High School Sophomores Discover Asteroid 126
Several readers sent us the story of three high school sophomores in Racine, Wisconsin who were just notified that a celestial body they had discovered during a science project has been verified as an asteroid. The students at Racine's Prairie School will be given the opportunity to name the asteroid in about four years. They used a telescope in New Mexico, belonging to a college in Michigan, that they controlled over the Net.
Uhoh (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Uhoh (Score:4, Funny)
that would be sweet revenge for all science class geeks.
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Re:Uhoh (Score:5, Funny)
It's going to be called omfg!noob!lol!111 Just so everyone knows how awesome and kewl it is.
Asteroid Name (Score:1)
Re:Uhoh (Score:5, Funny)
Now, this is kinda cute, and something I'm sure little kids might enjoy, and it's not like we are running out of stars. But someday, I can't help but picture a fateful day when we try to explain to our once-peaceful alien neighbors why the citizens of Earth have chosen to name the sun that their planet revolves around "Mr. Snugglekins III."
Thus beginning an inter-galactic war that will leave trillions dead.
My point is, having anyone other than scientists naming celestial bodies is a potential recipe for disaster. God forbid these kids decide to name it "Dick Face" and the asteroid decides it would rather be a meteorite...
Re:Uhoh (Score:5, Informative)
It might make you feel better to know that those star naming deals are scams. They are not creating official names. What they tell you (in very careful language) is that the name you choose will go in the [insert important-sounding catalog name]. But that catalog is really just one they keep. Scientists don't use it.
Also, according to Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], when these high-schoolers name the asteroid, the IAU gets to vet the name. If it's "Johnsmithisajerk", they'll probably say no.
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--John Smith
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College in Michigan? (Score:5, Interesting)
Pictures of the telescope [calvin.edu].
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If I ever get the chance, I'm going to name my asteroid something like 'Mikeroid"); drop table asteroids' and then in four more years I get to name ALL of them!
Why wait 4 years? (Score:5, Insightful)
Also: I suppose those guys must ace all those two-picture "spot the 10 differences" tests after this...
Re:Why wait 4 years? (Score:5, Insightful)
A genuine question from a genuine ignoramus (Score:1, Insightful)
I am not familiar with the system of naming, but how do they refer to the asteroid now? Whether or not it is unique seems irrelevant, since they still have to call it something. Presumably it's something like 'Asteroid ABCXYZ-31415' or something like that. So why can't they give it the name they want, and if it turns out not be unique, they just say "Asteroid Principl
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The rule is, IIRC, that the object has to have had an orbit determined which is good enough to be "useful in the establishment of identifications" (from [umd.edu] http://www.ss.astro.umd.edu/IAU/csbn/mpnames.shtml [umd.edu] ). That would normally be a minimum of 2 apparitions ; potentially as little as one year. However, for an "interesting" object you can establish a preliminary orbit from a few nights of observation
Obviously (Score:5, Funny)
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I vote for Mister Vacuumy Pants!
Re:Obviously (Score:5, Funny)
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Maybe they've been laughing at yours but not at... oh, skip it.
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"Asteroid Yurdick" would work a lot better with this one.
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* S.C.Johnson, Horlick's, Case or other local manufacturer
* Arthur's Diner (fictional)
* names of models of AMC automobiles (Rambler, American, Classic, Ambassador, Matador, Javelin, Hornet, Gremlin, etc.) Oh
* Anything Danish.
* Max Hardcore
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Suckers!
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Re:Why wait 4 years? (Score:5, Funny)
It's because of the powerful asteroid naming lobby. Or the writer's strike.
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How does that work, exactly? (Score:1)
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.. or grew bigger :-) (Score:2)
So let me get this straight (Score:5, Funny)
Yep. Sounds like high school to me.
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too bad... (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately, this will be 5 months after it collides with the earth.
This is more common than you'd think (Score:5, Informative)
http://ari.home.mchsi.com/index.htm/ [mchsi.com]
List of asteroids discovered this school year:
http://ari.home.mchsi.com/mp_discoveries_table_2007.htm/ [mchsi.com]
And some info on the telescope he uses to capture images:
http://bi-staff.beckman.uiuc.edu/~melockwo/telescopes/holmes32/holmes32.html/ [uiuc.edu]
Same deal as this article. He uploads pics for students at participating schools to work with.
Re:This is more common than you'd think (Score:5, Funny)
Does that mean he didn't find any yet?
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Yes, it was sloppy, but we all know that file extensions don't end with a slash, right..?
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True, but directory pathnames do, and there's no reason that a directory's name can't contain a dot. I've seen a few sites that do this to categorize their files. Thus, for package foo, they might have a directory foo.html/ that contains the package's web pages, foo.jpeg/ that contains the package's images, and foo.pdf/ that contains the package's PDF files. Try it with your web server; you'll probably find that it works fine.
It's yet anoth
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Working Links (Score:2)
http://ari.home.mchsi.com/index.htm [mchsi.com]
List of asteroids discovered this school year:
http://ari.home.mchsi.com/mp_discoveries_table_2007.htm [mchsi.com]
And some info on the telescope he uses to capture images:
http://bi-staff.beckman.uiuc.edu/~melockwo/telescopes/holmes32/holmes32.html [uiuc.edu]
Dottie (Score:1, Offtopic)
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These gaming articles are boring (Score:5, Funny)
I discovered Asteroids in grade school (Score:2)
I doubt THEY really discovered it (Score:5, Insightful)
this leaves with the impression this guys just got lucky. It's like they identified each faint dot as an asteroid, and one just turned out to be exactly that. I imagine they just pointed at each dot
Students:Is this an asteroid?someone knowledgeable:No
Students:Is this an asteroid?
someone knowledgeable:No
Students:Is this an asteroid?
someone knowledgeable:No..wait Yes
Students: Ha we are smart!
However I do give the students credit for initiative, it's refreshing to see that some kids still have interest in science (other then computing)
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so...yes.
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So, if you can find *any* asteroid at all with a telescope, chances are better than 70% that it is a new discovery. And, finding one probably isn't all that hard with a modern telescope... just point it at the Kupier Belt and take a few pictures.
So, I w
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And, finding one probably isn't all that hard with a modern telescope... just point it at the Kupier Belt and take a few pictures.
Considered how most objects in the Kuiper belt are smaller and as far away as Pluto, you might want to try with a pair of binoculars instead ;-)
I call it (Score:2)
simpsons (Score:2, Funny)
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EZ (Score:2)
Texting... (Score:2)
ROTFLCOPTER.
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I can hear it now.... (Score:2)
Tommy: "Ohhhhh...Looky 'dere, Billy! There's somethun' up in sky o'ver 'dere!"
Billy: "Ohhhh...that's one of them 'dere asteroids, don't ya know!"
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Now we know (Score:2, Funny)
I use my telescope for watching sophomores.....
(/perv)
SciFi (Score:1)
The school will have a vote . . . (Score:1, Troll)
Wow, the 'Superfriends' (Score:1)
Deep Impact (Score:2)
If I could propose a name... (Score:1)
I can see it now. (Score:2)
Relax.... (Score:1)
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That will turn out to the most efficient power source available and we destroy ourselves fighting over it.
Why should nature destroy us when our own greed will do a better job.
This is just the sort of thing .... (Score:2)
wow (Score:1)
Citizen Science (Score:2)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/science/citizenscience.shtml [bbc.co.uk] (N.B. May not work in the USA?)
"Some of these enthusiasts get a thrill out of seeing sky sights with their own eyes, while others patiently scan the heavens to discover things that no human has seen before.
David Tate monitors the skies from a small fibreglass dome which he built himself in his back
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