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¡2003 Dues Now Payable
for each Voting Member!
Still only $20.00!
If you are reading the Newsletter
online,
please print our treasurer's address
on an envelope and send in your dues today.
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Betty Lou Grimm, Treasurer
Big Bend Astronomical Society, Inc.
1001 N Fighting Buck Avenue, Apt F-22
Alpine, TX 79830
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¡COMING
EVENTS!
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*** STAR PARTY ***
Jim
& Barbara Walker's
8:00 PM, SATURDAY, March
29
Sun sets at 7:11 PM. NO POTLUCK SUPPER: It’s too late to eat!
SUNDAY, March 30
Please e-mail Jim
& Barbara Walker or call 915-364-2467 if you need further
information.
*** REGULAR MEETING ***
7:30 PM, Wednesday, May 14, 2003
300 Lawrence Hall, Sul Ross
Campus
Program will be announced.
Visit
the Schedule Page for more info.
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Spring Begins on March 20th
. . . But Why?
(Edited from Sky
and Telescope, by permission.)
The winter
of 2002-03 officially comes to an end at exactly 7:00 p.m. Central Standard
Time on Thursday, March 20th – regardless of whether anything spring-like
is happening at that moment.
Why is
spring said to begin at such a precise time, regardless of day or night,
snow or warmth? Because that's the moment of the March equinox.
The seasons' official starting times are determined by the Earth's motion
around the Sun – or from our point of view, the Sun's annual motion in
Earth's sky. The start of spring (for the Northern Hemisphere) is defined
as the moment in March when the Sun passes over Earth's equator heading
north, an event called the vernal equinox. This moment can come at any
time of day or night.
The Sun
appears to move north and south in our sky during the year because Earth's
axis is tilted with respect to our orbit around the Sun For skywatchers
at mid-northern latitudes, the effect is to make the Sun appear highest
in the sky in June. At that time the Northern Hemisphere is tipped sunward
and gets heated by more direct solar rays, making summer. Six months later,
when we're on the opposite side of our orbit, the Northern Hemisphere is
tipped away from the Sun; the solar rays come slanting in to our part of
the world and heat the air and ground less, making winter.
An equinox
happens when the Sun is halfway through its journey from one of these solstices
to the other. Several other noteworthy things happen on the equinox date:
· Day and night are approximately the same length; the
word "equinox" comes from the Latin for "equal night." (A look in your
almanac will reveal that day and night are not exactly 12 hours long at
the equinox, for two reasons. First, sunrise and sunset are defined as
when the Sun's upper edge — not its center — crosses the horizon. Second,
whenever the Sun is very near the horizon, refraction by Earth's atmosphere
shifts its position upward slightly.)
· The Sun rises due east and sets due west, everywhere
on Earth. The spring and fall equinoxes are the only times of the year
when this happens.
· If you were standing on the equator, the Sun would pass exactly
overhead in the middle of the day. If you were at the North Pole, the Sun
would be skimming the horizon just beginning the six-month polar day.
· In the Southern Hemisphere, the March equinox marks the start
of autumn, and the September equinox marks the start of spring. Summer
for kangaroos begins in December, winter in June.
· Eggs do not balance on end more easily at the equinox than
at other times! Actual tests have demolished this bit of New Age goofiness;
the ability of eggs to balance depends on tiny irregularities on their
shells (and the persistence of the would-be balancer!), not on what day
it is. "This perennial silly-season story has nothing to do with how eggs
balance," says Sky & Telescope senior editor Alan MacRobert,
"and everything to do with how some media can't say no to a wacky story
even if it's wrong."
For more information see http://www.skyandtelescope.com. |
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