhancing- I'm not sure how to take this. Are they selling advice or some kind of tickler for my enhanced manhood?

Your private xxx life will be so good, you won't help from boasting it- I'm boasting it all the time, now that I be enhanced!

Oh well, time for another low fat muffin, smothered in butter.

Aperture Fever

Aperture Fever.

I've mentioned this affliction in my 'astronomy: hobby or obsession' series of articles. Just about everyone who gets involved in observing astronomical objects eventually succumbs to this dread affliction.

You may start off with a reasonably priced instrument that is easy to tote around and use. Like a nice pair of binoculars.











But after some time you'll be tempted by those faint fuzzies you can just barely detect in your 8x50s or image stabilized binoculars, and before you know it..



You've gone completely bonkers like this guy. He has a problem. Aperture fever.

Some of us start out with that modest refractor we get for Christmas or a birthday, or in my case, money I saved from my paper route. These are great for looking at the Moon, planets and some of the brighter Messier objects.


















But again, tantalizing glimpses of fainter and fainter objects haunt your dreams. Early in the 20th century, 'refractor aperture fever' finally met its practical limit with the construction of the 36" Lick and Yerkes 40" refractors.

Two things strike me at once, looking at this photo. First, there is Albert Einstein to the left center. Second, no one in this picture is smiling. They've just christened the largest refractor on the planet and they're looking grumpy!

Well, I know why. I have had the opportunity to observe with both this and the Lick 36" refractor.


And the only thing the telescope operators have ever shown me is...


M13... I know, it's lovely, but both times I was on observatory tours with professional and advanced amateur astronomers, and I wanted to see something I can't see with my 12" LX200. The view wasn't all that much better than the one I get from my backyard. Einstein was probably ready to go have drinks and a snack when they made him stop and pose for this picture... after showing him M13.

The Lick trip really was disappointing. The narrow switchback mule trail road that takes you up to the observatory is enough to make the most hardy person car sick. After surviving the hair raising ascent, I was expecting a bigger payoff.

At Yerkes I noticed a small blue 50mm finder scope mounted near the observer end of the tube. It looked exactly like the one on my telescope, so I made a remark about it to the telescope operator. He said, "That's not a finder scope. That's what we use to read the setting circles!" The Great Refractor is not a 'go to' telescope, and it's a long way up to the RA axis.

Compound reflectors have become one of the favorite commercial telescope types on the market. You see them everywhere nowadays. The 8" Schmidt Cassegrain is a great portable, multi-use telescope.



They come in a variety of sizes, but once the telescope is taller than you and weighs more than you do, you probably have a case of aperture fever.


But it could be much worse. If something like this shows up in your back yard you are in deep doo-doo.


This is my friend Jim Bedient standing in front of the Faulkes telescope. Note the semi-detached, insane smile creeping across his face. A sure sign of aperture fever.

Also note the position he has assumed at the telescope. That's because the large gray flex tube to the upper right of his head is a giant vacuum hose. In order to operate the telescope you back up to a station where the open end of the vacuum tube terminates. Once the observer is in place the telescope automatically begins sucking money out of your back pocket to pay for your minutes.




There is one man who has done more to raise the hopes of amateurs and spread the dread disease of aperture fever than anyone in history, John Dobson. Dobson invented an inexpensive way to mount large optics in homemade Newtonian telescopes. These are called Dobsonian telescopes.


Tens of thousands of Dobsoinian telescopes have been made since this man began spreading the aperture fever virus. In spite of being a priest, he may, in fact, be the anti-Christ.

Amateurs everywhere have succumbed to the obsession of owning 16-36" telescopes of their own with which to hunt down elusive, faint, celestial objects. Their pride of ownership and badge of membership in the 'obviously afflicted club' is evidenced by the fact that they have pictures of their telescopes taken with family members and pets!














To further illustrate just how serious this telescope obsession is here is a picture of a woman actually hugging her telescope.


I've often wondered why this woman would be caught in this precarious position, one foot off the ground, apparently ready to fall on her prize possession at any moment. Perhaps that is not a smile on her face. It's possible she is grimacing and has actually somehow managed to get her left breast caught in between the truss tubes! Ouch...

In any case, I feel it my duty to warn anyone just starting out in astronomy, and especially those of you who have already begun to show signs of aperture fever, that there is no known cure for this disease. So do proceed with caution when entering the door of your favorite astronomical retail outlet, or perusing the tantalizing offerings of online astronomical equipment dealers. Once you head down this road, there is rarely any place to turn off and return to sanity.

You have been warned.

Variable Star Names For Fun

Here's a bit of humor that comes up occasionally on variable star astronomy email lists I subscribe to.

Constellation names are abbreviated to three letter designations most of you are familiar with. Andromeda= AND, Draco=DRA, Ursa Major= UMa and so on. When combined with the lettered names of variable stars, sometimes they can be interpreted as other words or phrases. For example S Andromedae is abbreviated as S AND, which of course looks like "sand".

Some of these are good, some are funny, some are a stretch and some of these are even mine! The rest have been collected (stolen, borrowed, nicked) over time and since there's nothing better to do with them, here they are presented for your amusement. Let's begin.

Or should I say, IM OPH.

T OPH- golf anyone?
R UMa - gossip
T UMa - unfortunate growth
RU OPH - leaving already?
W AND - a stick
AB CAS- something you count with
PU PER - party spoiler
U BOO - you didn't like the play
U HOR- not a nice thing to say to a lady
Y TRI - give up before starting
S LAC - not as tight as it could be
HU VIR - cleans the carpet
T AUR- and feather
ST AUR- what's that bright thing in the sky?
Z AUR- leader of Russia
S PIC - and span
Y MON - Jamaican question
S CAM - wanna buy some swampland?
ST ARI - clear night sky
S HOR- where the sea meets the land
T HOR- god of thunder
W HOR- red light district worker
IN TEL - information
RS TAU - make as was
W IND - in your hair
TU LUP- spring flower
S NOR - turn over
SU SEX - the county west of Kent
R OCT - it was very good
S OCT - it was very bad
ST OCT- the shelves are full
PU PUP - needs house training
Y SEX - let's keep it platonic
ZZ SEX - sorry, I fell asleep
RU HER - or are you someone else?
FU MON - Jamaican way of saying they're displeased with someone
RU TAU - network equipment
SU TAU - suitor
TU TAU - teacher
S ORI- I didn't mean it
ST ORI- that's mine, and I'm sticking to it
W ORI- who, me, worry?
AW VUL - aren't puns awful?
R APS- he likes to sing and rhyme
S APS- stuff from trees
T APS- played at military funerals
Y APS- talks a lot
Z APS- Don't taze me, bro!
S DOR- where you buy things
V ERI- what variable stars do
TU FOR- one, what a deal!
NO SER- I didn't do it
U SER- error
LO SER- you suck
S UMi- if you think you have a case
Y UMi- mmm, tastes good
RY VOL- fighting over the same girl
SU PER- it's a bird, it's a plane, no it's...
Y PER- slow, fast or intermittent
HY Dra - This star belongs to another constellation!
eta Gem- well, spit it out, then. It might be worth something!
RU Peg- if not, who RU?
S TUC - can't think of any more.
HO Tel- with room service, please
RU Lupi- U must be if you've read this far!

If you can think of any, I'll add them to the list!

Snowbirds

Many astronomers and star gazers also enjoy bird watching. The skills acquired in observing, photographing and taking notes in astronomy transfer quite readily to birdwatching. Both require patience, planning and skill, but the excitement of nabbing the elusive Horsehead nebula or the Blue-bellied Sapsucker for the first time is the same in both cases.

Here are two more extremely rare sightings we've added to the Simo-ornithology list this year.


This is a rare December sighting of 'Ihateus winterii'. Normally migrating south to Mexico for the winter, this bird is much more at home by the pool than on a snow mound. Notice the fancy plumage intended to entice the male of the species to do the shoveling.

Also seen:

This is a rare daytime sighting of the nocturnal 'Astronimus insanitis'. Undeterred by the fact that there has not been a clear night since October, he faithfully keeps the path to the observatory clear to impress the female, and... you never know, it might be clear tonight!
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