Space Travel News  
ECLIPSES
Expedition To Study South Pacific Solar Eclipse

File image.
by Staff Writers
Williamstown MA (SPX) Jul 09, 2010
Professor Jay Pasachoff of Williams College's astronomy department is on Easter Island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean preparing to observe the July 11 total solar eclipse. The eclipse will be one of the least observed ever, since so much of the path is over ocean.

Easter Island, 2,500 miles west of the Chilean South American mainland, is the only substantial land in the path, until the extreme end of the eclipse reaches Patagonia at sunset. Some eclipse scientists and eco-tourists will observe totality from smaller islands or atolls in French Polynesia or the Cook Islands, from two chartered airplanes, and from a chartered ship.

Pasachoff has travelled to Easter Island with students Muzhou Lu, Williams College '12, and Craig Malamut, a Keck Northeast Astronomy Consortium Summer Fellow and Wesleyan '11. They are joined on site by Prof. Marek Demianski.

They will be carrying out high-resolution imaging to look for motions in the corona and to continue following the varying magnetic-field configuration in the solar corona as a function of the solar-activity cycle. Though the sunspot cycle remains in an extreme low, some other indications of solar activity have been increasing and the researchers are eager to see the condition of the low and middle corona.

Pasachoff is the coauthor of papers with Miloslav Druckmuller of the Czech Republic and Vojtech Rusin of Slovakia on the former's extensive image processing to bring out fine details and high contrast in the corona at the eclipses of 2005, 2006, and 2008.

They plan to compare the images they capture at this month's eclipse with similar images planned to be taken from Polynesia and the Cook Islands as well as those taken with one of the expedition's Nikon telephoto lenses from an airplane that will take off from Tahiti.

The airplane observations are in collaboration with Glenn Schneider of the University of Arizona and Joel Moskowitz of New York. They expect to see motions at least in polar plumes.

The researchers also will use the images to fill gaps between the observations of the corona on the solar disk taken with NASA's new Solar Dynamics Observatory and the observations of the outer corona taken with the Naval Research Laboratory's coronagraph on the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory; they have contributed to similar images for the past several eclipses but now will have the improved SDO images as part of the expedition's montage. Several of the cameras will be computer controlled using software called Solar Eclipse Maestro, written by Xavier Jubier of France.

The event will be Pasachoff's 51st solar eclipse. He is Chair of the International Astronomical Union's Working Group on Eclipses.

The Williams College team is accompanied by a documentary crew filming for the National Geographic Channel, and their activities will be covered in a special program, titled Easter Island Eclipse, partly pre- recorded and partly expected to have new eclipse footage that will air July 11th at 11 pm. In Williamstown, the National Geographic Channel is on cable channel 201.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Williams College
Solar and Lunar Eclipses at Skynightly



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ECLIPSES
Rainy forecast douses plans to view Easter Island eclipse
Santiago, Chile (AFP) July 8, 2010
Easter Island will be overcast and drizzly Sunday, weather experts said - a disappointing forecast for thousands hoping to view what would be, if the weather cooperates, a spectacular solar eclipse. About 4,000 tourists have traveled to tiny Pacific ocean outpost to view Sunday's rare total eclipse of the sun, but Chile's meteorological office on Easter Island said dreary weather may ruin ... read more







ECLIPSES
Pre-Launch Processing Underway For Ariane 5's Upcoming Launch

SBSS Launch Delayed

ISRO To Launch Five Satellites On July 12

Orbital Rockets Selected To Launch Two NASA Scientific Satellites

ECLIPSES
Opportunity Has Two More Drives

Spirit Still Silent

Opportunity Keeps On Driving To Endeavour Crater

Still Listening For Spirit

ECLIPSES
NASA releases videogame, Moonbase Alpha

Man In The Moon Has 'Graphite Whiskers'

India Hopes To Launch Chandrayaan-2 By 2013

Building A Better Robot Arm For Lunar Rovers

ECLIPSES
Course Correction Keeps New Horizons On Path To Pluto

Scientists See Billions Of Miles Away

System Tests, Science Observations And A Course Correction

Coordinated Stargazing

ECLIPSES
First Directly Imaged Planet Confirmed Around Sun-Like Star

VLT Detects First Superstorm On Exoplanet

Earth-Like Planets May Be Ready For Their Close-Up

Plentiful And Potential Planets

ECLIPSES
Musk goes public on divorce

NASA Preparing For DM-2 Test: Now That's Powerful Information

NASA Tests Engine Technology To Assist With Future Space Vehicle Landings

Aerojet Propellant-Saving Xenon Ion Thruster Exceeds 30,000 Hours

ECLIPSES
China Sends Research Satellite Into Space

China eyes Argentina for space antenna

Seven More For Shenzhou

China Signs Up First Female Astronauts

ECLIPSES
Hayabusa Contains A Hint Of Dust

En route to a comet, European probe to fly by asteroid

Philae And Rosetta Gear Up For Asteroid Lutetia

Japanese lab finds 'minute particles' in asteroid pod


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement