Images from China’s Chang’e 4 mission

New Images from China’s Chang’e 4 as Eighth Lunar Day Ends

China’s Chang’e 4 mission is continuing its science and exploration work on the farside of the Moon, having completed its eighth lunar day of activities on Wednesday.

Chang'e 4

This composite image showing the shadow of the Yutu-2 rover, roving tracks, and the distant Chang’e 4 lander was taken during lunar day 7.
CNSA / CLEP

China’s Chang’e 4 lunar lander and Yutu 2 (Jade Rabbit 2) rover powered down at 9:00 and 9:50 Universal Time (UT), respectively, on August 7th, just under 24 hours ahead of local sunset, according to an update (Chinese) from the China Lunar Exploration Program (CLEP).

The Yutu 2 rover has now covered a total of 271 meters (890 feet) since its deployment and continues to make its way west of the landing site in Von Kármán Crater. Chang’e 4 landed in the 180-km-diameter (112-mile) crater, which lies within the immense South Pole-Aitken impact basin, following local lunar sunrise on January 3rd. NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has been tracking Chang’e 4’s progress as it passes overhead.

Despite passing its design lifetime of three lunar days, or three Earth months, Yutu 2 is apparently continuing to drive well. The rover has even increased its drive distance in recent lunar days, driving 33.13 meters during lunar day 8, the farthest since the 43 meters it covered in lunar day 3. The rover has adapted to and overcome earlier issues that arose when reflections from the craft triggered obstacle alerts.

Yutu 2 Drive Map

This map of Yutu 2’s drive was produced by space exploration historian and cartographer Phil Stooke. The route for lunar days 6, 7 and 8 are early estimates.
Phil Stooke

Science Returns

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The Dragon Awards

From the Dragon Awards site

Welcome to the annual Dragon Awards! A way to recognize excellence in all things Science Fiction and Fantasy. These awards are by the fans, for the fans, and are your chance to reward those who have made real contributions to SF, books, games, comics, and shows. There is no qualification for voting – no convention fees or other memberships are needed. The only requirement is that you register, confirm your email address for voting purposes, and agree to the rules. This ensures that all votes count equally.

You do not need to take a cheap cialis proper treatment for the issue and also necessary to get through the problems and not just stay with them. Bring a little spark back into cialis properien your love life. Livoplus is involved in prevention of generic cialis price loss of functional integrity of cell membrane. The Canadian government enables pharmacies to levitra purchase give free or low cost medicines because of the government permitting free and low-cost health care. You may register to receive a ballot until Friday, August 30th at 11:59PM (EDT)

Follow the link below.

https://www.dragoncon.org/awards/2019-dragon-award-ballot/

Fanzines to share!

Fanzines to Share!

First up, CyberCozen, edited by Leybl Botwinik who writes:

CELEBRATING 50 YEARS SINCE THE APOLLO 11 MOON LANDING !!!! Welcome to our latest issue of CyberCozen, — Israel’s longest running and only English language SF fanzine
(we’ve been around since 1989)

Enjoy this month’s issue and don’t feel shy to send us your feedback 🙂   – Leybl Botwinik, CyberCozen Editor.


George Philies sent Tightbeam from the N3F:

Behold the  August Tightbeam

As a minor note, someone has been sending out emails pretending to be me and asking for money. It’s not me. I have money, thanks. Please do not send them any money.

This issue of Tightbeam is under 30 pages, which appeared to be the concensus. Because we have more book reviews than that, the N3F Writers Exchange Bureau, Pro Bureau and Book Review Bureau will now be issuing a new zine:

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Expect it to appear sooner or later, probably this month.


And from the British Columbia SF Association , Felicity Walker has sent us the BCSFAZine 536
It’s dated January 2018, but it is the latest issue. Felicity has fallen a little behind, and is still trying to catch up.  😀


 


MonSFFA Picnic in the Park tomorrow

MonSFFA welcomes family, friends and friendly folk who just want to stop by and meet up with a bunch of SF/F fans!

The weather looks promising! Better than last year’s umbrella con!
Sun, 11 Aug A mix of sun and cloud. Wind becoming west 20 km/h gusting to 40 in the morning. High 26. Humidex 28. UV index 7 or high.
Night Cloudy periods with 40 percent chance of showers. Low 18.

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Looking up: Observing highlights for this week

https://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/this-weeks-sky-at-a-glance-august-9-17/

This Week’s Sky at a Glance, August 9 – 17

 

Moon with Jupiter and Antares, Aug. 8-9, 2019

The Moon accompanies Jupiter on the night of Friday the 9th, with Antares looking on from below. (For clarity, the Moon in these scenes is always shown three times its actual apparent size.)

Friday, August 9

• The waxing gibbous Moon shines near Jupiter this evening, as shown here. But Jupiter, 40 times larger than the Moon, is currently 1,830 times farther away.

Jupiter’s own four big moons, roughly as big as ours, are pinpoints in a small telescope or good, steadily braced binoculars. They’re lined up east and west of the planet. This evening you’ll find Europa to Jupiter’s east and Io, Callisto, and Ganymede to its west, counting outward. See the guide to Jupiter’s moons for every night in August, good worldwide, in the August Sky & Telescope, page 51.

Saturday, August 10

Narrow windows for good Perseid viewing. The annual Perseid meteor shower is predicted peak late on the night of August 12-13, but the waxing gibbous Moon won’t set that night until just before the beginning of dawn.

You may do better a day before that, on the morning of the 12th, if you catch the hour or so of dark sky between moonset and the start of dawn (for North America). And, there’s a possibility this year of a second peak in the meteor rates due right around then for North America (around 10h UT August 12th).

A day earlier on the morning of the 11th — late tonight, in other words — we get two dark hours before dawn, but the meteor rates will probably be low. However, there are indications that this year’s Perseid shower is bringing some unusual early fireballs.

Not sure when dawn begins? At this time of year it’s about 1 hour 45 minutes before your local sunrise time if you’re in the world’s midnorthern latitudes (near 40° N.)

Here’s the International Meteor Organization’s near-real-time graph of Perseid activity this year, based on scientific, standardized-method meteor counts coming in from visual observers around the globe.

Sunday, August 11

• The Moon shines with Saturn tonight, 3° or 4° to Saturn’s right as seen during evening in North America.

Physically Saturn is 35 times as large as the Moon (not counting the rings), and tonight it’s 3,500 times farther away.

Saturn’s own largest satellite, Titan, is 1.5 times as large as our Moon. A small or medium-size telescope shows it tonight as an 8.5-magnitude orange pinpoint, about four ring-lengths to Saturn’s west.

Monday, August 12

• It’s supposed to be peak Perseid night, but you’ll have the bright light of the waxing gibbous Moon washing the sky, so only the brightest meteors will show through. Best time: the later in the night the better, right up to the beginning of Tuesday’s dawn.

Not sure when dawn begins? It’s about 1 hour 45 minutes before your local sunrise time if you’re in the world’s mid-northern latitudes (near 40° N.)

Tuesday, August 13

• The nights around full Moon, such as now, are traditionally considered the worst for lunar observing. But not if your interest is crater rays! These show best under high, shadowless illumination. To go exploring, see Chuck Wood’s “Unruly Crater Rays” in the August Sky & Telescope, page 52. Do you know about the hill-blocked ray pattern of Kepler?

Wednesday, August 14

• Full Moon tonight and tomorrow night. The actual moment of full Moon is 8:29 a.m. tomorrow morning EDT. So for evening skywatchers in the time zones of the Americas, both this evening and tomorrow evening qualify as “full moon” about equally.

Tonight the Moon is in dim Capricornus. Tomorrow it’ll be just across the constellation border into dim Aquarius.

Thursday, August 15

• Different people have an easier or harder time seeing star colors, especially subtle ones. To me, the tints of bright stars stand out a little better on a bright sky background — such as we have with the moonlight tonight.

For instance, the two brightest stars of summer are Vega, overhead soon after dark, and Arcturus, shining in the west. Vega is white with just a touch of blue. Arcturus is a yellow-orange giant. Do their colors stand out a little better for you in moonlight or in late twilight?

Binoculars, of course, always make star colors easier.

Friday, August 16

• As August proceeds and nights begin to turn chilly, the Great Square of Pegasus lifts up in the east, balancing on one corner. Its stars are only 2nd and 3rd magnitude, and your fist at arm’s length fits inside it. Late this evening the waning gibbous Moon rises below it.

From the Square’s left corner extends the main line of the constellation Andromeda: three stars (including the corner) about as bright as those forming the Square.

This whole giant pattern was named “the Andromegasus Dipper” by the late Sky & Telescope columnist George Lovi. It’s shaped sort of like a giant Little Dipper with an extra-big bowl, and it’s currently raising its contents upward.

Saturday, August 17

• The actual Little Dipper, meanwhile, is tipping far over leftward in the north. It’s less than half as long as the Andromegasus Dipper, and most of it is much fainter. As always, you’ll find that it’s oriented more than 90° counterclockwise compared to Andromegasus.

________________________

Want to become a better astronomer? Learn your way around the constellations. They’re the key to locating everything fainter and deeper to hunt with binoculars or a telescope.

This is an outdoor nature hobby. For an easy-to-use constellation guide covering the whole evening sky, use the big monthly map in the center of each issue of Sky & Telescope, the essential guide to astronomy.

Jumbo Pocket Sky Atlas cover

The Pocket Sky Atlas plots 30,796 stars to magnitude 7.6, and hundreds of telescopic galaxies, star clusters, and nebulae among them. Shown above is the Jumbo Edition for easier reading in the night. Sample chart.

Once you get a telescope, to put it to good use you’ll need a detailed, large-scale sky atlas (set of charts). The basic standard is the Pocket Sky Atlas (in either the original or Jumbo Edition), which shows stars to magnitude 7.6.

Next up is the larger and deeper Sky Atlas 2000.0, plotting stars to magnitude 8.5; nearly three times as many. The next up, once you know your way around, are the even larger Interstellarum atlas (stars to magnitude 9.5) and Uranometria 2000.0 (stars to magnitude 9.75). And read how to use sky charts with a telescope.

You’ll also want a good deep-sky guidebook, such as Sue French’s Deep-Sky Wonders collection (which includes its own charts), Sky Atlas 2000.0 Companion by Strong and Sinnott, or the bigger Night Sky Observer’s Guide by Kepple and Sanner.

Can a computerized telescope replace charts? Not for beginners, I don’t think, and not on mounts and tripods that are less than top-quality mechanically (meaning heavy and expensive). And as Terence Dickinson and Alan Dyer say in their Backyard Astronomer’s Guide, “A full appreciation of the universe cannot come without developing the skills to find things in the sky and understanding how the sky works. This knowledge comes only by spending time under the stars with star maps in hand.”


This Week’s Planet Roundup

View of Mercury before sunrise, Aug. 10, 2019

For a few mornings around August 11th, Castor and Pollux point down to Mercury.

Find Mercury low in the dawn (mid-August 2019)

A week later, Mercury is brighter and more directly below Castor and Pollux (as seen from 40° north latitude, for which these scenes are always drawn).

Mercury displays itself low in early dawn this week as it brightens from magnitude –0.2 to –0.8. Use binoculars to look for it very low about 45 minutes before sunrise. It’s below or lower right of twinklier Pollux and Castor, as shown here. Don’t confuse it with Procyon off to its right.

Venus and Mars are out of sight behind the glare of the Sun.

Jupiter on July 18, 2019

The non-Red-Spot side of Jupiter, imaged on July 18th by Christopher Go. South here is up. Note the blue festoons in the Equatorial Zone, the bright marking at one of them, and the pronounced, regular ripples in the south edge of the bright North Tropical Zone.

Jupiter (magnitude –2.3, between the feet of Ophiuchus) is the white dot in the south as twilight fades. Jupiter starts getting lower in the south-southwest soon after dark. Orange Antares, much fainter at magnitude +1.0, twinkles 7° to its lower right.

Jupiter and Antares form a shallow, nearly isosceles triangle with Delta Scorpii (Dschubba) to their right. Delta, a long-term eruptive variable of the Gamma Cassiopeiae type, has been only a little fainter than Antares for most of the last 19 years — after it brightened by some 50% in July 2000.

In a telescope Jupiter is 41 arcseconds wide and shrinking gradually. See Bob King’s observing guide to Jupiter.

Saturn on July 16, 2019

Saturn on July 16th, imaged by Damian Peach with the 1-meter Chilescope in average seeing. South here is up. “No notable spots or storms,” writes Peach. “The [north polar] hexagon is ill defined at best, though perhaps because of the below par seeing.”

Saturn (magnitude +0.2, in Sagittarius) is the steady, pale yellowish “star” in the south-southeast during and after dusk, 30° left or upper left of Jupiter. Below Saturn you’ll find the handle of the Sagittarius Teapot.Uranus (magnitude 5.8, in Aries) is high in the southeast before the beginning of dawn.

Neptune (magnitude 7.8, in Aquarius) is well up in the southeast by 11 or midnight and highest in the south well before dawn. Finder charts for Uranus and Neptune.

_________________

All descriptions that relate to your horizon — including the words up, down, right, and left — are written for the world’s mid-northern latitudes. Descriptions that also depend on longitude (mainly Moon positions) are for North America.

Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) is Universal Time (UT, UTC, GMT, or Z time) minus 4 hours.

_________________

Audio sky tour. Out under the evening sky with your earbuds in place, listen to Kelly Beatty’s monthly podcast tour of the heavens above. It’s free.

_________________

“This adventure is made possible by generations of searchers strictly adhering to a simple set of rules. Test ideas by experiments and observations. Build on those ideas that pass the test. Reject the ones that fail. Follow the evidence wherever it leads, and question everything. Accept these terms, and the cosmos is yours.”
— Neil deGrasse Tyson, 2014

Warped Milky Way in 3D

Warped Milky Way in 3D

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Astronomers have used pulsating stars to trace the crooked shape of our galaxy’s disk.

warped galaxy disk

This artist’s illustrations shows our galaxy’s warped disk, traced out by young variable stars called Cepheids (green points).
J. Skowron / OGLE / Astronomical Observatory, University of Warsaw

 

TO VIEW THE VIDEO ILLUSTRATING THE CURVATURE CLICK HERE AND SCROLL DOWN.

A careful survey of more than 2,400 Cepheid variable stars has revealed the Milky Way’s warped disk in new detail. Dorota Skowron (University of Warsaw, Poland) and colleagues report the result in the August 2nd Science.

Cepheids are giants and supergiants that breathe in and out at a rate proportional to their intrinsic brightness. This period-luminosity relation makes them superb distance markers, as Henrietta Swan Leavitt discovered in the early 20th century.

Skowron used the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE), as well as data from five other surveys and catalogs, to map the Cepheids’ 3D locations, which lie primarily within a few tens of thousands of light-years of the Sun. Their project confirms there’s a severe warp in our galaxy’s disk, reminiscent of pizza dough bent in its mid-toss flight. The warp has also shown up in maps using neutral hydrogen gas, stars, dust, and stellar motions, as well as a recent infrared study that used roughly half as many Cepheids as Skowron’s team did.

When they plotted the variable stars’ locations looking down at our galaxy’s disk, the astronomers noticed that the Cepheids clump, gathering in several concentrations that trace out a sloppy spiral pattern. Curious, the team took the three most prominent clumps and calculated the ages of the stars in them. They found that the stars in each group had a similar age to one another — approximately 64, 113, and 175 million years. The youngest clump’s stars tightly clustered together, whereas the oldest clump’s stars were the most spread out.

The team thinks that these Cepheid populations were born in three bursts of star formation. As time passed, stars that formed together would have naturally gone their separate ways, explaining why the oldest stars are the most spread out. Computer simulations confirm that three starbirth episodes would have stretched into the pattern the team’s map reveals in the Milky Way.

Since all three rounds of star formation happened on the same side of the galaxy, Skowron speculates that an encounter with a dwarf galaxy might have triggered them.

Aurora Awards: Voting is now open!

Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association

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View this email online

VOTING IS NOW OPEN

Voting for the Aurora Awards is now open.

Voting will close September 14, 11:59 EDT

Remember, you must be logged in to the website with an active CSFFA membership in order to download the voter’s packages or to vote.  The voting page has important instructions on how to fill out the voting form.  Please read them before voting, especially if you are a first-time voter, and contact us if you have any questions about how to vote.

If you are already logged in, click here to go to the voting page.  Logged in members can also visit the voter package download page to review the works on the ballot before voting.

If you have not yet logged in, or you need to renew your membership, go to the member login page.

If you have not yet been a member of CSFFA, this year or in the past, you can go to the become a member page to join us. Membership costs $10 for the year and is renewed every year in January.

If you just want to see the public ballot, it is here.

Vote results will be announced at Can-Con October 18 – 20, 2019 in Ottawa (http://can-con.org/) and will be available on the website soon after.

Advance online participation in the CSFFA AGM opens after voting closes and we will send you an email when that is available.

If you have any comments, questions or concerns, please contact us.

Happy voting!

 

WEATHER FORECASTS PROMISING FOR MONSFFA BARBECUE THIS SUNDAY

Despite the rain expected Friday and Saturday, the weather forecasts are shaping up as quite promising for this Sunday, August 11, the date of MonSFFA’s Summer Barbecue-in-the-Park. We anticipate sunny/cloudy skies with a slight breeze and temperatures in the mid-20s!

Check this Web site again Saturday evening for any last-minute posts regarding the weather, should any changes to the forecast necessitate an update.

Here again is our…

INVITATION to CLUB’S 2019 SUMMER BARBECUE-in-the-PARK!

Sunday, August 11; 10:30 or 11:00AM until about 4:00PM

We take this opportunity to invite all club members, their families, and friends to join us for our annual summer barbecue, 2019 edition!

Bring your own food and drink; MonSFFA will supply a small cooking grill. We usually commandeer a couple of picnic tables for the day, but you may wish to cart along a folding chair of your own, or a picnic blanket, and perhaps a card or board game, ball, or Frisbee. And don’t forget your sunscreen!

 

 

Be sure to check the club’s Web site the evening prior to the event for any word of cancellation due to impending rain. In the event of inclement weather, the event will be postponed until the following Sunday, August 18, same time and place.

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So, if the rain stays away, we will gather on the 11th at about 10:30-11:00AM under or nearby our usual stand of trees in Parc Angrignon, Lasalle (Angrignon Metro).  You’ll find us behind the Metro/bus station and just a short walk from the parking lot adjacent the now-shuttered “Farm”, or petting zoo.

View or download the July-August 2019 issue of e-Impulse here for complete details on our 2019 summer barbecue, including a map to help guide you to the site of the event (see map, Events Column).

e-ImpulseJuly-August2019PDF

Do join us for a pleasant afternoon of easy conversation, refreshing drink, and tasty fare amongst the company of fannish friends!

 

 

Conjunction: Moon, Jupiter, Antares

Space Weather News for Aug. 8, 2019
http://spaceweather.com
https://www.spaceweatheralerts.com

BRIGHT MOON + JUPITER CONJUNCTION: When the sun goes down tonight, step outside and look south. The waxing gibbous Moon is approaching Jupiter for a beautiful conjunction alongside the red giant star Antares. Closest approach is Friday, August 9th. Visit Spaceweather.com for full sky maps and observing tips.

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Above: Jupiter and the Moon are having a close encounter in the constellation Scorpius. Visit our Realtime Photo Gallery for images from around the world.

Reminder: Club’s 2019 Summer Barbecue-in-the-Park is this Sunday!

INVITATION to CLUB’S 2019 SUMMER BARBECUE-in-the-PARK!

MonSFFA’s Summer Barbecue-in-the-Park, traditionally held in July, will this year be held on Sunday, August 11!

We take this opportunity to invite all club members, their families, and friends to join us for our annual Summer Barbecue-in-the-Park, 2019 edition!

Bring your own food and drink; MonSFFA will supply a small cooking grill. We usually commandeer a couple of picnic tables for the day, but you may wish to cart along a folding chair of your own, or a picnic blanket, and perhaps a card or board game, ball, or Frisbee. And don’t forget your sunscreen!

 

 

Be sure to check the club’s Web site the evening prior to the event for any word of cancellation due to impending rain. In the event of inclement weather, the event will be postponed until the following Sunday, August 18, same time and place.

So, if the rain stays away, we will gather on the 11th at about 10:30-11:00AM under or nearby our usual stand of trees in Parc Angrignon, Lasalle (Angrignon Metro).  You’ll find us behind the Metro/bus station and just a short walk from the parking lot adjacent the now-shuttered “Farm”, or petting zoo.

View or download the July-August 2019 issue of e-Impulse here for complete details on our 2019 summer barbecue, including a map to help guide you to the site of the event (see map, Events Column).

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e-ImpulseJuly-August2019PDF

Do join us for a pleasant afternoon of easy conversation, refreshing drink, and tasty fare amongst the company of fannish friends!