jueves, 23 de julio de 2009

Astrónomos aficionados descubren manchas sorprendentes



  Esta semana ha sido apoteósica para los astrónomos aficionados, las noticias han sido espectaculares. Teniendo en cuenta los medios de los que disponen las grandes agencias espaciales estatales probablemente sea esta rama de la historia natural la que con más dificultad consigue hacer aportaciones destacables a la Ciencia. Además de disponer de pocos medios, tener que buscar buenas zonas sin contaminación lumínica y pasar bastante frío resulta difícil aportar nuevas observaciones, pero esta semana han dejado en evidencia que la Ciencia no sólo se nutre de dinero público y privado sino de la sana afición por saber de miles de personas de todo el mundo que cultivan su conocimiento científico de modo "amateur".

  Primero tuvimos la noticia del impresionante descubrimiento de Anthony Wesley un astrónomo australiano que comentó así los hechos:

I started this imaging session on Jupiter at approximately 11pm local time (1300UTC). The weather prediction was not promising, clear skies but a strong jetstream overhead according to the Bureau of Met. The temperature was also unusually high for this time of year (winter), also a bad sign.The scope in use was my new 14.5" newtonian, in use now for a few weeks and so far returning excellent images. 
I was pleasantly surprised to find reasonable imaging conditions and so I decided to continue recording data until maybe 1am local time. By about midnight (12:10 am) the seeing had deteriorated and I was ready to quit. Indeed I had hovered the mouse over the exit button on my capture application (Coriander for Linux) and then changed my mind and decided instead to simply take a break for 30 minutes and then check back to see if the conditions had improved. It was a very near thing.

When I came back to the scope at about 12:40am I noticed a dark spot rotating into view in Jupiters south polar region started to get curious. When first seen close to the limb (and in poor conditions) it was only a vaguely dark spot, I thouht likely to be just a normal dark polar storm. However as it rotated further into view, and the conditions improved I suddenly realised that it wasn't just dark, it was black in all channels, meaning it was truly a black spot.

My next thought was that it must be either a dark moon (like Callisto) or a moon shadow, but it was in the wrong place and the wrong size. Also I'd noticed it was moving too slow to be a moon or shadow. As far as I could see it was rotating in sync with a nearby white oval storm that I was very familiar with - this could only mean that the back feature was at the cloud level and not a projected shadow from a moon. I started to get excited.

It took another 15 minutes to really believe that I was seeing something new - I'd imaged that exact region only 2 days earlier and checking back to that image showed no sign of any anomalous black spot.

Now I was caught between a rock and a hard place - I wanted to keep imaging but also I was aware of the importance of alerting others to this possible new event. Could it actually be an impact mark on Jupiter? I had no real idea, and the odds on that happening were so small as to be laughable, but I was really struggling to see any other possibility given the location of the mark. If it really was an impact mark then I had to start telling people, and quickly. In the end I imaged for another 30 minutes only because the conditions were slowly improving and each capture was giving a slightly better image than the last.

Eventually I stopped imaging and went up to the house to start emailing people, with this image above processed as quick and dirty as possible just to have something to show

  Posteriormente la NASA se puso rápidamente manos a la obra, confirmando la observación con un telescopio de infrarrojos y recopilando toda la información posible. En principio se trataría del impacto de un cometa.

 Depués vino la noticia del descubrimiento de Frank Melillo, un astrónomo norteamericano que encontró una mancha en la superficie de Venus. No está claro aún si se trata de un efecto atmosférico o de una erupción volcánica, eso si ya hay otros científicos siguiendo el descubrimiento.

  Esta semana también fue noticia astronómica el eclipse de sol que recorrió Asia, y que junto a estas otras noticias ha eclipsado en parte la otra noticia astronómica de la semana: el 40 aniversario de la llegada por primera vez del hombre a la luna el 20 de julio de 1969, en la misión Apolo XI.  En fin, ha sido una semana muy intensa para los astrónomos.


  

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