![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
took place on 18th of February 1930 - almost exactly 75 years ago.
However, the sattelite of PLuto Charon remained not discovered for ... 48 YEARS ! It was ACCIDENTLY discovered on pictures of PLuto in 1978. The technology needed to discover Charon existed for all 48 years ( from 1930 to 1978 ). Why it was not discovered ? http://www.interlog.com/~wnowak/book |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"wnowak" wrote in message
... took place on 18th of February 1930 - almost exactly 75 years ago. However, the sattelite of PLuto Charon remained not discovered for ... 48 YEARS ! It was ACCIDENTLY discovered on pictures of PLuto in 1978. The technology needed to discover Charon existed for all 48 years ( from 1930 to 1978 ). Why it was not discovered ? http://www.interlog.com/~wnowak/book It's sometimes hard to explain why something was not noticed for a long time, but the usual answer is, no one looked hard enough, or possibly Charon was occasionally seen, and dismissed as a flaw or background star. Pluto was not regarded as a subject of great interest by most astronomers in the '40s and '50s, except for the question of its size and mass. The best way to look for evidence of mass was to measure deviations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, so observational approaches were directed at accurate observations of these other planets. Back in the 1960s an effort to observe an occultation of a star by Pluto produced upper limits for its size, and showed that Pluto was much smaller than Earth, but Charon did not happen to occult the star for any observer. You also have to remember that most photographic observations of Pluto were done to determine or improve its orbit, so only relatively small telescopes were used, such as astrographs, or long focus refractors adequate for the task but often located in places with relatively poor seeing. Charon is always within a second of arc or so of Pluto itself and would be extremely hard to spot on such photographs. It was only when Christy used a relatively large (1.5-m, ISTR) telescope to get precise astrometry from a high-quality mountaintop site (for prediction of possible occultations) that he noticed a small bump on one side of the planet's image. He might have simply dismissed it as a background star or a flaw, but because it was on several images in different positions he realised it was a satellite. This said, I recall that Gerard Kuiper observed Pluto visually with the Palomar 5-m telescope in the late 40s or early 50s, on a night of excellent seeing. He wanted to measure the diameter with a bifilar micrometer (or similar), and it is slightly surprising that he did not spot Charon. Or maybe he did, and dismissed it as a faint background star. Remember, this was a single observation on one night. -- Mike Dworetsky (Remove "pants" spamblock to send e-mail) |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Mike Dworetsky
writes "wnowak" wrote in message ... took place on 18th of February 1930 - almost exactly 75 years ago. However, the sattelite of PLuto Charon remained not discovered for ... 48 YEARS ! It was ACCIDENTLY discovered on pictures of PLuto in 1978. The technology needed to discover Charon existed for all 48 years ( from 1930 to 1978 ). Why it was not discovered ? It was only when Christy used a relatively large (1.5-m, ISTR) telescope to get precise astrometry from a high-quality mountaintop site (for prediction of possible occultations) that he noticed a small bump on one side of the planet's image. He might have simply dismissed it as a background star or a flaw, but because it was on several images in different positions he realised it was a satellite. Interesting stuff snipped. Can you imagine the feelings of astronomers if Charon hadn't been discovered until 1990, and they realised they had missed a series of eclipses which won't recur for over a century? :-) -- Support the DEC Tsunami Appeal http://www.dec.org.uk/. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jonathan Silverlight writes:
Can you imagine the feelings of astronomers if Charon hadn't been discovered until 1990, and they realised they had missed a series of eclipses which won't recur for over a century? :-) Yes I can, because when the satellite was discovered in 1978, the orbit was known to be nearly edge on, but it was not known whether it was opening or closing, thus there was a 50 percent chance that the eclipses had been missed. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am curious. Do you remember the exact time of GK observations, or maybe you
can ask around ? I can calculate the exact angular distance between P and CH and add this fact to my site http://www.interlog.com/~wnowak/book So far I thought that I knew everything about PLuto, but you proved me wrong ![]() BTW, no observations of PLuto ( for sure no Charon ![]() telescope in 1930s, 40s ? Excellent seeing in California in 1930-50 would be 0.30 arcsec. right ? WN. Mike Dworetsky wrote: "wnowak" wrote in message ... took place on 18th of February 1930 - almost exactly 75 years ago. However, the sattelite of PLuto Charon remained not discovered for ... 48 YEARS ! It was ACCIDENTLY discovered on pictures of PLuto in 1978. The technology needed to discover Charon existed for all 48 years ( from 1930 to 1978 ). Why it was not discovered ? http://www.interlog.com/~wnowak/book It's sometimes hard to explain why something was not noticed for a long time, but the usual answer is, no one looked hard enough, or possibly Charon was occasionally seen, and dismissed as a flaw or background star. Pluto was not regarded as a subject of great interest by most astronomers in the '40s and '50s, except for the question of its size and mass. The best way to look for evidence of mass was to measure deviations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, so observational approaches were directed at accurate observations of these other planets. Back in the 1960s an effort to observe an occultation of a star by Pluto produced upper limits for its size, and showed that Pluto was much smaller than Earth, but Charon did not happen to occult the star for any observer. You also have to remember that most photographic observations of Pluto were done to determine or improve its orbit, so only relatively small telescopes were used, such as astrographs, or long focus refractors adequate for the task but often located in places with relatively poor seeing. Charon is always within a second of arc or so of Pluto itself and would be extremely hard to spot on such photographs. It was only when Christy used a relatively large (1.5-m, ISTR) telescope to get precise astrometry from a high-quality mountaintop site (for prediction of possible occultations) that he noticed a small bump on one side of the planet's image. He might have simply dismissed it as a background star or a flaw, but because it was on several images in different positions he realised it was a satellite. This said, I recall that Gerard Kuiper observed Pluto visually with the Palomar 5-m telescope in the late 40s or early 50s, on a night of excellent seeing. He wanted to measure the diameter with a bifilar micrometer (or similar), and it is slightly surprising that he did not spot Charon. Or maybe he did, and dismissed it as a faint background star. Remember, this was a single observation on one night. -- Mike Dworetsky (Remove "pants" spamblock to send e-mail) |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wnowak writes:
Jonathan Silverlight writes: Can you imagine the feelings of astronomers if Charon hadn't been discovered until 1990, and they realised they had missed a series of eclipses which won't recur for over a century? :-) Yes I can, because when the satellite was discovered in 1978, the orbit was known to be nearly edge on, but it was not known whether it was opening or closing, thus there was a 50 percent chance that the eclipses had been missed. Hmm ... that is in contradiction with what Stern says in his book; "... However, the fact that no observer had accidently stumbled onto one in progress hinted it was more likely that the event were in future, than in the recent past. " ( page #66 ) This suggests 50% ++, correct Mr. Tholen ? I don't buy the argument. There wasn't a whole lot of accurate photometry being done prior to the discovery of the satellite. The events themselves lasted only about five hours, and that's for a central event (less for the grazing events). With two events per orbit and one orbit every 150 hours, you're talking one part in 15. That is, if someone were making random observations, there's a 94 percent chance that the observations would be at times when no event was occurring. But as I said, there weren't a whole lot of observations being made. I'd have to dig into the literature to count the number of photometric points obtained in the 1970s, but I'd guesstimate 30. If events were occurring, that's two potential observations at the time of events. They could have been easily dismissed as bad points. Furthermore, I don't know of anybody who was taking high time resolution observations of Pluto in the 1970s. You'd need several points during an event to see the trend. A single low point could be easily dismissed as a faulty observation. Meanwhile, there is also a claim in the literature that events were seen when we now know there could not have been events, which demonstrates that faulty observations can be made. To tell you the truth I do not quite understand what Stern is talking about. For sure you know, since your picture is in the same book a few pages down the road. Please explain this to us. I hope the above is sufficient. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I think that there was a substantial chance that Charon would have been
discovered exactly during the eclipse season. Considering the fact that PLuto was getting closer to its perihelion point ( 1989 ), one would expect that big world telescopes would place it inside its "focal point". This would be a real "jaw dropper" , if Charon was discovered exactly during the eclipse season ![]() Please note that the point of perihelion and the point of PLutonian equinox ( max. eclipses ) have nothing in common. It is simply a random coincidence that they happen now almost exactly at the same time. If you are interested in other shocking coincidences surrounding PLuto+Charon, please visit my site. Jonathan Silverlight wrote: In message , Mike Dworetsky writes "wnowak" wrote in message ... took place on 18th of February 1930 - almost exactly 75 years ago. However, the sattelite of PLuto Charon remained not discovered for ... 48 YEARS ! It was ACCIDENTLY discovered on pictures of PLuto in 1978. The technology needed to discover Charon existed for all 48 years ( from 1930 to 1978 ). Why it was not discovered ? It was only when Christy used a relatively large (1.5-m, ISTR) telescope to get precise astrometry from a high-quality mountaintop site (for prediction of possible occultations) that he noticed a small bump on one side of the planet's image. He might have simply dismissed it as a background star or a flaw, but because it was on several images in different positions he realised it was a satellite. Interesting stuff snipped. Can you imagine the feelings of astronomers if Charon hadn't been discovered until 1990, and they realised they had missed a series of eclipses which won't recur for over a century? :-) -- Support the DEC Tsunami Appeal http://www.dec.org.uk/. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "wnowak" wrote in message ... I am curious. Do you remember the exact time of GK observations, or maybe you can ask around ? I can calculate the exact angular distance between P and CH and add this fact to my site http://www.interlog.com/~wnowak/book If you do a search on the ADS you will find Kuiper's paper in the 1950 Publs of the Astr Soc Pacific, v. 62, p133. He states he was unable to get an accurate measurement on the Texas 82-inch telescope owing to the faintness of Pluto. The equipment used was a disk that simulated the angular diameters of stars or small objects (not a micrometer). The measurement was therefore a direct comparison of visual appearances. He moved to the 200-inch telescope and observed on the night of 21 March 1950 as a guest of M. Humason. The angular diameter was found to be 0.23 arcsec (0.20 if some corrections were taken into account). This was so small as to be a genuine surprise to some, because it meant that the mass could not be as large as the 1 Earth-mass others were deriving from the orbit of Neptune ( which of course turned out to be spurious). He had Milton Humason check his observations at the telscope and they independently observed the same value via the direct comparison disk device. From the article, the impression I gain is that with an 82-in telescope the observation was difficult owing to the faintness of Pluto (V mag 14.9 in the early 1950s), but with a 200-inch telescope and an extra 1.5 mag gained through increased aperture, and a smaller diffraction disk, it became much easier. Charon is more than two magnitudes fainter than Pluto. Given the difficulty of the visual measurement, and the fact that he was concentrating on the size of the disk rather than looking for companions, it isn't really surprising that Kuiper did not notice a second much fainter object next to Pluto. (It is possible that he saw Charon and dismissed it as a background star, as it would have had an unresolved stellar angular diameter in the device used. Remember, the observation was made on a single night so motion would not have been detected.) -- Mike Dworetsky (Remove "pants" spamblock to send e-mail) So far I thought that I knew everything about PLuto, but you proved me wrong ![]() BTW, no observations of PLuto ( for sure no Charon ![]() Wilson telescope in 1930s, 40s ? Excellent seeing in California in 1930-50 would be 0.30 arcsec. right ? WN. Mike Dworetsky wrote: "wnowak" wrote in message ... took place on 18th of February 1930 - almost exactly 75 years ago. However, the sattelite of PLuto Charon remained not discovered for ... 48 YEARS ! It was ACCIDENTLY discovered on pictures of PLuto in 1978. The technology needed to discover Charon existed for all 48 years ( from 1930 to 1978 ). Why it was not discovered ? http://www.interlog.com/~wnowak/book It's sometimes hard to explain why something was not noticed for a long time, but the usual answer is, no one looked hard enough, or possibly Charon was occasionally seen, and dismissed as a flaw or background star. Pluto was not regarded as a subject of great interest by most astronomers in the '40s and '50s, except for the question of its size and mass. The best way to look for evidence of mass was to measure deviations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, so observational approaches were directed at accurate observations of these other planets. Back in the 1960s an effort to observe an occultation of a star by Pluto produced upper limits for its size, and showed that Pluto was much smaller than Earth, but Charon did not happen to occult the star for any observer. You also have to remember that most photographic observations of Pluto were done to determine or improve its orbit, so only relatively small telescopes were used, such as astrographs, or long focus refractors adequate for the task but often located in places with relatively poor seeing. Charon is always within a second of arc or so of Pluto itself and would be extremely hard to spot on such photographs. It was only when Christy used a relatively large (1.5-m, ISTR) telescope to get precise astrometry from a high-quality mountaintop site (for prediction of possible occultations) that he noticed a small bump on one side of the planet's image. He might have simply dismissed it as a background star or a flaw, but because it was on several images in different positions he realised it was a satellite. This said, I recall that Gerard Kuiper observed Pluto visually with the Palomar 5-m telescope in the late 40s or early 50s, on a night of excellent seeing. He wanted to measure the diameter with a bifilar micrometer (or similar), and it is slightly surprising that he did not spot Charon. Or maybe he did, and dismissed it as a faint background star. Remember, this was a single observation on one night. -- Mike Dworetsky (Remove "pants" spamblock to send e-mail) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Space Calendar - January 28, 2005 | [email protected] | Astronomy Misc | 1 | January 31st 05 09:33 AM |
Space Calendar - January 28, 2005 | [email protected] | History | 1 | January 31st 05 09:33 AM |
Space Calendar - December 23, 2004 | [email protected] | Misc | 0 | December 23rd 04 04:03 PM |
Sedna, space probes?, colonies? what's next? | TKalbfus | Policy | 265 | July 13th 04 12:00 AM |
New Solar System Model that explains DW 2004 / Quaoar / Kuiper Belt and Pluto | hermesnines | Misc | 0 | February 24th 04 08:49 PM |