Rare Astronomical Event Will See Triple Moon Shadows On Jupiter 53
hypnosec writes Stargazers are in for a treat: they will be able to witness a rare astronomical event early tomorrow morning (January 24, 2015) where shadows of three of Jupiter's largest moons — Io, Europa, and Callisto — will fall upon Jupiter simultaneously. Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles will provide a live online broadcast on its Livestream channel. It will begin on January 24 at 0430 GMT (January 23 at 11:30 PM EST, 8:30 PM PST) and end at 0700 GMT (2:00 AM EST, 11:00 PM PST). They've also posted a short animated video of how the event will appear.
Just be honest. (Score:2)
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I did.....mostly because I probably won't watch it live. While neat from a rarity stance, it doesn't have much scientific relevance that I can think of. Cool, but the video is good enough for me.
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Thank you Captain Obvious.
Although you should perhaps note that the term "stargazer" is often used as a description of "an observational astronomer, particularly an amateur".
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Really? Don't say that so loud, you'll hurt its feelings. Besides, I thought it was a rare star type called a "black dwarf", sort of the theoretical limit of a brown dwarf with its teensy but measurable gravitational heating...
Well, maybe not so rare...;-)
rgb
(And I'm just kidding, yeah, black dwarfs are dark white dwarfs and brown dwarfs may or may not have had to undergo fusion at some point yadda yadda, but the point is that Jupiter is on the spectrum that includes brown dwarfs emitting only from gravit
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Not yet.
They're only five years behind schedule on that one.
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Rare Astronomical Event (Score:2)
Quick, alert the YouTube idiots: the Anunnaki are returning on Planet Nibiru!!!!
You're being followed by a Moonshadow (Score:3, Funny)
Apparently several.
Moonshadow (song) [wikipedia.org]
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Article a bit on the vague side (Score:4, Insightful)
The event is slated to being [sic] on January 24, 2015 at 4:30 AM GMT and should end by 7:00 am GMT.
Slated to begin? Should end?
What kind of delays are they expecting? I know they sometimes push the news back if X Factor overruns, but this is ridiculous.
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"What kind of delays are they expecting?"
There is a delay between the event and the observation of the event due to the speed of light.
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That's why real astronomers use ludicrous speed.
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Why do you imply there is a delay expected? (Cursive usage of "slated")?
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The article implies that the schedule is flexible (probably by choosing to refer to both the transit and the live feed as "the event"), when it's anything but. I was just pointing out the ridiculousness of the idea for comedic effect.
Cat Stevens is getting paranoid (Score:5, Funny)
Now he's being followed by three moon shadows.
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(per the video description) From Los Angeles, you'd next see it in 2023. Which to me means that it isn't as rare as implied (unless it's like primes where there are some close ones and some far ones and the next next one would be hundreds of years later).
already raining here (Score:2)
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No triple moonshadow for you, then, but you might get a double rainbow! [youtube.com]
Not that easy to see (Score:4, Informative)
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How fast is your telescope? Fast telescopes suck at planetary observing.... and what power do you normally view at? The size of the scope means relatively little when it comes down to seeing the planet since they're normally very bright (Jupiter obviously is). A light bucket like my 12" dob isn't going to get that much better of an image than a 6" dob at the same focal length ratio and power.
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You can have either a doubling of aperture and have the power the same, or you can have double the aperture and double the power and have the f/ratio the same.
If you have a doubling of aperture and maintaining the magnification the same, your diffraction disks (Airy disks) are half the width, and the image has 4 times the light coming through. In itself at
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> "people who've either spent thousands on *astrological* equipment"
Well I suppose he's right:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Watch the video from the start when you're done, it's a great little video.
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> who've either spent thousands on astrological equipment
Well there's your problem -- you should have been focusing on telescopes instead of the Zodiac.
I've got a 6" Dobsonian telescope -- not terrifically expensive, under $1,000 I'm sure -- and I've enjoyed Jupiter moon transits before. It's no Hubble, but I enjoy it.
And if I were on Jupitor, I still wouldn't care (Score:3)
Seriously-- rarity in and of itself isn't worth noting. It's particularly not worth noting if something doesn't really happen "to" anyone. And (ignoring the harm to all life as we know it) even if you were on Jupitor, you wouldn't be able to see all the moon shadows because Jupitor's so freaking huge.
Is this something for birder-type people? People that just want to check something off the list?
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I feel sorry for you. Rarity is something definitely worth noting, especially if it's something you have a mild interest in (and while you clearly don't care a lot of us news for nerds type are into space stuff).
You clearly have never had the joy of seeing something incredible, like another planet travel across the surface of the sun. Have you ever even seen an eclipse? Many humans live their life by the mantra of "I was there", or "I saw that". If something is rare that in itself is note worthy for the peo
Re:And if I were on Jupiter, I still wouldn't care (Score:2)
Some people are just different and have vastly different concepts of importance.
For the VAST majority most people, rarity in and of itself has no importance. Three black dots appearing on an orange blob that themselves have no effects on the lives, health, or entertainment of people on Earth will get almost no coverage. If it shows up on the local news, they'll focus on the people who gathered at the local observatory (Check out these nerds, eh?) and not the event itself.
Even rare silly calendar dates (11/1
Snow storm (Score:2)