Archive for August, 2009

Perseid Meteors, August 2009

Perseid Meteors, APOD

In the middle of August — every year — Earth passes through a swath of crunchy gunk left behind by comet Swift-Tuttle. Comets have orbits, planets have orbits, and sometimes these orbits overlap… just as long as they’re not at the same place at the same time then there’s no big-time collision. But these comets leave bits of rock and ice in their wake, and when our planet later goes through that spot, we get lots of small-time collisions instead… in the form of meteors. Little particles burn up in the atmosphere (meteors); larger chunks make it to the ground (meteroites).

Comet Swift-Tuttle made a re-appearance in 1992, refreshing its orbital path with lots of fresh new grit for the Earth to sweep up on its next pass. My nephew came to visit us in August shortly after that, and we hopped in the pickup truck and headed out to a remote area with no city lights — and the show was spectacular! (The “Astronomy Picture of the Day” here is a time-lapse of a night in August 2009, but that’s  a good representation of how I remember that night on the pickup truck in the early 1990′s…)

There were from three to five at once, brilliant lines of burning rock, lighting up the night sky. It was eerie how full the sky was of these glowing bits of shrapnel from space.

Well, for 2009, I had early-morning commitments on Thursday August 13 and Friday August 14, so I wasn’t able to stay up as late as I’d like to have, to see the meteors (that’d be around 2-3am for optimal activity).

Zut alors!

But many other folks did, and here are some captured by the fine folks over at Flickr.com.

(Also be sure to check out Stellarium — it’s been around quite a while and it’s really an awesome desktop astronomy program!)

, ,

No Comments

Powerful travel mojo

Flight delayed almost three hours on a nice sunny dayCan many of you claim to have the mojo to delay a perfectly good flight on a perfectly sunny, calm day — for three hours? I can.

From 2008-2009 I had thirteen consecutive flights that delayed over an hour, if not outright canceled. That’s right, lucky 13. If you want a delayed flight, just fly with me and we’ll be there late, or maybe not until the following day.

In Detroit the crew calmly asked us to waste no time leaving the plane we’d just boarded. After we were off they informed us that a fuel leak had been spotted on the underbelly of the plane. I got to be on a first-name basis with the Best Western near the Detroit airport due to overnight delays.

In Toronto they cancelled my flight to O’Hare, one of the busiest and most robust airports in the world. I got to stay overnight in Canada one more night.

Here, at Reagan airport near Washington DC, you can see that my flight was being delayed more than two hours… in nice balmy partly-cloudy weather. Delay index is low, mostly sunny weather, and a two-hour delay.

I’ve got powerful travel mojo.

No Comments

Those who do not learn the lessons of history…

Got this little tidbit in an email from my brother today:

What have we learned in 2,064 years?

“The budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to work, instead of living on public assistance.”
- Cicero, 55 BC

evidently nothing…

So, this snippet from Cicero assumes that all of these things are good.

No Comments