The Bakersfield Californian

Enjoy brilliant stars in the winter sky

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Another semester is finished at Bakersfiel­d College and the William M. Thomas Planetariu­m finished its fall schedule of shows Wednesday with “Season of Light.” Just one snag this season due to problems with the film file caused the postponeme­nt of the Mars 1001 showing. It’ll be shown in the spring season of shows that will start up in mid-February. In the meantime I’ll be enjoying the winter break with my daughters, who are flying home and reveling in freshsquee­zed orange juice from locally grown tree-ripened oranges.

Another thing to enjoy are the brilliant stars of the winter constellat­ions such as Orion, Taurus, Canis Major, Auriga and Gemini. Orion will already be up when the sky is dark enough to see stars. The attached star chart shows the sky for 9:30 tonight when the last of the constellat­ions of the Orion group, Canis Major, is fully above the horizon. If you follow the line from Orion’s belt down, you’ll come to the brightest star in the night sky, Sirius, which is also the closest star we can see with the unaided eye from Kern County.

An even closer star visible from Bakersfiel­d is Barnard’s star in the constellat­ion Ophiuchus, but it requires a telescope to see since it is a red dwarf star shining with just 1/2500 the sun’s luminosity. Sirius, on the other hand, shines with about 25 times the sun’s luminosity. If we were orbiting

Sirius at the same distance as we orbit the sun, the temperatur­e on Earth would be almost 295 C (over 560 F) without considerin­g any sort of greenhouse effect.

The temperatur­e calculatio­n I just gave uses a simplified formula that includes just the distance from the sun, the sun’s luminosity, and the reflectivi­ty of the planet (called the “albedo” in astro-speak). For the sun, the formula gives a temperatur­e for Earth of -19 C. Yes, below the freezing point of water. The Earth has an atmosphere that traps some of the energy radiating outward from the warm ground in what’s called a greenhouse effect.

As with most things in life, a greenhouse effect in moderation is a virtue. We need some to keep the surface temperatur­e of Earth warm enough for liquid water to exist. A greenhouse effect in excess is not good for human civilizati­on because of the disruption­s in regional production­s of food and the supply of fresh water.

HABITABLE ZONES

As astronomer­s consider which exoplanets are in the “habitable zones” of their stars — range of distances in which the surface temperatur­e of the planet would allow liquid water to exist — they may include various concentrat­ions of water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, ozone and nitrous oxide in a planet’s atmosphere to come up with possible habitable zone boundaries.

Another technique is to calculate the habitable zone’s inner boundary as that for a planet with zero greenhouse effect in operation and the habitable zone’s outer boundary as that for a planet with a significan­t greenhouse effect like we find on Venus. That makes the habitable zone wider — an “optimistic habitable zone.”

Some research teams might take a more conservati­ve approach of sticking with a fixed greenhouse effect amount for the entire habitable zone or totally ignore the greenhouse effect. This is why it pays to dig a little deeper into any astronomer’s claim about a habitable zone planet to find out how they are calculatin­g the habitable zone.

MONITORING CARBON DIOXIDE

Last week, the European countries that are members of the European Space Agency (ESA) committed significan­t boosts in funding for the space agency. One of the biggest boosts will be with the Copernicus program of Earth-observing science satellites to observe human-made sources of carbon dioxide on a daily basis as well as sea surface height and vegetation health.

While NASA pioneered efforts to track carbon dioxide from space with the OCO-2 and OCO-3 missions, they are designed to last just a few years and there are no plans to keep monitoring carbon dioxide with future missions. The ESA system will operate for at least 20 years and cover wider swaths of the globe, covering any given point more frequently than the OCO missions.

IN THE NIGHT SKY

In our evening sky tonight, Venus and Saturn are now the only planets visible because Jupiter is lost in the twilight glow of the setting sun. Jupiter goes behind the sun on December 27. Saturn is also dropping closer to the sun while Venus climbs up away from the sun as Venus catches up to Earth. Venus is now that brilliant evening star you see in the west. In the early morning sky, Mars is climbing up away from the sun as Earth catches up to it. Next year, Mars will be well-placed for NASA, ESA, China and the United Arab Emirates to launch their respective Mars missions.

One last note: The December solstice that marks the beginning of our winter will happen on Dec. 21. The sun will stop its southward drift among the stars at 8:19 p.m. Pacific Time. Enjoy the longest night of the year and I wish you many blessings this holiday season and a great 2020!

Contributi­ng columnist Nick Strobel is director of the William M. Thomas Planetariu­m at Bakersfiel­d College and author of the award-winning website AstronomyN­otes.com.

 ?? COURTESY OF NICK STROBEL ?? The evening sky in mid-December.
COURTESY OF NICK STROBEL The evening sky in mid-December.
 ??  ?? NICK STROBEL FOR THE CALIFORNIA­N
NICK STROBEL FOR THE CALIFORNIA­N

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