Transcript: February Week 4
PAUL
Welcome to Idaho Skies on Radio Boise. This is the last week of February. We’re your hosts, Paul..
RACHEL
..Rachel..
KRIS
..And Kris
PAUL
The Zodiacal Light is now well placed for viewing in the evening.
RACHEL
And it will remain until around March 8th when moon light begins interfering again.
KRIS
During the next three months, the Zodiacal Light rises steeply above the western horizon after sunset.
RACHEL
Its steepness makes is easier to see because the Zodiacal Light climbs its highest above the horizon.
KRIS
The Zodiacal Light appears as a faint pillar of light that is best seen with the unaided eye.
PAUL
So don’t use a telescope or binoculars, they’ll magnify too much and show too little.
RACHEL
The Zodiacal Light is faint enough that you need a dark location to see it.
PAUL
Saturn reaches opposition on the night of the 24th.
KRIS
What does that mean?
RACHEL
It means the ringed world rises near sunset and sets near sunrise.
KRIS
At opposition, Saturn is at it’s nearest to Earth for 2008.
PAUL
Great!
RACHEL
For Saturn, that means it’s 770 million miles away.
PAUL
Bummer.
KRIS
At that distance, it takes a radio signal from NASA an hour and nine minutes to reach the Cassini spacecraft currently in orbit around Saturn.
RACHEL
Saturn appears as a pale-yellow star to the unaided eye and binoculars. You’ll find it 1/3rd of the way above the eastern horizon at 9:00 PM.
KRIS
That puts it just below the stars of Leo the Lion.
RACHEL
However, unlike the stars in Leo, Saturn doesn’t twinkle unless the air is very turbulent.
PAUL
Forty years ago on the 24th astronomer Jocelyn Bell and her college advisor Dr. Anthony Hewish found a one inch long squiggle on a chart recording made by their radio telescope.
KRIS
That short squiggle was so perfectly regular in time, that at first, they wondered if they had discovered the radio beacon of an extraterrestrial civilization.
RACHEL
Instead, they had discovered the radio pulses of a rapidly rotating neutron star, or pulsar.
PAUL
At the end of their lives, massive stars are unable to support their weight through nuclear fusion.
KRIS
Therefore, they collapse and explode as a supernova. The explosion and gravity crushes the protons, electrons, and neutrons in their core into a ball around 12 miles across.
RACHEL
That makes a teaspoon of neutron star weigh the same as a mountain on earth.
KRIS
Shrinking a star by a factor of 80,000 increases its spin rate by the same factor.
RACHEL
Therefore, pulsars can spin faster than 100 times per second.
KRIS
Creating a neutron star doesn’t just increase it rotation rate, it also increases the strength of its magnetic field.
RACHEL
The combination of a rapid rotation rate and strong magnetic field creates a machine capable of launching powerful beams of radiation from its north and south poles.
KRIS
When the pole of a rotating neutron star sweeps past the earth, we detect its beam of radiation as a blip in a radio telescope.
PAUL
And that’s Bell and Hewish discovered on February 24th, 1968.
RACHEL
That’s Idaho Skies for the last week of February. Our sound engineer this month was Paul Molinari. Join us next month for the space and astronomy news for Idaho and beyond.
For Idaho Skies this is Rachel…
KRIS
..Kris..
PAUL
.. and Paul.
Welcome to Idaho Skies on Radio Boise. This is the last week of February. We’re your hosts, Paul..
RACHEL
..Rachel..
KRIS
..And Kris
PAUL
The Zodiacal Light is now well placed for viewing in the evening.
RACHEL
And it will remain until around March 8th when moon light begins interfering again.
KRIS
During the next three months, the Zodiacal Light rises steeply above the western horizon after sunset.
RACHEL
Its steepness makes is easier to see because the Zodiacal Light climbs its highest above the horizon.
KRIS
The Zodiacal Light appears as a faint pillar of light that is best seen with the unaided eye.
PAUL
So don’t use a telescope or binoculars, they’ll magnify too much and show too little.
RACHEL
The Zodiacal Light is faint enough that you need a dark location to see it.
PAUL
Saturn reaches opposition on the night of the 24th.
KRIS
What does that mean?
RACHEL
It means the ringed world rises near sunset and sets near sunrise.
KRIS
At opposition, Saturn is at it’s nearest to Earth for 2008.
PAUL
Great!
RACHEL
For Saturn, that means it’s 770 million miles away.
PAUL
Bummer.
KRIS
At that distance, it takes a radio signal from NASA an hour and nine minutes to reach the Cassini spacecraft currently in orbit around Saturn.
RACHEL
Saturn appears as a pale-yellow star to the unaided eye and binoculars. You’ll find it 1/3rd of the way above the eastern horizon at 9:00 PM.
KRIS
That puts it just below the stars of Leo the Lion.
RACHEL
However, unlike the stars in Leo, Saturn doesn’t twinkle unless the air is very turbulent.
PAUL
Forty years ago on the 24th astronomer Jocelyn Bell and her college advisor Dr. Anthony Hewish found a one inch long squiggle on a chart recording made by their radio telescope.
KRIS
That short squiggle was so perfectly regular in time, that at first, they wondered if they had discovered the radio beacon of an extraterrestrial civilization.
RACHEL
Instead, they had discovered the radio pulses of a rapidly rotating neutron star, or pulsar.
PAUL
At the end of their lives, massive stars are unable to support their weight through nuclear fusion.
KRIS
Therefore, they collapse and explode as a supernova. The explosion and gravity crushes the protons, electrons, and neutrons in their core into a ball around 12 miles across.
RACHEL
That makes a teaspoon of neutron star weigh the same as a mountain on earth.
KRIS
Shrinking a star by a factor of 80,000 increases its spin rate by the same factor.
RACHEL
Therefore, pulsars can spin faster than 100 times per second.
KRIS
Creating a neutron star doesn’t just increase it rotation rate, it also increases the strength of its magnetic field.
RACHEL
The combination of a rapid rotation rate and strong magnetic field creates a machine capable of launching powerful beams of radiation from its north and south poles.
KRIS
When the pole of a rotating neutron star sweeps past the earth, we detect its beam of radiation as a blip in a radio telescope.
PAUL
And that’s Bell and Hewish discovered on February 24th, 1968.
RACHEL
That’s Idaho Skies for the last week of February. Our sound engineer this month was Paul Molinari. Join us next month for the space and astronomy news for Idaho and beyond.
For Idaho Skies this is Rachel…
KRIS
..Kris..
PAUL
.. and Paul.
