Thursday, December 28, 2017

Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observatory is up and running, and it just spotted a nearby asteroid

It was bigger than anyone thought. When astronomers captured high-resolution images of the near-Earth asteroid 3200 Phaethon earlier this month, one of the first things they noticed was that it outstripped previous estimates for the rocky object’s size, expanding its girth from 3 miles to 3.6 miles.

The images were captured using a powerful planetary radar system at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, hit hard by Hurricane Maria in September. While the observatory's generators meant its radio telescope observations were back just days after the storm, getting the radar up and running took more time.

The radar system required enormous amounts of diesel to run, and fuel on the island was in short supply after Maria. Instead, the observatory became a staging groundfor relief flying into the surrounding area.

Months later, as power slowly returned to the island, the Observatory was able to turn on its radar again to get these shots of Phaethon as it passed near the Earth. The images have a resolution of about 250 feet per pixel—pretty impressive for a beauty shot taken from millions of miles away.

"These new observations of Phaethon show it may be similar in shape to asteroid Bennu, the target of NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, but more than 1,000 Bennus could fit inside of Phaethon," Patrick Taylor, group leader for Planetary Radar at Arecibo Observatory, said in a statement. "The dark feature could be a crater or some other topographic depression that did not reflect the radar beam back to Earth."

Like many objects floating around our solar system, Phaethon takes its name from mythology. Near-Earth objects tend to be given names from myths around the world, but not myths that involve creation tales or the underworld—those are reserved for objects in other parts of the solar system.

In this case, Phaethon takes its name from Greek mythology. Phaethon was the son of the sun god Helios, and asked his dad for a chance to drive the sun-carrying chariot across the sky. Phaethon wasn’t great at driving, almost burning up the Earth. Zeus shot him out of the sky to avoid disaster, killing the foolish flier in the process.

Luckily, there’s no need to worry about this Phaethon scorching the planet anytime soon. Though it is large and classified as ‘potentially hazardous’, it made its closest pass by Earth on December 16, at a distance of 6.4 million miles. That’s 27 times farther away than the moon. Researchers discovered Phaethon in 1989, and think that it did come closer to Earth in the past, getting as near as 3.2 million miles back in 1931. It’s not expected to come ‘close’ to Earth again until 2093.

Observatories like Arecibo, which has the most powerful radar system on the planet, keep an eye on Phaethon and others like it for us. Asteroids larger than one kilometer could have a disastrous effect should they actually collide with Earth, potentially causing mass extinctions, or shifting the global climate. Asteroids larger than 100 meters (328 feet) could have devastating local impacts. While researchers estimate that they’ve found 90 percent of near-Earth objects (NEOs) with a diameter larger than 1 km (0.6 miles), the goal now is to find 90 percent of all NEOs larger than 140 meters. There are an estimated 17,000 of these objects still awaiting discovery.

The 54-year-old observatory recently faced down fears of a forced retirement, but in November the government granted Arecibo another year of funding.

phaethon
Images of near-Earth asteroid 3200 Phaethon taken by the Arecibo Observatory.

The observatory was battered by Hurricane Maria earlier this year.

By Mary Beth Griggs
Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observatory is up and running, and it just spotted a nearby asteroid

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Isaac Newton 'Graffiti' Discovered in Historic English Manor

Towering thinker Sir Isaac Newton carved a now-barely visible doodle of a windmill into a stone wall in his childhood home, according to a news release from the National Trust.
The drawing was discovered at Woolsthorpe Manor, the Lincolnshire, England,home where Newton was born in 1642, said the National Trust,which protects the house and other heritage sites in the United Kingdom.
Newton is famous for his laws of motiontheory of universal gravitationand an experiment that involved shooting sunlight through a prism to create a rainbow effect (and inspire a very famous Pink Floyd album cover). But before Newton was a Sir, he was a boy — and apparently that boy had a thing for drawing on walls. [The Mysterious Physics of 7 Everyday Things]
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Chris Pickup, an independent conservator and doctoral candidate at Nottingham Trent University in England made the discovery while investigating the manor. Pickup used a photographic technique called reflectance transformation imaging (RTI). By bathing the interior walls of the manor in light coming from multiple different directions, Pickup was able to capture details of the surfaces that would be otherwise invisible to the naked eye, including the faded outlines of Newton's alleged doodle.
"It's amazing to be using light, which Newton understood better than anyone before him, to discover more about his time at Woolsthorpe," Pickup said in the news release. "I hope that by using this technique, we're able to find out more about Newton as man and boy and shine a light on how his extraordinary mind worked."
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New light technology has revealed graffiti thought to have been drawn by a young Isaac Newton on the walls @NTWoolsthorpehttp://ow.ly/fiXg30h33vn 
Newton was born at the manor on Christmas Day, 1642, and spent the first few years of his life at the house. Decades later, in 1665, Newton returned to Woolsthorpe when the University of Cambridge, where he was studying, closed due to an outbreak of the plague. It was at Woolsthorpe that Newton performed many of his experiments involving light and optics, including the famous work with prisms that led him to conclude white light contains all other colors in combination. An apple tree still standing in the nearby orchard is said to be the very tree that inspired Newton to develop his law of universal gravitation, after watching an apple drop from the branches to the grass below.
The newly identified drawing is thought to have been inspired by a mill that was built near the manor during Newton's childhood. The construction of any mechanical object would have likely stoked the boy's curiosity, the National Trust said.
"The young Newton was fascinated by mechanical objects and the forces that made them work," Jim Grevatte, a program manager for the Illuminating Newton series at Woolsthorpe Manor, said in the release."Paper was expensive, and the walls of the house would have been re-painted regularly, so using them as a sketch pad as he explored the world around him would have made sense."
Newton-era drawings were previously discovered on the manor walls in the 1920s and 1930s, after various farmhouse tenants peeled away the old wallpaper. In 1752, Newton's friend and biographer William Stukeley wrote that the walls and ceilings of Newton's home were "full of drawings, which he [Newton] had made with charcole. There were birds, beasts, men, ships, plants, mathematical figures, circles & triangles."
There was "scarce a board in the partitions about the room" that Newton hadn't scrawled upon, Stukeley wrote.

Originally published on Live Science.

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Isaac Newton 'Graffiti' Discovered in Historic English Manor