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Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

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Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School
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Page 1: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Loren W. ActonMontana State University

January 20, 2011

Interact Rotary ClubBozeman High School

Page 2: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

We humans are motivated to dream, to explore, to discover, to

learn.

"Dream no small dreams for they have no power to move the hearts of men."

--  Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

“It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today

and the reality of tomorrow.”

-- Robert H. Goddard

Page 3: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Dr. Robert H. Goddard1882-1945

Page 4: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

The beginning of space exploration

First view of Earth from a camera on V-2 #13, launched October 24, 1946. White Sands Missile Range/Applied Physics Laboratory

Page 5: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

J. F. Kennedy -- Rice UniversitySeptember 12, 1962

Page 6: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Buzz Aldrin setting out scientific instruments on Apollo 11.

Page 7: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Al Bean, tourist pose, Apollo 12

Page 8: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Did Galileoget it right?

-Dave Scott, experimenter

Apollo 15

Painting by Al Bean, Apollo 12

Page 9: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Apollo 16 Rover Grand Prix

Apollo 17 Oops! Apollo 17 “Dad gummit!”

Apollo 17 Rock hounds

Page 10: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

*July 29, 1985. Second launch attempt.

*

Page 11: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Off to work on the ISS

Page 12: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Soyuz, another route to the ISS

Page 13: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

“Butch” Wilmore gives a tour of the ISS

Page 14: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Shuttle “Fly around”

Page 15: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Wonders of Robotic Space Exploration

“Humans in space” have generated a grand public interest and excitement. Yet, it is robotic space explorations that have paid the biggest dividends of remarkable new knowledge and useful applications. E.g.,

• Solar physics and space weather.• Planetary exploration.• Astronomy and astrophysics.• Earth remote sensing, climate and weather.• Global Positioning System.• Communication and broadcasting.• Military intelligence.

Today we’ll touch on only a few exciting experiments.

Page 16: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

The GOES-13 satellite captured a "full-disk image" of North and South America on December 30 at 09:45 EST, as the world awaited the new year.

Credit: NOAA/NASA GOES Project

Page 17: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

A Robot's Shadow on Asteroid ItokawaHayabusa, a mission of ISAS/JAXA, Japan

Image of Itokawa taken by Hayabusa.

Page 18: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Hayabusa capsule in Woomera, Australia, desert.

Sample return from Asteroid Itokawa. December 2010.

ISAS/JAXA HayabusaMission.

Page 19: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

First sample from Itokawa

Page 20: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Snowstorm Engulfs Comet Hartley 2

Observed by NASA Deep Impact (extended) mission on November 4, 2010.

Comet Hartley 2, photographed on Oct. 13, 2010 by Nick Howes using the 2-meter Faulkes North Telescope in Hawaii.

Page 21: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Source of the Hartley 2 snow storm.2 km

CO2 jet

Page 22: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Solar Dynamics ObservatoryBlue: 0.8 MK, Green: 1.3 MK, Red: 2.0 MK

January 2011

Page 23: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Big (M5.4) x-ray flare.6 Nov. 2010 15:36

NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory

Page 24: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

A coronal mass ejection (CME) observed by STEREO on Dec. 12, 2008

Page 25: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

NASA Stereo observations of the coronal mass ejection of 1 Aug 2010.

Bottom: Sun and its immediate surroundings (north at the top).

Top: Views past the Earth and beyond.

Page 26: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Pub

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AA

AS

Page 27: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.
Page 28: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Cartoon of a Coronal Mass Ejection and its Impact on the Earth’s Magnetosphere

http://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/istp/outreach/cmeposter/movies

Page 29: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Magnetic storm – 10 January 1997

Space Plasma Physics Group & Advanced Visualization Lab., Univ. of Marylandhttp://www.spp.astro.umd.edu/mhd/jan_cloud.htm

Page 30: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

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Page 31: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.
Page 32: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Discovery of Cosmic Microwave Background, 1965Nobel Prize, 1978.

Images taken from: http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/bb_tests_cmb.html

Page 33: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Variation from placeto place on the skyis as much as about± 0.004ºK.

Image taken from: http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/bb_tests_cmb.html

Page 34: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Cosmic Background Explorer - 1992

Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe - 2001

CMB Temperaturerange = .0005K!

Credit: The InternetEncyclopedia of Science

Page 35: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

Diagram taken from: http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/bb_tests_cmb.html

Page 36: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

The CMB bottom line.

• Velocity of our solar system through the universe equals 368 km/sec.

• Age of the universe is 13.75 billion years (since the big bang).

• The universe is made up of: 4% ordinary matter23% dark matter73% dark energy

Oh, the adventure and wonder of space exploration!

Page 37: Loren W. Acton Montana State University January 20, 2011 Interact Rotary Club Bozeman High School.

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