Every once in a while, instead of a
neat image, NASA posts a link to a video with an explanation. Last week we had
a video from the Youtube user melodysheep. With that, here are the NASA
Astronomy Pictures of the Day for the week of November 11, 2012.
Sunday, November 11
Baily's Beads near Solar Eclipse
Totality
Image Credit & Copyright: Leonid Durman
Explanation: Just before the
Sun blacks out, something strange occurs. As the Moon moves to completely cover
the Sun in a total solar
eclipse -- like the one set
to occur over parts of Australia on
Tuesday -- beads of bright
sunlight stream around the edge of the Moon. This effect, known as Baily's beads, is named
after Francis Baily
who called attention to the phenomenon in
1836. Although, the number and brightness of Baily's beads used
to be unpredictable, today the Moon is so well mapped that general features
regarding Baily's beads are expected. When a single bead dominates, it is
called the diamond
ring effect, and is typically seen just before totality. Pictured above,
horizontally compressed, a series of images recorded Baily's beads at times
surrounding the 2008 total solar
eclipse visible from Novosibirsk,
Russia. At the end of
totality, as the Sun again emerges from behind the moon, Baily's beads may again be
visible -- but now on the other side of the Moon.
Monday, November 12
Meteor and Moonbow over Wallaman
Falls
Explanation: Which feature
takes your breath away first in this encompassing panorama of land and sky? The
competition is strong with a waterfall, meteor, starfield, and even a moonbow all vying for
attention. It is interesting to first note, though, what can't be seen -- a
rising moon on the other side of the camera. The bright moon not only
illuminated this
beautiful landscape in Queensland,
Australia last June, but
also created the beautiful moonbow
seen in front of Wallaman
Falls. Just above the ridge in the above image is
the horizontal streak of an airplane. Toward the top of the
frame is the downward streak of a bright meteor, a small
pebble from across our Solar System that lit up as it entered the Earth's
atmosphere. Well behind the meteor are numerous bright stars and nebula seen
toward the center of our
Galaxy. Finally, far in the background, is the band of our Milky Way Galaxy,
running diagonally from the lower left to the upper right in the image but also
circling the entire sky.
Tuesday, November 13
A Solar Eclipse Quilt
Credit & Copyright:
Sherry Winkelman (CXC)
Explanation: Some people are
so inspired by solar eclipses that they quilt. Pictured above is a
resulting textile from one such inspiration. The 38x38 inch quilt offers
impressions of a total annular
eclipse, when the Moon is too far from the Earth to cover the entire Sun, witnessed in Spain in
October of 2005. Today, however, a full total solar eclipse will
occur, although it will only be visible to eclipse chasers
and those who live in a thin swath
of Australia. For a few
minutes, those near the center of the eclipse
path will see the entire Sun blocked by the Moon,
causing the day to become unusually
dark. Just before -- and just after -- totality occurs,
sunlight may stream between mountains on the Moon's edge creating a diamond ring effect. The
next total eclipse
of the Sun will occur in November
2013.
Wednesday, November 14
Our Story in One Minute
Video Credit & Copyright: MelodySheep, Symphony of Science, John Boswell; Music Credit: Our Story
Video Credit & Copyright: MelodySheep, Symphony of Science, John Boswell; Music Credit: Our Story
Explanation: Could you tell
the story of human existence in a minute? This thrilling video
culls together multiple teasing snippets in an attempt to do just that. And
sets it to music. Briefly depicted, from start to finish, is an artistic
animation of the Big Bang,
a trip across the early
universe, the formation
of the Earth and Moon, the emergence of multi-celled life and plants, the
rise of reptiles and dinosaurs, a devastating
meteor strike, the rise of mammals and
humans, and finally the rise of modern
civilization. The minute movie ends with a flyover of the modern skyscraper and a human
standing atop a snow covered
mountain. The above
video is the latest from the Symphony of Science
project.
Thursday, November 15
Solar Eclipse over Queensland
Explanation: This month's
New Moon brought a total
solar eclipse to parts of planet Earth on November 13
(UT). Most of the total eclipse track fell across the southern Pacific, but
the Moon's dark umbral shadow began its journey in northern Australia
on Wednesday morning, local time. From along the track, this
telescopic snapshot captures the Moon's silhouette in skies over Queensland
along the Mulligan highway west of Port Douglas. Almost completely
covered, the Sun's disk is seen still surrounded by a hint of the faint solar corona.
Planet-sized prominences stretch above the active Sun's edge. Sunlight
streaming through gaps in the rugged profile of the lunar limb creates the
brilliant but fleeting Baily's
Beads.
Friday, November 16
Moon Shadow Sequence
Explanation: On the morning
of November 14, the
Moon's umbral shadow tracked across northern Australia before heading into
the southern Pacific. Captured from a hilltop some 30 miles west of the outback
town of Mount Carbine, Queensland, a series of exposures follows the progress
of the total
solar eclipse in this dramatic
composite image. The sequence begins near the horizon. The Moon steadily
encroaches on the on the reddened face of the Sun, rising as the eclipse
progresses. At the total
phase, lasting about 2 minutes for that location, an otherwise faint solar corona shimmers around
the eclipsed disk. Recorded during totality, the background exposure shows a
still sunlit sky near the horizon, just beyond a sky darkened by the
shadow of the Moon.
Saturday, November 17
Like a Diamond in the Sky
Explanation: A dark Sun hung over
Queensland, Australia on Wednesday morning during a much anticipated total solar
eclipse. Storm clouds threatened to spoil the view along the northern
coast, but minutes before totality the clouds parted. Streaming past the Moon's
edge, the last direct rays of sunlight produced a gorgeous diamond ring effect in this
scene from Ellis Beach between Cairns and Port Douglas. Winking out in a
moment, the diamond didn't last forever though. The area was plunged
into darkness for nearly 2 minutes as the Moon's shadow swept
off shore toward Australia's Great Barrier
Reef and out into the southern Pacific. Ranging from 1/4000 to 1/15 seconds
long, five separate exposures were blended in the image to create a
presentation similar to the breathtaking
visual experience of the eclipse.
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