Jesse Ramsden – Scientist of the Day
Jesse Ramsden, an English instrument maker, died Nov. 5, 1800, at the age of 65.
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Jesse Ramsden – Scientist of the Day
Jesse Ramsden, an English instrument maker, died Nov. 5, 1800, at the age of 65.
read more...
The First Asteroid Ever Discovered
On the night of January 1, 1801, Giuseppe Piazzi, a priest in Palermo, Italy, was mapping the stars in the sky. Over three nights, he'd look at and draw the same set of stars, carefully measuring their relative positions.
That night, he measured the stars. The next night, he measured them again. To his surprise, one had moved. The third night, the peculiar star had moved again. This meant it couldn't be a star at all.
It was something new, the first asteroid ever discovered, which Piazzi eventually named Ceres. Asteroids are bits of rock and metal that orbit the Sun. At over 900 kilometers across, Ceres is a very large asteroid. But through a telescope, like Piazzi's, Ceres looked like a pinpoint of light similar to a star. In fact, the word asteroid means star-like. You can tell the difference between stars and asteroids by the way they move across the sky. Of course, Piazzi knew none of that at the time, just that he had discovered something new. To learn about Ceres, Piazzi needed to track its motion across the sky and then calculate its orbit around the Sun.
So each clear night, Piazzi trained his telescope to the heavens. Night after night, he made careful measurements, but from his observations he learned that Ceres was only visible in the sky during the day. It would take another year and a lot of astronomers to nail down Ceres’ path, but we haven’t lost track of it since.
Today, we can do something that Piazzi could only dream of: send spacecraft to study asteroids up close. One spacecraft called Dawn journeyed billions of kilometers over four years to the main asteroid belt. There, it visited Ceres and another asteroid, Vesta. Dawn's stunning images transformed Piazzi's dot of light into a spectacular landscape of craters, landslides, and mountains.
From the TED-Ed Lesson The first asteroid ever discovered - Carrie Nugent
Animation by TED-Ed / Reza Riahi
Piero Piazzi Fronts First The Children for Peace Campaign Piazzi, president of Women Management Milan model agency, is helping to raise funds to support children affected by the HIV and COVID-19 emergencies.
A Grande Pirâmide de Gizé e os Estudantes da Bíblia
Qual a importância da Grande Pirâmide de Gizé para os Estudantes da Bíblia?
Como e por que a Grande Pirâmide tem sido chamada de “Testemunha Pétrea” por muitos?
Qual a possível relação desse monumento antigo com a Bíblia, nos aspectos:
Layout do Plano de Deus
Cronologia
Fim dos tempos
Como os Estudantes da Bíblia atuais encaram a Grande Pirâmide?
Esses e outros pontos interessantes foram…
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This is Sinagra
As a followup piece to my last post about how to experience small Sicilian towns I thought I’d share some images of the place where I am living as an example of what you can see in a small Sicilian paese.
I often get asked about where abouts I am in Sicily, I generally say I’m in the province of Messina as most small towns are rather insignificant, in the sense that they tend to be generic,…
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Seriously Ceres
Courtesy of NASA’s Dawn space probe, we can now see the dwarf planet Ceres, located in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, rotating in all its glory.
Ceres was discovered by the Italian astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi in 1801. It is a little more than one eighth the diameter of the Moon.
The gif above shows somewhat mysterious whites spots on Ceres’ surface. Hopefully, this “mystery” will…
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Gondolando Verso Sera by photolupi on Flickr.
Gondolier silhoutte
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