Tag Archives: Aastro Kerala

Outreach Activities by AASTRO Kozhikkode gains mass attention

Kozhikkode : AASTRO Kozhikkode Team is in a busy schedule conducting a series of astronomy popularisation programmes in various parts of the district.AASTRO district fractionconducted more than half a dozen programmes with in two weeks after its formation.Some of them include Skywatching session in Providence Womens College,Elathur CMS Girls High school and so on...

AASTRO Outreach programme at Perambra Balasabha

Most of the places,large masses including students,parents,teachers and public gathered showing their keen interest in wonders of the universe and large no.of requests for programmes are pending in front.

In Providence Womens College,AASTRO organised a sky watching session in which students teachers and others turned up in large number

Sky watching,Providence Womens College,Calicut

AASTRO Kozhikkode will have more outrech programmes for  coming days since clear sky is available said AASTRO District Co Ordinator Shri M,P.C.Nambiar.For more details and arranging activities in your institution or at your place,one can contact AASTRO Kozhikkode team in +91-9447731394

CCUP School Nadappuram - AASTRO Skywatching programme

Around 200 people including students and parents turned up for AASTRO Outreach in Govt Fisheries School,Puthiyappa

AASTRO Kollam chapter is now all set for action.

Kottarakkara,Feb.09 : AASTRO Kollam district chapter is now ready for its activities throughout the district after its first meeting at DIET Kottarakkara on Feb 09th.The core committee for its activities formed in the meeting in which around 50 members participated representing various Colleges,Schools,SSA,KSSP and other bodies in the district.

AASTRO KOllam Chapter Meet

AASTRO will soon have its units in St.Johns College,Anchal,D B College Sasthamcotta,S N College Kollam and N S S College Nilamel.Some of the proposed activities are :

  • Forming an Academic expert group in astronomy and allied sciences
  • AASTRO Clubs in Colleges and Schools
  • District Level Astronomy camp
  • One day sky watching programmes throughout the district
  • Astronomy study tours

and many more......

The district point of contact and Co ordinator for AASTRO Kollam Chapter will be Shri.K.V.Sreenivasan Kartha,executive Engineer,KIP,Kottarakkara and co ordinator for AASTRO Clubs in the district will be Shri.G.Raju,principal,Govt Polytechnic,Punalur.

AASTRO KOLLAM CHAPTER

District co Ordinator

Shri.K.V.Sreenivasan kartha,Kottarakkara

Phone : +91-9447104909 E mail : kvskartha@gmail.com

AASTRO Club Co Ordinator

Shri.G.Raju, Punalur

Phone : +91-9447205460  E mail : rajug@sify.com

  • K G Sivaprasad,9745225052
  • P.Humam Rasheed,9747446570
  • K R Anil,9446232834
  • Ajay Kumar,9497135148
  • Devi S Kumar,9961437993
  • Adeela Beegum,9947398399

AASTRO Clubs

  • St.Johns college,Anchal : MidhunS ,9496327843
  • D B College,sasthamcotta : Sarath Prabhav, 9809089108
  • N S S College,Nilamel : Muhammed Binas,9809706574
  • S N College,Kollam : Sujai surendran,9744835381

ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS OF INTEREST IN FEBRUARY 2010

Sky Map for February 2010

Feb 3: A Waning Gibbous Moon (81%) stands 8 degrees South of Saturn at 4:00am.

Feb 4: A Wining Gibbous Moon (71%) stands 5.3 degrees SW of Spica at 3:00am.
Feb 5: Mars will be 3 degrees North of the Beehive Cluster (M44).
Feb 6: Last Quarter Moon.
Feb 8: A Crescent Moon (30%) is just 3 degrees from Antares before dawn.
Feb 12: A very thin Moon is just 1.5 degrees from Mercury. The pair will be nicely fitted in a 10x50 Binocular. But you will have very little time to view this event as they will be low in the east.
Feb 14: New Moon.
Feb 15: Neptune Conjunction.
Feb 21: The Moon stands just 2.2 degrees from the Pleiades Cluster (M45) after dusk.
Feb 22: First Quarter Moon.
Feb 25: A Waning Gibbous (87%) Moon stands about 8 degrees from Mars at 9:00pm.
Feb 27: The Moon is 6 degrees from Regulus at 9:00pm.

Feb 3: A Waning Gibbous Moon (81%) stands 8 degrees South of Saturn at 4:00am.
Feb 4: A Wining Gibbous Moon (71%) stands 5.3 degrees SW of Spica at 3:00am.
Feb 5: Mars will be 3 degrees North of the Beehive Cluster (M44).
Feb 6: Last Quarter Moon.
Feb 8: A Crescent Moon (30%) is just 3 degrees from Antares before dawn.
Feb 12: A very thin Moon is just 1.5 degrees from Mercury. The pair will be nicely fitted in a 10x50 Binocular. But you will have very little time to view this event as they will be low in the east.
Feb 14: New Moon.
Feb 15: Neptune Conjunction.
Feb 21: The Moon stands just 2.2 degrees from the Pleiades Cluster (M45) after dusk.
Feb 22: First Quarter Moon.
Feb 25: A Waning Gibbous (87%) Moon stands about 8 degrees from Mars at 9:00pm.
Feb 27: The Moon is 6 degrees from Regulus at 9:00pm.

Event COSMOS @ IIT Kanpur

Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur organises Techkriti,2010 which includes an event COSMOS
which is completely devoted towards Astronomy.COSMOS includes competitions like Star-Hunt,Astro-Quiz in which prizes worth *Rs.15,000* are at stake and workshops like *Telescope Making Workshop*.

*Star-Hunt* *
Each team is required to bring their own telescopes and find the given
objects in the provided STAR LIST( the star list includes planets, prominent
stars, clusters, nebulae and even messier objects).
1st Prize: Rs 5000
2nd Prize : Rs. 4000
3rd Prize : Rs. 3000
*Astro-Quiz*
Test your knowledge on Astronomy with an on-the spot quiz event and win
Prizes and goodies.

*Telescope Making Workshop*
Telescope Specifications:

Type : Refractor telescope. 45mm objective lens. 750mm Focal Length with
slide-in focus, star diagonal for right-angled viewing and bi-element astro
eyepiece.

*The telescope will be powerful enough to show the lunar craters, solar
system objects(Saturn, Jupiter and their moons etc) besides being useful for
Nature study, Bird watching and tourism.

Duration: 4 hours
Date: 13th February 2010
*Registration Fees: Rs 1200 per team.*
Maximum members in a team: 3

For registration, send a mail to cosmos@techkriti. org  the subject "*name
of the workshop or competition interested in"*
*for example: "Star-Hunt" ; "Telescope Making Workshop" in the following
format
NOTE: for Star Hunt competition, the team is required to bring their OWN
TELESCOPES.

Name:
Email:
College name and location:
Branch:
Year:
Phone number;
Telescope specification* (in case you are participating in Star Hunt, you
need to provide the specification of the telescope which you plan to bring)
Any prior experience in astronomy events:

For any queries feel free to contact  :
Coordinator, COSMOS
IIT Kanpur.
Cell: 09956817273

v s/AASTRO

Mars in a Nutshell

Mars swings to within 99 million kilometers of our fair planet this week, making its closest approach until 2012. Get your telescope out, or simply look up and gaze at the steady orange-red glow of the Red Planet. It rises in the east in the constellation Cancer just after sunset. You can’t miss it. At magnitude -1.3, Mars almost shines as bright as Sirius, the brightest star in the sky.

The particulars of Red Planet:

Diameter: 3400 km (about 0.53x Earth)
Mass: 6.4 x 10^23 kg (about 0.1x Earth)
Orbital Period: 687 Earth days
Rotation period: 24 hours 37 minutes (a “Mars day” is called a “sol”)
Axial Tilt: 25 degrees (similar to Earth’s 23.5 degrees)
Orbit size: 1.67 astronomical units at aphelion, 1.38 at perihelion (Mars has a highly elliptical orbit; remember the average Earth-sun distance is 1.0 astronomical unit)
Opposition Frequency: Mars is at “opposition” when it’s opposite the sun as seen on Earth, as it is this week. Oppositions occur every 780 days, on average.
Atmospheric composition: 95.7% carbon dioxide, 2.7% nitrogen, 0.2% oxygen)
Surface temperature: -90 C to -5 C, approximately
Satellites: Two natural satellites, Phobos and Diemos; both are likely captured asteroids

While Venus is nearly the same shape and size as the Earth, Mars has a surface that's much more familiar. Mars has broad deserts that look a little light some deserts on Earth. Again somewhat like Earth, Mars has polar caps of frozen water and carbon dioxide which grow and shrink with the planet's seasons. Mars also has a thin atmosphere, which means it has wind and weather and clouds and even massive dust storms that engulf large parts of the planet.

Mars also has a number of large volcanoes, including the immense Olympus Mons which rises 27 km above the surface of the planet, dwarfing Earth's Mount Everest. Unlike Earth, Mars did not develop plate tectonics. That means Martian volcanoes sit permanently over hot-spots in the crust and grower larger over time. Most volcanoes lie on a large, elevated bulging area of the planet's surface called Tharsis, which is six miles high and as large as North America. No one knows for sure what caused this massive bulge.

Unlike Earth, Mars presently has no liquid surface water. But there are large canyons thought to be carved into the surface by ancient flows of liquid water a couple of billion years ago. The largest canyon, Valle Marineris, puts Earth's Grand Canyon to shame. Valle Marineris has a width of 200 km in some parts, a depth of 7 km, and stretches to a length of 4,000 km… roughly the width of the continental United States.

Mars gets its reddish color from the sand of its deserts. But even a small telescope shows darker continent-size features once thought to be areas of vegetation. These dark features are simply crater fields where darker sub-surface material has been ejected and scattered by the wind.With a small telescope, you can see the dark surface features, polar caps, and occasional dust storms. But since it presents a small disk, even at its closest approaches to Earth, Mars is not easy to observe.

v s/AASTRO

Annular Solar Eclipse photographs by German Eclipse Chasers

Baily's beads,photographed by Tobias kamschulte from Thiruvananathapuram,Kerala

Stunning photographs by Tobias Kampschulte and other German Eclipse Chasers who were there at Thiruvananthapuram with AASTRO  for the ASE watch can be viewed from the link :' http://astro-digital.de/fotos/rsf2010/Thumbnails.html .

Brightest and Biggest Moon in 2010

Moon in Perigee

Just after turning Sun into a ring of fire on 15th January as new moon,
the coming full moon on 30th January night has something in store for
all of us. It will not only shine brighter but will appear bigger as
compared to other full moons during this year. To put it in simple
words - The full Moon of January 30th is the biggest and brightest full
Moon of the year. Is this an illusion or some gimmick played by a TV
channel? No, its something which mother nature has kept in store for
us.

why moon looks bigger or smaller? Things when are faraway look
smaller and when are closer look bigger. So moon at perigee will look
bigger than the rest of the positions of moon in its orbit around the
earth. And if perigee happens within short span of the full moon, it
will look BIG!!!! Try this simple exercise. Hold your thumb very close
to your eye, it will cover all your view and as you move the thumb away
from your eyes, it will appear smaller.

Some full Moons are genuinely larger than others and this coming
Saturday's Moon is quite BIG. Why? The Moon's orbit is an ellipse with
one side 50,000 km closer to Earth than the other. In the
language of astronomy, the two extremes are called "apogee" (far away)
and "perigee" (nearby). On Jan. 30th, the Moon becomes full 3 hours
after reaching perigee, making it around 15% bigger and around 30%
brighter than smallest full Moon we are going to see in rest of the
2010.

so lets don't sit at home on 30th Jan evening, go out and see the bright
shining full Moon, The biggest in 2010.

- v s/AASTRO

Teachers Workshop for Eclipse watch

Thiruvananthapuram:AASTRO organised one day training for teachers from schools in and around city on January 11th in connection with Kazcha-2010,the eclipse watching mega event.Around 200 teachers from 100 schools partcipated in the workshop.Hon.Mayor Shri Jayan Babu inaugurated the workshop.AASTRO resource persons like Prof.K.Pappootty.Dr.C.P.Aravindakshan,Shri.KrishnaWarrier,Shri K.P.Sreenivasan conducted different sessions on various topics.Booklets were also distributed.

200 teachers participated in the workshop organised by AASTRO

Lunar Eclipse watch on Dec.31st 2009

Thiruvananthapuram : AASTRO  arranged facilities for public for watching the last lunar eclipse on Dec.31st 2009 at Central Stadium.Large no.of  People,especially families, turned up with extreme enthusiasm for the upcoming solar eclipse and other activities on astronomy had a wonderful new year night.AASTRO  volunteers Dr.C.P.Aravindakshan,

Large no.of families and children turned for the Partial Lunar Eclipse watch organised by AASTRO on Dec.31st.

Large no.of families and children turned for the Partial Lunar Eclipse watch organised by AASTRO on Dec.31st.

V S Shyam, Pradeep Attukal,Vaisakhan Thampi,B Ramesh were some of them present for the programme.

AASTRO Kerala – the youngest amateur astronomy organization in the world -launched officially

Prof.Dr.Susanne Huttmeister,Director,Zeiss Planetarium,Germany is addressing the audience during the inaugural function

Prof.K.Pappootty,President,AASTRO Kerala giving presidential address

Amatuer Astronomers Organisation,AASTRO Kerala is now the youngest amateur astronomy organization in the world: The German eclipse expedition team was invited to formally launch it on 14 January in Trivandrum.Daniel Fischer,Science Writer and International Astronomical Union Member from University of Bonn,Germany made the official declaration More than 250 astronomy enthusiasts were present for the Inaugural function at Priyadarshini Planetarium  Hal.Prof.K.Pappootty,President,AASTRO kerala presided the function..Celebrated personalities in science popularisation and allied fields were present.Prof.Dr.Susanne Hüttemeister,Director of Zeiss Planetarium,Germany delivered a talk on Astronomy after the official function

An exhibition was also arranged by AASTRO volunteers in the venue which revealed the beauty of the Cosmos.

In connection with the inauguration and Annular Solar Eclipse outreach activities,AASTRO arranged talks,interactions and various programmes in different colleges in the city.