Saturday, October 1, 2022

Lecture by Huib Jan van Langevelde : Zooming Into Black Hole Sagitarius A*


Selfie with Prof. Huib Jan van Langevelde

Dutch astronomer Huib Jan van Langevelde is working at the JIVE in Dwingeloo, professor of galactic radio astronomy at Leiden University and director of the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) consortium. The EHT is a project in which some 350 scientists from 18 countries work together. The EHT bundles the large ALMA telescope in Chile with other (sub)millimetre telescopes and published the first image of a black hole in 2019 and the black hole Sagitarius A* in our Milky Way in 2022. 
At the JVS/VVS weekend of Oct 1,2022, Prof. Huib Jan van Langevelde gave a lecture on zooming into a black hole using milimeter telescopes.

Some really good video's: 




Sunday, September 25, 2022

55 Sunspots - 5 Sunspotgroups




Today the Sun was covered with 55 sunspots within 5 sunspotgroups. I made some pictures using my TAL200K f/8.5 with different set ups.

Setting: TAL200K f/8.5, ASI290MM, Barlow x2, light and CaK filter
Setting: TAL200K f/8.5, Nikon D7500
Software: SharpCap4, AS3!, IMPPG, CS4







Saturday, September 24, 2022

Lecture on MYRRHA - Hamid Ait Abderrahim


MYRRHA is the world’s first large scale Accelerator Driven System project at power levels scalable to industrial systems. MYRRHA offers unparalleled research opportunities in spent nuclear fuel, nuclear medicine and fundamental and applied physics.

MYRRHA: MYRRHA (Multi-purpose hYbrid Research Reactor for High-tech Applications) is the world’s first large scale Accelerator Driven System (ADS) that consists of a subcritical nuclear reactor driven by a high power linear accelerator. With the subcritical concentration of fission material, the nuclear reaction is sustained by the particle accelerator only. Turning off the proton beam results in an immediate and safe halt of the nuclear reactions.

On December 30th (2022), Professor and director of the MYRRHA project Hamid Aït Abderrahim, will give a lecture @MIRA astronomy club.
See for more information this link. 

Neptune and James Webb Space Telescope

The James Webb Space Telescope captured Neptune together with it's rings. 


Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) image of Neptune, taken on July 12, 2022, brings the planet’s rings into full focus for the first time in more than three decades.


The most prominent features of Neptune’s atmosphere in this image are a series of bright patches in the planet’s southern hemisphere that represent high-altitude methane-ice clouds. More subtly, a thin line of brightness circling the planet’s equator could be a visual signature of global atmospheric circulation that powers Neptune’s winds and storms. Additionally, for the first time, Webb has teased out a continuous band of high-latitude clouds surrounding a previously-known vortex at Neptune’s southern pole.

Open Days KMI Observatory - Opendeurdagen KMI


Today and tomorrow you will get the unique opportunity to step onto the grounds of the Space Pole in Uccle with direct interaction with the scientists themselves. You can see the telescopes, learn about the weather, the climate, the aurora or the planets of the solar system. Entrance is free.

Observatory - Meteorology - Aeronomy
September 24-25, 2022, 10 a.m.- 6 p.m.
Ringlaan 3 Avenue Circulaire, 1180 Brussels

For more information see this website: https://spacepole.be/en/open-days



Sunday, September 18, 2022

Lectures of Radboud Astronomy club Free

Astronomy Club "Radboud" decided to make all their lectures free of charge as from this year (2022-2023. The lectures can be followed both fysically as online.

Following lectures area already scheduled:



Saturday, September 10, 2022

Vega Rocket at the Milan Science and Technology Museum

VEGA (VV01) Credit Pascal Hilkens

The "Museo Nazionale Scienza E Technologia Leonardo Da Vinci" @ Milan houses a 1:1 scale model of the VEGA (VV01) rocket. The Museum houses the 1:1 scale model of the first Vega (VV01), a vector developed by the European Space Agency (ESA). About 30 meters high and with a mass of 137 tons, it is composed of 4 stages (3 solid fuel, 1 liquid fuel) that can transport and release satellites of up to 2.000 kilograms. Unlike most small launchers, it can carry multiple loads into Space, placing them on different orbits. Vega was developed thanks to a collaboration between Italy, France, Belgium, Spain, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Sweden. The first launch took place on February 13, 2012.

VEGA (VV01) Credit Pascal Hilkens

In May 2013, VEGA VV02 launched the Belgium made satellite Probe-V and in December 2015 VEGA VV06 launched LISA-Pathfinder.