Yale Students Capture Asteroid On Film 145
netringer writes: "Two Yale University students used the WIYN 0.9-meter telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory to capture a series of still images of asteroid 2002 NY40 on August 15-16, two nights before it made a close flyby of Earth. The still images were made into a cool digital movie that shows the asteroid streaking across the sky over a period of two hours. According to an AP story the students were supposed to looking at some binary stars when they decided to look a the asteroid instead."
But how? (Score:2, Funny)
Just a typo (Re:But how?) (Score:1)
This is just a typo. The correct headline is: "Yale Students Capture A Steroid On Film"
I also got some pictures! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I also got some pictures! (Score:2)
Re:I also got some pictures! (Score:3, Funny)
Like here [cnn.com]
here [cnn.com]
here [cnn.com]
here [cnn.com]
here [cnn.com]
and even here [cnn.com]
Re:I also got some pictures! (Score:2)
That has to fake (Score:2, Funny)
That was no asteroid!! (Score:4, Funny)
It seemed to be keeping time to "blue Suede Shoes" too, but that's probably just a coincidence. Probably...
Re:That was no asteroid!! (Score:2)
No, those gaps are there to insert commercials.
Don't you know anything about science?
Fools. FOOLS! (Score:1)
Thank goodness it's the middle of the night, else I wouldn't have been able to snag such a neat-o
Re:Alt movie (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Alt movie (Score:1)
We need more eyes on the skies (Score:5, Insightful)
Asteroid hunting should be part of the basic curriculum for astronomy programs, if it isn't already. Multiply a half dozen students by every university in the world and you've suddenly increased our detection capacity by several orders of magnitude.
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:1)
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:1)
Only if we actually find one. If there aren't any, you don't need the deflector. If there are, then you have all the justification you need for spending massive amounts on deflection tech. So go for as much detection budget as possible first.
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:3, Insightful)
Wouldn't help much if they are looking at the sky with naked eyes. I bet the bottleneck is the number of appropriate telescopes not the number of watching eyes.
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:4, Informative)
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:2)
Nope. The concern is the net vector, not the individual vectors of Earth and asteroid. For it to hit us, the net vector has to be toward us -- therefore straight along our line of sight. Same principle flying or driving -- the vehicles that are moving relative to a spot on the windshield are not the ones you have to worry about, it's the ones that look like a spot on the windshield (and getting bigger) that are the ones that'll hit. (Ditto for side windows.)
Now, if you're talking about months or years in advance, then yes, because of the curvature of the orbits it won't be on a direct vector at that time. Just when it's too close to do much about it.
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:1)
However, I do think my claim that it would "almost surely miss us" was far too strong, and probably should have been more like "might not necessarily hit us". :-)
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:2)
Yes, but that would make Star Trek confusing.
Ensign: "Captain: It is coming *strait* at us!"
Captain: "In that case, relax Ensign. It does not mean anything."
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:1)
Re:We need more eyes on the skies (Score:2)
Traditional asteroid hunting is a truly obsessive-compulsive kind of thing. I mean, it's good that somebody does it, but the last thing we want to do is turn introductory astronomy courses into the sort of brainwashing exercise it would take to produce these people.
Besides, many of the existing asteroid hunters undoubtedly don't want any more competition.
NASA's Pitiful efforts? (Score:2)
The NASA page [nasa.gov] he cites says the plan is to map all the major near Earth asteroids by 2008. How is this pitiful? If extinction class rocks hit us every 10^7 or 10^8 years, how much time can we budget to defend ourselves against the next one? What if it took 10^2 years? Would that be an unreasonable amount of time to be confident we had detected most of them?
The rock last week was about 100 meters in diameter. Tunguska is estimated to have been 60 meters in diameter. Since the mass goes up as the cube of the diameter this one would have been about five times as powerful as Tunguska. The planetary.org article I linked to says one that size strikes us every couple of millenia. Is this program a failure if we can't detect and divert the next Tunguska sized rock? The article says the Tunguska strike was as powerful as the blast from a 16 megaton H-bomb. It said it devastated 2000 square kilometres. That would be a square about 42 kilometers on a side. Ie. Bigger than Monaco, smaller than NYC.
16 megatons? Rick Green's [pbs.org] glossary of cold-war terms defined a "small-theatre nuclear exchange" as "Curtains for the actors after just one act, hence the prefix 'small theatre'". Sure, this could be devastating for lots of people, if it too didn't land somewhere relatively deserted, like northern Siberia. But civilization would survive, even if it landed on Hollywood.
The planetary.org article said 25% or more of the rocks that have hit Earth may have been long period comets. Figuring out how to detect and deflect long period comets that might hit the Earth would be much more difficult. Maybe so much more difficult we shouldn't waste any resources trying?
Yeah right (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yeah right (Score:1)
Hmph! (Score:4, Funny)
--
"All art is quite useless."
Re:Hmph! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hmph! (Score:3, Funny)
Telescope, Schmeloscope! In my day if you wanted to see an asteriod you had look up and squint really hard. I once squinted so hard I could see the Red Spot on Jupiter and individual stars in Andromeda. But then my eyes popped.
You kids and your "telescopes" have it easy.
I could animate some gifs that look more real (Score:2, Funny)
Finally.. (Score:4, Funny)
Another shiny astronomy thing (Score:2, Interesting)
Contains movies of Saturn's moons that I made back when I was a grad student.
Re:Another shiny astronomy thing (Score:1)
Re:Another shiny astronomy thing (Score:1)
Re:Another shiny astronomy thing (Score:1)
The movie (Score:4, Funny)
$image = newImage(128, 128);
$image.plotRandomStars();
$image.plot(10 + $frame, 10 + $frame);
$image.write();
}
Even better =) (Score:3, Funny)
SCREEN 13
REM ASTEROIDS ROOL~!
FOR i% = 1 TO 320 STEP 1
PSET (i%, 150)
NEXT i%
END
Re:The movie (Score:1)
$image = newImage(128, 128);
$image.plotRandomStars();
foreach $frame (0..100) {
$image.plot(10 + $frame, 10 + $frame);
$image.write();
}
Re:The movie (Score:2)
I'd already thought of this:
sub plotRandomStars()
{
srand(123456);
foreach (0..500) {
$image.plot(rand() & 127, rand() & 127, rand() & 255);
# Assuming grey-scale image
}
}
It's kinda Perl, but won't work...
Re:The movie (Score:1)
He (she) refuses to be impressed with a simple yet elegant soluition to a problem. Would a real live time lapse movie be any better?
More links... (Score:5, Informative)
insubordination will not be tolerated (Score:2, Funny)
Kids who don't do what they're told and know how to use a telescope? Why, next they'll be using the telescope to plan the trajectory of ICBMs!
Their professors should report them under the TIPS [citizencorps.gov] program, especially in the event of a student holding a temporary visa, to ensure a quick, appeal-free exile.
Re:insubordination will not be tolerated (Score:1)
I thought it was pretty cool (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:HA HA HA... THAT'S NOT FUNNY LOSER (Score:1)
Re:I thought it was pretty cool (Score:1)
Satellite damage (Score:1)
Meteoric dust (mostly stuff that is blown off comets) is much more of a problem. Even though they are usually less than 1mm in diameter, they are travelling at speeds up to 75km/second! They can and have caused damage to satellites. The most satellite operators can do when a meteoric storm is predicted (ie the Perseids and Leonids) is to turn their solar panels to be edge-on (=smaller target), close the doors over their sensors, and cross their fingers.
Damn, it's Quicktime (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Damn, it's Quicktime (Score:1)
Re:Damn, it's Quicktime-Don't worry, I have .gif (Score:2)
ny40.gif [astropage.nl] no worries about that evil closed source software now is there? LOL..
Re:Damn, it's Quicktime (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Damn, it's Quicktime (Score:2)
Xine plays quicktime movies now.
Meta: How the f is this offtopic? (Score:1)
here's the gif ;-) (Score:5, Informative)
My video of their web server versus Slashdot... (Score:2, Funny)
That's it? (Score:1)
I was expecting to see craters!!!!
Links to more video, still photos (Score:4, Informative)
The folks at Yale were not the only ones looking at the sky that night. SpaceWeather.com [spaceweather.com] has some links to other images here [nasa.gov].
Is it for real??? (Score:1)
Re:Is it for real??? (Score:4, Interesting)
If the telescope has an equatorial mount (like the 0.9 m WIYN telescope they used), then you don't get any field rotation while tracking. A horizontal mount (like almost all recently-built telescopes have) does give you field rotation, but the computer can simply counter-rotate the detector to correct for it.
Re:Is it for real??? (Score:2)
In response.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, you could do the same with photoshop... Or better, just look at Star Wars. But most asteroids (and most everything within the solar system other than the planets) are nothing more than little dots on a black field. Contrary to popular belief, much of astronomy is not about pretty pictures.
As for the stars not moving, I'm not familiar with the set up of the Kitt Peak telescope, but they most have some sort of sidereal rate drive motors installed. There isn't much astronomy one can do with a streak.
Re:In response.... (Score:2)
well fair enuff ... (Score:2)
Those rowdy Yale students! (Score:1)
Isn't that always the case? Man, those star gazers are a rebelious bunch!
Pretty lame (Score:2)
Nice job for some students, but enough for national press attention? Slow news day for slashdot, I guess.
Hmmm (Score:1)
Astronomers slacking off (Score:2, Funny)
I can see how it all transpired now...
"No guys, I said we should use the telescope to check out pieces of ass...but I guess this is cool too."
I work across the hall from these guys . . . (Score:4, Informative)
Look closely. (Score:2)
going off target (Score:2)
(I got extra lucky once and got an extra night on the 0.9 Coude Feed because the people scheduled next cancelled! The hardest part was convincing America West to let me change my no-change no-refund ticket that this was an insanely improbable circumstance - I kept telling them that it was easier to win the lottery.
Re:going off target (Score:2)
Plus, it happens quite often that:
* The night is not of high enough quality for your project (e.g. cirrus on a photometry project)
* Your targets set an hour before dawn or rise an hour after sunset
* The TAC gives you time when the moon is within 10 degrees of your target (been there, done that)
WIYN generally has a fair bit of free time. Wisconsin has implemented a "Grad Student Queue", about a night or two per year for experimental projects. Its good practice for younger students and sometimes leads to published papers.
I'd rather win the lottery than get an extra night of Coude Feed time. Getting a free night or a half night is not as unlikely as you describe. The 2.1m telescope only is only oversubscribed by a factor of 2.23 according to the March NAOA newsletter (http://www.noao.edu/noao/noaonews.html) (meaning almost half of the applicants are granted time) which is MUCH better odds than the lottery.
Re:going off target (Score:2)
This was the case here. They had plenty of objects to observe for the first part of the night, but had nothing to observe for the second half. They tried desperately to find some "real science" targets, but in the end realized that "real science" could be done with a time series of an asteroid (and it made for a cool movie).
About the WIYN 0.9m telescope (Score:3, Informative)
* There is NO film involved. This telescope has been purely digital for quite a while.
* It was the KPNO 0.9m until it was sold to the WIYN (Wisconsin, Indiana, Yale and NOAO) consortium. since NOAO runs Kitt Peak, this means that the telescope used to be 100% accessible to US astronomers, and now 60% of its time is dedicated to observers at WI, IN and Yale (which is cool for them!).
* As off the last time I checked, it boasts shared use of the biggest digital camera on the mountain: 8192 x 8192 pixels (on 8 2048x4096 chips)
* It was built in the early 70's IIRC. It is run by a PDP-11 with Forth software.
* For some of it's computer parts, there are no more spares anywhere. When they die, it's upgrade time.
* It is right next to the WIYN 3.5m telescope
* The dome roof gets frozen open or shut in the winter sometimes, despite being in southern Arizona.
* I spent about two weeks at that telescope, about half of which was cloudy...
* Here's the type of picture that 8192x8192 camera can take (before a lot of postprocessing): the Orion Nebula (shrunk to 1270x948) http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~dolan/thesis/trap.gif
* It's a fun telescope to use.
wow (Score:1)
Re:Grade Inflation My Ass (Score:1, Flamebait)
Shut up, you loser.
Yale does NOT have grade inflation (you're thinking of Harvard's president summer's concern about it, where it doesnt really exist. You take a school full of overachievers and sometimes you just have to give them A's).
Furthermore, no actual ivy league student would be this fucking classless.
get a life.
Re:Grade Inflation My Ass (Score:2)
Actually, after a few drinks most Ivy League students are just as classless as any state schooled kid. And yes, we do have grade inflation, same as almost all prestigious colleges right now. Yale provides a superior education only to those students willing to work for it. The rest just have well-padded resumes.
Re:Grade Inflation My Ass (Score:1)
Re:Grade Inflation My Ass (Score:1)
i went to a public school in new jersey
my parents went to state/city colleges
my grandparents didnt go to colelge
*piss off*
Re:Grade Inflation My Ass (Score:2)
i refine my earlier post.
none of the ivy league students that actually post to slashdot would be this classless.