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   BAMA      Science Research Echo      1,586 messages   

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   Message 416 of 1,586   
   Roger Nelson to All   
   See Mercury at Sunset   
   08 Feb 13 22:31:20   
   
   See Mercury at Sunset   
       
   Feb. 8, 2013:  NASA has recently discovered a very strange planet.  Its days   
   are twice as long as its years.  It has a tail like a comet. It is hot enough   
   to melt lead, yet capped by deposits of ice. And to top it all off ... it   
   appears to be pink.   
       
   The planet is Mercury.   
       
   Of course, astronomers have known about Mercury for thousands of years, but   
   since NASA's MESSENGER probe went into orbit around Mercury in 2011,   
   researchers feel like they've been discovering the innermost planet all over   
   again.  One finding after another has confirmed the alien character of this   
   speedy little world, which you can see this week with your own eyes.   
       
   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=117lEleTeiY   
       
   A new ScienceCast video previews the year's best apparition of the planet   
   Mercury. Play it   
       
   Mercury is emerging from the glare of the sun for a beautiful two-week   
   apparition during the month of February 2013.  The show begins about a half   
   hour after sunset. Scan the horizon where the sun's glow is strongest and, if   
   the sky is clear, Mercury should pop out of the twilight, a bright pink   
   pinprick of light.  Mercury itself is not actually pink, but it is often   
   colored so by the rosy hues of the setting sun.   
       
   If you're looking on the evenings of February 8th and 9th, scan the sky around   
   Mercury with binoculars.  A second planet is there, too.  Glowing faintly red,   
   Mars is barely a degree from Mercury.  In binocular optics, Mercury and Mars   
   form a charming little double-planet.   
       
   As February unfolds, Mercury will rise higher in the sunset sky, brightening   
   as it ascends.  From February 11th through 21st, the "pink planet" will be   
   visible for as much as an hour after sunset.  February 11th is a date of   
   special interest: a slender crescent Moon will appear straight above Mercury,   
   providing guidance for novice sky watchers.   
       
   Mercury circles the sun about three times closer than Earth does, rotating   
   just three times on its axis every two Mercury-years.  This slow-spin under   
   the solar inferno bakes Mercury's surface bone-dry and raises its daytime   
   temperature to 425 degrees Celsius, hot enough to melt lead.  This would seem   
   an unlikely place to find deposits of ice, yet that is what the MESSENGER   
   probe recently confirmed: Mercury has enough ice at its poles to encase   
   Washington DC with a layer of frozen water two miles thick.   
       
   http://spaceweather.com/gallery/indiv_upload.php?upload_id=76356   
       
   Mars and Mercury setting together over the Alps on Feb. 8th. Credit: Stefano   
   De Rosa of Turin, Italy Ice on Mercury is possible because the tilt of   
   planet's spin axis is almost zero -- less than one degree -- so there are   
   pockets at the planet's poles that never see sunlight. Shadowed areas at each   
   end of the heavily-cratered planet turn out to be cold enough to freeze and   
   hold water.   
       
   MESSENGER found something else: Much of Mercury's ice is coated with a   
   mysterious dark substance.  Researchers don't know exactly what it is, but   
   they suspect it is a mix of complex organic compounds delivered to Mercury by   
   the impacts of asteroids and comets.   
       
   In some ways, Mercury itself resembles a comet with a long tail.  NASA's twin   
   STEREO probes, on a mission to observe the sun, spotted Mercury's tail in   
   2008. The MESSENGER probe has since flown through it.  The tail appears to be   
   made of material blown off Mercury's surface by exposure to solar flares and   
   the solar wind at point-blank range.  The pressure of sunlight pushes the tail   
   in the anti-sunward direction, just like the tail of a comet.   
       
   With the sun currently approaching the maximum of its 11-year activity cycle,   
   Mercury is getting hit by the stormiest space weather in years.  This is a   
   great time for MESSENGER to study the processes that turn Mercury into a   
   "comet-planet."   
       
   Mercury is a strange planet, indeed.  When the sun goes down tonight, step   
   outside and see for yourself.   
       
       
   Author: Dr. Tony Phillips  |  Production editor: Dr. Tony Phillips  | Credit:   
   Science@NASA   
       
       
   Regards,   
       
   Roger   
      
   --- D'Bridge 3.9   
    * Origin: NCS BBS - Houma, LoUiSiAna (1:3828/7)   

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