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Volume 31—Number 10 October 2014 Roanoke Valley Astronomical Society Amateur Astronomy News and Views In Southwestern Virginia RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 1 of 14 Following a day of clouds and rain, Saturday, September 20 th dawned to a nearly all-blue sky. The forecast for good weather for the Society’s 2014 picnic and star party was on its way to becoming a reality! A total of 34 RVAS and family members turned out for our annual bash, our third consecutive year for holding the event at the Claytor Nature Study Center, about (Picnic Connued on page 7) Annual RVAS Picnic and Star Party Fine Weather Rewards Picnickers 2014’s Picnickers: (kneeling, left to right) Noah Abdelhadi and Ben, Randy, Nico and Vivian Sowden; (front row) Maxine Fraade, Bev Suhr, Carolyn Baratta, Mark Hodges, Paul Caffrey, Robin Jones and Remona and Dave Thomas; (second row) Kim Wade, George Blanar, Jeff Suhr, Frank Baratta, Mary Erickson, Rand Bowden, Sharon Stinnette, Michael Good, Genevieve and John Goss, Emily Hamilton and Josh Jones; (back row) Chris Wade, Meighan and Mark Erickson, Clark Thomas, Fred Davis, Nasser and Kasey Abdelhadi, Tom Skelly and Kevin Hamilton. Photo by Dave Thomas By Frank Baratta

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Page 1: Fine Weather Rewards Picnickers · 2014-10-04 · RVAS members who bring telescopes have free admission. The event begins at 5 p.m. but telescopes won’t be needed until after the

Volume 31—Number 10 October 2014

Roanoke Valley Astronomical

Society Amateur Astronomy News and Views

In Southwestern Virginia

RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 1 of 14

Following a day of clouds and rain, Saturday, September

20th dawned to a nearly all-blue sky. The forecast for

good weather for the Society’s 2014 picnic and star

party was on its way to becoming a reality!

A total of 34 RVAS and family members turned out for

our annual bash, our third consecutive year for holding

the event at the Claytor Nature Study Center, about

(Picnic Continued on page 7)

Annual RVAS Picnic and Star Party

Fine Weather Rewards Picnickers

2014’s Picnickers: (kneeling, left to right) Noah Abdelhadi and Ben, Randy, Nico and Vivian Sowden; (front row) Maxine Fraade,

Bev Suhr, Carolyn Baratta, Mark Hodges, Paul Caffrey, Robin Jones and Remona and Dave Thomas; (second row) Kim Wade,

George Blanar, Jeff Suhr, Frank Baratta, Mary Erickson, Rand Bowden, Sharon Stinnette, Michael Good, Genevieve and John

Goss, Emily Hamilton and Josh Jones; (back row) Chris Wade, Meighan and Mark Erickson, Clark Thomas, Fred Davis, Nasser

and Kasey Abdelhadi, Tom Skelly and Kevin Hamilton.

Photo by Dave Thomas

By Frank Baratta

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 2 of 14

The Roanoke Valley Astronomical Society is a membership organization of amateur astronomers dedicated to the pursuit of observational and photographic astronomical activities. Meetings are held at 7:30 p.m. on the third Monday of each month. See calendar on last page of news-

letter for location. Meetings are open to the public. Observing sessions are held one or two weekends a month at a dark-sky site. Yearly dues are: Individual, $20.00; Senior Individual, $18.00; Family, $25.00; Senior Family, $22.00; Student, $10.00. Articles, quotes, etc. published in the

newsletter do not necessarily reflect the views of the RVAS or its editor.

Officers/Executive Committee/Editor/Webmaster Michael Good, President ([email protected] )

Rand Bowden, Vice President ([email protected]) Dan Chrisman, Secretary ([email protected])

Jeff Suhr, Treasurer ([email protected]) Carol Mesimer, Member at Large ([email protected])

Frank Baratta, Immediate Past President ([email protected]) Michael Good, Past President ([email protected])

David E. Thomas, RVAS Newsletter Editor ([email protected])

Roger Pommerenke & David E. Thomas, Webmaster ([email protected])

RVAS web page: http://rvasclub.org

October’s the time for telescopes and wine!

October is a grand month for observing with its clearer skies and earlier sunsets. Two opportunities allow RVAS

members to show off their telescopes while interacting with the public in fun settings.

1. Friday October 3. Virginia Mountain Vineyards holds its annual event, “Wine, Moon, and Stars” at their

winery just north of Fincastle. RVAS members who bring telescopes have free admission. The event begins at

6:00 p.m. The sun sets at 6:58 with Saturn becoming visible just past 7:30. The moon will be near first quarter

and can be viewed from 6 p.m until the event ends about 9:00. From past experiences, wine drinkers love viewing

the moon!

2. Saturday October 11. Blue Ridge Vineyards between Buchanan and Eagle Rock just off highway 43 is having

a musical wine tasting with the Star City Swag band. RVAS members who bring telescopes have free admission.

The event begins at 5 p.m. but telescopes won’t be needed until after the sun sets about 6:50. Saturn is sinking

lower in the southwest but is still visible from 7:30 p.m. until, perhaps, 8 p.m. The moon will not rise until 9:15,

allowing stargazers to see the glorious southern Milky Way with its many nebulae, open star clusters, and globu-

lar star clusters.

Please let John Goss ([email protected]; 966-4606) know if you would like to join the fun!

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 3 of 14

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array

(ALMA) is a partnership of North America, Europe, and

East Asia, in cooperation with the Republic of Chile, and

is the largest ground-based global astronomy endeavor

in history.

Composed of 66 high-precision antennas and located on

an excellent site at 16,500-feet elevation on the

Chajnantor plateau in northern Chile, ALMA is delivering

to astronomers orders of magnitude improvements in

sensitivity, frequency coverage, and resolution for milli-

meter and submillimeter imaging and spectra, impacting

virtually every field of astrophysics and opening multi-

ple new scientific frontiers.

ALMA’s capabilities span a key part of the electromag-

netic spectrum for observing the first stars and galax-

ies, directly imaging planet formation, studying super-

massive black holes in galaxies, and much more.

This talk will discuss ALMA’s origins and history, its

state-of-the-art technical capabilities, and its primary

scientific goals. Innovative aspects of its design, con-

struction, and operations will be highlighted, including

recent compelling science results and the key roles of

the North American ALMA Science Center in Virginia

and the Joint ALMA Observatory in Chile.

October’s Presentation

The ALMA:

New Window on Our Cosmic Origins

Mark T. Adams

ALMA Operations Support Facility situated at 2,900

meters in Chile.

Photo: ALMA (ESO / NAOJ / NRAO), W. Garnier

Acknowledgement: General Dynamics C4 Systems

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 4 of 14

Mark Adams is a professional astronomer who

works at the National Radio Astronomy Observato-

ry (NRAO) in Charlottesville, Virginia, where he

leads the Observatory’s Communications Office.

Mark was born in Baltimore and was raised in Mar-

yland and Pennsylvania. He earned an undergradu-

ate astronomy degree (B.S.) from the Pennsylvania

State University. At the University of Arizona, he

earned his Ph.D. in Astronomy in 1981 (thesis dis-

sertation: “An Observational Study of Low-Mass

Star Formation in NGC 2264”).

After 13 years working in the defense industry in

Florida, Mark returned to astronomy in 1994 as the

Site Director for the University of Texas -

McDonald Observatory in the Davis Mountains of

far west Texas. Mark moved to Charlottesville and

the NRAO in January 2004. He currently leads in-

ternal and external communications for the NRAO,

including outreach to the US and international sci-

entific communities. Mark’s scientific interests

range from the early stages of stellar evolution to

meteors. He has written numerous professional and

popular articles on astronomy and natural history,

and a book, Chasing Birds across Texas: A Birding

Big Year (Texas A&M University Press, 2003).

Upcoming Speaker

Mark T. Adams, Ph.D.

Cone, Fox Fur and Snowflake Nebulae in Infrared

Spitzer Image of NGC 2264.

Photo by SIRTF/NASA/ESA.

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 5 of 14

The 2013 meeting of the Mid East Region of the Astro-

nomical League (MERAL) was held at the Green Bank

Star Quest. The Library Loaner Telescope Program was

described and a drawing was held for an Orion 4.5 inch

StarBlast Dobsonian Telescope and an 8-24 mm zoom

Celestron eyepiece. The winner was to give the tele-

scope and eyepiece to his or her club to modify and do-

nate to the local library system.

The lucky winner was the RVAS's own Vipin Trivedi!

In August 2014, Dan Chrisman, Frank Baratta, and

John Goss devoted an afternoon to modifying the tele-

scope to make it easier to use and to make it library

ready. The manual later was revised to reflect the

scope's alterations and to include new sections on iden-

tifying planets.

On Friday September 19, John Goss presented the li-

brary telescope to Michael Meise and Diana Rosapepe

of the South County branch of Roanoke City Libraries.

They aim to have it catalogued and entered into the

system by the end of September so patrons can begin

checking it out as they do books.

This marks the third Library Telescope in the Roanoke

area, with the first one being donated by the RVAS to

the Blue Ridge Library in June 2012 and the second

being donated by an individual to the Williamson Road

Library in August 2014. That particular loaner scope

will be presented to the public on October 7.

Thank you, Vipin Trivedi for making the South County

telescope possible!

RVAS donates telescope to

the South County Library

By John Goss

South County Telescope

Photo by John Goss

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 6 of 14

The Sun in Ha, with Prominences

( Comparing the size of the earth in relation to the Solar Disc and a Solar Prominence )

Member Observations

Photos of the Solar disc and Frank Baratta adjusting the RVAS Solar telescope, by Dave Thomas

Solar disc photo taken through the eyepiece of the Solar scope. Earth from space photo by NASA

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 7 of 14

five miles northwest of Bedford. As is always the case,

there was no lack of food, fun and fellowship.

Our event began, technically, at 3:00 p.m., but picnick-

ers arrived from that time until shortly before the pic-

nic dinner began at about 5:00 p.m. Mark Hodges, who

had been unable to attend last year due to his work

schedule, performed flawlessly as our Grille Chef Du

jour.

While setting up and preparing for dinner, we also set

up the club’s Coronado Solar scope for views of the late

-September sun before it dipped below the treetops.

At first the sun seemed rather inactive, but soon a

number of solar prominences were seen, including one

huge outburst that appeared like a wall of flame at

about one o’clock on the edge of the solar disk.

With Mark ensuring that everyone had all the burgers

and hot dogs they desired, the group enjoyed the vari-

ous dishes, salads, desserts and other edibles everyone

had brought. So many delectable items graced the ta-

ble, it’s hard to single out any, but it wouldn’t be unfair

to commend RVAS Vice President Rand Bowden for the

“Trifle” dessert—glass pedestal bowl and all—that he

made and contributed for our eating pleasure!

Around 6:00 or so, dinner was winding down and it was

time for the door prize segment of our day. RVAS

President Michael Good gathered us together and hand-

ed out the door prize tickets, and the drawings began.

A dozen prizes were given away, ranging from a free

2015 Astronomical Calendar, the over-sized, annual vol-

ume by Guy Ottewell, to the ever popular RVAS mug.

Congratulations to the following winners:

Dave Thomas – Astronomical Calendar

Fred Davis – Free RVAS Membership

Randy Sowden – Free RVAS Membership

Emily Hamilton – “Curiosity” (book)

Mary Erickson – “Destination Mars” (book)

Josh Jones – “The Celestial Sampler” (book)

Vivian Sowden – “The Planets” (book)

Carolyn Baratta – “Starry Night” (book)

Chris Wade – Deep Space Mysteries Calendar Kim Wade – Deep Space Mysteries Calendar *

Robin Jones – RVAS Mug *

Paul Caffrey – RVAS Mug

(* Kim Wade and Robin Jones traded prizes with each

other, since Chris Wade had also won one of the wall

calendars.)

Following the drawings, Michael made several announce-

ments and spoke to the group about the many outreach

requests that had been received by the club, only a few

of which we are currently able to satisfy. He also

brought everyone up to date regarding our Library

Loaner Telescope (LiTel) program. John Goss, Dan

Chrisman and Frank Baratta had gotten together on

August 11th to outfit the scope won for the club by Vipin

Trivedi. Dr. Trivedi had entered our club’s name in the

drawing held by the Mid-East Region of the Astronomi-

cal League (MERAL) at its meeting during the 2013

Green Bank Star Quest. This scope becomes the third

now put into service at area libraries, in this case at

Roanoke County’s South County branch. The others are

located at the Botetourt County Library in Blue Ridge

and the Roanoke City Library Williamson Road branch.

The latter telescope was actually purchased by the li-

brary and outfitted by John. All are loaned to patrons

just like books, and are in high demand. We will contin-

ue preparing telescopes, and members interested in par-

ticipating can contact Michael at presi-

[email protected] for more information.

(Picnic Continued from page 1)

(Picnic Continued on page 8)

RVAS President Michael Good jests with Paul Caffrey, who had

just added another club mug to his collection.

Photo by Frank Baratta

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 8 of 14

Michael then called on Frank to engage the group in a

“Name the Constellation” game, which could be played

for a prize or just for fun. Everyone playing received a

map of the constellations visible this evening and a

sheet listing the constellation names, the goal being to

match each numbered star pattern with its name.

Those willing to reveal how many they identified could

compete for the prize. The players were given 5

minutes to name as many patterns as possible. When

time was called, Frank led the group through the an-

swers. The top scorer—surprise, surprise—was Mark

Hodges, who, along with being the Science Museum of

Western Virginia’s chief technician, has long been its

planetarium operator! His prize was a NASA DVD on

the New Horizons spacecraft scheduled to arrive at

Pluto in July 2015. Congratulations, Mark!

The time had arrived to clean up what remained on our

dinner tables. While that proceeded, Clark Thomas

(16” truss Dobsonian), Fred Davis and Sharon Stin-

nette (6” refractor), Josh and Robin Jones (8” Dob-

sonian) and Mark Hodges (11” SCT) began setting up

their scopes; meanwhile, Michael Good set up his tripod

-mounted 11x80 binoculars. As dusk neared, Saturn and

Mars could be seen approaching, and soon dipping below,

the treetops in the southwest.

This night, full darkness would arrive at about 8:45

p.m., but well before then it became apparent that sig-

nificant dewing was in store for the scopes. Early on,

this began to affect Mark, who, unfortunately, had left

his dew shield at home. Dewing also held Clark back;

for quite a while he kept his scope pointed horizontally

to avoid collecting moisture on his optics. Fred and

Sharon and Robin and Josh were able to continue using

their scopes to enjoy the night. Much of the southern

half of the sky from the observing field adjacent to the

Center’s picnic pavilion suffers from skyglow from near-

by Bedford, but the northern half of the sky is quite

nice. However, there’s not a whole lot you can do once

dew begins to collect. Still, considering the poor quality

of the weather we’ve been experiencing, just being out

under a mostly clear sky for a while is not to be under-

valued.

By about 9:15 most everyone had packed it in for the

night. Sharon had the key for the education and re-

search building; she and Fred and Michael remained as

the last scopes were packed away. Shortly after 9:30,

they too departed for the evening.

Thanks to Guy Ottewell and John Goss for providing

three of our door prizes. And thanks, of course, to Mi-

chael, Sharon and everyone who planned and attended

our 2014 event. It was great fun!

(Picnic Continued from page 7)

Mark Hodges, “Griller In-Chief”.

Photo by Dave Thomas

RVAS President Michael Good sets up his 11x80 binoculars

Photo by Dave Thomas

Picnic Photos

(Photos Continued on page 9)

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Good food and conversation

Photo by John Goss

(Photos Continued from page 8) More Photos

(Photos Continued on page 10)

RVAS President Michael Good plays the “Birdiee Golf” Game

Photo by John Goss

Delicious food aplenty

Photo by John Goss

E.T. Phone home

E.T., disguised as binoculars

Photo by John Goss Frank Baratta adjusts the Solar scope

Photo by Dave Thomas

Yummy deserts

Photo by Dave Thomas

RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 9 of 14

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Mark, John, Genevieve, and Paul, confer

Photo by Dave Thomas

(Photos Continued from page 9) More photos

Paul Caffrey Wins another RVAS coffee mug

Photo by Dave Thomas

Observing the Sun through the Solar scope

Photo by John Goss

RVAS President Michael Good presents another coffee

mug, and the lucky recipient is, Robin Jones

Photo by Dave Thomas

RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 10 of 14

Panorama of Claytor Nature Center

By Michael Good

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 11 of 14

Carl Sagan said in the first Cosmos: "Absence of evi-dence is not evidence of absence." What greater

"absence" is there than something critically relevant

being forever beyond our direct measurements on an

individual basis? This challenge can apply on a very small

scale, or on a scale as large as the multiverse.

There are indirect work-arounds that can help us "see

the unseeable." This strategy for finding truth was well

expressed by Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock

Holmes: "Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth."

He also said: "It has long been an axiom of mine that the little things are infinitely the most im-portant." (brainyquote.com)

The history of science is filled with established error

passing as comfortable fact, and with new truth being

opposed as heresy. English philosopher Bertrand Russell

put it this way: "The fact that an opinion has been wide-ly held is no evidence whatever that it is not utterly absurd."

Those who chose to burn Giordano Bruno at the stake in

1600 were good people in their own minds, protecting

Truth against disruptive heresy. Bruno's real crime was

envisioning life on planets around stars in the sky. To-

day's technology is just approaching what Bruno visual-

ized over 400 years ago. In the future our instruments

are likely to confirm what he visualized.

In Bruno's case we are talking about seeing the condi-tional unseeable, as a matter of time and technology.

Neither time nor technology allows us mortals to direct-

ly see and/or measure forever unseeables. The lesser

can never fully know the greater, and our powers of ob-

servation are definitely less than the majesty of all

that is.

There are distances outward, and distances inward.

Both directions inflict limits on our scientific technolo-

gies. We can never see all the way to the end of our uni-

verse, and beyond. Equally, we can hardly see below the

level of atoms at 10^-10 m, and are a long way from di-

rectly observing corpuscular entities approaching

Planck's dimension (10^-35 meters), below which no la-

boratory technology can measurably penetrate. Never-

theless, that's where the most exciting science lies!

There is one instrument that can penetrate the super-

small, as well as the super-large. It is the human mind,

following the trail of logic and visual imagination. The

purely imaginary world is full of attractive ideas and

theses (some of which are developed into religions), and

nearly all of which are likely in error, due to an intellec-

tual version of the Pauli exclusion principle. Even con-

ventional elementary physics is in crisis today, whether

admitted or not. How can we move forward? (Seeing Continued on page 12)

Seeing the Unseeable

by Clark M. Thomas

© 2014

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 12 of 14

Conventional physics has built its reputation on testable

phenomena, some of which have been repeatedly tested

and verified. The area of possible verification still rep-

resents only a small percentage of all phenomenal di-

mensions.

Scientists happily induce experimental findings to eve-

rything else within their chosen theory. However, nei-

ther induction nor deduction is flawless, no matter how

apparently verifiable any experiment has been.

Ideas appear to come in six flavors: impossible, possi-

ble, probable, untestable, testable, tested, and veri-

fied:

* Some ideas are easily eliminated, such as "impossible"

being self-contradictory.

* The "possible" is more important than "probable," as

ultimately we cannot put a probability value on any pos-

sible unknown.

* "Untestable" is equivalent to unseeable.

* "Testable" ideas are good to have, if we can design

and execute a valid test of general value which is re-

peatable.

* Just because something has been repeatedly

"tested," it is not necessarily true. Misunderstanding

what it is we are testing, even if we think we know the

forces, can lead to the right conclusion for the wrong

reasons in the everyday world. This was Einstein's pri-

mary error.

In the everyday world, where we can discuss and utilize

"forces" of nature, physics works just fine. It is only

when we go very large, or very small, that the neat and

tidy everyday ideas are stressed. It is within extreme

dimensions that a general paradigm lives or dies for all

dimensions.

General Relativity DIES when it fails to explain gravity

data relating to supercluster trains. Another theory,

shadow gravity, elegantly and operationally explains

what happens. In this case, GR has misrepresented

shadow gravity measured in smaller everyday dimen-

sions as general proofs of GR in all dimensions.

The chain of logic is only as strong as its weakest link.

That's why Einstein wrote to a friend one year before

his death that he feared his continuous structures

would soon be overthrown: "In that case, nothing re-mains of my entire castle in the air, gravitation theory included, and of the rest of modern physics." ­ Albert

Einstein. (Pais, A. 1982. Subtle is the Lord: The Science and the Life of Albert Einstein, Oxford U. Press, Ox-

ford, UK, p. 467.)

There are theoretical astrophysicists, and there are

experimental astrophysicists. Each needs the other.

Theory needs to be developed, and then tested. If

there were nobody to design and execute experiments,

theories would proliferate like weeds. We see this in

the many flavors of string theory, which cannot be in-

dependently verified by testing.

String theory cosmologists have a lot of sophisticated

calculus to "back up" their ideas. However, nobody can

win a string theory argument, because there can be no

experimental verification. Additionally, there is no way

for the math by itself to verify any theory. No ab-

stract statement by itself proves any version of string

theory is false or true, as long as it is internally con-

sistent. String theory is something of a mutation of

Einstein's GR; so when GR falls, so too does string the-

ory.

An aspect of string theory is supersymmetry. Whereas

super-symmetric particles are not branes, they are

part of the overall multi-dimensional architecture.

Ironically, the Large Hadron Collider was supposed to

find a zoo of supersymmetric particles, and it did not.

Other experiments have likewise failed to support the

idea. If we are not able to rely on GR and string theory,

what's left, as Sherlock Holmes might ask?

On the macro scale, shadow gravity works exceptionally

well. On the sub-nano scale it works too, except not

below the graviton level. Below that level push gravity is

replaced by primary electromagnetism, which dialecti-

cally shifts into secondary/polar EM at dimensions larg-

er than Planck scale. Thus, all verifiable EM experi-

(Seeing Continued from page 11)

(Seeing Continued on page 13)

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Mars moves through Scorpio and Sagittarius during October

By John Goss

ments have been of secondary EM, and not of primary

EM.

The closest we can come to experimental verification

of energy/matter within the Planck dimension (10^-35

m) is to construct a theory or theories that elegantly

allow for the emergence of phenomena we can observe

and measure on the collective scale. We are talking

about the forever unseeable foundation (at 10^-40 m)

elegantly supporting the superstructure of increasingly

larger dimensions of matter and energy.

To the degree that we can reverse engineer experi-

ments involving collective nano-phenomena, we can

thereby make reasonable and elegant hypotheses about

the much smaller energy/matter corpuscles we cannot

see and measure. This luminous method is important for

developing all-dimensional paradigms. In short: Go at

the unseeable with all-dimensional theory, and with

testing of the seeable; then hypothesize about the un-

seeable in mass form according to the Law of Parsimo-

ny. From the collective we can deduce the individual

unseeables.

In contrast, verifying theory on the scale of hundreds

of millions of light years is not like doing an experiment

near the sub-Planck level: First, one checks for a theo-

retical/logical consistency, which is supplied by the

modern version of shadow gravity correcting Le Sage's

mistakes. Second, one checks the data supplied by the

COBE satellite, as verified by red shifts seen in Digital

Sky Survey images. When all this checks out, and it

does, we can say that the "experiment" is complete. To

challenge/verify it, we need only re-check the data, and

try to propose a superior theoretical model, of which

there is none to date.

Einstein's trepidations in 1954 have come true. It just

took sixty years for the right data to euthanize his

continuous structures fantasy. Combine the COBE and

DSS gravitational data along supercluster chains of gal-

axies, with the Large Hadron Collider not being able to

support supersymmetry, and you have the makings of a

complete transformation of accepted modern cosmolo-

gy.

In a Kurosawa movie featuring samurai in Japan's medi-

eval period, a warrior is stabbed once in the belly by an

enemy sword. He shouts out to his attacker, "You have

killed me!" The stabbed samurai initially seems quite

alive, except for that festering mortal wound. Such is

the fate of standard cosmology.

A final thought for those who think elemental astro-

physics is just a game for nerds: "Ninety-nine percent of who you are is invisible and untouchable." R. Buckmin-

ster Fuller. (brainyquote.com)

(Seeing Continued from page 12)

RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 13 of 14

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RVAS NL— October 2014— Pg 14 of 14

Monthly Calendar

MONTHLY MEETING: October 20th, 7:30 p.m., Center on Church, Downtown Roanoke.

Dr. Mark Adams, of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Charlottesville, Virginia, will

be speaking about “ALMA: New Window on Our Cosmic Origins.” See inside for details.

RVAS WEEKEND OBSERVING OPPORTUNITIES: Unless otherwise indicated, observing is held at Cahas Moun-

tain Overlook, milepost 139 on the Blue Ridge Parkway.

-- Friday and Saturday, October 17th and 18th. Sunset is at 6:40 p.m. Astronomical twilight ends at 8:07 p.m.

The Moon sets at 3:19 p.m. and 3:52 p.m., respectively.

-- Friday and Saturday, October 24th and 25th. Sunset is at 6:31 p.m. Astronomical twilight ends at 7:58 p.m.

The Moon sets at 7:11 p.m. and 7:54 p.m., respectively.

-- Future Sessions: November 14th and 15th; November 21st and 22nd.

ROANOKE CITY PARKS and RECREATION PUBLIC STARGAZE: Saturday, October 18th, 7:15 p.m., SITE

TO BE DETERMINED. Nonmembers must register with Parks & Rec. at 540-853-2236. Members can call 540-

774-5651 for information. (Next session: November 15th, 6:00 p.m., Cahas Knob Overlook, milepost 139 Blue Ridge

Parkway.)

Astro-Quiz

At the September equinox, the Sun is located in Virgo, as seen from Earth. Where is Earth as seen from the

Sun at that time?

Answer to Last Month’s Astro-Quiz: Last month we asked which of the 88 constellations borders more con-

stellations than any other, and how many it borders. Enclosing an area of almost 1303 square degrees of the ce-

lestial sphere within its border, Hydra is the largest constellation. But its irregular border also spans nearly 7

hours of right ascension and over 41 degrees of declination. In so doing, Hydra borders 13 others; 14, if you

count Lupus, which shares only one point of contact. The other 13 are Antlia, Cancer, Canis Minor, Centaurus,

Corvus, Crater, Libra, Leo, Monoceros, Puppis, Pyxis, Sextans and Virgo. (Have an answer to this month’s quiz [or

a question and answer to suggest]? E-mail it to [email protected]!)