All posts by mjh

Mark Justice Hinton lives in New Mexico and loves the Four Corners region, as well as the Rocky Mountains. Write him at chaco@mjhinton.com.

March’s full moon is called Crow Moon, among others [updated 8pm]

the Sap, Snow Crust, or Wind Moon. (It’ll be the Wind Moon in New Mexico.)

Look for Mars near the moon tonight. [from Kevin McKeown, abqjournal]

[update 8:00pm]

The Sky This Week, 2012 March 6-13 — Naval Oceanography Portal

The Moon brightens the evening and late night sky this week, with Full Moon occurring on the 8th at 4:39 am Eastern Standard Time. This month’s Full Moon goes by many names from many cultures, all of which are symbolic of the changing season: Worm Moon, Crow Moon, Sap Moon, and Crust Moon are the most common examples.

The Sky This Week, 2012 March 6-13 — Naval Oceanography Portal

It blows

The average wind speed for Albuquerque in March is 9.8mph. Winds peak in April with an average speed of 10.6mph. By May, they begin to tapper with an average of 10.3mph.

Adjusting the calendar from 11 minutes to 26 seconds

I can’t quite accept that Julius Caesar or Pope Gregory figured out these adjustments themselves. What forgotten chronologists did?

The Sky This Week, 2012 February 28 – March 6 — Naval Oceanography Portal

As you undoubtedly know, February 29th makes its (almost) once-every-four-year appearance this week, prompting many people to ponder "Why?" The answer lies in our attempt to carve up the year into an integral number of days. The system of leap years as we know it was first instituted by Julius Caesar c. 46BCE. In the Julian Calendar a leap year occurred every four years, giving a mean duration of a calendar year of 365.25 days over a four-year cycle. The Earth’s so-called "Tropical Year" (the time it takes between two successive occurrences of the Vernal Equinox) is 365.2422 years, thus the mean Julian Calendar year exceeded the Tropical Year in length by some 11 minutes. This had the effect of displacing the calendar date of the Equinox by one day every 128 years. By 1582 the cumulative difference between the Julian Calendar and the Equinox was some 10 days (which bollixed up the computation of the date of Easter), prompting Pope Gregory XIII to promote a reform to the calendar which still bears his name. In the Gregorian Calendar leap years occur every four years except in years ending in "00" (e.g. 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, etc.) However, years ending in "00" that are evenly divisible by 400 (e.g. 1600, 2000, 2400) *are* leap years, which yields 97 leap years in a 400-year cycle. Dividing 97/400 = 0.2425, thus the mean duration of a Gregorian year is 365.2425 days, which is only 26 seconds longer than the Tropical Year. This is the system which has been more or less "universally" adopted.

The Sky This Week, 2012 February 28 – March 6 — Naval Oceanography Portal

Incredible accuracy for adjustments made 430 years ago.

I can’t quite reconcile the preceding with a different observation:

With no other correction, the vernal equinox would occur, on average, about 5 minutes earlier each year. — Kevin McKeown

“Nation’s Urban Forests Are Losing Ground” and Albuquerque is among the worst!

Nation’s Urban Forests Are Losing Ground: Green Spaces Turning Brown in Cities | Living Green Magazine

National results indicate that tree cover in urban areas of the United States is declining at a rate of about 4 million trees per year, according to a new U.S. Forest Service study.

Tree cover in 17 of the 20 cities analyzed in the study declined while 16 cities saw increases in impervious cover, which includes pavement and rooftops. Land that lost trees was for the most part converted to either grass or ground cover, impervious cover or bare soil.

Of the 20 cities analyzed, the greatest percentage of annual loss in tree cover occurred in New Orleans, Houston and Albuquerque. Researchers expected to find a dramatic loss of trees in New Orleans and said that it is most likely due to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Tree cover ranged from a high of 53.9 percent in Atlanta to a low of 9.6 percent in Denver while total impervious cover varied from 61.1 percent in New York City to 17.7 percent in Nashville. Cities with the greatest annual increase in impervious cover were Los Angeles, Houston and Albuquerque.

The study was published recently in Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, and is available at http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1618866711000999

“Our urban forests are under stress, and it will take all of us working together to improve the health of these crucial green spaces,” said U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell.  “Community organizations and municipal planners can use i-Tree to analyze their own tree cover, and determine the best species and planting spots in their neighborhoods. It’s not too late to restore our urban forests – the time is now to turn this around.”

Nation’s Urban Forests Are Losing Ground: Green Spaces Turning Brown in Cities | Living Green Magazine

The Moon, Venus, and Jupiter align

Cold and Spellbinding: An Alignment of Planets in the Sunset Sky – NASA Science

A special night to look is Saturday, Feb. 25th, when the crescent Moon moves in to form a slender heavenly triangle with Venus, Jupiter and the Moon as vertices (sky map).  One night later, on Sunday, Feb. 26th, it happens again (sky map). This arrangement will be visible all around the world, from city and countryside alike.

Cold and Spellbinding: An Alignment of Planets in the Sunset Sky – NASA Science

Photos of Deep Space

Many of the photographs in this entry are from APOD, Astronomy Photo of the Day [recommended] or the NASA Image of the Day [also recommended].

APOD 2012 January 9 – Facing NGC 6946

2012 January 9
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Facing NGC 6946
Composite Image Data – Subaru Telescope (NAOJ) and Robert Gendler; Processing – Robert Gendler

APOD 2012 January 7 – Grand Spiral Galaxy NGC 1232

2012 January 7
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Grand Spiral Galaxy NGC 1232
Image Credit: FORS, 8.2-meter VLT Antu, ESO

APOD 2011 November 26 – Pelican Nebula Close Up

2011 November 26
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Pelican Nebula Close-up
Image Credit & Copyright: Martin Pugh

APOD 2011 November 13 – The Butterfly Nebula from Hubble

2011 November 13
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The Butterfly Nebula from Hubble
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble SM4 ERO Team

APOD 2011 October 29 – Spiral Galaxy NGC 3370 from Hubble

2011 October 29
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Spiral Galaxy NGC 3370 from Hubble
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble Heritage (STScI/AURA); Acknowledgement: A. Reiss et al. (JHU)

APOD 2011 October 25 – IC 1805 The Heart Nebula in HDR

2011 October 25
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IC 1805: The Heart Nebula in HDR
Image Credit & Copyright: Daniel Verloop (Beursacademie)

APOD 2011 September 22 – Arp 272

2011 September 22
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Arp 272
Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, ESA, NASA; Processing Martin Pugh

APOD 2011 September 21 – Pleiades Deep Field

2011 September 21
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Pleiades Deep Field
Image Credit & Copyright: Stanislav Volskiy

Photos of the Moon

Many of the photographs in this entry are from APOD, Astronomy Photo of the Day [recommended] or the NASA Image of the Day [also recommended].

APOD 2011 November 18 – A Colorful Side of the Moon

2011 November 18
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A Colorful Side of the Moon
Credit: NASA / GSFC / DLR / Arizona State Univ. / Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter

Explanation: This colorful topographical map of the Moon is centered on the lunar farside, the side not seen from planet Earth.

APOD 2011 December 24 – Eclipsed Moon in the Morning

2011 December 24
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Eclipsed Moon in the Morning
Image Credit & Copyright: Roger N. Clark

APOD 2011 December 16 – Red Moon Rising

2011 December 16
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Red Moon Rising
Image Credit & Copyright: Oshin Zakarian (TWAN)

APOD 2011 November 27 – Shuttle Plume Shadow Points to the Moon

2011 November 27
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Shuttle Plume Shadow Points to the Moon
Image Credit: Pat McCracken, NASA

APOD 2011 December 29 – Conjunction at Sunset

2011 December 29
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Conjunction at Sunset
Image Credit & Copyright: Stefano De Rosa

Two Earth Satellites Viewed From Houston  Image of the Day

Two Earth Satellites Viewed From Houston

acquired January 4, 2012download large image (139 KB, JPEG, 1416×944)

This photograph taken from Houston, Texas, juxtaposes Earth’s oldest satellite with one of its youngest.

Another cross-quarter day

The Sky This Week, 2012 January 31 – February 7 — Naval Oceanography Portal

[Groundhog Day is] from a tradition brought over to America by German immigrants. Loosely based on the old pagan celebration of Imbolc, it was believed that if a hibernating animal awoke and saw its shadow there would be six more weeks of winter. No shadow indicated an early spring. Imbolc and its derivatives mark one of the so-called "cross-quarter" days in the ancient seasonal calendar, marking the mid-point of astronomical winter. Halloween is another one of these cross-quarter days that are still widely observed here in the New World, continuing traditions that date back millennia in time.

The Sky This Week, 2012 January 31 – February 7 — Naval Oceanography Portal

Photos of the Earth

Many of the photographs in this entry and the next few are from APOD, Astronomy Photo of the Day [recommended] or the NASA Image of the Day [also recommended].

Regarding this first image which got a lot of attention: it’s not a photograph, per se. It’s a rendering of data. Mind blowing in more than one way.

Viral Image The Biggest and Bluest Marble – Kara Swisher – Media – AllThingsD

Enjoy:

(Image Credit: NASA/NOAA/GSFC/Suomi NPP/VIIRS/Norman Kuring)

APOD 2012 January 3 – A Full Sky Aurora Over Norway

2012 January 3
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A Full Sky Aurora Over Norway
Image Credit & Copyright: Sebastian Voltmer

APOD 2011 October 28 – October Skylights

2011 October 28
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October Skylights
Image Credit & Copyright: Malcolm Park

Fire in the Sky and on the Ground  Image of the Day

Fire in the Sky and on the Ground

acquired September 17, 2011

Amazing Time-lapse Video of Auroras as Seen From the ISS [Video] – How-To Geek

APOD 2012 January 1 – To Fly Free in Space

2012 January 1
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To Fly Free in Space
STS-41B, NASA

Amazing Space Photo From Twitter – Peter Kafka – Social – AllThingsD

Here’s one NASA’s Ron Garan beamed to earth yesterday from his perch in the International Space Station.

His caption: “This is what the Moon looked like 16 times today #FromSpace We had simultaneous sunsets + moonsets”

APOD 2011 November 14 – Waterfall, Moonbow, and Aurora from Iceland

2011 November 14
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Waterfall, Moonbow, and Aurora from Iceland
Image Credit & Copyright: Stephane Vetter (Nuits sacrees)

The long shadow of Mt. Rainier  Bad Astronomy  Discover Magazine

Here in Boulder we get magnificent sunsets, especially in the summer when the clouds interplay with the mountains to the west. But I have never seen anything like this: the shadow of Washington state’s Mt. Rainier cast along the clouds at sunrise:

That’s amazing. Mt. Rainier is a volcano, climbing to a height of over 14,000 feet (4300 meters).

Love and Joy for the New Year  Image of the Day

Love and Joy for the New Year

acquired December 21, 2011download large image (341 KB, JPEG, 2128×1416)

In November and December 2011, professional and amateur astronomers reveled in observing a sun-grazing comet that dove close to the Sun and survived for a return flight back to the outer solar system. Astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) enjoyed their own surreal view of the comet as it appeared on Earth’s horizon on the day of the solstice.

ISS Commander Dan Burbank captured a series of digital photographs of Comet Lovejoy on December 21, 2011, as it rose above Earth’s limb

Nickel Cobalt


This up to 1000 years old snow has metamorphosed into highly pressurized  glacier ice that contains almost no air bubbles. Thus it absorbs the  visible light despite the scattered shortest blue fraction, giving it  its distinct deep blue waved appearance. This cavity in the glacier ice  formed as a result of a glacial mill, or moulin.
Rain and meltwater on  the glacier surface is channelled into streams that enter the glacier at  crevices. The waterfall melts a hole into the glacier while the ponded  water drains towards lower elevations by forming long ice caves with an  outlet at the terminus of the glacier. The fine grained sediments in the  water along with wind blown sediments cause the frozen meltwater stream  to appear in a muddy colour while the top of the cave exhibits the deep  blue colour.
Due to the fast movement of the glacier of about 1 m per  day over uneven terrain this ice cave cracked up at its end into a deep  vertical crevice, called cerrac. This causes the indirect daylight to  enter the ice cave from both ends resulting in homogeneous lighting of  the ice tunnel.

This up to 1000 years old snow has metamorphosed into highly pressurized glacier ice that contains almost no air bubbles. Thus it absorbs the visible light despite the scattered shortest blue fraction, giving it its distinct deep blue waved appearance. This cavity in the glacier ice formed as a result of a glacial mill, or moulin.

The Big Picture from The Boston Globe [recommended]

Each week, The Big Picture features one long page full of photos of a current event. These photos are always very professional and gorgeous, appearing in a large format. My one complaint is that scrolling inevitably fails to line most of the photos up correctly; I wish there were a better mechanism for moving between photos.

2012 Marking the New Year – The Big Picture – Boston.com

Around the world people celebrated with fireworks, kisses, blessings, gatherings, cheers, watching the sunrise and plunges into icy bodies of water to welcome in a new year. Here’s a look back at how some of them marked the transition. — Lloyd Young (41 photos total)

Fireworks explode in the sky over Bucharest, Romania, at midnight, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012, during street celebrations of the new year. Large crowds gathered downtown Romania’s capital taking advantage of the dry weather to attend the celebrations. (Vadim Ghirda/Associated Press)

The Year in Pictures Part I – The Big Picture – Boston.com

(36 photos total)

A wave caused by a tsunami flows into the city of Miyako from the Heigawa estuary in Iwate Prefecture after a magnitude 8.9 earthquake struck Japan March 11, 2011. (Mainichi Shimbun /Reuters)

The year in Pictures Part II – The Big Picture – Boston.com

(45 photos total)

A cloud of ash billowing from Puyehue volcano near Osorno in southern Chile, 870 km south of Santiago, on June 5. Puyehue volcano erupted for the first time in half a century on June 4, 2011, prompting evacuations for 3,500 people as it sent a cloud of ash that reached Argentina. The National Service of Geology and Mining said the explosion that sparked the eruption also produced a column of gas 10 kilometers (six miles) high, hours after warning of strong seismic activity in the area. (Claudio Santana/AFP/Getty Images) )

The Year in Pictures Part III – The Big Picture – Boston.com

(51 photos total)

A defaced portrait of fugitive Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi in Tripoli on Sept. 1, 2011 as the fallen strongman vowed again not to surrender in a message broadcast on the 42nd anniversary of the coup which brought him to power. (Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty Images)