logo.jpg
  spacewriter.com logo

The SpaceWriter's Ramblings

  logo.jpg
icon1.gif icon2.gif icon3.gif icon4.gif icon5.gif icon6.gif icon1.gif icon2.gif icon3.gif icon4.gif icon5.gif icon6.gif icon1.gif icon2.gif icon3.gif icon4.gif icon5.gif icon6.gif

Anything and everything about science, especially astronomy and the cosmos.

NOTE: This blog has migrated to a new address. Please update your favorites link accordingly.



Visit my web site at
TheSpaceWriter.com
for astronomy info, stargazing thoughts, and reviews and recommendations for astronomy-related goodies!




Posting times are
US Eastern Standard Time.
All postings Copyright 2003-2008
C.C. Petersen

Powered by
Blogger

Archives


Feeds



Subscribe in a reader

icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif

ABOUT ME

I'm a science writer and editor. I work with clients in the observatory and planetarium community, as well as my own book, web, planetarium, and other projects.

Need a writer/editor? Visit my services page for my projects and availability.


icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif

Fulldomers!

Seasonal stargazing shows in digital fulldomevideo!
Now available from Loch Ness Productions.


icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif

Shopping
Support This Site

Looking for a great gift for someone special?

Visit
THE SPACEWRITER'S GIFT SHOP
(at Amazon.com).


icon1.gif icon1.gif

Cool astronomy-themed t-shirts created by TheSpacewriter at TheSpacewriter's Cafepress Shop.

Support This Site


icon1.gif icon1.gif

Like space music?

Check out the latest Geodesium album:


icon1.gif icon1.gif


In Association with Amazon.com

A great place to shop online


icon1.gif icon1.gif

MY LAST BOOK



Info about Visions of the Cosmos



Note: The ads you see below and at the bottom of this page are screened for content and many fine companies do appear here. Occasionally ads I don't want DO slip through, particularly for pseudo-science, st*r-naming, ID, and other questionable sites. Please understand that I cannot be held responsible for their content. Do visit them if you wish, but as with all advertising, be logical and use common sense.






Credits

Graphics and design by Ann Stretton © 2001 at
Ann-S-Thesia
Dingbat Fonts:The Dingbatcave
Fine Art:Eyebalm



About the ads here


2.02.2008



The 21-centimeter Band



No, it's not the name of a punk-rock band, although I wouldn't be surprised if some enterprising and musically inclined astrophysics grad students didn't form a band in their "spare time" and name themselves that. There's a great tradition of geeky names for scientist-led bands, such as the Eigenfunctions, the Algo-Rhythms, and one of my favorites, the Titan Equatorial Band, an impromptu group that featured such folks as one of my former colleagues Kelly Beatty (Sky & Telescope Magazine), Cassini Mission scientist Carolyn Porco,the late great science journalist Jonathan Eberhart, and many others. They gathered and played during Voyager spacecraft flybys.

But, that's not the kind of band I'm talking about in this entry. The 21-centimeter Band is a wavelength of light that is more attuned to a single note: the radio frequency (1420 MHz) emitted by changes in atoms of neutral hydrogen. It's right smack in the radio portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, and so radio astronomers have been using it for years to probe a variety of conditions in the universe.

Yesterday, I went over to Haystack Observatory to hear a talk about using 21-cm band emissions to study clouds of material being emitted from Asymptotic Giant Branch stars. These may sound like weird, far-out, geeky stars. And they are. But they're also part of the final act in the lives of stars that are less than eight times the mass of the Sun... including the Sun. As they slip into old age, these stars cool down, they expand, they get brighter, and through all this, they spend their nuclear fuel (which is running low) faster and faster. As they cool, their atmospheres get just chilly enough that dust grains can "freeze out" and create a dusty shell around the star. Think of this phase as a last burst of lively activity before settling into very old age (not unlike the antics of some elderly rockers doing successive world tours (not that there's anything wrong with that)).

Well, some of the larger AGB stars also start to pulsate, and these heavings send a stellar wind blowing away from the star, shoving the dusty shell out away from the star, along with a cloud of neutral hydrogen. Now, we can study the dust by looking for its signature in the infrared (where astronomers commonly detect warm (but not too hot) glowing things. And, voila, we can study the progression of the mass loss (that is, how quickly the stellar wind is shoving mass away from the star) by examining the 21-centimeter emissions from the neutral hydrogen in the shell.



Four scenes from an animation showing Mira and its 13 light-year-long tail.
Courtesy Galex Mission.


It's still a work in progress, but we did see some fine examples of 21-centimeter emissions from the stellar tail trailing out along the line of travel of the star Mira A which looks like it's got a comet tail. That tail is glowing in ultraviolet light, but 21-centimeter band studies show more detail in the neutral hydrogen that is also being carried along. If the work (which is still in progress) plays out as the astronomers expect, they should be able to figure out a pretty accurate timetable for when this material started streaming off the star (and hence, how old the tail is), and give us some new insights into the rockin' activity in these geriatric stars.

posted by CCP on 2/02/2008 11:12:00 AM | * |

icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif icon1.gif









icon1.gif icon1.gif

Earth Hour!

Do it for the Planet!

icon1.gif icon1.gif

Blog Roll

Planetarium-related

Loch Ness Productions
Purveyors of fine planetarium shows, music, and services.

INTENSELY Good Space Music
from a master in the genre!

My cool astronomy cause:
The Friends of the Griffith Observatory.
Join up today!

Science

The sites below belong to space and astronomy enthusiasts. I make every effort to check them and make sure they are still appropriate. However, I am not responsible for their content, nor do I endorse any of it by simply linking to them. As with all Web surfing, please exercise caution.


Adot's Notblog
A fellow traveler blogger and astronomy enthusiast!

Astronomy Blog
An astronomy blog pondering the big questions

Astronomy Cast
Astronomy Podcasting from Pamela Gay

BadAstronomy.com
Bad astronomy discussed and debunked along with fun stuff about really good astronomy!

Chris Lintott's Universe
Musings from an Oxford Astronomer.

Cosmic Variance
Random Samplings from a Universe of Ideas.

Dave P's Astronomy blog
Observational Astronomy and other TidBits

European Southern Observatory
Fine Ground-based astronomy images.

Gemini Observatory
Fine astronomy in infrared and visible wavelengths.

Griffith Observatory's page.
I wrote their exhibits!

Observing The Sky
Nightly Observation Reports from dedicated skygazers.

The Official String Theory Web Site. Time to feed your mind!

Pharyngula
Evolution, development, and random biological ejaculations from a godless liberal. Cast off your blinders and come on in!

Science Made Cool
A compendium of discoveries, inventions and commentary.

Slacker Astronomy
Astronomy with a Slacker Twist.

Space Telescope Science Institute
The best from Hubble Space Telescope

The Eternal Golden Braid
Astronomy, Space Science, and Science Fiction Commentary.

The Inoculated Mind
Bills Itself as a weekly science mindcast. Thought-provoking, honest.


Truth.

Unique

The Hairy Museum of Natural History
Defies description. Just go there (yes, it's safe for work).

Olduvai George
Absolutely fantastic natural history illustrations from a master.



News

The Agonist
News and Commentary

EurekAlert
Breaking Science News

National Public Radio
The Original Fair and Balanced

Slashdot.org
Like it says: News for Nerds


Shopping, Internet Stuff, and Web Guides

The Blog Search Engine Searching out the Blogoverse.

Blogwise.com
A blogger's listing service

Google
Best search engine

A blogger's listing service

Weblog Commenting and Trackback by HaloScan.com

The Truth Laid Bare Listings in the Blogosphere.


Links to My Site
Alternate Reality
An awful waste of space
Asa Dotzler - Firefox and more
A Song of November
Astroprof's Page
Astronomy Blog
Space/Astronomy
Bad Astronomy blog
BEEP! BEEP! IT'S ME
Bohemian Mama
boyruageek
Centauri Dreams
Colony Worlds
Cosmic Views
DaveP's astronomy
Dick's Rocket Dungeon
Electron Blue
Fly me to the Moon
From The Earth To The Moon
NYC Nova Hunter
Perspective and Soda
Robot guy
Salty Snack
Skymania's blogcast
Space Pragmatism
Solar Empire
Space Feeds
Space Law Probe
StarBaseOC
Sue Denham
Technology Integration
The Rabid Librarian's Ravings in the Wind
The Sublime Will
The Q80 Girl
TexasBestGrok
The Astronomy Blog
True Anomaly