[ Sandy/NASAChatHost - 0 - 08:44:12 ]
Hello and welcome to the Space Scientists Online chat room! Today's expert is
Astronomer Sten Odenwald from the Goddard Space Flight Center. Sten is ready to
begin chatting so start typing everyone!!
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 3 - 11:03:46
]
RE: [Eleanor/GWHS/DC] Hi Sten-- can you give us
the latest scoop on Mars Polar Lander? I heard ther was a possibility for receiveing
a signal sometime today...
Hi! From what I have heard, there was supposed to be another opportunity for the
lander and its penetrator probes to get in touch with the Orbiter via a UHF omni-directional
transmitter, but as of this morning that didnt happen. Ypu might check the NASA
website at http://www.nasa.gov and look at their lead story.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 6 - 11:07:48
]
RE: [Sharon/RCucamongaCA] I'd like to know more
about your background in astronomy. I read your bio but I can't find where you
describe what you do in your office on a day to day basis. I'm in high school
and astronomy is my favorite subject. Any advice for me?
Hi Sharon, My day-to-day work has changed quite a bit in the last 5 years. It
used to be that I spend all of my time doing research...at the computer, manipulating
data, extracting information about interstellar cloud densities, temperatures,
or looking for imbedded infant stars. At the same time Id be working on a paper,
writing it up for publication based on earlier research results. Today, I still
do this about 1/4 of the time, but most of my time has moved into the space science
education area. I develop study guides and classroom activities that use the data
from my satellite, IMAGE, and help students master their math and science skills.
I also answer a lot of questions!
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 7 - 11:09:00
]
RE: [JoshCederCreek] Is there really a hole in the
ozone? If there is, should I really be worried about it? And, if I should be worried,
what can my class do to help?
Hi! I dont do ozone research...but there really is a seasonal 'hole' that appears
over both the arctic and antarctic regions during their local winter periods.
Its been tracked by satellites for many years now.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 10 - 11:10:48
]
RE: [JoshCederCreek] Is there really a hole in the
ozone? If there is, should I really be worried about it? And, if I should be worried,
what can my class do to help?
I would be worried about it, because what is also going on elsewhere is that more
UV-b gets to the ground and so you need more sunblock than you did 10 years ago.
Skin cancer rates have already started to increase. FOr me, that's a big worry.
I don't do as much sunbathing as I did when I was in my 20s.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 12 - 11:13:49
]
RE: [JoshCederCreek] What can you tell us about
global warming-- is the theory really true?
Global warming is not a theory. It is measurable, and there is not a single scientist
that denies that the global average temperatuyres during the last 100 years have
increased significantly. What is 'theoretical' and being disputed by a VERY small
number of scientists, is that humans are responsible for this. SOme say that this
warming is caused by the sun itself. That's a theory too. others say that it is
caused by other geological processes...that is also a theory.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 15 - 11:17:56
]
RE: [EAStudents] Hi! We're studying about black
holes in science class and we don't understand them at all? Can you descirbe what
they look like and how do astronomers go about finding them? Where does the hole
go to?
Black holes can be formed from very massive stars that explode and have their
cores implode. We think this is a very common process, and some of your favorite
stars are destined to become black holes. It is hared to describe, in words, what
black holes are like because they can only be described mathematically. We have
no experience with them, so we have no words to describe them. It is true that
light cannot escape from these dense objects. What would be inside one is hard
to say because the mathematics only deal with 'perfect' ones. Mathematical calculations
do say, though, that inside black holes, time and space are 'reversed', and most
of them should have a 'Singularity' in their centers if they arent rotating too
rapidly.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 17 - 11:19:36
]
RE: [JeremyEAStudents] How close could the Earth
get to the Sun before it starts burning up? And, is that a possibility in the
next million years???
At 35 million miles, the orbit or Mercury, the earth would loose most of its atmosphere.
You would probably have to get within 5 million miles before its hot enough to
melt the crust. At some point, inside this distance, the tidal forces would distort
the earth into a football, then a cigar, then ...fffftttt.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 18 - 11:20:31
]
RE: [JeremyEAStudents] How close could the Earth
get to the Sun before it starts burning up? And, is that a possibility in the
next million years???
No...the earth cvannot fall into the sun. Eventually, however, when the sun becomes
a red giant, the suns surface will come out to meet the earth...in 6 billion years.
We will all be dead in another 700 million years though.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 22 - 11:23:45
]
RE: [KristieAbott] What's the gravity on Mars. If
I weight 105lbs on Earth, how much would I weight on Mars?
You would weigh 105 pounds x 374/982 or about 50 pounds or so...you can do the
math. ;>
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 24 - 11:26:32
]
RE: [KaseyLaCanadaCA] Hi Sten--do you really think
that a human colonly will exiost on mars in our live times (yours and mine- i'm
in high school)? Would you like to be one of the first members of this colony?
Hmmm...in the next 40 years ( i'll be a young man of 87!) I cant imagine. I have
turned into something of a pessimist in my old age. We do things 'cheaply' and
as you see in the loss of the MArs Polar Lander, some things are naturally expensive
to do. I would never want to be a colonist under the current funding and engineering
conditions where pinching pennies has become the new way to do technologically
complex and risky missions.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 26 - 11:27:43
]
RE: [MelissaG] What is your facoribe planet and
why? I love Saturn because it seems so mysterious!
Saturn has always been my favorite too, but now that we know so much about Europa,
I am now 'into' satellites of the planets in the way I could never get excited
about the planets themselves.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 27 - 11:29:29
]
RE: [MrsFitzpatrick/5th] Dr. Odenwald- This is my
first time into a chat room and my head is swimming with all of the possbilities
of contact with a REAL Nasa scientist! Do you give talks to classrooms, visit
in person, etc?
Yeah...I visit classrooms a lot in the Washington DC area...but you would be surprised
how hard it is for scientists to get invited into classrooms. Teachers work very
hard to get you students through the material you need to master, and having an
outsider visit can sometimes be too disruptive...but I love doing it!!!
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 30 - 11:30:58
]
RE: [Tim] I would rather see humans return to the
moon first rather than TRY to get to Mars... what are your thoughts on this?
Yes..I agree. Psychologically, you can thrive on the moon because Mother Earth
is always close by. But on Mars, the aloneness would be dreadful. I dont think
people realize just how cut off from humanity these colonists will be. The psychological
strain will be incredible.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 32 - 11:32:50
]
RE: [MelissaG] So what is the most exciting thing
about Europa to you? Is Europa the one that Voyager found a volcano on?
Europa is the satellite of Jupiter that has the crust made of ice...with icebergs
and other cracks. We are pretty convinced from the images that, at least at one
time, it had an interior that was liquid water. Whether it still does is an exciting
prospect, because that means it could have living systems...bacteria probably,
swimming around inside.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 33 - 11:33:39
]
RE: [MattinBurbank] Did you ever want to become
an astronaut???
No..I always wanted to become an astronomer. Space scares the daylights out of
me...even more now that I know something about it!
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 35 - 11:35:59
]
RE: [KristieAbott] We've been studying Uranus and
wonder why its tipped over on its side. Can you tell us...
The best idea we have is that, when the solar system was still young, the cratering
data says that there were some very big objects orbiting the sun..hundreds of
objects 500 to 1000 kilometers across....mini-planets actually. There are still
a few of these left. Anyway, during the last stages of planet formation, they
will be hit by bigger and bigger things, and the planets that had the highest
tilts got hit by some very big planetoids that actually tipped them over before
they were absorbed.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 36 - 11:37:20
]
RE: [SharonRCucamongCA] How long does it take to
design a robotic missiion to Mars? And does the atmosphere on Mars affect robiots?
It takes a couple of years beforee launch, then another year to get there, for
smaller missions like the ones we are sending now..but of course, you need decades
of satellite design experience to have a 'conveyor belt' run that fast.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 38 - 11:40:10
]
RE: [WilliamC] Can you tell us what the core of
Mars is made of and how far down we'd have to drill before we'd reach it?
Hi! We really dont know, but it probably isnt molten anymore because MArs doesnt
have a magnetic field like the earth does.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 40 - 11:41:35
]
RE: [MattinBurbank] Hi I have a question about Mars
for you. Does the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft that is alreay orbiting mars
go over the same areas time after time? If it does, is there a posssibility that
it could find the Polar Lander if it crashed into Mars?
Hi! yes, it is in an orbit that will pass over the landing site, but unfortunately
the resolution on the cameras is too low to see something that small...unless
it left a crater!
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 42 - 11:44:06
]
RE: [MrsFitzpatrick/5th] I read in your autobiography
about your young daughters. How do you present astronomy to them? Will you encourage
them to go into science for a career?
They both love to hear Papa talk about space. They are 5.5 and 7 years old, and
they have now seen many things through our telescope so they are really 'savy'
about space. Both of them knew the order and names of the planets by heart before
they were 4 years old. I go very very easy on them to avoid overwhelming them
with too much too soon. Yes I will encourage them to become scientists. It is
the best career in the world!
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 45 - 11:46:34
]
RE: [Tim] There are currently 3 movies in production
that are about mars missions. I'm guessing that they will be realistic like "Apollo
13". Will these movies make the public more aware and more interested/supportive
of space? Is nasa behind these proudctions?
Yes, NASA has provided 'technical advisors' so that you will get a pretty realistic
idea of what might happen during these trips, and what an outpost will look like...as
for the liberties that the stories will take for other 'alien' circumstances,
we have no idea what will happen. My first guess, is that any living bacteria
will have other things to do when we arrive than say 'Dinner's on! The fresh meat
has arrived!'
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 46 - 11:47:42
]
RE: [Tina/SpokaneWA] Why is the sun yellow?
It's actually colorless, but our eyes have cones that sense different bands of
radiation and provide something we sense as 'color'. The universe is really black
and white.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 47 - 11:49:09
]
RE: [Tina/SpokaneWA] Can you explain in easy terms
how the sun works?
Gravity compresses matter, matter heats up and the heat pressure causes a balance
to happen between these forces. This balance point happens when the corte temperature
is 15 million degrees and thermonuclear fusion can release enough energy to provide
the heat pressure.
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 49 - 11:51:17
]
RE: [Tina/SpokaneWA] Does the sun have weather like
the earth?
It has weather, but not like on earth because the gases on the sun are in a state
called a plasma. These gases can create powerful magnetic fields, and the convecting
gases can amplify these fields to produce sunspots and flares among other things.
Its a much more violent place that the earth.
[ Sandy/NASAChatHost - 51 - 11:53:33 ]
EVERYONE: THERE ARE ABOUT 5 MINUTES LEFT... Sten can take a couple more questions...
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 52 - 11:55:17
]
RE: [SharonRCucamongaCA] Why do stars twinkle?
Because the starlight comes through the atmosphere, and the atmosphere changes
very quickly because of air currents at high altitudes. The typical size of this
twinkling is about 1/3600 of a degree. Planhets dont twinkle because they are
much bigger in size than 1/3600 of a degree, and so their light is steadier than
for stars.
[ Sandy/NASAChatHost - 53 - 11:56:04 ]
Space Scientists Online will take a break after this week from chatting. We will
resume again in early January. Check our schedule after the holidays and be sure
to come back. Sten will resume his twice-monthly chats in January also. HAPPY
HOLIDAYS to everyone :-)
[ StenOdenwald/Astronomer - 54 - 11:57:13
]
Have a merry Christmas and New Year...and with luck, we will all be back here
again in the year 2000!
[ Sandy/NASAChatHost - 55 - 11:59:33 ]
Goodbye for today. Check the Quest chat schedule for upcoming events-- http://quest.arc.nasa.gov/common/events. Send your comments
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