Earth and her *3* moons?!?
Aug. 23rd, 2005 01:13 pmWhile looking up an unrelated topic, I came across an interesting event that I hadn't heard about: Earth's third moon.
*THREE* moons??? Well, actually no. Not even two, really. But Earth does have an extra "faux" moon, named "Cruithne" (thanks a LOT for a name only Celts can pronounce!) was discovered by European astronomers in 1986. Technically, it's not really a satellite of Earth, but an asteroid that shares its unusual horseshoe-shaped orbit with the Earth and the sun.
The "third" satellite was discovered in late 2002 by amateur astronomer Bill Yeung in a backyard observatory in Arizona. Astronomy is one of the few areas left where serious amateurs have a chance against huge operations to make major discoveries (with an infrastructure that protects and encourages such discoveries!). Read the article...it's fascinating!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2251386.stm
And:
http://cooltech.iafrica.com/technews/157576.htm
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=9319
The resolution:
http://www.birtwhi.demon.co.uk/GallerySatelliteJ002E3.htm
*THREE* moons??? Well, actually no. Not even two, really. But Earth does have an extra "faux" moon, named "Cruithne" (thanks a LOT for a name only Celts can pronounce!) was discovered by European astronomers in 1986. Technically, it's not really a satellite of Earth, but an asteroid that shares its unusual horseshoe-shaped orbit with the Earth and the sun.
The "third" satellite was discovered in late 2002 by amateur astronomer Bill Yeung in a backyard observatory in Arizona. Astronomy is one of the few areas left where serious amateurs have a chance against huge operations to make major discoveries (with an infrastructure that protects and encourages such discoveries!). Read the article...it's fascinating!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2251386.stm
And:
http://cooltech.iafrica.com/technews/157576.htm
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=9319
The resolution:
http://www.birtwhi.demon.co.uk/GallerySatelliteJ002E3.htm
no subject
Date: 2005-08-23 01:11 pm (UTC)Though.. I'm reluctant to call anything man-made or artificial as a "moon". That Apollo 12 booster rocket is really just another piece of space junk orbiting this planet. There's thousands of those already. What sets it apart from other pieces to make it a "moon"? Its atypical orbit?
no subject
Date: 2005-08-23 01:41 pm (UTC)And Cruithne is worse than that-- the article says: "Cruithne, pronounced "Croo-een-ya"" *Gak!*
no subject
Date: 2005-08-23 11:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-08-24 09:41 pm (UTC)http://tinyurl.com/8vwdm
And just a couple of months a go was an amateur discovery of a super nova in M51!
New stuff is happening all the time, and the big scopes are all being used for more specific purposes so it'sup to the backyard astronomer to find everything else that goes on :)
no subject
Date: 2005-08-25 12:18 am (UTC)Wow-- I didn't hear about the supernova discovery either! I need to subscribe to something...is "Science News" still being published?
no subject
Date: 2005-08-25 01:47 am (UTC)