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Neil Armstrong Observatory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Neil Armstrong Observatory was completed March 1, 2014, making Nicaragua the only country in Latin America with an astronomical observatory reserved for use by scholars. The observatory, which cost half a million U.S. dollars to build, is located at the Pierre and Marie Curie School in Managua.[1] The building consists of two floors plus a dome of more than 4.5 square meters. The telescope's main lens is 11 inches across and can magnify stellar objects by 50 to 800 times. The first floor is a chemistry lab named for Irene Joliot-Curie. The second floor, dedicated to the study of physics, is named for Isaac Newton. The observatory is named Neil Armstrong in honor of the first man to touch the Moon, during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • SOFIA Captures Pluto Occultation
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Transcription

>>This is flight number 223. A special flight. >>Ok, we're gonna take off, and Pluto is right here, we're gonna make sure we're on time straight to this point. >>Basically, we have three objectives. The first is to observe Pluto occulting a star. We should be able to get a pressure and temperature profile for Pluto's atmosphere, which is particularly interesting right now because we can directly compare it to the one derived from New Horizons and that will let us to calibrate all the observations we've been making for 20 years. And secondly, if we can do this occultation in multiple wavelengths simultaneously, we will be sensitive to particle dust haze in the atmosphere, in a way that we're not in any single wavelength. And, finally, the biggest objective is, if we can hit the center point of the shadow, within say 75 kilometers, then we can get an actual global view around the entire planet. >>Tonight we're planning on observing the Pluto occultation over the South Pacific. We have a very finite amount of time to catch the shadow as it streaks across the Earth. >>Let's go do it. >>Let's go. [SOFIA taking off] >>We started this process at MIT for this particular event about three years ago. Basically, you just have to spend a lot of time observing both Pluto and the star. As Pluto moves across the sky, we're constantly updating its ephemeris. Each night, we measure it, we measure its position, see which direction it's moving, and project that ahead until it intersects with the star. Simultaneously, we're measuring where the star is, trying to firm up the coordinate system of the other stars around it, so we can get a very careful measurement of how closely they will intersect, and more importantly, from where on the earth we'll be able to see that occultation. SOFIA is the only observatory that can actually get to the center of the shadow, as the center line is going to be over the ocean. And now we're here to actually observe the occultation and see what we can learn about Pluto's atmosphere. >>And, coming up on 5 minutes, pilots- it's gonna be a left-hand turn to 253. [Music/Radio Chatter] >>Update dot txt. Print that one- This particular mission looms large in importance because of the synergy with New Horizons. What I've been doing tonight is receiving updates on Pluto's position relative to the stars. I received that update first as a very simple text message. That the center line of the shadow had moved north by 227 kilometers. The good people upstairs were able to adjust these legs going back and forth, kind of like a trombone, so we wound up at the right place at the right time. >>Each stays the same...but now they're just shifted up and over. Headed in there, there, then up here, then down... All right? >> Yeah, that's good. >>There it is. >>My collegue Karina at the other console, is closely monitoring where the plane is compared to where it's supposed to be crossing this shadow path. >>Two minutes, crew. [Music] >>One degree left. >>One left. >>How's our cross elevation looking? >>Good, right in the center. >>Ah! Did it just? It's going down! Woohoo! >>Nice. >>That's so cool! >>They're right on top of each other. >>It's just about right on. >>Wow! >>Congratulations! That's so cool! >>Oh, it's coming back. >>Oh, yep I see it. >>That is so bizarre. >>That's probably close to 90 seconds... >>So they may have really gotten right in the middle. >>So this graph is signal over time plot. We see the signal of the occulting star before Pluto is moving right in front of it. At this point, Pluto is moving in front of the star and the signal drops down. And, here at the bottom of the curve, we see this central flash, which means that we were very close to the center line of the shadow. >>Everyone just jumped for joy when we actually saw that star occulted by Pluto. I think of Pluto as being kind of a small body, but we saw it and it was just amazing. One of the highlights of my career, I gotta say, working on this project. [Music]

References

  1. ^ Luna, Yader (2013-02-22). "Hoy inaugurarán moderno observatorio astronómico". El Nuevo Diario. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-05-18.

12°05′27″N 86°13′22″W / 12.09093°N 86.22268°W / 12.09093; -86.22268


This page was last edited on 5 October 2023, at 10:46
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