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Moons of Saturn; Features and Explorations

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moons of Saturn
In addition to having rings and attractive features, the planet Saturn has many and varied moons. The two moons Titan and Enceladus are attractive destinations for researchers due to their unique features and potential for life.

Moons of Saturn; Features and Explorations

The planet Saturn has a large number of diverse moons, ranging from satellites with a diameter of tens of meters to large moons like Titan with dimensions larger than the planet Mercury. Saturn has 82 confirmed moons, only 13 of which are larger than 50 km in diameter. Titan is the most prominent moon of Saturn and the second-largest moon in the Solar System after Ganymede (Jupiter’s moon). The moon’s atmosphere is as nitrogen-rich as Earth’s and offers views of river networks and hydrocarbon lakes.

The twenty-four moons of Saturn are regular satellites and their progressive orbits are not inclined to Saturn’s equatorial plane. These twenty-four moons include seven main satellites, four small moons, two small-orbiting moons, and two other moons that act as shepherds of Saturn’s F ring. The remaining 58 moons, which have a diameter varying from 4 to 213 km, are among the irregular moons whose orbits are further away from Saturn. These moons are likely captured planets or parts of bodies that have collapsed after being trapped. Irregular months are divided into Inuit, Norse, and Gaelic groups based on orbital characteristics. The names of these groups are taken from Greek mythology. The largest irregular moon of Phoebe is Saturn’s ninth moon, which was discovered at the end of the 19th century. Saturn’s rings are a combination of microscopic variable bodies to satellites several hundreds of meters in diameter, each orbiting Saturn in its own orbit.

Various moons of Saturn

Formation and origin

It is believed that Saturn’s lunar system was formed similar to Jupiter’s moons, but in general, the details of the formation of Saturn’s moons are unclear. On June 23, 2014, NASA reported strong evidence that the nitrogen in Titan’s atmosphere came from material from the Oort cloud, not from Saturn.

Group of months

Although the demarcation of Saturn’s moons is somewhat vague, they can be divided into ten groups based on their orbital characteristics. Many of these moons, including Penn and Daphnis, are in Saturn’s ring system, and their orbital period is slightly longer than that of Saturn. Internal moons and regular moons have an average orbital inclination that varies from 1 degree to 1.5 degrees. On the other hand, the irregular moons in the outermost part of Saturn’s moon system, especially in the Norse group, have orbital radians of millions of kilometers and orbital periods of several years. The Norse moons also orbit Saturn in the opposite direction.

Large inner moons: Saturn’s innermost large moons are located in Saturn’s thin E ring. These moons are Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, and Dione.

Outer large moons: These moons are located on the other side of the E ring, they are: Rhea, Titan, Hyperion, Laptus

Irregular months

Irregular moons are small satellites with high radians and inclinations and are thought to have been trapped by Saturn’s gravity in the past. The exact size of these moons is still unknown because their dimensions are so small that they are difficult to observe with a telescope.

Alkeonides

The three small moons between the moons of Mimas and Enceladus are called Alkeonids, which derives its name from Greek mythology. These three months are Matun, Ant, and Plan. Ant and Meton have a very thin circular arc in their orbit, while Plan has a completely thin ring. During these months, only texts were photographed from a relatively close distance. This egg-shaped moon has a small number of impact craters.

Overview of Titan and Enceladus

Titan and Enceladus are the two prominent moons of Saturn, which have been noticed by Cassini Huygens probe data and the potential for life in the past years, and missions have been designed to visit these two mysterious moons.

Titan

Titan is the largest moon of Saturn and the second-largest moon in the solar system (after Jupiter’s moon Ganymede). Titan is the only moon in the solar system with a dense, cloudy planet-like atmosphere. Scientists believe that the conditions on Titan are similar to the initial conditions on Earth, but the only difference is that the Earth is closer to the Sun and it is hotter. In many ways, Titan is the most similar to Earth.

Titan’s diameter reaches 2,575 km, which is approximately 50% wider than the Earth’s moon. The distance between Titan and Saturn is nearly 1.2 million kilometers and 1.4 billion kilometers or 9.5 AU from the Sun. An astronomical unit is the distance from the Earth to the sun. It takes about 80 minutes for sunlight to reach Titan because of this distance, sunlight is about 100 times dimmer than sunlight on Earth.

It takes approximately 15 days and 22 hours for Titan to complete one orbit of Saturn. Titan is tidally locked to Saturn, which means that, like Earth’s moon, one side of it is always seen from Saturn. It takes approximately 29 Earth years for Saturn to complete the orbit of the Sun (Saturnian year), and Saturn’s axis of rotation, like Earth’s, has a deviation that causes seasons on this planet; But Saturn’s seasons are longer, typically lasting nearly seven Earth years each. Since Titan’s orbit is in line with Saturn’s equatorial plane and Titan’s deviation from the Sun is almost the same as Saturn’s, the seasons of this month are the same as Saturn’s, that is, almost every season of Titan is seven Earth years and one year is equal to 29 Earth years.

Titan's methane lake
Cassini image of Titan’s north polar hydrocarbon lake

Scientists are not sure about the exact formation and origin of Titan. However, this month’s weather holds clues. A number of Cassini Huygens probe instruments measured nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15 isotopes in Titan’s atmosphere. According to the findings, the nitrogen isotope ratio found in Titan is very similar to the isotope of comets in the Everett cloud. The globular Oort cloud consists of hundreds of billions of icy bodies that are located at a distance between 5000 and 100 thousand astronomical units from the sun (each astronomical unit is equal to 150 million kilometers). The nitrogen ratio of Titan’s atmosphere shows that the building blocks of this moon were formed in the same gas and dust cloud as the Sun in the early history of the solar system, and the origin of these blocks is not the hot disk of Saturn’s material.

Surface: Titan’s surface is one of the most similar to Earth in the entire solar system. Of course, its temperatures are lower and it has different chemical characteristics. The surface temperature of Titan reaches minus 179 degrees Celsius. Titan may also have volcanic activity. The moon’s surface is full of methane and ethane streams that form large river and lake channels. No other world in the entire solar system (except Earth) has surface liquid.

Atmosphere: Nearly 95% of Titan’s atmosphere is nitrogen and 5% is methane. Traces of carbon compounds can also be found in the atmosphere of this planet. In the altitudes of this month, methane and nitrogen molecules are decomposed due to collision with the ultraviolet light of the sun and energetic particles. Parts of this molecule are re-combined and produce various biochemical substances such as substances containing carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and other elements necessary for life.

Some of the compounds are formed by decomposition and cycle of methane and nitrogen. Methane and nitrogen create a thick, orange cloud that covers the moon’s surface, making it difficult to observe Titan’s surface from space. The origin of all methane in the atmosphere still remains a mystery.

Joe Titan
The presence of methane and nitrogen in Titan’s atmosphere causes orange clouds

Life Potential

Cassini’s numerous gravity measurements of Titan indicate that the moon has a subsurface ocean of liquid water, possibly mixed with salt and ammonia. The European Space Agency’s Huygens probe also measured radio signals from the moon’s surface in 2005, indicating oceans 55 to 80 kilometers below Titan’s icy surface. The discovery of a global ocean of liquid water also places Titan in the group of moons of the solar system that have the potential for life. Additionally, the rivers, lakes, and seas of methane and liquid ethane on Titan’s surface could serve as a habitable environment on the surface of this moon, although any possible life on this moon would be different from terrestrial life; Therefore, Titan can host habitats and conditions suitable for life, including life that we know (in the subsurface ocean) and life that we do not know (in surface hydrocarbon liquids). Although evidence of life on Titan’s surface has yet to be discovered, the moon’s complex and unique chemical nature are definitive findings that make it an ideal destination for exploration.

Enceladus

Few moons in the solar system are as fascinating as Enceladus. Some of these moons are thought to have liquid water oceans beneath their frozen crusts, but one of Enceladus’ unique features is its geysers. Based on samples obtained from space probes, Enceladus has the most chemical elements necessary for life and probably has hydrothermal or hydrothermal vents that transport hot mineral water from subsurface oceans.

About the size of Arizona, Enceladus has the whitest and most reflective surface in the Solar System. This moon has a ring system and ejects ice fragments into space into its orbit. These fragments form Saturn’s E ring. The name Enceladus comes from Greek mythology. The images of the Voyager spacecraft in the 1980s show that this moon, despite its small size (approximately 500 km in diameter), has a relatively smooth ice surface in some places and has a high brightness. In fact, Enceladus is one of the most reflective bodies in the solar system, the reason for which scientists did not know for years.

Since Enceladus reflects a large part of the sunlight, its surface temperature is extremely low and reaches minus 201 degrees Celsius. Enceladus is located at a distance of 238 thousand kilometers from Saturn between the orbits of the other two moons Mimas and Tethys. The moon is tidally locked to Saturn, taking approximately 32.9 hours to complete one orbit in the densest part of Saturn’s E ring.

The moon Enceladus
The Cassini spacecraft captured this amazing image of Enceladus in October 2008

In 2005, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft revealed water ice, and gas particles ejected from the surface of Enceladus at speeds of approximately 400 meters per second. These eruptions appear to be continuous, creating a huge halo of icy dust around Enceladus that forms the material of Saturn’s E ring. Only a small fraction of this material enters the ring, and most of it falls on the surface of Enceladus as snow. For this reason, this moon has a white and bright surface.

Enceladus’ geysers originate from relatively hot cracks in its crust, which scientists call tiger stripes. Several gases such as water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, and maybe a little ammonia, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen along with salt and silica make up the gas cover of the Enceladus geyser channels. The density of biological material in geysers is twenty times higher than expected by scientists.

Based on measurements of the Doppler effect and the very small amplitude of Enceladus’ wobble as it spins around, scientists have discovered a global ocean beneath the moon’s surface. They believe that the thickness of the ice shell of Enceladus in its south pole is close to 1 to 5 km. The average thickness of the entire crust is between 20 and 25 km.

Since the ocean of Enceladus is covered with ice and the glaciers form Saturn’s E ring, examining the E ring could mean examining the ocean of Enceladus. A large part of the E ring is made up of ice particles, but among them you can also find very small particles of silica. These particles are formed when liquid water and rock react with each other at temperatures above 90 degrees Celsius. This is another indication of the existence of warm blue channels under the icy crust of Enceladus, which are not dissimilar to the warm blue channels of the Earth’s oceans. Enceladus is one of the prime candidates for life in the solar system with features such as a global ocean, unique chemistry and internal heat.

Enceladus glaciers

Enceladus glaciers; Parts of the icy fragments make their way into Saturn’s E ring

Space discoveries and explorations

The first moon of Saturn was discovered in 1655. Within two hundred years after the discovery of the first moon, seven more large moons were observed. Astronomers managed to discover 18 moons in the orbit of this planet until 1997. NASA’s Cassini mission and advances in ground-based telescopes made it possible to discover other moons of Saturn. In 1847, British astronomer Sir John Herschel suggested that Saturn’s moons be named after Greek mythology.

With the beginning of the space age, more features of Saturn’s moons were obtained. Unmanned probes have revolutionized the study of exoplanets. The Voyager spacecraft reached Saturn in 1980-1981 and discovered its three moons Atlas, Prometheus, and Pandora. The number of Saturn’s moons reached 17 by that time. In 1990, Penn’s moon was discovered in Voyager archive images.

The Cassini spacecraft, which arrived at Saturn in the summer of 2004, discovered three more of Saturn’s inner moons. Cassini scientists announced in November 2004 that there are more moons in Saturn’s ring structure, although only one, Dauphines, was confirmed at the time. In 2007, the moon Ante was discovered, and in 2008 Cassini observations reported high-energy electrons on the moon Rhea near Saturn’s magnetosphere, indicating a ring system around Saturn’s second largest moon. In March 2009, the Aegon satellite was discovered in Saturn’s G ring. In July of the same year S/2009 S1, the first B-ring satellite was observed. In April 2014, a new moon was reported in ring A.

View of Dione, Saturn's fourth largest moon next to Saturn's largest moon Titan, from the Cassini spacecraft
Lygia Sea Titan's second largest liquid sea from the Cassini spacecraft
General view of Laptus
View of the crescent of Dione, Saturn's fourth largest moon
Color view of Tethys, Saturn's icy moon
The months of Ria and Mimas
Prometheus, irregular moon of Saturn
Five months of Saturn
Images of Saturn’s moons

On July 1, 2004, the Cassini Huygens spacecraft began its SOI (Saturn Orbit Entry) maneuver and entered Saturn’s orbit. Cassini had extensively explored the Saturn system prior to SOI. The probe flew by Phoebe’s moon in June 2004 and sent back high-quality data. Cassini also flew by the surface of Titan twice, and on December 25, 2004, the Huygens probe was sent to the surface of this moon. Huygens landed on Titan’s surface on January 14, 2005 and sent a series of data back to Earth. In 2005, Cassini flew past Titan and other icy moons of Saturn several times.

According to a March 10, 2000 NASA report, the Cassini probe discovered evidence of liquid water reservoirs in the glaciers and geysers of Saturn’s moon Enceladus. In July 2005, Cassini discovered the first evidence of hydrocarbon lakes near Titan’s north pole, which was later confirmed in January 2007. In March 2007, more evidence was obtained of Titan’s arctic hydrocarbon seas, the largest of which is the size of the Caspian Sea. In 2009, Cassini discovered four new moons. Cassini’s mission ended in September 2017 after an intentional collision with Saturn’s atmosphere.

Future missions

Future missions to Saturn will be dedicated to exploring its two oceanic moons, Titan and Enceladus. If all goes according to plan, NASA’s Dragonfly robotic probe will launch in 2026 and reach Titan by 2034. The purpose of this probe is to investigate several situations on the surface of Titan.

Dragonfly is the first unmanned surface lander that can fly through Titan’s thick atmosphere. The probe’s instruments help assess chemical and biological traces of possible past and present life on Titan. The probe will also investigate Titan’s sand dunes and biomaterials. Overall, Dragonfly will investigate Titan’s atmosphere, surface features, subsurface oceans, and surface fluids.

After Titan, Enceladus is the next target of Saturn system research. Cassini’s discoveries from this month attracted a lot of attention, and several plans to explore Enceladus were proposed, but none were finalized. In September 2018, NASA and the Breakthrough Initiative proposed an agreement for the initial phase of the Enceladus mission. This spacecraft will be lightweight and low-cost and will investigate glaciers and sample them.

Space

Most alien planets probably do not have day or night

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Most alien planets probably do not have day or night. Alien planets probably do not have a circadian cycle, contrary to our imagination, and this process can have a significant impact on the evolution of possible life on these planets.

Most alien planets probably do not have day or night

Do aliens sleep? You may take sleep for granted, but research suggests that many possible life-hosting planets may not have a day-night cycle. It is difficult to imagine the absence of day and night, but right now on Earth there are creatures living in lightless habitats in the depths or on the seabed, and they offer a vision of alien life without the existence of a circadian rhythm.

There are billions of potentially habitable planets in our galaxy; But how do we get to this number? The Milky Way has between 100 billion and 400 billion stars, seventy percent of which are cold and small red dwarf stars or M dwarfs.

According to a detailed survey of exoplanets in 2013, approximately 41% of red dwarf stars have a planet in their life belt. At this distance, the planet has the right temperature to support liquid water; Therefore, these planets have the potential to host liquid water.

We still do not know which of the discovered exoplanets have liquid water. However, 28.7 billion planets are only in the red dwarf life belt. We have not even considered the statistics of other types of stars like our sun.

The lands of mPlanets close to red dwarfs are fatally locked to their star

Rocky planets in the habitable belt of an M dwarf are called M Earths. M-Earths are fundamentally different from our Earth. One difference is that M dwarf stars are much cooler than our Sun. Also, M Earths are located at a close distance from their star, and for this reason, the gravitational influence of the star on them is strong.

The star’s gravity exerts a stronger force on the near side of the planet than on the far side. By creating friction, the planet’s rotation slows down until its orbital and translational rotations become synchronized over millions of years. Thus, M fields are likely to be deadlocked; So that one hemisphere of them is always facing the star and the other hemisphere is always behind it.

The year of a mortally locked planet is as long as its day. Earth’s moon also has a deadly lock on us. For this reason, we always see one side of it and cannot observe its hidden side.

A planet in mortal lock looks strange, But most possible habitable planets are of this type. Our nearest planetary neighbor, Proxima Centauri b, located in the Alpha Centauri system four light-years from Earth, is likely a fatally locked M-Earth.

As a result, unlike our Earth, M Earths have no day or night and even seasons; But terrestrial life, from bacteria to humans, has circadian rhythms corresponding to the day and night cycle. Sleep is one of the most obvious consequences of circadian rhythm.

On Earth, some creatures live in absolute darkness

The circadian cycle affects biochemistry, body temperature, cell regeneration, behavior, and much more. For example, people who are vaccinated in the morning produce more antibodies than people who are vaccinated in the afternoon; Because the response of the immune system is different during the day.

We cannot yet say with certainty how much periods of inactivity and regeneration affect life. Perhaps organisms that evolved without cyclical time never needed to rest.

If you doubt it, you can look at terrestrial organisms such as cave dwellers, deep sea life, and microscopic organisms in dark environments such as the earth’s crust and the human body that thrive in space away from daylight.

Many life forms have biological rhythms that are synchronized to stimuli other than light. Naked burrowing mice spend their entire lives underground and never see the sun, But their day and night hours are proportional to the daily and seasonal cycles of temperature and rainfall. Also, deep-sea bivalves and thermal well shrimps coordinate with ocean tides.

Bacteria that live in the human gut synchronize with melatonin fluctuations in the host’s body. Melatonin is a hormone in the body that is produced in response to darkness. Temperature changes that occur in thermal wells, humidity fluctuations chemical changes, and environmental currents can all cause biological fluctuations in the body of living organisms.

According to new research, M-Earths can have alternate cycles for days and seasons. To evaluate days and seasons on exoplanets, scientists have adapted climate models to simulate the environment of M-Earths and planets such as Proxima Centauri b.

According to the simulations, the contrast between the night and day sides of the planets produces gusts and atmospheric currents similar to Earth’s gust currents. If a planet has water, its dayside is likely to have thick thunderclouds.

The interaction between winds, atmospheric waves, and clouds can change the climate and produce regular cycles of temperature, humidity, and rainfall. The length of these cycles varies from hundreds to thousands of Earth days depending on the state of the planet, But it has nothing to do with the rotation period of the planet. Although the stars in the sky of these planets remain constant, the environment changes.

Perhaps life on M-Earths evolved to match biological rhythms and climatic cycles, or perhaps evolution arrived at a more exotic solution. One can imagine species that live on the day side of the planet going to the night side to rest and regenerate themselves.

These descriptions remind us that if life is out there, it can challenge assumptions we don’t know exist. The only certainty is that it will surprise us.

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The biography of Edwin Hubble

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Edwin Hubble
Edwin Hubble was a famous American astronomer who immortalized his name in history by inventing extragalactic astronomy and important theories such as the expansion of space.

The biography of Edwin Hubble, the legendary astronomer who discovered the extragalactic space

Edwin Powell Hubble known as Edwin Hubble was a famous American astronomer who played an important role in formulating the basic principles of extragalactic and observational astronomy. Historians and astronomy experts consider him one of the most important astronomers in history. Hubble placed the space clouds, which before her time were known as gas and dust particles and were in the category of nebula or nebula, in the category of galaxies.. Historians consider Hubble’s discovery of other galaxies equal to Copernicus’ theory in terms of scientific value. Copernicus proved that the Earth is not at the center of the solar system, and Hubble proved that the Milky Way is not the center of the universe.

One of the important scientific relics of this astronomer is Hubble’s law in space. In short, this law states that the universe is expanding at a constant rate. In addition, in this law, the distance of each galaxy from the edge of the universe is directly proportional to its speed. Of course, this law was discovered two years before Hubble’s presentation by Georges Lemaitre, but its fame came to Hubble. The Hubble telescope is one of the most famous monuments built in the name of this legendary astronomer. An example of this telescope is installed in his hometown of Marshfield, Missouri. This telescope was sent into Earth orbit in 1990 to capture more detailed images of space outside the Milky Way.

Edwin Hubble has another great achievement in the field of cosmology and that is the classification of galaxies. This classification has been used by astronomers for many years. Hubble played a significant role in adding the astronomy category to the Nobel Prize. Of course, the sudden death of this scientist in 1953 prevented him from receiving this award.

Edwin Hubble

Birth and education

Edwin Hubbell was born on November 20, 1889, in Marshfield, Missouri. His mother was Virginia Lee James and his father was John Powell Hubble. His father was a lawyer and insurance businessman. Edwin was the third child out of 8 children in this family. Of course, like many children of those years, some of Edwin’s siblings died in childhood.

Hubbell lived in a rich family that had to migrate many times because of his father’s work style. During these trips, which were generally in cities around Chicago and Illinois, they lived in luxurious houses with many servants. The children of the Hubble family were all brought up with work and responsibility; Because their parents believed that this style of upbringing would increase their sense of responsibility.

Edwin Hubble was very interested in sports as a child and teenager

As a child, Edwin struggled to keep up with his older siblings and students, so he learned to read before school. He was very fond of adventure books by Jules Verne and H. Rider Haggard. Edwin’s grandfather was an amateur but enthusiastic astronomer. At the age of 7, he got acquainted with one of his grandfather’s telescopes and had his first experience of space exploration. The interesting thing is that instead of participating in the celebration, he observed the space with this telescope on his 8th birthday.

Hubble completed his high school education at Wheaton High School near Chicago. He finished high school easily and with excellent grades in English, mathematics, biology, chemistry, physics, Latin, and German languages. Of course, in high school, Edwin was more into sports than studying, and he owed his high grades to his innate intelligence. On his father’s advice, he was busy delivering goods on holidays. Finally, Edwin Hubbell graduated from high school in 1906 at the age of 16 and received a scholarship to the University of Chicago. He worked at this university as a laboratory assistant of the famous physicist Robert Millikan (Nobel Prize winner).

Edwin Hubble
Edwin Hubble (left), with friends after returning from Oxford

After entering the university, sports still occupied a large part of Hubble’s time. He was fond of sports such as basketball and boxing. He was a tall and strong person and he left several records during his university days. Edwin Hubble graduated from the university in 1910 with a bachelor’s degree in general science and honors in physics and astronomy.

After graduating from the University of Chicago, Hubbell entered Oxford University with a Rhodes scholarship and studied there for three years. Hubble was quickly influenced by English culture and changed many of his past behaviors and habits and adopted an English appearance. Contrary to his strong interest in experimental sciences and especially astronomy, he chose the field of law theory out of respect for his father and graduated from Oxford in 1912. He stayed at this university for another year and studied Spanish. While studying at Oxford, Hubble had another achievement including traveling around Europe. In these trips, in addition to having fun, he paid special attention to planning and thinking about his future. In those years, Edwin wrote in a letter to his mother:

Work is pleasant when it is for a great purpose and end. A goal so great that the thought of it and the anticipation of its achievements, will remove all the fatigue of the difficult task. When I find the purpose and principles I want, I leave everything for it and dedicate my life to it.

Edwin’s father died in the fall of 1912. He asked his father for permission to leave Oxford to visit him but was refused. Young Edwin remained in Oxford and his father died in January 1913.

Edwin Hubble
Hubble exploring the cave

His Career

Hubble’s first job was teaching high school Spanish and physics.

Edwin Hubble returned to America in the summer of 1913. He was employed as a Spanish and Physics teacher at New Albany High School in Indiana. In addition, he coached the school’s basketball team and had a part-time job as a German translator. Although Hubble was a popular teacher, he did not enjoy his job. For this reason, he corresponded with Forrest Ray Moulton, professor of astronomy at the University of Chicago, and asked him for advice on collaborating on astronomy projects and higher education in this field. Moulton also introduced Hubble to Edwin Frost, director of the Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin. In his letter, he introduced Hubble as a hardworking person, enthusiastic about science, and useful to Frost.

Finally, at the age of 24, Edwin entered the field of science, which he had become interested in nearly two decades ago by observing space through the lens of his grandfather’s telescope. Upon entering the observatory, he began his doctoral course in astronomy and received his degree in 1917 with a thesis entitled  Photographic Investigations of Faint Nebulae. With the outbreak of World War I, Hubble served in the army for a year and rose to the rank of colonel despite not being actively involved in combat. He then went to Cambridge University to study astronomy.

Edwin Hubble started working at the Mount Wilson Observatory in California in 1919 at the age of 30. This observatory is famous for its excellent weather and excellent observation conditions. These factors made Hubble research in this place until the end of his life.

Edwin Hubble
Hubble membership card in the army

Scientific achievements

As mentioned, Hubble wrote his doctoral dissertation on nebulae. He continued his research at Mount Wilson using the world’s largest telescope, the Hooker telescope. Hubble’s great discoveries, including galaxies beyond the Milky Way and the phenomenon of redshift, were the results of this astronomer’s research using the Hooker telescope.

In 1912, the American astronomer Henrietta Leavitt published an important discovery related to stars called the Cepheid variable. Beginning in the 1930s, Hubble was able to discover similar stars in nebulae using the Hooker telescope. While studying the Andromeda Nebula, he realized that these stars are very far from Earth and much farther than the stars of the Milky Way.

The discovery of other galaxies and the greatness of the universe was the greatest achievement of this scientist

Eventually, Hubble discovered that the Andromeda Nebula is actually a galaxy. Until then, most astronomers believed that the Milky Way and the Universe were a single entity. Hubble discovered that the universe is much larger than the Milky Way and consists of “island universes”. His findings in this historical discovery are summarized as follows:

  • His high-quality images of Andromeda and the Triangulum Nebula showed a massive cluster of stars.
  • Many of the stars were of the Cephasian type.
  • The studied nebula is one million light years away from Earth. 4 times more than all the objects that had been discovered until that time. (Of course, this distance is proven to be equal to 2.5 million light-years today.)
  • The diameter of the Andromeda Nebula is 30 thousand light years. (Today, these dimensions have been proven to be 220,000 light years.)
  • Andromeda galaxy emits light equal to one billion suns of our system.

Hubble published his findings three days after his 35th birthday. Of course, his discoveries were not published in a scientific journal, but in the New York Times. The results of his research were debated among astronomers for some time, and finally, his paper was reviewed at the meeting of the American Astronomical Society on January 1, 1925. Hubble changed everyone’s view of the universe with his discoveries. He proved that our vast galaxy, host to the Sun and hundreds of billions of similar stars, is only one of the billions of galaxies in the universe.

Edwin Hubble
Andromeda Galaxy

In addition to this discovery, Hubble provided a standard for classifying galaxies that was used by astronomers for years.

Redshift phenomenon

Prominent astronomer Veslu Slifer has also researched nebulae. He stated in his report in 1913 that the light of the nebula tends towards the red color of the color spectrum. He explained his discovery as a form of the Doppler effect. According to the same explanation, the light tends to the red side of the color spectrum as the emission source moves away, similar to the Doppler effect. To test his discovery, Slifer studied many nebulae. He came to the conclusion that the light of many of these nebulae has a fast transition towards red color and as a result, they are moving away from Earth at a high speed.

Hubble stated that galaxies are moving away from each other at high speed

In 1929, using Slifer’s findings and combining them with his own discoveries and his assistant Milton Humson’s, Hubble was able to find an explicable relationship between galaxy distance and redshift state. He recorded his findings in a formula known today as Hubble’s law. This formula is displayed as v = Hr, where v is the velocity, r is the distance, and H is Hubble’s constant. This constant was first named as 530 by Hubble, but today, using advanced research and tools, the exact number is 70.

The world is expanding

One of the main interpretations of Hubble’s law is that we live in an expanding universe. Of course, Hubble himself believed that there is not enough credible evidence to prove this interpretation of the redshift effect. The remarkable point is that although Hubble drew the attention of the scientific community to this law, the law was discovered two years earlier by Georges Lemaitre. In fact, Lemaitre’s interpretation of this law is more accepted by new cosmologists; Because he used Einstein’s law of relativity for his interpretation.

However, Hubble’s point of view was quite logical. He believed that the theory of red shift can only be accepted as a proof of the expansion of the universe when the density of matter in the universe is much higher than the amount discovered up to that time. These statements have been the basic foundations for the proof of dark matter in the universe. Hubble said about the density of materials needed to prove the effect of redshift:

The required density of matter is several times higher than the estimated maximum density of matter concentrated in the nebula. Furthermore, we have no evidence of significant interstellar matter increasing the density.

Edwin Hubble
Classification of galaxies by Hubble

However, although Hubble had a lot of resistance to accept the effect of redshift, in his research he found that the speed of this expansion is slowing down. However, these findings and research on the speed of galaxy expansion are still ongoing and astronomers discover new issues every day.

One of the historical events regarding the theory of the expanding universe is Albert Einstein’s meeting with Edward Hubble in 1931. The two met at Mount Wilson Observatory. In 1917, in his theory of relativity, Einstein considered the universe to be constant and without change in size. He did not see any end or end to the universe. Although his research showed signs of the expansion of the universe, this scientist tried to deny it by determining a constant called the cosmic constant.

However, the January 1931 meeting earned Hubble the nickname of the man who forced the world’s smartest man to change his mind. This meeting caused Einstein to call his previous calculations the biggest mistake of his scientific life, and as a result, Hubble’s findings became the center of attention in scientific circles.

The Big Bang theory is influenced by the findings of this scientist about the expansion of the universe

In 1935, Hubble discovered the 1373 asteroid named Cincinnati. A year later he published the book ” The Realm of the Nebulae “. This book is a historical interpretation of his experiences and research on intergalactic astronomy. With the outbreak of World War II, Hubble once again served in the US Army at the Aberdeen Proving Ground. He was in charge of the ballistics research department in this area. His extensive research resulted in several improvements in the power of ballistic bombs and projectiles. One of his major practical achievements in this research was the improvement of ballistic projectile components, which resulted in a high-speed camera to study the characteristics of the bomb after launch. After the war, Hubble returned to Mount Wilson and spent some time at the Palomar Observatory in California.

Edwin Hubble
Edwin Hubble in old age

In addition to scientific research, Edwin Hubble worked hard to convince the Nobel Prize Society to add astronomy to the award’s branches. He intended to add this science to this event as an independent subsection of physics. He believed that the efforts of astronomers in stellar physics should be appreciated. Unfortunately, after Hubble’s death, this society decided to appreciate this science as a branch of physics.

Personal life and death

Edwin Hubbell married Grace Burke Leib in 1924 at the age of 34 . They had no children. One of Hubble’s pastimes was collecting books. He was generally interested in books related to the history of science. In addition to scientific research, Hubble was also a member of the Board of Trustees of the Huntington Library in San Marino. The discovery of distant galaxies made him so famous that in 1948 his picture appeared on Time magazine. He and his wife had a close relationship with Hollywood stars and artists such as Aldous Huxley.

In 1949, at the age of 59, Edwin Hubbell suffered a heart attack while on vacation in Colorado and was nursed back to health by his wife. Of course, after this incident, the intensity of his research activities decreased until he died on September 28, 1953, due to a blood clot in the brain. He had willed that his burial place should not be known and personal notes were also destroyed by his wife. Grace also died in 1980 and was buried in a secret place next to her husband.

Awards and honors

The Cleveland Newcomb Prize was awarded to Edwin Hubble in 1924. In 1938, he was awarded the Bruce Medal, and a year later, he was awarded the Franklin Medal Science and Engineering Award by the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. The Gold Medal of the British Royal Astronomical Society was awarded to this legendary astronomer in 1940. The Legion of Honor, which is a military award from the US Armed Forces, was awarded to him in 1946 for his research in the field of ballistics.

Hubble telescope
Hubble Space Telescope

After the death of Edwin Hubble, in addition to the aforementioned awards, other honors were also registered to pay tribute to this American scientist. The Missouri City Hall of Fame inducted Edwin Hubbell in 2003. In 2008, a commemorative stamp was printed in the name of this scientist, and in 2017, the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame registered Hubble’s name.

Asteroid number 2069 and a hole in the moon are among the celestial objects that are registered in the name of this scientist. A planetarium at Edward R. Morrow High School in Brooklyn was also named after this scientist, and a street in Missouri was named after Edwin Hubble.

Certainly, the most famous monument of Edwin Hubble is the Hubble Space Telescope, which was launched in 1990. The main purpose of launching this telescope was to accurately calculate Hubble’s constant in his famous formula. Anyway, astronomers with this telescope first considered the number 72 as a constant in 2001, and then in 2006, by studying the microwave background of the galaxy, they reached the exact number 70. In addition, the Hubble telescope made it possible to observe not only the expansion of the universe but also the acceleration of this expansion. Today, the force that caused this expansion is called dark energy in scientific documents.

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Space

Can telescopes see astronaut footprints on the moon?

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footprints on the moon
Can telescopes see astronaut footprints on the moon? Some people who do not believe in the landing of man on the moon ask, if man walked on the moon, why the telescopes do not show their bootprints?

Can telescopes see astronaut footprints on the moon?

In the early 2000s, when there were occasional people who believed that the moon landing was a hoax, the argument was made that if NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope was powerful enough to see the tiny details of distant galaxies, why couldn’t it take the shoes of the Apollo astronauts on the moon?

The aforementioned argument, like many conspiracy theories, seems convincing on the surface; But with the slightest scrutiny, it loses its value. Those who are fooled by this claim are wrong about two things: how telescopes work and how big space is.

Astronomer Phil Platt explains on the Scientific American website that many people think a telescope’s job is to magnify images. Of course, manufacturers of cheap telescopes like to advertise them this way, printing statements like “150x magnification power” in big letters on the box of the telescopes, along with very misleading pictures of much larger telescopes. Although magnification is important, the true power of a telescope is in its resolution. This difference is subtle but very important.

Magnification is how much you can focus on an object and make it appear larger. This is important because while astronomical objects are physically very large, they are very far away and thus appear small in the sky. Magnifying them makes them easier to see.

Magnification is important, but the true power of a telescope is in its resolution

On the other hand, clarity or resolving power is the ability to differentiate between two objects that are very close together. For example, you might think of two stars orbiting each other (a binary star) as one star; Because their distance is very small and the naked eye cannot distinguish them. But if you look at them with a higher-resolution telescope, you may be able to see that they are two separate stars.

Isn’t that the Zoom? No; Because zooming in only makes everything bigger. This can be easily illustrated with the following image: zoom in as much as you want on the image, but once you pass a certain limit, you only enlarge the pixels and get no new information. To overcome this obstacle, you need to have high resolution rather than zoom.

Hubble image of Apollo 17 landing areaHubble Space Telescope image of the Apollo 17 landing area in the Taurus-Lytro Valley of the Moon. This image lacks the necessary resolution to show the traces of the moon landing or the movement of astronauts on the moon.
NASA/GSFC

The problem is that resolution depends on the telescope itself, meaning that a dramatic increase in resolution usually requires a much larger telescope; But no matter how big your telescope gets, it will still have limited resolution.

When light from an infinitesimal point, such as distant stars, passes through a telescope, the light is slightly scattered within the telescope’s optical instruments (mirrors or lenses). This fundamental property is called light diffraction and is unavoidable. The resolution of telescope images depends partly on the size of its mirror or lens. The larger the telescope’s light-gathering instrument, the higher its image resolution.

The way light propagates in optical equipment depends on wavelength, with shorter wavelengths producing higher resolution. So two nearby blue stars may be distinguishable in a telescope, while two red stars at the same distance may not be distinguishable.

When deciding on the size of a telescope’s camera pixels, astronomers must consider the wavelength they want to observe. Otherwise, they just magnify the noise; Like the previous example about zooming too much on the photo.

All these lead to an amazing result. The Hubble Space Telescope has a mirror with a diameter of 2.4 meters and the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has a mirror with a diameter of 6.5 meters. Therefore, the resolution of the James Webb telescope images can be expected to be much higher. At some wavelengths, it is: the shortest wavelength that the James Webb Space Telescope can see is about 0.6 microns (what our eyes perceive as orange light), and the resolution is technically much better than that of the Hubble image.

However, the James Webb Space Telescope was designed as an infrared telescope. At those wavelengths, say around two microns, the resolution is comparable to what Hubble can see at visible light wavelengths. In the mid-infrared, i.e. wavelengths of 10 to 20 microns, the resolution of the James Webb Space Telescope images is even lower. However, because the James Webb is the largest infrared telescope ever sent into space, it can provide the sharpest images we’ve ever had at these wavelengths.

A boot on the moonNo telescope on Earth or in low Earth orbit can capture an image like this, a high-resolution view of a boot on the moon’s surface.
NASA

Astronomers measure resolving power as an angle on the sky. From the horizon to the highest point of the sky is 90 degrees and each degree is divided into 60 arc minutes and each arc minute into 60 arc seconds. For example, the angular diameter of the moon from our point of view in the sky is about half a degree. That is, if we look at the moon from the Earth, the moon in the sky occupies a space equal to half a degree of the full circle of the sky, which is equivalent to 30 minutes of arc or 1800 seconds of arc.

The maximum resolution of a telescope refers to the smallest angular distance between two objects that the telescope is able to distinguish as two separate objects. This resolution is expressed as an angle.

At its best, the resolution of the Hubble telescope is about 0.05 of an arc, which is considered a very small angle. But the amount of detail Hubble is able to see depends on the distance and physical size of the target. For example, 0.05 seconds of arc is equivalent to the apparent size of a small coin that can be seen from about 140 km.

In this way, we return to the discussion of conspiracy theorists and their claims regarding the observation of astronaut footprints on the moon. Galaxies are usually tens of millions or even billions of light years away from Earth. At those distances, the Hubble telescope can distinguish objects with dimensions of several light years (i.e. tens of trillions of kilometers) with its best resolution. So even though it looks like we’re seeing galaxies in great detail in those amazing Hubble images, the smallest we can see is still pretty big.

At the same time, the moon is only about 380 thousand kilometers away from us and from the Hubble telescope. At this distance, the resolution of the Hubble telescope is surprisingly limited, unable to resolve objects smaller than about 90 meters. As a result, not only can we not see the astronauts’ footprints in the Hubble images, but we can’t even see the Apollo moon landings, which are about four meters across. Hubble’s resolution at this distance is so limited that it cannot distinguish details smaller than about 90 meters, so it is not possible to see objects smaller than this on the Moon.

Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter image from the Apollo 11 landing siteAn image of the Apollo 11 landing site captured by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO). Although the LRO telescope uses much smaller lenses than the Hubble Space Telescope, its proximity to the lunar surface has made it possible to see details such as the Apollo 11 lunar lander and astronauts’ footprints.
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

In the images taken by the Nass Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), we can see the moon landings and the footprints of the astronauts. Although the camera of this orbiter has a mirror with a diameter of only about 20 cm, the spacecraft is in lunar orbit and passes the Apollo landing sites at an altitude of 50 km.

The reason NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter can see more detail on the surface of the moon is because it is so close to the surface of the moon. This is why we send probes to planets: it allows us to get much better pictures of them. Sometimes, there’s no substitute for being there.

The lesson we learn from this topic is that the way tools actually work is often more complex and different than we expect. Furthermore, claims that may seem reasonable fall apart with a little scientific scrutiny. If a telescope is only advertised based on magnification, it’s best not to buy it and look for other options. It may seem difficult, but with a little determination, you will succeed.

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