Nebulae, a gorgeous clash of color and dust, occasionally creating shapes of infinitesimal wonder. The horsehead nebula is one of the best known seconded only by more famous ones such as the pillars of creation. 1500 lightyears away, the Horsehead Nebula is located in the Orion cloud complex and produces a beautiful horsehead silhouetted by the large emmission nebula behind it.
Friday, May 15, 2015
Friday, May 8, 2015
APOD 4.7
Japan is a lovely country with a stunning heritage and history, and one of the key things that gives the country its beauty is the cherry tree, of which is coming to blossom right now. Also right now is the summer triangle beginning to rise and be easily seen. Put these two sights together and you get a stunning image of the sync between Earth's and Heaven's beauty, a duet that one should only be lucky enough and privileged to witness.
Friday, May 1, 2015
APOD 4.6
The interesting part about this photo isn't necessarily the picture itself, rather the information that was gathered from it. As Comet 67p arrives closer to the sun and expels its gas and dust, scientists were able to discover some important facts about the early universe, including the fact that our Earth's water could not have come from comet collisions due to 67p's water being of significantly different composition. Also interesting is that the comet appears to have no magnetism, thus suggesting that magnetism was not of any key importance in the development of the early universe. Again, the fact that scientists learned this much from just one passing by comet is quite incredible.
Friday, April 10, 2015
APOD 4.3
Total lunar eclipses are stunning and rare sights to see, but for those lucky enough to be in the right area it is a treat that must not be passed up. For Californians, this will be the third of four total lunar eclipses in this recent tetrad, of which there have so far only been eight in the entirety of the 21st century. Granted this one was quite short, shortest of this century, it was still quite the sight to see. The final one shall be in September 21st, of which astronomers will definitely be keeping an eye on.
Thursday, March 5, 2015
Karl Swarzschild
Born on the ninth of October, 1873 in Frankfurt, Karl Swarzschild was born into a wealthy Jewish home, providing him a solid base for success, and would jump start his life into his eventual success as a famous astronomer. From an Early age, Swarzschild demonstrated incredible intelligence, from creating his own telescope, to publishing a paper on celestial mechanics of which included a focus on the theory of the orbits of double stars, all of this at only the age of 16. After graduating from the University of Munich with a doctorate, he later ended up teaching as a professor at the University of Gottingen, where he had the opportunity to work with famous mathematicians and even run the school's observatory. Of course his prestige didn't end there, for not much later he ended up becoming the director of the Astrophysical Observatory in Potsdam in 1909, and was elected a member of the Berlin Academy of Science. He even elected to join the German army in World War One and ended up contracting an extremely painful skin disease while fighting on the Russian front, which even that still did not stop him from publishing three more papers on the theory of relativity and quantum theory.
In one of these publications, Swarzschild actually produced the first exact solutions to Einstein's theories of general relativity, specifically his field equations, which is now known as the Swarzschild metric. The coordinate system within also became known as Swarzschild coordinates, of which was based on a spherically symmetric space-time. Continuing on the name labels developed by him, he also developed the radius for any given mass, known as the Swarzschild radius, whee if that mass could be compressed to fit within that radius, no known force could stop it from collapsing into a gravitational singularity, or what is commonly known as a black hole. Granted, at the time the concept of a black hole was unheard of and even Swarzschild said that this solution was physically meaningless, as something like this could never possibly happen nor exist. While he is best known for his general relativity work, Swarzschild also did excellent work in celestial mechanics an and quantum mechanics, as well as improving upon stellar photometry and stellar structure and statistics. He also did a lot of work on observing Halley's comet and spectroscopy.
Monday, March 2, 2015
Planetary Nebula
NGC 40 (The Bowtie)
Cepheus
4600 Light Years Away
Radian: .6

NGC 246 (Skull Nebula)
Cetus
1600 Light Years Away
Radian: 3.9
NGC 650/651 (Little Dumbbell)
Messier 76
Perseus
2100 Light Years Away
Radian: 2.1
IC 289
Cassiopeia
4200 Light Years Away
Radians: .7
NGC 1360
Fornax
1700 Light Years Away
Radians: 6.6
NGC 1501
Camelopardalis
4890 Light Years Away
Radians: .9
NGC 1535 (Cleopatra's Eye)
Eridanus
5800 Light Years Away
Radians: .3
NGC 1514 (The Crystal Ball)
Taurus
2300 Light Years Away
Radians: 2.1

IC 418 (Spirograph Nebula)
Lepus
5200 Light Years
Radians: .2
NGC 3587 (Owl Nebula)
Messier 97
Ursa Major
2200 Light Years Away
Radians: 3.3
Friday, February 27, 2015
APOD 3.6
Adding in to the list of APODs I've done that lead to new discoveries, a strange plume has been discovered (at least back in 2012) and what is different with this than any other weird discovery is that there aren't even any theories on what it could be. Many theories were brought up, but they were all definitely not possible, including dust plumes and such, and even more strange is that this plume was discovered by amateur astronomers, and was first observed by an attorney. We will continue observing this and the satellites around Mars will surely be observing this constantly.
Friday, February 13, 2015
APOD 3.4
In a stunning combination of a unique fish eye photo, a full bright moon with an aurora drifting through the sky, this photo from a black sand beach in Iceland is definitely a sight to behold. The ice on the black sand only acts as polished mirrors of the aurora above. This was a perfect combination of the Earth's magnetosphere and wind from a coronal hole near the Sun's south pole. Just beyond the moon's halo, Jupiter can also be seen.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
Star formations
http://education-portal.com/academy/lesson/nuclear-fusion-star-formation.html
http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/other-shows/videos/how-the-universe-works-a-star-is-born/
Friday, February 6, 2015
APOD 3.3
M104, the famous Sombrero Galaxy, dubbed so due to its rather hat shaped design, near perfect edge, and the bright bulge emanating from the center. Quite the spectral, especially when enhanced with beautiful images from the Hubble and Subaru. It can be seen across the spectrum and supposedly is the host of a super-massive black hole, which is pretty crazy given its size of 50,000 light years across. Located 28 million light years away, it is one of the largest galaxies located in the Virgo galaxy cluster.
Friday, January 30, 2015
APOD 3.2
The Claw, a very appropriate name for this large solar eruption, occurred and was photographed back in 2000 by the SOHO satellite. Large enough to fit ten Earths, this crazy eruption is not only massive, but it also is in an interesting shape. Oddly enough it is in a figure eight type shape, thus suggesting that it has its own thread of a magnetic field pulsing through it. This could be accounted for the differential rotation, and the constant fluctuation of the gasses in general, it is also interesting to note how these solar flares seem to be occurring a lot more frequently now.
Friday, January 9, 2015
Apod 2.8
This image really is more beautiful than it is informative, being a panoramic shot of the Terskol Observatory in Russia in the Caucasus Mountains. A stunning image of colors on a slightly cloudy night with further visible in the background is the Milky Way rising, specifically the central band. The telescope itself is two meters long, and the observatory is located specifically on Mt. Elbrus.
John Herschel
John Herschel, March 1792- May 1871, was a gentlemen of science, performing many and most of his observations alone, but at the same time influencing some of the greatest scientists to come and further influencing the concept of collaborative science. Herschel had a fairly normal childhood outside of the fact that his father was a famous and renowned astronomer already. He was born and raised in wealth, and upon the inheritance of his father's capital ended up using it to later fund his astronomical ventures. Herschel has published numerous books on his observations and those who he has influenced includes famous influences on society such as Charles Darwin, of whom took his influence for writing the "On the Origin of Species" from Herschel's observations on natural philosophy. Herschel was rather legendary for this perspective, and hence revolutionized further thought process pertaining to the way everything functioned and its relation to everything else. Granted Herschel wasn't fully convinced of certain facts known to day brought up by Darwin, such as he denounced Darwin's Origin of Species, the concept of conservation of energy, and firmly defended the concept of Boscovichian atomism.
As for his astronomical ventures, one of his most famous works is known as his "Cape Observations" which stems from when he was in Africa on Cape Hope observing in great detail a very specific and tiny spot in the sky, such as the Nebula of Orion, and the star Argo. He cataloged over 1200 stars and made drawings in great detail of what he observed. Through all of this he was even able to prove his father's theory of that these glowing masses aren't just randomly scattered in space but in stead seem to congregate in a form of canopy around a central vertex of some sort. He also continued on his father's work beyond Hope in the cataloging of double stars, clusters and nebulae with the assistance of James South and a few others, expanding his father's observations greatly. He was revolutionary in heavily pushing the need for rigorous mathematical crunching and the view/observation of natural phenomena such as the nature of light. He did also later realize the need for collaboration from multiple places around the world for things such as magnetic stuff and things.
Thursday, January 8, 2015
1/7/15
Got to go out to the Jetty and at exactly 7:29pm in the NorthEastern sky at the exact height that was said, I go to see the Iridium flare among an extremely dark and star speckled sky. I got to see the satellite appear around 7:28:30 and watch it build up to its full brightness quickly, though it did not last as long as I had hoped, it was still quite amazing.
New Years Observation
During New Years Eve, I was out at Marina Jacks and got a pretty clear shot of the sky for a good amount of time, during which I got to see a couple constellations, and noted Venus in the sky as well, in the south west sky.
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