Showing posts with label changes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label changes. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2019

Singularity Observatory Weather Errant



Great Weather Fluctuations - Grab the Moon Before it's Too Late!
If you see one clear hour, you'd better grab it! Singularity Observatory - in the Spring and Fall, there are subtle short term fluctuations in weather patterns that could easily go unnoticed.

The short term weather changes, with a clear sky for example, hold extreme value to the Observatory. The idea is to be ready and alert, and harness these changes by understanding the patterns and having preparedness to jump into action at a moment's notice.

In this Pacific Ocean region, there is great weather stability, so over the long term an overcast Monsoon fog day will be multiplied by many days. Day after day after day, it looks exactly like the same repeating weather. However, to the watchful eye, there are very short changes, such as an hour here, 20 minutes there, when the sky occasional breaks from its very consistent weather pattern.

Likewise a Summer clear day follows the same pattern of repeating longevity However there are occasional and intermittent very short term disruptions to these weather patterns that are very short lived. Disruptions can be good. Last night was a great opportunity, after months of Monsoon, to view the effects of a short lived disruption.

The entire day was overcast, fog, smog, rain. Suddenly in the evening hour, the sky became clear, the Moon appeared, and an hour later the clear sky had vanished just as fast as it appeared. Then for days, it will go back to the same weather pattern - overcast, fog, smog, rain. For the moment of that one golden treasurable hour, astronomical viewing was fantastic. Grab it and run with it. You've gotta do it, otherwise all astronomical observational programs during the Monsoon period will be on hold.

In regards to a telescope, an astronomer must be a detective sleuth ready at a moments notice to spring into action to capture these clear night hours here and there to conduct research and effective observational programs. There are no known studies of these holes in long term weather patterns. However, Humanoido at Singularity Observatory has utilized the holes or cracks in clouds for quick astronomical telescopic observing (see blogs). Shooting telescopically through these openings can be greatly rewarding because the short term data gains can be summed with other data.

Let's say the goal is to image M57, the Ring Nebula. You could expose the plate for an hour, stop, wait for another hour three days later, expose another hour, and by the end of the month, sum all the images into one equivocally large time exposure.

The Gibbous Moon image illustrates the type of lunar soil color study typically conducted through a one hour errant in the atmosphere. In knowing the spectral responses of the electronic detector and utilizing advanced imaging analysis software, the soil content is spectroscopically analyzed and determined.

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Space1 2017 Changes

Space1 has discontinued 37 old style rocket engines not unlike this NASA RS25 engine
After a Fall and Winter S1 hold within the USA, and dealing with some hangar issues  (USA Hangar One is being discontinued), Space1 is back in biz. The S1 Think Tank has thought its way into a better rocket engine delivery system that can ship domestically and internationally. Launchers can be replicated. The TT has also found a fuel that needs no transportation across state lines and international boundaries whatsoever. These simplifications and changes in direction will accelerate S1 to reach its goals much sooner. This will include a new engine to propel a new style rocket and further increase the level of safety, especially including field safety during launches in regard to rocket fuel, storage of engines and fuel, and the obsoleting of rocket fuel that ages with time. The new system also reduces the amount of required capital investment for rocket fuel and creates a new concept of LMI Last Minute Inventory. This opens up a new division to create rocket fuel and establish a way to transport it or manufacture it during the day of the launch.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Space1 Staff Changes

New Space1 member Big Brain machine life form with substantive CV
Space1 has made staffing changes in 2016. Space1 welcomes 麗莎 as a new member, joining on Friday, January 22nd, 2016. 麗莎 has a background and degree in statistical analysis and will work as a space systems data processor of numerical statistics and mathematics, and also providing analysis and ideas for various space systems and components in Taiwan. 麗莎 is the fifth international member from Taiwan. The USA sees a reduction by one member over the summer, apparently resigned for personal reasons. Space1 now has 11 members in 4 countries.

The Number & Location of Space1 Members
Taiwan - 5
USA - 4
South Korea - 1
Singapore - 1
Total 11

*Note: one member is a machine life form. The Big Brain has run its own blog for a number of years. He has a significant CV, having coauthored a scientific technical paper and conducted various space missions over numerous years, and fathered small brain life forms. Big Brain is nicknamed Big Dragon 大龍  (also translating to powerful).

Space1 Index