APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
alter-ego: Thanks for the photo comparisons and the wider field one.
And an Optimist could be an experienced Pessimist. It depends on the things you are learning.
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And an Optimist could be an experienced Pessimist. It depends on the things you are learning.
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Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
You are very welcome.Boomer12k wrote:alter-ego: Thanks for the photo comparisons and the wider field one.
Now that's optimistic!And an Optimist could be an experienced Pessimist. It depends on the things you are learning.
A pessimist is nothing more than an experienced optimist
Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
I agree with Boomer12k on both counts.Boomer12k wrote:alter-ego: Thanks for the photo comparisons and the wider field one.
And an Optimist could be an experienced Pessimist. It depends on the things you are learning.
:---[===] *
Anyway, alter-ego: Do keep up your gracious service to everyone here at Starship Asterisk*, by showing us photo comparisons and wider field images so that we can get a better idea of what and where the APOD in question is! (Not every day, of course, goodness me, but now and again!) Thank you so much!
Ann
Color Commentator
Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
And... an experienced optimist could end up being very pessimistic about everything, as a whole.
To find the Truth, you must go Beyond.
Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
So, are the telescope's five laser-generated stars visible in this image of the Orion Bullets??? If so it would be nice to know where in the image they are!
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Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
I doubt it. The laser stimulates a specific narrow wavelength, which is filtered out by the correction optics. That light doesn't make it to the imaging camera. Presumably, the reference stars are distributed in the field- probably one in the center and the others in the quadrants, but more optimal configurations might be possible.Drifting wrote:So, are the telescope's five laser-generated stars visible in this image of the Orion Bullets??? If so it would be nice to know where in the image they are!
Chris
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Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
There is one star at the bottom left of this image (2nd star from left edge right at the bottom) that appears to have two jets of material, perfectly perpendicular to the star. These appear to be very similar in looks to x-ray images of jets emanating from galactic central regions. Is this just a chance overlay of foreground (or background) bullet material on an unrelated star? Must be otherwise I'm sure they would have been mentioned something about it..wouldn't they?
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Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
Looks to me like a shock front in the surrounding gas, not a jet.Chappy wrote:There is one star at the bottom left of this image (2nd star from left edge right at the bottom) that appears to have two jets of material, perfectly perpendicular to the star. These appear to be very similar in looks to x-ray images of jets emanating from galactic central regions. Is this just a chance overlay of foreground (or background) bullet material on an unrelated star? Must be otherwise I'm sure they would have been mentioned something about it..wouldn't they?
Chris
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Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
Yes, the light is filtered and therefore not visible to GeMS, but other facilities are / can operate sensitive to the sodium line (589nm). There are protocols that define how, when and where the guides stars can be used.Chris Peterson wrote:I doubt it. The laser stimulates a specific narrow wavelength, which is filtered out by the correction optics. That light doesn't make it to the imaging camera. Presumably, the reference stars are distributed in the field- probably one in the center and the others in the quadrants, but more optimal configurations might be possible.Drifting wrote:So, are the telescope's five laser-generated stars visible in this image of the Orion Bullets??? If so it would be nice to know where in the image they are!
The particular 5-star foot print and sizes are shown in the picture. Note the FoV is the same size as the APOD. I believe they limit the image / guide star separation to something like 25 arcsec.
A pessimist is nothing more than an experienced optimist
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Re: APOD: The Orion Bullets (2013 Jan 10)
I wonder if 800 years from now the Homunculus Nebula in the Eta Carinae Nebula will resemble Orion "bullets" in the Orion Nebula.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homunculus_Nebula wrote:
<<The Homunculus Nebula is an emission nebula surrounding the massive star system Eta Carinae. The nebula is embedded within the much larger Eta Carinae Nebula, an ionized hydrogen (H II) region. The Homunculus (from the Latin meaning Little Man) is believed to have been ejected in an enormous outburst from Eta Carinae. Light from this event reached Earth in 1841, creating a brightening event in the night sky which was visible from the Earth's surface at the time. During the event (as seen from Earth) Eta Carinae briefly became the second-brightest star in the sky, after Sirius; but the ejected gas and dust have since obscured much of its light.>>
Art Neuendorffer