Related Posts:Thanks, Mom and Dad, for introducing me to spaceSTS-133 NASA TweetupPerseid FailThe Perseid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight
Posts tagged: space
Video of this morning's winter solstice lunar eclipse
December 21, 2010, 12:13 pm View CommentsEarly this morning, I crawled out of bed and went to the front of my apartment to watch the winter solstice lunar eclipse. Thankfully, I had the perfect angle through my window to watch the Earth’s shadow move across the face of the Moon without having to bundle up and face the cold like so many of my brave friends on Twitter.
I tried taking some photos, but the kit lens on my Canon T2i just wasn’t cutting it. My iPhone just laughed at me and spit out some blurry images. But I wasn’t worried. I knew that the Internet’s brilliant astrophotographers were snapping photos with camera rigs far more impressive than mine. I decided to relax, put down the camera, and pick up the binoculars.
I think it was the most spectacular lunar eclipse I ever saw. The sky over Baltimore was completely clear, and the Moon turned a deep rusty orange that was staggeringly beautiful, even from the middle of the city. Before we had science, people must have freaked right out when this kind of thing happened. (Or slept through it.)
I was right about the talented Internet photographers. Check out this time-lapse video of the eclipse by William Castleman.
Winter Solstice Lunar Eclipse from William Castleman on Vimeo.
[Winter Solstice Lunar Eclipse via Gizmodo]
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STS-133 NASA Tweetup
November 23, 2010, 10:25 am View Comments(Photo credit: NASA/Paul E. Alers)
I started writing about the NASA Tweetup nearly a dozen times now. I’m having trouble encapsulating exactly how profound of an experience it was, maybe because I’m still wrapping my head around it.
In the weeks leading up, a group of very organized people coordinated the rental of a vacation house, which we dubbed the Big House. The enthusiasm people had in the Google group and on Twitter was infectious. I didn’t know anyone, but I was excited to dive in and meet them. Within a matter of hours of arriving, we were family. These are new friends I will keep for the rest of my life.
At Kennedy Space Center, we saw things that aren’t normally available to the public. The launch was delayed multiple times, and then eventually scrubbed, but Stephanie Schierholz, the tweetup organizer and our personal superhero/rockstar, coordinated extra activities and more unforgettable moments than we could have dreamed. What was originally a three-day trip was extended into a week-long experience that, for lack of a better term, changed my life. We saw the inside of the Vehicle Assembly Building. We visited the launchpad at sunset. We explored the Kennedy Space Center visitor center at leisure and rode the Shuttle Launch Experience multiple times. At the Big House, we stayed up late, forged new relationships, played music, laughed harder than any of us had laughed in a long time, ate, drank, and basked in the presence of some of the most creative, smart, fascinating people I had ever met.
I am working on a much longer post about the whole week, but in the meantime, my friends Raam and Tallulah both wrote incredibly stirring pieces that express the spirit of the experience much better than I can right now. It’s absolutely required reading. We also had no shortage of photographers on hand, so be sure to check out my Flickr set as well as the tweetup group.
As of right now, NASA plans to launch Discovery no earlier than 2:52 a.m. on December 3. Stephanie informed us that our badges will allow us into the press area during this new launch window. (See? She’s still our superhero.) So, presented with this astonishing opportunity, I will head back down to the Space Coast next week. There’s no way I could miss this.
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Thanks, Mom and Dad, for introducing me to space
October 27, 2010, 5:22 pm View CommentsI owe a lot of my interest in science and space exploration to my parents. Growing up, my Dad took me on field trips to explore planets and stars through telescopes in the dead of winter. My first up-close look at the Moon knocked my socks off. We put down blankets in the backyard and counted meteors during showers. My parents bought subscriptions for me to kids’ science and space magazines, and I once got to spend a summer at the the Maryland Science Center’s planetarium in Baltimore.
A few years ago, when Mars and the Earth were closer to each other than they’d ever be in our lifetimes, my dad and I gazed at the Martian polar ice caps through his telescope. It was stunning.
Just this past May, I was lucky enough to road trip down to Florida with my sister and father to watch my first-ever space shuttle launch, the launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis, STS-132. Right now, I’m beside myself with excitement for the NASA Tweetup this weekend.
I’m so thankful that my parents introduced me to space at a young age. Just a few minutes ago, I got this email from my dad:
The date for the next launch draws near and I’m excited even tho I’m not going! So I thought you might like to see this pic of your space shuttle toy that I found cleaning up today. Still in great working condition!
0:-)
I totally remember this toy. It was one of my favorites. Right now, I kind of want to go home and play with it.
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Perseid Fail
August 13, 2010, 11:29 am View CommentsAfter a line of thunderstorms blew through the area, it seemed like we’d have a nice clear view of the sky for the Perseid meteor shower last night.
Then a bunch of stupid clouds and haze rolled in and blocked everything, eventually turning into rain. I know because I woke up almost every hour, ran to the window, then went back to bed disappointed yet stupidly hopeful that, if I checked back an hour later, the clouds would move out and reveal a spectacular pre-dawn display.
Well that never happened. In fact, the stupid, jerky clouds are still hiding the sky as I write this, and I’m exhausted from taking a series of one-hour naps. I’m still irrationally hopeful that the weather will clear tonight, despite all weather forecasts to the contrary. The rest of me wants to make other plans and wait for the Orionids in October.
Stupid clouds.
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The Perseid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight
August 12, 2010, 3:57 pm View CommentsThe Perseids, an annual meteor shower, will peak tonight in the northern hemisphere. Each year, the Earth passes through the debris trail left behind by the Swift-Tuttle comet as it makes its 130-year trip around the sun. At the shower’s peak, there can be as many as 60 meteors per hour, so if you have a clear view of the sky tonight, all you need to do is look up. Plus, as an added bonus, there will be a thin crescent moon tonight, so that means less moonlight to interfere with the meteors.
You’ll see the most meteors between midnight and dawn, since that’s the time of day you’ll be staring up through the atmosphere on the leading side of the Earth as it we pass through and burn up bits of comet dust, but there should be a good show all night. If you’ve never stayed up (or woken up early) to watch a meteor shower, you owe yourself.
I hoped to get a glimpse of some meteors this morning, but mother nature decided to bring a line of thunderstorms through the Baltimore area. Hopefully the weather will cooperate tonight and early tomorrow morning. If not, I’ll have to wait for the Orionid meteor shower in October.