StarDate

Billy Henry

StarDate, the longest-running national radio science feature in the U.S., tells listeners what to look for in the night sky.

单集

  1. 1天前

    Tarazed

    To predict the lifespan of a star, you don’t need a crystal ball – a bathroom scale will do just fine. Heavier stars age faster, so if you know the star’s mass, you have a good idea of its future. Consider Tarazed, the second-brightest star of the eagle. It’s only about six percent the age of the Sun. But because it’s about three and a half times the Sun’s mass, it’s already completed the “prime” phase of life. Now, it’s well into the next phase – as a red giant. Mass is critical because, as the star’s mass increases, so does its gravity. Stronger gravity squeezes the star’s core more tightly, increasing its temperature. That revs up the rate of nuclear reactions in the core. When a star is born, its core is mostly hydrogen. In the prime phase of life, the star “fuses” the hydrogen atoms to make helium. When the hydrogen is gone, the core shrinks, so it gets even hotter. That causes the star’s outer layers to puff up, which is what’s happened to Tarazed – it’s more than 90 times the Sun’s diameter. Higher core temperatures trigger the next round of reactions. So today, Tarazed is fusing the helium to make heavier elements. Eventually, that will end as well. Tarazed will shed its outer layers, leaving only its tiny, dead core – ending the star’s fairly short but bright life. Tarazed is low in the east at nightfall. It’s close above even brighter Altair, at the southern point of the Summer Triangle. Script by Damond Benningfield

    2 分钟
  2. 6月21日

    Equation of Time

    Our clocks tick off a steady 24 hours per day. But if a sundial could record the time with the same accuracy, it would show that the length of the day changes. The difference is called the equation of time. Clocks measure the length of a day averaged over a full year – the Sun’s average motion across the sky. Sundials show the Sun’s true motion. Over the course of a year, the length of a solar day – the period from one local noon to the next – varies by almost a minute. And that adds up. In early February, a solar day lasts about 14 minutes less than 24 hours. In early November, it lasts about 16 and a half minutes more than 24 hours. The change has a couple of causes. Earth’s orbit is lopsided, so our planet travels at different speeds. When we’re closest to the Sun, we move faster than average; when we’re farthest, we move slower. But the rate at which Earth spins on its axis remains the same. The difference in those two motions causes the Sun to move a little faster or slower across the sky, changing the length of a solar day. And Earth’s axis is tilted, so the poles take turns dipping toward the Sun. Today is the June solstice, so the north pole is tilting sunward. The change in the Sun’s position as a result of that tilt adds to the complexity. The solar day is exactly 24 hours long around June 13th. So now, the equation of time is almost zero – a close match between the sundial and the clock. Script by Damond Benningfield

    2 分钟

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StarDate, the longest-running national radio science feature in the U.S., tells listeners what to look for in the night sky.

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