Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

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Expand view Topic review: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by bystander » Sun Dec 20, 2009 6:50 pm

neufer wrote:My youngest daughter is named DAWN. It was either that or CREPUSCULA.
Thank goodness! I hate to think what it would be like going thru life with a name like Crepuscula.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by DavidLeodis » Sun Dec 20, 2009 6:19 pm

It is a superb image. Without the information in the explanation I doubt I would have known that the handle of the Big Dipper (The Plough to me!) was there. Not having the ploughshare bit I would not have recognised it otherwise! :oops: but I don't think I need be. :)

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by neufer » Sun Dec 20, 2009 4:37 pm

Case wrote:
bystander wrote:According to Merriam-Webster
...aurora also means 'dawn'. Didn't know that until today. :D
My youngest daughter is named DAWN.

It was either that or CREPUSCULA.

CREPUSCULAR: a. Pertaining to twilight; glimmering; noting the imperfect
light of the morning and evening; hence, imperfectly clear or luminous.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by Case » Sun Dec 20, 2009 2:30 pm

bystander wrote:According to Merriam-Webster
...aurora also means 'dawn'. Didn't know that until today. :D

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by neufer » Sun Dec 20, 2009 1:47 pm

bystander wrote:According to Merriam-Webster and Wiktionary auroras is the preferred form, although both are acceptable.
I notice that Merriam-Webster doesn't even attempt to pronounce auroras.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by Chris Peterson » Sun Dec 20, 2009 4:44 am

SittingDownMan wrote:Ok. Whatever.
"Auroras". From a self-styled scientist, forsooth.
I'm too old for this playground, obviously.
Relax, it wasn't a criticism of you! It was just a light-hearted reference to a discussion a week or two ago.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by bystander » Sun Dec 20, 2009 4:07 am

SittingDownMan wrote:Ok. Whatever.
"Auroras". From a self-styled scientist, forsooth.
I'm too old for this playground, obviously.
According to Merriam-Webster and Wiktionary auroras is the preferred form, although both are acceptable.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by geckzilla » Sun Dec 20, 2009 3:32 am

Well, that's an interesting thing to get upset about. You say po-tay-toe, I say po-tah-toe? We all get along?

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by SittingDownMan » Sun Dec 20, 2009 3:21 am

geckzilla wrote:Oh gosh, here we go with the plural-of-whatever again. :lol: I made sure to include one of each for you two. Too bad I can't change the APOD itself. :)
Ok. Whatever.
"Auroras". From a self-styled scientist, forsooth.
I'm too old for this playground, obviously.

Bye.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by geckzilla » Sun Dec 20, 2009 3:05 am

Oh gosh, here we go with the plural-of-whatever again. :lol: I made sure to include one of each for you two. Too bad I can't change the APOD itself. :)

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by Chris Peterson » Sun Dec 20, 2009 2:32 am

SittingDownMan wrote: No. "*Aurorae* are" or "the aurora *is* "...
Or even better, "auroras are".

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by SittingDownMan » Sun Dec 20, 2009 1:44 am

APOD Robot wrote:Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)
by APOD Robot » Sat Dec 19, 2009 4:55 am
Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash

... but aurora are caused by energetic...
No. "*Aurorae* are" or "the aurora *is* "...

That one bugs me almost as much as authors insisting "nexus" is plural.

.....................SDM............:>

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by bystander » Sat Dec 19, 2009 6:19 pm

geckzilla wrote:I'm guessing his camera clock was set to the wrong year. Or maybe he did take it two years ago with the devious plot of releasing it in 2009, claiming to have captured the meteor during a different meteor shower!
I'm not Occam, but I'm guessing the clock was wrong. I can't imagine what conspiracy your other plot would support. :lol: As shown in APOD's link Geminid meteor shower, Mr. Hansen's photo is included in Space Weather's 2009 Geminid Meteor Gallery. Could this be evidence of a time traveler from the past? :wink:

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by BMAONE23 » Sat Dec 19, 2009 4:00 pm

Another great "Chance Encounter" with a famous constellation... The meteor flash is perfectly allighed with the first 3 handle stars of the Big Dipper Megrez, Alioth, & Mizar

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by orin stepanek » Sat Dec 19, 2009 2:29 pm

I don't recall this one being posted before; though it may have been. It wasn't posted in December of 2007 however. http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/calendar/ca0712.html I checked Jan 2008 and didn't see it there either. :?

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by geckzilla » Sat Dec 19, 2009 2:26 pm

I couldn't find the photo posted anywhere 2 years ago. I'm guessing his camera clock was set to the wrong year. Or maybe he did take it two years ago with the devious plot of releasing it in 2009, claiming to have captured the meteor during a different meteor shower! ...Calling Mr. Occam, cleanup on aisle 4.

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by TBIRD7777 » Sat Dec 19, 2009 1:51 pm

I'm guessing this photo has been posted before, I have not checked. But in the notes below it states that this was taken on Dec. 13th, And it was taken on Dec. 13th, but Dec. 13th 2007. The impression they have given is that it was taken in 2009, so they should re-write their blurb, or put the year in. No big deal I know, but when re-hashing already posted photos, it's always good to check. This is by far one of the Top sites in the history of the Internet, so why am I being so anal? I would just like to see them make as few mistatkes as possible. - TBIRD7777 :D

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by neufer » Sat Dec 19, 2009 1:04 pm

haosci wrote:It appears that this beautiful scene also has a background of noctoluminescent clouds.
Except that noctilucent clouds occur:

1) at least 15 kilometers below the ionospheric Aurora Borealis
2) and in the summertime!

So this is most likely a multiple exposure including wintertime nacreous clouds:
http://www.lightningwizard.com/AurNLC.php wrote:
<<Aurora Borealis (also called "Northern Lights") and Noctilucent Clouds (abbreviated as "NLC") are beautiful phenomena that occur far above the daily weather. They may be called "space weather". Aurora is caused by streams of charged particles from the sun entering Earth's atmosphere. The charged particles collide with oxygen and nitrogen atoms in the ionosphere at altitudes over 100 km. These atoms then emit the usually red and green colored light we see. The magnetic field of the Earth leads the stream of particles to the poles. A few days after an Earth-directed solar eruption, the Northern Lights can incidentally also be observed closer towards the equator.

Noctilucent Clouds (NLC) are silvery to blueish white fragile looking clouds in the night sky, roaming in the mesosphere at about 80-85 km altitude. They can be seen at [polar] latitudes mostly from late May to early August, with a maximum around 21 June. In that time of year, temperatures at those altitudes are coldest, allowing the small amounts of water vapour to condensate on meteor dust. The clouds are seen because the sun does not go far below the horizon, so that the sun still illuminates the very high clouds.>>

Re: Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by haosci » Sat Dec 19, 2009 12:01 pm

It appears that this beautiful scene also has a background of noctoluminescent clouds.

Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash (2009 Dec 19)

by APOD Robot » Sat Dec 19, 2009 4:55 am

Image Aurora Shimmer, Meteor Flash

Explanation: Northern Lights, or aurora borealis, haunted skies over the island of Kvaløya, near Tromsø Norway on December 13. This 30 second long exposure records their shimmering glow gently lighting the wintery coastal scene. A study in contrasts, it also captures the sudden flash of a fireball meteor from December's excellent Geminid meteor shower. Streaking past familiar stars in the handle of the Big Dipper, the trail points back toward the constellation Gemini, off the top of the view. Both aurorae and meteors occur in Earth's upper atmosphere at altitudes of 100 kilometers or so, but auroras are caused by energetic charged particles from the magnetosphere, while meteors are trails of cosmic dust.


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