Today I was looking at the APOD titled "Milky Way over Devil's Tower". This APOD is fitting for today because it is Halloween. It shows the Milky Way and clusters of stars over the strange formation known as the Devils Tower. One can actually see Pluto in this formation of the Milky Way as well. Not only is this picture fitting for today, it is actually also very beautiful as the milky way seems to look like a rainbow over the formation. This a very cool panoramic picture.
Friday, October 31, 2014
APOD 2.1
Today I was looking at the APOD titled "Milky Way over Devil's Tower". This APOD is fitting for today because it is Halloween. It shows the Milky Way and clusters of stars over the strange formation known as the Devils Tower. One can actually see Pluto in this formation of the Milky Way as well. Not only is this picture fitting for today, it is actually also very beautiful as the milky way seems to look like a rainbow over the formation. This a very cool panoramic picture.
Friday, October 17, 2014
Observation 1.3
On the night of October 7th I observed the full moon. It was too bright to see many other stars though. On October 8th morning i attempted to see the lunar eclipse but weather conditions were not ideal and the clouds blocked the moon. On the night of October 8th however, the sky cleared up a bit and I was able to observe some stars and attempted to label them in constellations but many stars were not visible due to the brightness of the sky and I was unable to do so successfully.
Observation 1.2
On October 1st I went outside to observe the moon. About two fist lengths away from the moon to the west mars was visible and so was the star Antares. Both of these stars appeared somewhat reddish. I was not able to see the constellation of Scorpius however because it was too bright outside to see all of its stars.
APOD 1.8
I was recently looking through the APODs when i saw this one titled "Eclipse at Moonrise". This is yet another APOD dedicated to the total blood moon eclipse that occurred on October 8th. However this is my first time seeing a picture of the composite time exposure of the moon rising making it look like it is leaving behind a trail. This picture shows how the moon rises in the sky and with the lights of the city of Chongquin the moon seems to be the only object in the night sky allowing views to focus on it.
Friday, October 10, 2014
James Gregory Biography
James
Gregory Biography
James
Gregory was a Scottish mathematician who was born in the village of Drumoak,
Scotland in 1638. He was a very sickly child, therefore he was homeschooled and
taught by his mother and later his uncle, who was a student of Viete; a French mathematician.
This might have been where he got his thirst for mathematics. While
homeschooled James Gregory learned many core subjects including the little
known subject of geometry. In 1651 Gregory’s father passed away and Gregory was
sent to attend grammar school in Aberdeen, he later went on to study at the
Marischal College in 1662.
After
college Gregory traveled to London, there he published his first work called Optica promota (1663). In it he
suggested that telescopes would be more effective if they used concave mirrors.
Newton later used this idea in his studies without giving credit to Gregory. This
paper also added on to Kepler’s description of the telescope. The telescope
that Gregory had described is known as the Gregorian telescope. Unfortunately
Gregory was not able to secure a job in London and moved to Italy where he
continued his research. While in Italy he published Vera circuli et hyperbolae quadrature (1667), and Geometriae pars universalis (1668). This explained how to find the
area of a circle or hyperbola. It also focused of convergent and divergent
series which later became the foundation for calculus.
At age 30
Gregory was in London once again where he was elected into the royal society
and became chairman of mathematics for St. Andrew’s College in Scotland. Upon
returning to Scotland Gregory married widow Mary Jamesome in 1669 and had two
daughters and a son with her. James Gregory was not satisfied with the
curriculum at St. Andrew’s however his efforts to change it were in vain as the
Governing Board of the college refused to allow any changes in the curriculum. Gregory
was not the only one who was dissatisfied with the curriculum as students
revolted against the administration. During this Gregory was in London again
attempting to start up the first public observatory in Britain at St. Andrew’s.
The administration decided to blame Gregory for the student revolt and punished
Gregory by not giving him his salary.
Luckily for Gregory he was soon
offered a job at Edinburg University to be chairman of mathematics there. He
did not publish any papers while at Edinburg but he did relate to John Collins
an English mathematician the important results of the infinite series (a series
that is used in calculus).He also worked with various colleagues in Paris to
predict the occurrence of a lunar eclipse. It was here that Gregory was able to
predict longitude for the first time.
However
he soon died. Gregory was showing his students the moons of Jupiter when he
suffered a stroke and was blinded. A few days later he died. Many of his unpublished papers stayed hidden
until they were published in 1939. In these documents he discovered the
interpolation formula and binomial theorem before Newton did. He also
discovered Taylor expansion a full forty years before Taylor. He also solved
Kepler’s problem of how to divide a semicircle through its diameter and gave
the earliest example of a comparison test for convergence. If James Gregory was
able to publish those papers he would have been seen as one of the greatest
intellectuals and mathematicians of his time.
APOD 1.7
Today I was observing the APOD 1.7 titled "The Moons at Opposition". This is a remarkable picture because it not only got the moon at its eclipse but it also was able to get the planet Uranus and its moons which were at opposition with the moon at that time. Even though Uranus is somewhat faint and its moons fainter still, the photographer was still able to get a picture of it and was able to label them for us. It is very impressive that we can even see the planet Uranus from the Earth at all because it is far away, this gives us an idea of just how big Uranus really is, after all it is an ice giant.
Friday, October 3, 2014
APOD 1.6
Recently I was looking at the APOD from October 2nd called the Bubble Nebula. Based on the picture of the Nebula this really does look like either a bubble or a marble. This nebula spans over ten light years and even though it looks peaceful it is actually a place of rough stellar wind and radiation. The center of this nebula is an O star which is over 45 times as massive as our star. It is amazing how detailed this picture is of the Nebula. This is from the hydrogen and oxygen around the nebula which is used to create the red and blue images in the nebula.
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