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More Posts from Astrotidbits-blog and Others

8 years ago
Two Comets Pass In The Night Bound For Your Telescope

Two comets pass in the night bound for your telescope

Remember comets Lovejoy and C/2012 X1 LINEAR? We dropped in on them in late January. On Feb. 6 the two cruised within  2 degrees of each other as they tracked through Ophiuchus before dawn.  Were it not for bad weather, astrophotographer Damian Peach would have been out to record the cometary conjunction, but this unique photo, taken two mornings later, shows the two comets chasing each other across the sky. Of course they’re not really following one another, nor are they related,  but the illusion is wonderful.

Image credit & copyright: Damian Peach

8 years ago
Great Red Spot Closeup

Great Red Spot closeup

via reddit

8 years ago
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?
Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?

Is Time Travel Possible, According To Science?

“You can witness the evolution and destruction of humanity; the end of the Earth and Sun; the dissociation of our galaxy; the heat death of the Universe itself. So long as you have enough power in your space ship, you can travel as far into the future as you like.”

Have you ever wondered about time travel? Perhaps you have your destination in the far future, and want to see how it all turns out? Maybe you want to return to the past, and alter the future or present by your actions there? Or maybe you want to freeze time altogether? If you want to know whether it’s possible, the physics of relativity holds the answer. Special relativity allows us to control our motion through time by manipulating our motion through space. The more we move through space, the less we move through time, allowing us to travel as far as we want into the future, limited only by our energy available for space travel. But going to the past requires some specific solutions to general relativity, which may (or may not) describe our physical Universe.

What’s the status of traveling through time? Come get the scientific story (with a brand new podcast) today!

8 years ago
Pre-Winter Storm, Southwestern Australia In 2014

Pre-Winter Storm, Southwestern Australia in 2014

Credit: NASA / ISS

8 years ago
Rosetta: Alarm To Sound For Comet Mission

Rosetta: Alarm to sound for comet mission

One of the most daring space missions ever undertaken reaches a key milestone on Monday.

Europe’s Rosetta probe was launched a decade ago on a long quest to chase down and land on a comet, and has spent the past two-and-half-years in hibernation to try to conserve power.

But at 10:00 GMT, an onboard “alarm clock” is expected to rouse the spacecraft from its slumber.

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8 years ago
NASA’s Cassini Spacecraft Shows Earth And Its Moon From Between Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Spacecraft Shows Earth And Its Moon From Between Saturn’s Rings

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft shows Earth and its moon from between Saturn’s rings

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which orbits Saturn, took a picture of Earth from between Saturn’s rings — with Earth’s moon at its side.

Captured at 1:41 a.m. Eastern on April 12, 2017, the spacecraft was 870 million miles away from its home planet when it took the image.

Earth is seen as a tiny bright speck in the center of the picture. Upon cropping and zooming in, its moon can be seen to the left as an even smaller dot. The photograph, captured by the Imaging Science Subsystem, doesn’t clearly show which part of Earth is facing the ringed planet at the time the picture was taken, but NASA has revealed it is the southern Atlantic Ocean. Read more (4/21/17)

follow @the-future-now

8 years ago
Observing The Skies Above By Kirby Wright On Flickr.

Observing the Skies Above by Kirby Wright on Flickr.

8 years ago
What Are Comets Made Of?

What are comets made of?

7 years ago

My Radio-inActive Life

I am a non-practicing amateur radio operator. K4EYO is my callsign. I have a General Class license, but I got that after the FCC did away with the Morse code requirement, so to some people that doesn’t really count.

There is still the Extra class license out there, my one last goal, the pinnacle, the zenith of the U.S. Amateur radio licensing system. I’m putting that off, because once I pass that test, well, what’s left? I already have the Holy Grail of licenses, which is the General Radiotelephone Operator’s License (GROL). But that’s for working on radio equipment on ships in the Great Lakes and in the oceans, and also for supervising avionics techs, or something like that. In other words, very non-amateur. It’s a lifetime license, so I don’t have to deal with renewing it, which is the coolest thing about it, to me.

Ancient History

When I was a kid, way back in the 60’s my best friend’s dad was a Ham (that’s what we call ourselves in Amateur Radio-Land) and he tried to teach a bunch of us kids Morse code via LPs. We sat in the basement and wrote down what we heard, or what we thought we heard. I hated it. But he had a great ham shack (equipment room) with lots of postcards (QSL cards) from his radio contacts all over the world. Cool. He also took us to the local radio club meetings in nearby Hazel Park, MI. All I remember from that was all of the cigar smoke and the swap meet equipment - old Hallicrafters and Heathkits. These were the computer geeks before there were computers.

And that was it for my radio experience. We moved to Atlanta and my attention was refocused on not being beat up by the various gangs at my new high school and pretending to like Elvis.

Not So Ancient History

Years later (1990-ish) I wound up going to a technical school in the mountains of North Georgia, which is a story for another day. But there I could pick from auto mechanics, brick-laying (yep!), practical nursing, electrical wiring, and electronic technology. They used to have watchmaking(!), which is what I would have taken, but instead I settled for the electronics program.

We had a couple of old guys who taught us all about analog circuits, tubes (we had a room full of tubes - must be worth a fortune now), and antennas. I loved this stuff.

We also had a younger guy who taught us about digital circuits, PLCs, assembly language, and who asked me at one point what the hell I was doing there, and not in a university somewhere.

I owe him a debt of gratitude for encouraging me.

It was here that I got my Technician class license and my GROL (first person in something like 15 years from the school). We re-established the dormant radio club at the school, which had three or four members. We’d go to hamfests (conventions for radio geeks), and talk to each other on 2 meter radios in our respective cars.  We strung antennas up on the roof of the classroom. We also tried to communicate with MIR as it made its passes overhead, along with the other thousands along the east coast. Remember MIR? From Wikipedia, ca 1993:

image

One guy had an HF setup at home. I just had a mobile 2m radio in my VW Bug, and a 2m handheld radio that stayed on my hip, as I played geek wannabe.

A Slight Divergence- typewriters

We moved back to Atlanta and my new skills got me a job repairing typewriters (actually, the auto mechanic track would have been more useful). This was a very cool job, but the pay was terrible. But I learned how to repair/adjust IBM Selectrics via sets of slides in Carousel trays, and older mechanical machines like Smith Coronas, Remingtons, Olivettis just by figuring them out. I keep thinking this is what I’d do if I started my own business. But then I come to my senses.

White Collar Work

Then I got into call center work, first answering phones, then managing, then building them as a project manager. This was the period where I’ve earned the most money so far.

The problem with project management is that by definition, projects are temporary. And so are project manager jobs. At this time there was also a huge movement to move call centers to India, and I didn’t like the thought of that commute.

Blue Collar Work

After being unemployed for 7 months I went to a Georgia Department of Labor job fair in 2001, where the local transit authority (MARTA) had a recruiter looking for radio techs. I was the only one there who had radio licenses and education (the line for computer maintenance/IT jobs was a mile long). 2 months later I had a job and became underemployed.

So now I was in a real radio shop! I could talk about radios, bring in my equipment to adjust and tune…

Nope. Only one had a ham license, the old-timer. The rest of them couldn’t care less about radios. And to add injury to insult, we were not allowed to work on our own stuff, even off the clock.

But I did get great training on 800 mhz trunking systems. And it got me motivated to go to college to get a degree in Economics (“you won’t get rich studying economics, but at least you’ll know why”, as the old joke goes.)

Back to White Collars

It was a few months after graduation that I got a new job at MARTA, as a Maintenance Planner for the computer maintenance group. 7 years later and I’m still doing that. Still not getting rich.

Urban Radios

This is when I upgraded my license to “General” and started putting together a radio setup. But we live in a high-rise, so antennas are more of a challenge. And to keep from singeing the fur on the cats, I had to look at low power (QRP) systems. I have always preferred these anyway, just to be an iconoclast amongst the iconoclasts.

For decades the radio magazines touted home-built (or store bought) 1000 watt or more systems. Just blast that signal out there, power bills & other people’s TV reception be damned! Not really, RFI is bad.

QRP systems appeal to me just like bicycles and economics appeal to me: Efficient use of resources.

So I’ve built assembled a little 40 meter radio, and built assembled an iambic paddle and have built assembled a meter in an altoids can. Now I just need to revisit my old nemesis, Morse code.

image

See, these low powered, efficient systems are that way because they don’t transmit voice. No fat sidebands. But they only use 3 watts instead of 100 or 1,000.

So I need to string up some wire, or build some exotic coil loaded beast to transmit from the living room, which could double as a scratching post for the cats. And then we’ll be in business.

Now

And six years later nothing has changed, except for the thick layer of dust on my stuff. I really should wire it all up and at least listen to chatter out there.

But I also need to make a shirt, finish the kitchen cabinets, build a workbench…

8 years ago
Hubble Has Been 27 Years In Space, Being Launched In April 24, 1990. The First Image It Shoot Was The
Hubble Has Been 27 Years In Space, Being Launched In April 24, 1990. The First Image It Shoot Was The

Hubble has been 27 years in space, being launched in April 24, 1990. The first image it shoot was the star cluster NGC 3532.

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