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#123629 - 05/01/07 11:39 PM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: Beryl]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
Two today,

one for the real geeks - what is the closest known star to our sun?

http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~dolan/constellations/extra/nearest.html

And one for those of us who have seen a sky with a full blaze of stars, unhidden by city lights...

http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~dolan/constellations/mw/MilkyWay.html

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#123677 - 05/02/07 06:27 AM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: bevin]
Gail Administrator Offline
I have many points...

Registered: 12/10/02
Posts: 13636
Loc: Buon giorno, Principessa
I'm not a geek, but can I guess? Antares?
_________________________
Gail

gail@adventistforum.com

And the work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness quietness and assurance for ever. Isaiah 32:17

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#123688 - 05/02/07 01:19 PM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: Gail]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
Hey - you are following this thread, so you must be at least a geeklet :-)

This is really a test of who read what Sci-Fi as a kid, because those stories often had people going to the then-closest-known star

/Bevin

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#123844 - 05/03/07 05:07 AM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: bevin]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England

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#123859 - 05/03/07 07:11 AM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: bevin]
Bravus Online   content
Husband and Father

Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 7128
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
Alpha Centauri would be the closest star to our sun. (I had to read the question twice because people often ask the trick question 'which is the closest star to earth?')
_________________________
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate

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#123883 - 05/03/07 05:11 PM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: Bravus]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/ast99/ast99500.htm

 Quote:

Question: What is the closest star to the sun. Some sources say Alpha Centauri and others say Proxima Centauri is the closest. Both are reliable is the closest star???

Answer: The name "Alpha Centauri" actually denotes a triple star system in the constellation Centaurus (it appears as a single star to the naked eye). Two of these stars, denoted Alpha Centauri A and B, are very similar to the Sun and are approximately 4.336 light-years away. They orbit each other (better said, they orbit their common center of mass) with a period of about 80 years. Then, orbiting this pair is a small, faint star only a tenth the size of the Sun. This star takes one-and-a-half million years to orbit the larger pair; at the moment it is closer to us than the other two, a mere 4.205 light-years away. Because it is the nearest star to the Sun, it is named Proxima (from the Latin word for "nearest") Centauri. This information came from "Astronomy: The Cosmic Journey", an astronomy text by William Hartmann. I did not know this stuff myself 'til now!

Ron Winther

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#123959 - 05/04/07 04:27 AM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: bevin]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
http://hubblesite.org/gallery/album/nebula_collection/pr1997038g/

Nebulae are huge (bigger than solar system) clouds of gas, lit up by the stars in or near them. They have several different causes

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebula
 Quote:

Many nebulae form from the gravitational collapse of diffuse gas in the interstellar medium or ISM. As the material collapses under its own weight, massive stars may form in the centre and illuminate the surrounding gas allowing it to be observed. An example of this type of nebula is the Rosette Nebula or the Pelican Nebula.

Some nebulae are formed as the result of supernova explosions. One of the best examples of this is the Crab Nebula, in Taurus. It is the result of a recorded supernova in the year 1054. At the center of the nebula is a neutron star, created during the explosion.

Other nebulae may form as planetary nebulae. Again these are created near the end of a star's life; when a star with a mass of under 1.4 solar masses becomes a red giant. An outer layer of light hydrogen gas is ejected from the star as the fusion process slows, and the star becomes unable to sustain its entire mass. A nebula is made of luminiscent gases, rock and ash.

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#123967 - 05/04/07 04:57 AM Re: Stars are God's Fireworks [Re: bevin]
Bravus Online   content
Husband and Father

Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 7128
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
Ah! Thanks for the Proxima Centauri info
_________________________
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate

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#124606 - 05/08/07 01:32 AM God's Cooking... [Re: Bravus]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
"Four hundred years (09 October, 2004), a previously unseen star suddenly appeared in the night sky. Discovered on Oct. 9, 1604, it was brighter than all other stars.
"

"The bubble is expanding at 4 million mph"

"All stars make heavy chemical elements like carbon and oxygen through a process called nuclear fusion, where lighter elements are fused together to make heavier elements. Many chemical elements heavier than iron, such as gold and uranium, are produced in the heat and pressure of supernova explosions. These heavy elements enrich the interstellar medium, providing the building blocks for stars and planets, like Earth.
"

http://www.space.com/php/multimedia/imagedisplay/img_display.php?pic=041006_kepler_supernova_02.jpg

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/super_photo_041006.html

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#124664 - 05/08/07 01:00 PM Re: God's Cooking... [Re: bevin]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
Freaky - I had not seen this when I posted the above...

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070507/ap_on_sc/supernova

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