It's IYA Sun Day!
Join me this afternoon from 1:30 until 3 p.m. Myrtle and Lime Streets
Monrovia CA for the Old Town Sidewalk Astronomers fourth and final "100
Hours of Astronomy" observing celebration. Here is what the sun looks
like today
http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime-images.html
I'll be out at Monrovia's Library Park with two telescopes - one is my
homemade (in John Dobson's telescope makring class) safe solar
telescope. And the other is a small reftactor fitted with a special
h-Alpha filter.
The homemade telescope shows the sun in white light - this is how the
sun looks to the unaided eye. The viewer sees the photosphere, or the
apparent surface of the sun, which has a temperature of 6,000 Celsius.
You can say this is the sun you can "see" or what you see through a
projection onto a piece of paper.
The other is a telescope fitted with an h-Alpha filter, which shows just
one wavelength of light -the red light of hydrogen (wavelength of 656.3
nanometers). With this we see the next highest layer of the sun - the
chromosphere (temperature between 6,000 and 20,000 C.) We need a filter
to see this layer because the brighter photosphere layer below washes
out the fainter chromosphere, just like a bright streetlight would wash
out the light of a flashlight. What you see through an h-Alpha filter
are ribbony dark colored filaments against the disk and prominences on
the edge, many times longer than the diameter of the Earth!
I took these definitions from my writeup for the SOHO outreach website
:-)
http://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/outreach/past/Sidewalk/
For those who venture out to Myrtle and Lime, you'll be rewarded, not
only with some great solar views, but I am bringing an AMAZING
collection of educational handouts. While they last, get 3-d images of
the sun in H-alpha, courtesy of the SOHO - Solar and Heliospheric
Observatory, some more from STEREO ( two space-based observatories, one
ahead of Earth, the other trailing behind. I also have lots of NASA
lithographs of the sun. And just a very few additional 3-d cards from
the SOHO/TRACE missions. And plenty of IYA bookmarks. First come,
first get! See you in a half hour!
Jane
PS the Sun will be the subject of my May What's Up podcast!
--
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
34.2048N 118.1732W, 637.0 feet
http://www.whiteoaks.com
Old Town Astronomers:
http://www.otastro.org
My JPL What's Up podcast:
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup.cfm
Twitter:
http://twitter.com/jhjones http://twitter.com/CassiniSaturn