Bulletin
7 25
November
Introducing
. . . Alan Gilmore
This weeks audioconference guest
speaker is Alan Gilmore.
Alan Gilmore is the superintendent at
Mt John Observatory - Canterbury Universitys research
station above Lake Tekapo.
Alan started star-gazing when he was
in the fourth form in 1959 and has been interested in
astronomy ever since.
The Mt John Observatory is
world-recognised and is unique within New Zealand. Although
there are other observatories around the country Mt John has
New Zealands three largest telescopes and has very
favourable viewing conditions. A research programme in the
1960s showed Mt John had low rainfall and cloud cover
- providing less atmosphere for researchers to look
through.
Students and researchers from New
Zealand and overseas gather at Mt John to study the stars
and changes in the night sky. A current research project is
looking at how fast stars move and the directions in which
they move.
These researchers are studying the
night sky to find out more about where weve come from
and what the future might hold for us.
Alan and his wife Pam Kilmartin have
worked at the Observatory for 17 years. They have yet to
find a comet but have found several asteroids.
As well as working for the University
the couple also pursue their own research.
Frequently
asked questions about space
Question:
What happens to used spacecraft?
Answer: Most of these
vehicles are displayed at NASA Centres and science
museums across the country. For example, the Apollo 11
command module is on display at the Smithsonian
Institutions National Air and Space Museum in
Washington, DC.
Question: Why
dont photographs taken on the Moon or in orbit
show stars in the back of deep space?
Answer: For the same
reason they often dont appear in night time
pictures taken on Earth - because the light from
brighter objects washes the stars out of the
picture.
Space
activity - Space Shuttle Word Find
See if you can find the names of all
the Space Shuttles in the word-find below.
Circle the names if you can find them. You can move up,
down, sideways and diagonally.
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Here are the names of the Space
Shuttles . . .
- Atlantis
- Challenger
- Columbia
- Discovery
- Endeavor (American spelling)
- Enterprise
- Pathfinder
Planet
profile
All about . . .
Jupiter
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the
sun, and the largest planet in the solar system. Named after
the ruler of the gods in Roman mythology, Jupiter has 1400
times the volume of Earth but is only 318 times more
massive. This indicates that the giant planet must consist
of gas rather than the metals and rocks of which the earth
and other inner planets are made of.
Orbiting the sun at an average
distance 5.2 times greater than that of Earth, Jupiter makes
a complete revolution in 11.9 Earth years but takes only 9.9
hours to rotate once on its axis.
Scientific knowledge of the Jupiter
system increased enormously in 1979 with the successful
visits by the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft launched by NASA.
Scientists also collected a large amount of information
about Jupiter when fragments of the dying Comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into the planet in July 1994. The
collisions stirred up the planets atmosphere, heating
interior gases and bringing them to the surface. Scientists
captured detailed images of these gases with telescopes
located on Earth and in space.
Jupiters turbulent, cloud-filled
atmosphere is cold. Periodic temperature fluctuations in
Jupiters upper atmosphere reveal a pattern of changing
winds like that in the equatorial region of Earths
stratosphere.
All about . . .
Neptune
Neptune is the fourth largest of the
planets in the solar system, and the eighth furthest away
from the sun. The average distance of Neptune from the sun
is 4.5 billion km.
The period of rotation is about 16
hours, and the period of revolution around the sun is 164.79
Earth years. The temperature of the surface of Neptune is
about -218° C, much like Uranus, which is more than 1
billion miles closer to the sun. Scientists assume,
therefore, that Neptune must have some internal heat source.
The atmosphere consists mostly of hydrogen and helium, but
the presence of up to three percent methane gives the planet
its striking blue colour.
Eight known satellites orbit Neptune,
two of which can be seen from Earth. The largest and
brightest is Triton, discovered in 1846, the same year
Neptune was first seen. Triton is slightly smaller than
Earths moon. Nereid, the second satellite (discovered
in 1949), has a diameter of only about 320 km. Six more
satellites were discovered by the Voyager 2 planetary probe
in 1989. Neptune is also circled by five thin rings.
The discovery of Neptune was one of
the triumphs of mathematical astronomy. To account for
perturbations in the orbit of the planet Uranus, the French
astronomer Urbain Jean Joseph Leverrier in 1846 calculated
the existence and position of a new planet. That same year
the German astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle discovered the
planet within one degree of the position Leverrier said it
was.
In
the news
Following Dr Lucids visit to New
Zealand were probably a lot more interested in Mir
than we used to be. Heres whats been in the news
recently.
A hatch on the Mir space station that
the crew thought it had fixed was leaking oxygen again
Wednesday, but Russian officials said the problem was minor.
A spokesman for Russias Mission
Control says its not dangerous and doesnt pose
any serious inconvenience to the crew.
The leak began when cosmonauts failed
to properly seal the hatch separating outer space from the
docking chamber when they returned from a spacewalk at the
beginning of this month.
The chamber is closed off from the
rest of the station, so the resulting loss of pressure in
the docking chamber did not affect other parts of the Mir.
When cosmonauts Anatoly Solovyov and
Pavel Vinogradov again ventured into space last Thursday,
they found a white powder-like residue on the edge of the
hatch. On their way back, they removed the substance and
installed several additional clamps to make sure the seal on
the hatch was airtight.
The crew pumped oxygen into the
chamber last Sunday, and the pressure held for two days
before falling again late Tuesday.
Space officials remain uncertain about
the cause of the leak and the nature of the white residue.
Solovyov and NASA astronaut David Wolf are to examine it
during the next spacewalk - planned for 5 December.
The hatchway problem ranks small
against the background of recent troubles that have plagued
the aging station &emdash; the worst of them being the 25
June collision with a cargo ship which cut Mirs energy
supply by half.
Explorers
mystery quiz - Bulletin 7
Answer the Explorers Mystery Quiz
questions below correctly and be in to win a Panasonic
cassette recorder for your class. You will find the answer
to this weeks first question on your Explorers and
Adventurers Mystery Trail poster. You might need to do a bit
more research to answer question two. Fax your answers to
the Telecom Adventure Line: 0800 253-020. Entries close at
5pm on Friday 28 November.
The classes whose students correctly
answer the most Explorers Mystery Quizzes during the
Explorers and Adventurers programme will go into the draw
for a grand prize in December. So good luck
everyone
This weeks
questions
Question one :
How long is the longest space flight humans have
undertaken?
Question two : The
Cassini space probe was named after Gian Domenico
Cassini (1625-1712). What was he famous
for?
Last weeks
winner
The winner of
last weeks Explorers Mystery Quiz was Howick
Intermediate School, Extension Group, Howick,
Auckland.
Last weeks
answers
Answer one :
The Apollo 10 mission crew went 39,897 km/H in
1969.
Answer two : John F.
Kennedy was the American president who called on NASA
to have an astronaut on the moon between 1960 and 1970
- a feat that was achieved.
Christmas
edition
Want to know what Amazon adventurer
Andrew Mercer and Polar Frees David Scott are up to
now? Then look out for our special Explorers and Adventurers
bulletin.
Before the end of the year well
catch up with the Explorers and Adventurers weve
followed this year. This special bulletin will also feature
answers to this weeks quiz and the Grand Prize
winner.
Keep
in touch
If youve got an inquiry or want
more information about the Space Explorers programme, the
best way to get in touch with Danielle is through the
Adventure Line fax (0800 253-020) or email her on:
danielle.greig@telecom.co.nz
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