Richard E. Wend (1921-2009)

By Roger Kolman

Dick Wend passed away Sunday, October 25, 2009, after a battle with lymphoma. For anyone who knew him a deep void now exists within. He will be sorely missed.


Dick was a member of the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) for six decades and was a recipient of the Director's Awards for his lifetime contributions.

He was an avid observer of the planet Jupiter and served as the Jupiter Recorder for the Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers.

He was a longtime member of the Milwaukee Astronomical Society and the Racine Astronomical Society and served as in officer in the RAS for many years.

He was a member of the Astronomical League for more than six decades and served as an officer of the North Central Region for many years. Additionally, he served as a member of the Leslie C. Peltier Award Committee from 1980 until his death.

He served as a volunteer at Volo Bog and received awards for his contributions to that organization.

He served on the Fox Lake Library Board from 1991 until his death and was a valued member of that group.

Any organization he joined became richer for his participation.

He was a valued friend to all who knew him.

May he rest in peace.

New Slacker Astronomy Episode


This week Doug, Michael and I have a lot fun talking about CCDs and how they work, we answer questions from the reader mail bag about cosmology and the expansion of the universe, and Michael introduces the new Slacker Blogger, Ben Huset. There are a lot of laughs in this one, and we wax a little philosophical here and there. Tune in to the Slacker Astronomy Podcast and join in the fun.

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Carnival of Space Quasquicentennial Edition

...that means it is the 125th Carnival of Space; a collection of the best space-related blog posts from the past week.

This week we have entries from:

Next Big Future
Cosmic Ray
Centauri Dreams
Cheap Astronomy
The Chandra Blog
Weirdwarp
AARTScope Blog my new favorite from down under.
Crowlspace
Universe Today
Bad Astronomy
Artsnova
Commercial Space
Telescoper
Simostronomy who?
The Great KSSSM
A Babe in the Universe
Kentucky Space
and from the host, a picture that paints a billion words:  trying to grasp the meaning of one billion thanks to Information is Beautiful.

Messenger Pictures from Mercury


For those astronomy and space enthusiasts that also love LOLCats, here is the largest paw print known to man, from the surface of the planet Mercury.

Photo credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institute of Washington

Uptick in Orionid Meteors This Year?

According to M. Sato and J. I. Watanabe (2007, PASJ 59, L21) the strong Orionid meteor activity of 2006-2008 may be repeated this year. The increased activity present in 2006-2008 is apparently due to dust trails from comet 1P/Halley, ejected in 1400BC and 11BC.  The orbits of these meteoroids are affected by the 1:5 and 1:8 mean-motion resonances with the planet Jupiter. This resonance effect essentially herds the debris into filaments, and the filament responsible for the increased activity in 2006-08 is expected to lie in Earth's path again around October 18-24 this year. With the moon out of the way this week, meteor watchers should be treated to higher than average counts and bright meteors.

The Loneliest Guy at the Star Party

I don't go to star parties very often anymore. Packing up all the gear, telescope, food, clothes and setting off to remote dark sky sites lost its appeal to me somewhere along the way.

Star parties are part camping trip, part observing opportunity and part social event. Anywhere from a few dozen to hundreds of people come together, pitch their tents or park their campers, set up their telescopes in an open field, swap equipment and stories and share the views through their telescopes through the night.

My wife went to one star party with me a long time ago. She doesn't like to be cold, and when it's clear it's usually cold. She doesn't like to go camping much either. Forget raccoons and porta-potties. Her idea of 'roughing it' is staying in a hotel that doesn't have room service.

I tried my best to make her comfortable. We had these brand new camp lounger chairs, I tucked her into a sleeping bag in the lounger, and covered the sleeping bag with a plastic tarp to keep the dew off her and made a little hood for the back of her head. It was August, and I figured she could at least sit back and watch for Perseid meteors. After a short time, I real bright one exploded overhead and I could hear everyone around us who happened to see it oohing and aahing. Coming from Irene's lounger was the distinct, lady-like, unmistakable sound of snoring. I went back to observing variables with the telescope.

My observing program is mostly cataclysmic variables. 9 out of 10 observations I make are 'less than' observations. In other words, I don't see the star, so it's not in outburst tonight, and I record the faintest comparison star I can see in the eyepiece to set an upper limit on the star's brightness, for example <14.9. Then I move on to the next field to see if anything has popped up since the last time I visited there.

As is the custom at star parties, eventually someone comes around to see what you are looking at and asks for a peek in the eyepiece. So I give them a quick primer on cataclysmic variables, show them the chart so they can identify the field and let them have a look. They stare into the eyepiece for a minute and then say, "where is the variable star?" I tell them it's too faint to see and they walk away somewhat disappointed. Or they'll say, "I can identify the star field, but it's not there?" to which I say, "I know, isn't that cool?" As they walk away they warn the next curious spectators, "Don't go over there. He's looking at nothing!"

It takes a special kind of nutty to do what I do. Like I said, I don't go to star parties very often anymore.

R Coronae Borealis Update

In August of 2007, R Coronae Borealis, or 'R Cor Bor' as we variable star enthusiasts call her, began one of its R CrB-type fading episodes. These fadings are what make R CrB type stars interesting and unique. R CrB is normally a 6th magnitude star, easily observed in binoculars. Occasionally, suddenly and totally unpredictably, the star will fade by as much as eight magnitudes, becoming a faint 14th magnitude star requiring a telescope to observe.

These fading episodes are believed to be caused by the star being dimmed by huge amounts of stellar dust and soot, dredged up from within the star and belched out into its outer atmosphere. Typically, the fading happens rather abrubtly, measured in weeks, and recovery back to maximum light can take several months or a year.

This particular fade has taken on new proportions. Not only has it attained the faintest magnitude in the historical record, it has remained at minimum for longer than ever before also. Some of us are beginning to wonder if the star will ever come back to maximum light again.



Above is the light curve showing the last fifteen years of R CrB activity. Several fading episodes can be seen, but none compares in depth or duration compared to this current fade. The unpredictability and rarity of these type stars makes them favorite targets for variable star observers.

R CrB is heading for solar conjunction. It will be interesting to see what happens when she pops up again in the morning sky. I'll keep you updated.

Simostronomy Podcast on 365 Days of Astronomy


Today's episode of 365 Days of Astronomy features a story from Simostronomy. It's all about a simpler time, and a couple kids dreaming of going to the Moon. The Summer We Flew To The Moon is a fun story about what happens when you don't plan for everything before blast-off.

I'd like to dedicate this one to my mom, since it is her birthday today and she was Mission Control for us and our spacecraft in this story. I always wanted to be an astronaut when I grew up. Thanks, Mom, for never insisting I actually grow up!

Carnival of Space #124


The Carnival of Space #124 is hosted this week at We Are All In the Gutter Looking At the Stars. Stories this week feature the Nobel Prize for the invention of the charged coupled device; the newly discovered ring around Saturn; The Andromeda Galaxy in ultra-violet, (definitely do click on the image for a gigantic view of the image!); results from astronomers studying the recent Solar System visitor, Comet Lulin; a nice piece on the annual meteor shower caused by the debris trail from Halley's Comet, mounting your binoculars for easier views; sunspots; some astronomy nostalgia, book reviews and much more.

Head on over to the Carnival and be careful, or you might learn something!

Observatories of the Southwest: A Book Review

To me, and many of my friends, astronomical observatories are sacred, magical places where the mysteries of the universe are revealed to astronomers peering out into space with fantastic telescopes of all imaginable shapes and configurations. The fact that most of the largest, most famous observatories are located on mountain tops in far off places just makes them all that much more mysterious and wonderful.

Thousands of people make pilgrimages to these far off locations each year, to marvel at the state of the art in instrumentation and to learn more about the science being done with these massive machines in their unusual structures.

As it happens, the American Southwest, with its dry air and mountainous regions is home to many of the best observatories in the world. These observatories are the subjects of a new book by Douglas Isbell and Stephen E. Strom called Observatories of the Southwest, A Guide for Curious Skywatchers, published by The University of Arizona Press. If you are planning a trip to one or more of these places in the near future you need to buy this book. If you want to know the history behind any of these magical places, or meet some of the people who work there, or learn about the science being done with these gargantuan collections of glass, steel and electronics—buy this book.

It isn’t just the subjects of this book, the illustrations or the excellent writing that make it a wonderful read. It’s the way the book is organized; part travel guide, part history book, part human interest and part popular science.

Each observatory has its own chapter. The authors guide us through Palomar Observatory, Kitt Peak National Observatory, Lowell Observatory, Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory Very Large Array, the Observatories of Sacramento Peak, McDonald Observatory and the Mount Graham International Observatory.

Each chapter can stand on its own as a perfect travel companion for any trip you decide to plan or take to any of these places. You are provided with the website url, contact phone number and physical address of each place to set up a visit.

Within each chapter you get a history of the planning and construction of the observatory and instruments, and the initial discoveries brought about by the use of the observatories and their telescopes. Many of these interesting stories are full accounts you’ll find hard to locate anywhere else, let alone all in one resource. This was one of my favorite aspects of this book. The stories behind investigating the suitability of each site, planning the construction, raising the money and building these multi-million dollar facilities on top of remote mountains where no roads exist is almost as interesting as the reasons for doing it.

A ‘For the Public’ section gives driving directions, hours of operations a description of the facilities, displays and gift shops and what you are able to view during public tours. Another section in each chapter called ‘For Teachers and Students’ gives useful information on programs available for school age kids, college students and amateur astronomers wanting to do observing or public outreach.

Some of the highlights of this book are the interviews with leading scientists who actually worked at the observatories or used the telescopes to make landmark discoveries in science. For example, Vera Rubin is featured in the chapter on Kitt Peak. She talks about the her work and its place in the story of dark matter, but what is even better are her descriptions of actually working at the observatory and with the staff. Her description of the desert flowers and sunsets from the south ridge of Kitt Peak show how special these places are for more than just the purely scientific reasons. Indeed, it is clear most of the interview subjects held each of their observatories in high regard for many reasons, some of them very non-scientific.

But what sets this book apart from any other travel guide to observatories or historical account of the activities and discoveries at each observatory is the ‘Science Highlight’ at the end of each chapter. This is where all the information is put into the context of how past achievements relate to what we are trying to learn today, what questions are being asked now, and how these instruments and people are working to find the answers. This is the juicy stuff you never get in a three-dollar tour from a research assistant or telescope operator when visiting a major observatory.

So if you are planning a trip to a southwest observatory this year, buy this book. Then you can be that annoying know-it-all person on the tour who answers all the questions before the tour guide can get a word out.

Hubble's Amazing Rescue

PBS sent me an advance copy of the NOVA program 'Hubble's Amazing Rescue' which airs Tuesday, October 13, 2009 at 8PM Eastern time on PBS. At first I thought, "Great, another hour-long show of guys practicing space walks in a swimming pool". I couldn't have been more wrong.

What you get is truly an insider view to the preparation, dedication and innovation required to carry out the most sophisticated set of space walks and tasks ever performed by human beings in space. These astronauts spent two years of their lives preparing to repair and upgrade mankind's favorite telescope for the last time ever. Like Super Bowl contenders, when game day comes you get one chance, that's it.

The stars of the show are undoubtedly the two astronauts who made the space walks and Hubble herself. But like any great team, it takes dozens to hundreds of people to make it all work. I actually enjoyed the underwater practice sessions. We got to see how they made a plan, ran through it underwater, made corrections based on practice experience and revised the plans. The engineers who were designing and redesigning the special tools sometimes worked day and night to get things ready for the next practice session.

I'd never thought much about it before, probably because I didn't realize just how long some of these space walks lasted, but these astronauts spend up to eight hours floating around in those suits and you can't take a ham sandwich with you for lunch. There are no potty breaks either. All this reminded me of one of my favorite captions of all time.

In space you wear some mighty thick, clumsy gloves. Yet these people were tasked with removing dozens and dozens of little screws without dropping a single one. A loose screw inside the space telescope would be a disaster.

Speaking of disasters, just going up in the space shuttle takes a special kind of person. You have a one in seventy chance of not coming back.

The movie takes us through the two year preparation. We get to know these brave astronauts and many of the ground team. Finally, launch day comes and everyone is ready to go. Once in space, the shuttle crew wastes no time grabbing Hubble and gets down to business. Seeing the giant space telescope sitting in the cargo bay of the shuttle always surprises me. The Hubble Space Telescope is gigantic! I don't know why, but I never think of it as being that huge. After all, it's a satellite right?

As with all the best laid plans of men, not everything goes off without a hitch. Obviously, we are beginning to see the results of this servicing mission in new images from Hubble, so you know they completed the job and made it back home safely; but there are some suspenseful moments in the mission that I will not spoil for you. Watch the movie Tuesday, or make sure you record it on your DVR. You won't be sorry. It's an amazing story about amazing people doing amazing things to keep our most amazing telescope ever going for a few more amazing years. Two big thumbs up from the Simostronomer.

Carnival of Space #123

This week's Carnival of Space has a lot to offer, but my favorites from this week were the blogs about the Messenger spacecraft flyby of Mercury. The images coming back to us are in a word- spectacular.

AstroInfo's blog and the Visual Astronomy blog highlighted many of the same images, but they are so cool I enjoyed them both times.

Slacker Astronomy Podcast--Polaris

The latest Slacker Astronomy podcast hit the Internet yesterday. This one was a lot of fun!

The main topic of discussion is Polaris, the North Star. We talk about the fact that it is a variable star (of course!), some of the mythology surrounding it, and I conduct an interview with Dr. Ed Guinan (shown right) of Villanova University about research he and his graduate student, Scott Engle, are doing on this interesting, but difficult to study star.

So click on over to Slacker Astronomy and check out the North Star Special.