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Friday, July 31, 2015

Barren Mercury!

Mercury is the closest and the smallest planet in the Solar System. From Mercury the sun appears three times as large as it is viewed from earth. I believe that it is easy to understand how hot the surface of planet Mercury is because it is the closest planet to the sun. Temperature can rise up to 430 degrees Celsius and during night, temperature drops to -170 degrees Celsius as the planet does not have an atmosphere to retain the heat. 

Mercury can be observed in the sky from Earth and it makes an indirect appearance 13 times a century. We can observe a special event known as a transit, where Mercury pass across the face of the sun. The first two transits of the 21st century occurred on May 7, 2003 and November 8, 2006. The next one will occur on May 9, 2016. (Isn't it next year???! I'm excited!) 

Mercury is one of the fastest planets as it travels through space nearly 50 km per second which is the reason Mercury completes an year or a revolution in just 88 days. The surface of Mercury resembles to the Earth's moon, because of its barren surface. 

The Caloris Basin which is a result of an asteroid impact is about 1300 km in diameter. Mercury shrank in radius about 1 - 2 km as the planet cooled down after its formation. It is the second densest planet of the solar system.



Tuesday, June 2, 2015

The Solar System


The sun and its family of planets which is our immediate neighborhood is known as the solar system. The planets' moons or their natural satellites, comets, asteroids and meteoroids are all included in the solar system. Everything inside the solar system is held together with the help of the sun's gravity.

There are 8 planets in the solar system. Actually there were 9 but Pluto is not now included as a planet because of several reasons. (I will mention them later in another post).

The Inner Planets



    Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars are considered as inner planets because they lie on the inner side of the asteroid belt which orbit the sun. The planets formed about 4.6 billion years ago and all these inner planets were formed from dust particles and they ended up being rocky planets.

Outer Planets 

Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are considered as outer planets as they are located outside the asteroid belt. They are also known as gas giants.

Models of the Solar System



Above is a picture of the heliocentric model which was explained by Sir Nicholas Copernicus. Later Johannes Kepler improved this model. 

Early astronomers believed that the sun and all the other planets revolved around the Earth. This concept is known as the geocentric model of the solar system. The heliocentric model which placed the sun at the centre was first introduced by Aristarchus of Samos and was later explained and developed by Sir Nicholas Copernicus. Galileo Galilee's observations with his newly made telescope strongly supported the heliocentric model.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Our Place in the Universe : The Milky Way

Our solar system is located within a galaxy known as the Milky Way. The Milky Way appears as a dim glowing band in the night sky in which the naked eye cannot distinguish individual stars. It appears like that because its disk shaped structure is viewed from within. In 1610, Galileo Galilei resolved the band of light into individual stars. 
The Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy and there are about 100 - 400 billion stars in the Milky Way and astronomers believe there are about 100 billion planets in it too. A disk of gas and dust known as the interstellar medium fills the space between the stars. Our solar system is located about 27 000 light years away from the Galactic Centre of the Milky Way. At the very centre is Sagittarius A*, and intense radio source, which is believed to be a supermassive black hole.

It is believed that much of the mass of the Milky Way does not emit or absorb electromagnetic radiation. This mass is known as "dark matter".

The Milky Way is a aprt of the Local Group which is a part of the Laniakea or the Local Supercluster.

Background light or stray light from the moon can greatly reduce the visibility of the Milky Way. It is very difficult to view the Milky Way from a city or a town, but it can be easily observed from a rural area. 

When we observe from the Earth, the visible region of the Milky Way occupies an area in the sky which consists of 30 constellations. The centre of the Milky Way is where the galaxy is the brightest, is located in the direction of the constellation Sagittarius.

The Milky Way which is the second largest galaxy in the Local Group is approximately 100,000 light years across and approximately 1000 light years thick. Most of the mass of the Milky Way appears to be dark matter, which only interacts in a gravitational way with other matter.


Monday, April 13, 2015

The Life Cycle of Stars





Wonderful video by the Institute of Physics. I love the explanation!

Sunday, April 12, 2015

The death of the universe - Renée Hlozek

14 Most Beautiful Galaxies In the Universe!

Black Holes: NO ESCAPE!




The Largest Galaxy in the Universe: IC 1101





Video by Deep Astronomy

Galaxies

A galaxy is a collection of stars, gas, dust and dark matter bound together by gravity. The word galaxy is derived from a Greek word "galaxias". Astronomers believe that there are about 170 billion galaxies in the observable universe. 

Galaxies differ enormously, yet they can be categorized according to their shape. There are spiral, elliptical, barred spiral or irregular shaped galaxies in the universe. Spiral galaxies like the Pinwheel Galaxy and the NGC 4414 galaxy consists of a flat rotating disc and a central bulge. The disc contains stars, gas and dust while the term bulge is used for a central concentration of stars in the galaxy. The spiral galaxies are so called due to the presence of spiral arms that extend from the centre to the disk. New stars are formed in the spiral arms hence they are brighter than the surrounding disk. According to Wikipedia, spiral galaxies have the following characteristics. 

  • A flat rotating disc of stars
  • A central bulge of older stars
  • A near- spherical halo of stars
  • A supermassive black hole at the centre .  (Sagittarius A* in the Milky Way)
  • A near - spherical dark matter halo


 
Pinwheel Galaxy

Our own galaxy, Milky Way has proven to be a barred spiral galaxy recently. In barred spiral galaxies, spiral arms wind out from a central bar. The galaxy NGC 1300 is also another example for this type of galaxy.


Milky Way galaxy
Elliptical galaxies are shaped like a ball or an egg and they're mostly made up of old stars. They don't have much star formation activity within them. Some examples for this type of galaxies are M87, M32 and IC 1101, which is one of the largest galaxies in the observable universe.

IC 1101 galaxy : an elliptical galaxy
Irregular galaxies have no specific regular shape and they contain lots of gas and dust so most of them are helpful for the formation of new stars.

Our milky way is a part of a galaxy group known as the Local Group. A group of galaxies is the smallest collection of galaxies. Normally, galaxy groups don't contain more than 50 galaxies and they are the most common structures of galaxies in the universe. I will state more about group of galaxies later in my other posts.

The Laniakea Supercluster or the Local Supercluster is where the Local Group belongs to. Superclusters are very large structures which contain large groups of galaxy clusters or groups. 

The Local Supercluster