Notice of Next Meeting

Our next monthly meeting takes place on:

Date: 14 March 2012
Time: Starting at 19:30
Location: At the Jhb Observatory

 

3 x 20 min talks:
Meteorites Part III
by Trevor Gould

NASA Imaging by Michael Robins
Variable Stars by Dave Blane


About our meetings
Meetings take place every month (except December) on the second Wednesday of the month at the Johannesburg Observatory, 18a Gill Street, Observatory.

These generally last about one and a half hours, and usually include a Beginners Corner, What's Up in the Night Sky, and the main speaker's presentation. Tea and coffee are served afterwards. Visitors welcome.

Click here for directions and a map to the Observatory


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News & Announcements

Fifth ATV named after George Lemaître

ESA’s Automated Transfer Vehicles (ATVs) are an essential contribution by Europe to running the International Space Station. Naming the fifth after Belgian scientist Georges Lemaître continues the tradition of drawing on great European visionaries to reflect Europe’s deep roots in science, technology and culture.

The first Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV), which made a flawless flight in 2008, was named after French science fiction writer Jules Verne.

It was followed in 2011 by ATV-2, named in honour of German mathematician and astronomer Johannes Kepler.

It will be the turn of the third ATV, named after the Italian physicist and space pioneer Edoardo Amaldi, to head towards the Space Station on 9 March.

ATV-4, aiming for launch in early 2013, carries the name of Albert Einstein.

Naming the last vehicle of the family, ATV-5, after Belgian physicist Georges Lemaître, father of the Big Bang theory, continues this approach.

Credit: ESA

Transforming Galaxies

Many of the Universe's galaxies are like our own, displaying beautiful spiral arms wrapping around a bright nucleus. Examples in this stunning image, taken with the Wide Field Camera 3 on the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, include the tilted galaxy at the bottom of the frame, shining behind a Milky Way star, and the small spiral at the top center.

Other galaxies are even odder in shape. Markarian 779, the galaxy at the top of this image, has a distorted appearance because it is likely the product of a recent galactic merger between two spirals. This collision destroyed the spiral arms of the galaxies and scattered much of their gas and dust, transforming them into a single peculiar galaxy with a unique shape.

This galaxy is part of the Markarian catalogue, a database of over 1500 galaxies named after B. E. Markarian, the Armenian astronomer who studied them in the 1960s. He surveyed the sky for bright objects with unusually strong emission in the ultraviolet.

Ultraviolet radiation can come from a range of sources, so the Markarian catalog is quite diverse. An excess of ultraviolet emissions can be the result of the nucleus of an "active" galaxy, powered by a supermassive black hole at its center. It can also be due to events of intense star formation, called starbursts, possibly triggered by galactic collisions. Markarian galaxies are, therefore, often the subject of studies aimed at understanding active galaxies, starburst activity, and galaxy interactions and mergers.

Credit: NASA

 

 
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Events

* Feb 08: Monthly meeting at the Planetarium
* Feb 17: Public viewing @ Obs, from 7pm
* Mar 14: Monthly meeting @ Obs
* Mar 14: Beginners Astronomy Course, presented by Gil Jacobs. Runs for 4 consecutive Wednesdays.
* Mar 16: Public viewing @ Obs, from 7pm
* May 18-20: Proposed deep sky weekend to Marakele National Park
* July 21: ScopeX @ Military History Museum


ScopeX 2012