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Monthly Archives: April 2022
Jupiter’s Great Red Spot
Growing up, I grew to recognize Jupiter’s distinctive birthmark, but I never attempted to understand it. I figured their were clever astronomers out there who knew what was going on and I’d end up absorbing what they know from a TED talk at 1.5x speed. After looking into it though, it turns out the Great […] Continue reading
Posted in Jovians
Tagged astro2110, blog5, jupiter, Uncategorized
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Blog 5: Eris
Eris is a trans-Neptunian object and is the second-largest dwarf planet in the solar system. It was discovered in 2005. It is .28 % the mass of Earth. Eris has one large moon, Dsymonia.It is about 96 AU away from the sun. Its orbital period is 559 Years. Its surface has methane ice. This shows […] Continue reading
Posted in Class, General
Tagged astro2110, blog 5, blog5, Eris, Solar System, Uncategorized
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Interesting facts about Pluto and our path to exploring it
Dr. Alan Stern is most known for his role as the principal investigator of the New Horizons mission to explore Pluto and the Kuiper Belt. Recently, Dr. Stern spoke at Purdue University on October 10, 2019, discussing and examining the topic of “What If We Return to Pluto?” During this discussion, he detailed many interesting […] Continue reading
Detecting Extrasolar Planets
Extrasolar planets can be difficult to detect because they are tiny, far away, and dim, but the Doppler Method provides an indirect way to find them. This method involves looking for alternating blueshifts and redshifts in the star’s spectrum, which reveal a star’s motion around its center of mass. This motion could reveal the presence […] Continue reading
Posted in Class
Tagged astro2110, blog6, Class, discovery, dopplershift, extrasolar, gravity, planets
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Kepler-16b – The Existence of Tatooine
Kepler-16b was discovered when looking for exoplanets using the transit method from the Kepler mission of 2011. While looking at this data two stars were discovered to be in orbiting each other due to the dip in brightness of the system when they eclipsed. What was strange was even when they were not eclipsing each […] Continue reading
Posted in Exoplanets
Tagged astro2110, blog6, Solar System
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Jupiter’s Magnetosphere
Jupiter’s magnetosphere is by far the strongest. This is because of how thick its layer of metallic hydrogen is and its high-speed rotation rate. Its strength is 20,000 times stronger than Earth’s. It’s so large that it begins to avert the solar wind almost 3 million kilometers before it even reaches Jupiter. Jupiter’s magnetosphere in…Continue reading » Continue reading
Jovian Layers
The formation of our solar system helps explain the composition of the Jovian planets. Past the frost line, hydrogen compounds condensed into ices. The four jovian planets started as icy planetismals, but Jupiter and Saturn captured much more hydrogen and helium gas than Uranus and Neptune during solar system formation. This is probably because Jupiter […] Continue reading
Posted in Class
Tagged astro2110, blog5, Class, Jovian Planets, jupiter, layers, Solar System
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Black Holes: A great mystery of the universe
Black holes are one of the greatest mysteries of our universe. However, using just a few concepts that we have learned in class, we can understand the basic constructs of black holes. A black hole is the result of a single point in space containing extreme mass (this point is called a singularity). Similar to […] Continue reading
Posted in Light, Physics, Universe
Tagged astro2110, Black Holes, blog6, escape velocity
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Blog 6: Planet Nine
Planet Nine is a hypothetical planet on the edge of the solar system. Its gravity would explain the weird orbit of objects beyond Neptune. It is predicted to be 5 times the size of Earth. It is assumed to be about 400- AU The Scientists who created this hypothesis believe that the star formed much […] Continue reading
Posted in Class, General
Tagged astro2110, blog 6, blog6, Solar System, Uncategorized
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blog post 06
In 2019, researchers captured the first image of a black hole. They were able to do this by having all the major radio telescopes on Earth act together to simulate a radio telescope that was the size of Earth. Before this, we could only see indirect evidence of the existence of black holes. This particular […] Continue reading
Posted in Historical, Observables
Tagged astro2110, Black Holes, blog6, Historical, Observables, telescopes
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