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The wonders of space offer so much opportunity for research, and for business. Here is our tribute for 2014, in partnership with the Department of Science & Technology.
Citation preview
SPECIAL ISSUE 2014
Special Edition in conjunction with the Department of Science & Technology
SPACETHE FINAL FRONTIER
JM BUSHA SCHOLARSHIP AWARDGet started, work hard, up your
performance and receive one of the following prizes from
JM BUSHA Investment Group, the student partner:
UNIVERSITY(i) Full Scholarship (Tuition and Accommodation)
(ii) Tuition Grant(iii) Textbooks Grant
HIGH SCHOOLThe best performing Grade 11 student receives
(i) R1,000 Prize money(ii) Two library books and
(iii) Qualifi es for entry into the JM BUSHA Scholarship Award
THE FUTUREA good education, a good career, a better life,
and the best investment portfolio are equal to a secure fi nancial and happy future.
For that, talk to JM BUSHA Investment Group. Invest wisely. It’s your performance.
www.jmbusha.com or invest@jmbusha.com
DIRECTORS’ REPORT“S
pace, the final frontier.“ Remember that famous quote from the Star Trek series, with the star ship Enterprise setting out “to go where no man [human?] has gone before”? Well, that frontier is on our doorstep with the South African National Space Agency (SANSA), our very own space agency, about whom you can learn more in this issue.
Today, as never before, it is an exciting time to be a young learner of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in Southern Africa, because there are opportunities to go on a journey into the future as exciting as in the original science fiction films and books. Our country has staked its claim as an important member of the international astronomical scientific community, and the future is bright for our young scientists. Under the auspices of the Department of Science and Technology (DST), the National Research Foundation (NRF), SANSA, and a very active Astronomical Society, the sky is the limit. No, sorry, there is no limit and the sky is merely the beginning!
If you have not heard the names KAT, MeerKAT, SALT or SKA, turn the pages in this Special Edition on Space to learn more about the vast variety of world-class telescopes and observatories that are spread across our amazing landscapes, and how scientists are probing ever deeper into our origins and our future. Humans have been fascinated with the prospects of space – whether it is alien life forms (friend or foe); a newly discovered habitable planet, moon or exoplanet; or untold riches of known or new minerals uncovered on Mars or elsewhere. Space ships, space stations, astronauts and cosmonauts, heroes and villains, meteorites and comets, galaxies and supernova, and the controversies and calculations of the Big Bang and the possibility of an eventual Big Crunch. That is the stuff that the science of space and all the underlying sciences that propel us ever further on this quest are made of.
In this issue, you can learn more about the exciting programmes that SANSA runs throughout the year. You may find out how to pursue a career in space-related disciplines. You can also feast your eyes on some of the most breathtaking visuals – photos taken deep in space of nebulae, supernovas, planets and more. But, it is the mind that will surely stretch, as the infinity of space and the related physics often leave one gobsmacked. Yes, our brains are small when it comes to comprehending the magnitude of it all, yet we are quick learners.
Space is not an abstract concept, though. It is part of our lives and has been since the dawn of humanity. (We arrived a bit later than the estimated date of 13.7 billion years ago for the Big Bang). The stars and planets have been part of ancient cultures, and we share a beautiful piece of ethnoastronomy that explains what some of the constellations and bodies meant to our own forefathers. Likewise, space is beeeeg in popular culture so we have created some fun lists of films, books and music where concepts of outer space and exploration feature prominently. We firmly believe that today’s science fiction is tomorrow’s technology.
We hope that this special issue of The Money Tree will open your eyes to our world and to new possibilities and opportunities like nothing you have ever read before has been capable of doing. In the words of Buzz Lightyear: “To infinity and beyond.”
Learn more about the vast variety of world-class telescopes and observatories that are spread across our amazing landscapes, and how scientists are probing ever deeper into our origins and our future.
JM BUSHA SCHOLARSHIP AWARDGet started, work hard, up your
performance and receive one of the following prizes from
JM BUSHA Investment Group, the student partner:
UNIVERSITY(i) Full Scholarship (Tuition and Accommodation)
(ii) Tuition Grant(iii) Textbooks Grant
HIGH SCHOOLThe best performing Grade 11 student receives
(i) R1,000 Prize money(ii) Two library books and
(iii) Qualifi es for entry into the JM BUSHA Scholarship Award
THE FUTUREA good education, a good career, a better life,
and the best investment portfolio are equal to a secure fi nancial and happy future.
For that, talk to JM BUSHA Investment Group. Invest wisely. It’s your performance.
www.jmbusha.com or invest@jmbusha.com
T H E M O N E Y T R E E
Special Edition in conjunction with the Department of Science & Technology
THE INSIDE SCOOP
SPACE: AFRICAN36 SANSA: Serving Humanity
42 Astronomy in South Africa60 AstroEthnography
62 Astronomic Growth in Southern Africa
SPACE: GALACTIC34 What is Space Week?
46 A Short History of Space Exploration 52 Are We Alone?
56 Own Your Own Star 58 Missions to Mars
ENTERTAINMENT16 Ask the Elder17 Space By The Numbers18 Cool Space Apps 20 Movies24 Music30 Books
PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS8 Visual Essay: Best of Hubble 100 64 Rare Moment: ISS and the Space Shuttle
COVER IMAGEIMAGE CREDIT: NASA, ESA, M LIVIO AND THE HUBBLE 20TH ANNIVERSARY TEAM (STSCI)Hubble Captures View of “Mystic Mountain”This craggy fantasy mountaintop enshrouded by wispy clouds looks like a bizarre landscape from Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image, which is even more dramatic than fiction, captures the chaotic activity atop a pillar of gas and dust, three light-years tall, which is being eaten away by the brilliant light from nearby bright stars. The pillar is also being assaulted from within, as infant stars buried inside it fire off jets of gas that can be seen streaming from towering peaks.This turbulent cosmic pinnacle lies within a tempestuous stellar nursery called the Carina Nebula, located 7,500 light-years away in the southern constellation of Carina. The image celebrated the 20th anniversary of Hubble’s launch and deployment into an orbit around the Earth.Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 observed the pillar on 1-2 February 2010. The colours in this composite image correspond to the glow of oxygen (blue), hydrogen and nitrogen (green), and sulphur (red).
LEFTHubble's Sharpest View of the Orion NebulaThis dramatic image offers a peek inside a cavern of roiling dust and gas where thousands of stars are forming. The image, taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) aboard NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, represents the sharpest view ever taken of this region, called the Orion Nebula. More than 3,000 stars of various sizes appear in this image. Some of them have never been seen in visible light. These stars reside in a dramatic dust-and-gas landscape of plateaus, mountains, and valleys that are reminiscent of the American Grand Canyon.
4 13
WHY THEMONEY TREE?
The Money Tree Magazine – a Student Investor (Pty) Ltd publication
THE TEAM: Joseph Makamba Busha (Chairman), Matthew Piper (Managing Director), Tokologo Phetla (Executive Director), Karidas Tshintsholo (Executive Director), Jack Newby (Executive Director), Siyabonga Mseleku
(Investment Writer), Tsepiso Secker (Chief Writer), Mmabato Thobejane (Relationship Manager)
You get access to:• Information about graduate recruitment opportunities • Information about opportunities for further study • Information about scholarship/bursary opportunities • Investing & personal fi nance content • Market and economic analysis • Content and tips for your career • Student lifestyle content • Latest social events to look forward to • Cool entertainment news • “Ask the Elder” advice • Business and entrepreneurship advice and content • Games, gadgets and technology • Student Investor of the Issue • Profi les of interesting people (possibly on YOUR
campus or school) • Free prizes through our competitions
…ALL in ONE Magazine At THE MONEY TREE, we pride ourselves in satisfying our target markets through research and diversifi cation of our products – we put YOUR interests fi rst.
MEET THE DIRECTORS
The Money Tree magazine is published quarterly by Chapel Lane Media on behalf of Student Investor. Opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of Chapel Lane Media, Student Investor or any of its clients. Information has been included in good faith by the Publisher and Editor, and is believed to be correct at the time of going to print. No responsibility can be accepted for errors and omissions. No
material (articles or photographs) in the publication may be reproduced, in whole or in part, without specific written permission from the Editor. Submissions of articles and photographs for the publication are to be
arranged in advance and will be published at the discretion of the Editor. The Publisher, while exercising all reasonable care, cannot be held responsible for any loss or damage.
Please ensure that all enquiries for material submission are mailed to editor@tmtmag.co.zaCopyright © 2014.
All copyright for material appearing in this magazine belongs to Chapel Lane Media in conjunction with Student Investor and/or contributors.
All rights reserved.
A Student Investor PublicationSPECIAL EDITION 2014
Joseph M Busha Chairman
For The Money Tree Magazine
For Student Investor
PublisherChapel Lane Media
Charl du Plessischarl@chapellane.co.za
082 452 8110
DistributionFree distribution at major university and college campuses, and at
premier high schools across South Africa. To find out where to get your copy, contact distribution@studentinvestor.co.za
Print by CTP, Cape TownStock Photos from dollarphoto.com
Managing EditorTanya Goodman
tanya@chapellane.co.za
Art DirectionWhite Space Invaders
ws-invaders.co.za 082 959 3263
Advertising SalesTokologo Phetla
sales@studentinvestor.co.za 073 684 8874
How to read QR-codesFirst, you need a QR-code app and a smartphone or tablet equipped with a camera. Then, go to the app store and search for a free QR-code app.
Some examples of free QR-code apps: RedLaser for iOS; RedLaser or QR Droid for Android; QR Code Scanner Pro for BlackBerry.
When you launch your app, you’ll see that your phone’s camera is activated. Next, line up the camera on your device with the QR code you want to scan and hold the device steady until the app can read the code.
Then, most apps automatically take you to the relevant website; some you have to click or tap. Have fun!
MONEY TREETHE
Joseph Makamba Busha Joseph Makamba Busha is Chairman of Student Investor (Pty) Ltd, and Group Managing Director of JM Busha Investment Group. His love for education, work and business experience made it easier for an
idea to be converted into a business. His life is devoted to creating a better, more inclusive and responsible society and equitable world.
Matthew Piper Matthew Piper is the Managing Director of Student Investor (Pty) Ltd. His passion for entrepreneurship, investing and empowering others is what led to the founding of Student Investor. When away from the bustle of
business life, he spends his time on other passions such as art and academia. Matthew aims to be at the forefront of change in South Africa through entrepreneurial leadership.
Tokologo Phetla Tokologo Phetla is the Director of Operations & Strategy of Student Investor (Pty) Ltd. His vision is to contribute to the creation of an economically powerful African continent. He aims to do this through entrepreneurship and
building up what he terms, a new African Consciousness. “The vision is simple: To change the face of the world, make it look more African.”
Karidas TshintsholoKaridas Tshintsholo is the Director of Marketing & Corporate Relations of Student Investor (Pty) Ltd. Karidas is a learner at heart who enjoys the study and application of Economics. He is an aspiring serial
entrepreneur and hectic jazz fan who is crazy about Mustangs. A young man who knows he is an integral part of a bright future for the African continent.
Jack NewbyJack Newby is the Director of Financial Education of Student Investor (Pty) Ltd. He is passionate about the financial markets and numbers have always fascinated him. He has been managing his own portfolio since he
was 18, with great returns. He believes Student Investor can help the youth of South Africa learn about the markets and he encourages everyone to be part of this revolution.
Karidas Tshintsholo Director: Marketing & Corporate Relations
Jack Newby Director: Financial Education
Matthew Piper Managing Director
matthewpiper@studentinvestor.co.za 071 293 4409
Tokologo Phetla Director: Operations & Strategy
tokologophetla@studentinvestor.co.za073 684 8874
5 13
WHY THEMONEY TREE?
The Money Tree Magazine – a Student Investor (Pty) Ltd publication
THE TEAM: Joseph Makamba Busha (Chairman), Matthew Piper (Managing Director), Tokologo Phetla (Executive Director), Karidas Tshintsholo (Executive Director), Jack Newby (Executive Director), Siyabonga Mseleku
(Investment Writer), Tsepiso Secker (Chief Writer), Mmabato Thobejane (Relationship Manager)
You get access to:• Information about graduate recruitment opportunities • Information about opportunities for further study • Information about scholarship/bursary opportunities • Investing & personal fi nance content • Market and economic analysis • Content and tips for your career • Student lifestyle content • Latest social events to look forward to • Cool entertainment news • “Ask the Elder” advice • Business and entrepreneurship advice and content • Games, gadgets and technology • Student Investor of the Issue • Profi les of interesting people (possibly on YOUR
campus or school) • Free prizes through our competitions
…ALL in ONE Magazine At THE MONEY TREE, we pride ourselves in satisfying our target markets through research and diversifi cation of our products – we put YOUR interests fi rst.
LIGHT CONTINUES TO ECHO THREE YEARS AFTER STELLAR OUTBURSTThe Hubble Space Telescope’s latest image of the star V838 Monocerotis (V838 Mon) reveals dramatic changes in the illumination of surrounding dusty cloud structures. The effect, called a light echo, has been unveiling never-before-seen dust patterns ever since the star suddenly brightened for several weeks in early 2002.
HUBBLE TOP 100 IMAGESThe Hubble Space Telescope sits in Earth’s low-orbit and has recorded visible light images from deep space and time for 24 years. It is a joint project between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA). Named after astronomer Edwin Hubble, who calculated the date of the Big Bang, observations from Hubble have led to many breakthroughs in the sciences. This visual essay features a small selection from the Hubble Heritage Team, who gathered together their favourite images that Hubble has sent back over the years. This is just a tiny fraction of what is available.You can download the complete set in a free app for your iPad from the App Store.
8
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VISUAL ESSAY
GHOSTLY STAR-FORMING PILLAR OF GAS AND DUSTResembling a nightmarish beast rearing its head from a crimson sea, this celestial object is actually just a pillar of gas and dust. Called the Cone Nebula (in NGC 2264) – so named because in ground-based images it has a conical shape – this monstrous pillar resides in a turbulent star-forming region. This picture, taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) aboard the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, shows the upper 2.5 light-years of the Cone, a height that equals 23 million roundtrips to the Moon. The entire pillar is seven light-years long.
9
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WFC3 VISIBLE IMAGE OF THE CARINA NEBULAComposed of gas and dust, the pictured pillar resides in a tempestuous stellar nursery called the Carina Nebula, located 7,500 light-years away in the southern constellation of Carina.Taken in visible light, the image shows the tip of the three-light-year-long pillar, bathed in the glow of light from hot, massive stars off the top of the image. Scorching radiation and fast winds (streams of charged particles) from these stars are sculpting the pillar and causing new stars to form within it. Streamers of gas and dust can be seen flowing off the top of the structure.Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 observed the Carina Nebula on 24-30 July 2009. WFC3 was installed aboard Hubble in May 2009 during Servicing Mission 4. The composite image was made from filters that isolate emission from iron, magnesium, oxygen, hydrogen and sulphur.
10
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11
THE RING NEBULA (MESSIER 57)This new image shows the dramatic shape and colour of the Ring Nebula, otherwise known as Messier 57.From Earth’s perspective, the nebula looks like a simple elliptical shape with a shaggy boundary. However, new observations combining existing ground-based data with new NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope data show that the nebula is shaped like a distorted doughnut. This doughnut has a rugby-ball-shaped region of lower-density material slotted into in its central “gap,” stretching towards and away from us.
CREDIT: NASA, ESA AND THE HUBBLE SM4 ERO TEAM
12
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13
THE HORSEHEAD NEBULA This Hubble image, captured and released to celebrate the telescope’s 23rd year in orbit, shows part of the sky in the constellation of Orion (The Hunter). Rising like a giant seahorse from turbulent waves of dust and gas is the Horsehead Nebula, otherwise known as Barnard 33.
This image shows the region in infrared light, which has longer wavelengths than visible light and can pierce through the dusty material that usually obscures the nebula’s inner regions. The result is a rather ethereal and fragile-looking structure, made of delicate folds of gas — very different to the nebula’s appearance in visible light.
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14
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LIGHT AND SHADOW IN THE CARINA NEBULAPreviously unseen details of a mysterious, complex structure within the Carina Nebula (NGC 3372) are revealed by this image of the “Keyhole Nebula,” obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope. The picture is a montage assembled from four different April 1999 telescope pointings with Hubble’s Wide Field Planetary Camera 2, which used six different colour filters. The picture is dominated by a large, approximately circular feature, which is part of the Keyhole Nebula, named in the 19th century by Sir John Herschel.
This region, about 8,000 light-years from Earth, is located adjacent to the famous explosive variable star Eta Carinae, which lies just outside the field of view toward the upper right. The Carina Nebula also contains several other stars that are among the hottest and most massive known, each about 10 times as hot, and 100 times as massive, as our Sun.
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16
Dear Elder,
Is Pluto a planet or not? My father tells me
that when he grew up there was never any
doubt about Pluto being a planet, yet my
teacher seems to have a different opinion.
Jack Mosdell, Springs
Dear Jack,
Officially, Pluto is no longer a planet since
2006, when it was down-graded to being a
dwarf planet. For your interest, I will mention
that it is the second largest dwarf planet
known to us, with only Eris being larger. To
get a sense of scale, consider that Pluto is
about one-third of the moon’s volume, even
though, being entirely rock and ice, it weighs
only about one sixth of the moon. Blame it on
the International Astronomical Union (IAU) who
decided, after the discovery of Eris, to define
planets more precisely and exclude ice objects
like Pluto from the definition. This definition is
by no means popular in all quarters, so I would
suggest that both your father and your teacher
are correct.
The Elder
Dear Sir,
Why can one not see the Southern Cross
when in Europe? And what are we missing
out on that they may be able to see?
Emily Prozezsky, Nelspruit
Dear Emily,
You know what Emily, whereas we have the
Southern Cross, they have the Pole Star in
the northern hemisphere. But I bet you that
few people know that one can actually see
the Southern Cross (or the Crux Constellation)
from parts of the northern hemisphere at select
times of the year. For instance, around mid-
evenings during April in Cancun, one might be
able to see this set of stars. Crux is arguably
the most distinguishable constellation of the
major 88 that we observe, and consists of four
stars: Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Delta Crucis,
ranging from 88 to 364 light-years away from
Earth. And next time we play an international
test against either the Aussies or Kiwis, look
carefully at their flags and you will see that the
stars on their flags are the Southern Cross.
The Elder
Dear Elder
Who won the space race? And why did it
even start?
Yasmina Yusuf, Berea
Dear Yasmina
The end of World War II is marked by the point
at which Allied troops from the USA, Britain and
others came in from the western part of Germany
and met with the advancing Russian forces
invading from the east. They met in Berlin where
part of the negotiations to end the war resulted
in dividing the city into sectors, and so started
45 years of Cold War. East and West had very
different ideologies, and each advance in the area
of arts or sciences, or any victory in sport, was
taken to validate that the one or the other ideology
was superior. Free markets, capitalism and
democracy versus statism and communism. Who
won? I suppose we all won because the urge
to outdo their opponents propelled both sides
into spending irrational amounts of resources on
developing space programmes, all to our modern-
day benefit. The Russians had the first man in
space. The Americans stepped on the moon first.
I suspect both sides can claim some victory.
The Elder
ASK THE ELDERQ&A
BY THE NUMBERS6 x 10 −273.15°
Celsius1.4
times
13.7 billion
6.3 million
THE MASS OF EARTH IN KILOGRAMS. IT AFFECTS GRAVITY. GRAVITY AFFECTS EVERYTHING.
ABSOLUTE ZERO OR 0 KELVIN. THE TEMPERATURE OF MOST
OF THE UNIVERSE.
THE NUMBER OF NATURALLY
OCCURRING ELEMENTS
THAT ARE THE FUNDAMENTAL
BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL THE MATTER IN THE UNIVERSE.
THE ESTIMATED WEIGHT IN KILOGRAMS
OF MAN-MADE SPACE JUNK CURRENTLY ORBITING
EARTH.
THE NUMBER OF YEARS SINCE ARMSTRONG AND
ALDRIN SET FOOT ON THE MOON. TIME FOR
MARS?
THE NUMBER OF ATOMS OF
HYDROGEN PER CUBIC METRE OF SPACE REQUIRED TO REVERSE THE
BIG BANG AND MAKE ALL END IN THE BIG CRUNCH
ONE DAY.
THE NUMBER OF TIMES MARS IS FURTHER AWAY FROM EARTH THAN
THE MOON, THE FURTHEST HUMANS HAVE JOURNEYED.
WHEN A STAR IS THIS MUCH BIGGER THAN THE SUN, OR MORE, IT IS
DESTINED TO BECOME A SUPERNOVA.
THE NUMBER OF YEARS AGO THAT THE BIG BANG OCCURRED,
AS CALCULATED BY EDWIN HUBBLE.
24
92
455600 1995
THE FIRST YEAR IN WHICH A WOMAN PILOTED A SPACE
SHUTTLE WHEN US COMMANDER EILEEN COLLINS GUIDED STS-63
TO SPACE STATION MIR.
THE NUMBER OF TIMES OF ALL THE OTHER PLANETS
COMBINED THAT THE LARGEST PLANET IN OUR SOLAR SYSTEM, JUPITER, WOULD BE IN TERMS OF MASS.
2.5 times 17
SPACE APPSThe Best According to Mashable.com*
NASAThe National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is the
government agency behind the USA’s space programme, as well as all
things that fly. The NASA app is free and available on all devices and it
keeps users abreast of the world’s premier space agency’s progress,
projects, missions and research with the help of feature stories, photos,
videos, live webcasts and more. On log-in, we could see what the Hubble
telescope was beaming back to Earth, as well as a recent starburst.
POCKET UNIVERSEFor iPad and iPhone users only, this app takes you on a virtual tour of the
universe, provides you with frequent astronomical updates, and can be
set to operate across a variety of time zones. If you are into quizzes, or
want to see the moons of our sister planets, this one is for you at about
R30 in the iStore.
MOBILE OBSERVATORYAccording to Mashable, this app for Android users is one of the most
detailed astronomy apps out there and is often considered a great
alternative to Pocket Universe. While it comes with the updated star
maps, Mobile Observatory also has interactive views of the solar system
and zoomable views of the sky and planets. It's basically an Astronomy
101 textbook loaded onto your phone.
SOLAR WALK 3-DApple has featured Solar Walk 3D on its Best Apps list for three
consecutive years, and for good reason. The high-def, interactive views of
our solar system will blow away even the nerdiest of space lovers. Unlike
other astronomy apps, Solar Walk also has 3D models of man-made
satellites, like the Hubble. The only drawback is that you need cyan-red
3D glasses to access the 3D modes.
TECHNOLOGY
18
SKY MAPWhile it's not as robust as Pocket Universe, Sky Map is a great alternative
for Android users. As Google's "window on the sky," this app was originally
created by 20 employees who genuinely loved astronomy. Last year, the
company open-sourced the app to allow for further development.
MOON ATLASHere's the best thing about our moon: It's one of the only out-of-this-
world objects you can see every night, even under bright city lights.
Don't take its dependability for granted – there's always something more
to learn about our lunar friend. Moon Atlas for iPhone and iPad is a 3D
globe that you can pinch and control to manipulate for finer detail. Swipe
to view the moon from every angle and read through more than 1,800
named features.
EXOPLANETOK, we've given you lots of great app options for the major planets
and astronomy maps, but what about all those other alien worlds? The
Exoplanet app for iPhone and iPad is an interactive database of every
known exoplanet beyond our solar system. Updated every day, the app
pushes notifications whenever a new exoplanet is discovered.
SPOT THE STATIONNASA's Spot the Station isn't really an app, but rather a service.
Whenever the International Space Station is visible in your area, NASA
will shoot you a text or email. As the third-brightest object in the sky, the
ISS is visible with the naked eye. On a clear day, it looks like an airplane
whizzing through the sky.
*About www.mashable.com: Mashable is a British-American news website, technology and social media blog founded by Pete Cashmore in 2005. The
website's primary focus is social media news, but it also
covers news and developments in mobile, entertainment,
online video, business, web development, technology,
memes and gadgets. 19
20
DISTRICT 9What better place to start than in our own neighbourhood? Aliens land in Johannesburg, looking no worse than passengers on a SAA flight from New York usually do on touchdown, give or take a few funny limbs and scaly looks. We do to them what came naturally to the Apartheid government – we create an alien Soweto of sorts and get Afrikaans cops to boss them around. Although we see no Romeo and Juliet type of cross-species romance, they share many common features with us: they think like us, share emotions and have many of the same gestures. They can, of course, travel interstellar and shoot weapons activated by their DNA, so we are not quite the same. For a test of reality, it is almost certain that aliens won’t have DNA that can mix with ours, they won’t enjoy dining on cat food and they won’t have technology we can instantly operate.
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERSOriginally filmed in 1956, the 1978 remake of this movie was just long ago enough that one suspects the next Hollywood blockbuster might soon be coming to a cinema near you (starring Will Smith yet again?). The central idea of this script is how ordinary people get replaced by aliens who take on all of their physical features but are void of human emotion. Voila, in the absence of emotion, we have a perfectly functioning society. The nasty aliens are called the “Pod People” because as they fled their dying world and touched down on Earth, they fell on leaves with small pink flowers and assimilated. The movie has all the right elements, with bodies being discovered and all agencies with any authority remaining frustratingly disinterested and sceptical. Witnesses also get converted by the Pods. We want to leave you emotionally hanging by not revealing how it all ends. Not quite Hollywood happy. The main thesis is interesting – that the Pod people might have been doing humans a favour by removing all emotion.
ET could not phone home for all the tea in China. He would have needed to buy airtime and, given the distance, it would have been prohibitively expensive. Besides, he only would have qualified for pay-as-you-go rates, assuming that the corner shop would take his currency!
These trivial details have never stopped Hollywood from making our aliens and extra-terrestrials, good and bad alike, somewhat human in significantly more aspects than that which could possibly be credible. In what follows, we list some of the more popular space or alien movies of all time. Then, more as an afterthought, we also wade through some of the scientific hubris in these science-fiction films, just to make sure we do not have unreasonable expectations of whom we may encounter someday.
ALIEN ALERTBY CHARL DU PLESSIS
MOVIESSp
ecia
l Edi
tion
in c
onju
nctio
n w
ith
THE
DEPA
RTM
ENT
OF S
CIEN
CE &
TEC
HNOL
OGY
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ETSpielberg did aliens and he did them well. ET was cute enough to be a soft toy. It is hard to remember why he came here and how he was going to get back. All you really need to know is that he was decidedly in the toilet-paper-puppy-picture league of warm and fuzzy feelings, and he left us with two memorable moments. The one being the immortal words “ET phone home.” The other, when ET rides in the front basket of a bicycle jumping over the moon. Oh yes, the young Drew Barrymore was a close second on the cuteness factor. Now, let’s get real. Given that mobile phones only hit the market well after this movie’s 1982 release, what are the odds that aliens would be “phoning home?”2001
A SPACE ODYSSEYIn 1968, the next century seemed a long way off to Director Stanley Kubrick and his cast. The story of 2001 deals with an epic journey to the planet Jupiter. Now, bear in mind that in 1968, the first space flights had already occurred and that a step on the Moon was a mere one year away. So, Kubrick and Clarke should be forgiven if they thought there was a likelihood of a journey to Jupiter within the not too distant future. Reality check? Who knows where humanity might have ventured by now if the end of the Cold War did not interrupt the excessive, beat-them-at-any-cost investment in the space race. The sequel, based on Arthur C Clarke’s book 2010, pulled heavyweights such as Roy Scheider (of Jaws fame), Helen Mirren and John Lithgow, and that year, too, has come on gone with nothing quite as memorable as what Clarke predicted.
ALIENIt might be hard to believe today, but yes, once it was possible to have pin-up status despite having freakish, octopus-like creatures with gnarly teeth bursting out of your chest. Just ask Sigourney Weaver, who played Warrant Officer Ripley. Alien introduced scientific research, and good-looking female scientists in white coats to the science-fiction genre in a big way. What we also liked was the fact that this 1979 female astronaut-scientist had strong leadership qualities – a culmination of everything that feminists had been fighting for all in one package. Ripley is the lone survivor of plenty attempts to flush the alien out of the space ship Nostrodomo. Pure fiction, one would hope, and clearly, way too early to think of androids having the capacities that the film gave to Ash, the company’s secret agent on the mission.
INDEPENDENCE DAYThis was the first in a series of doomsday movies that were to hit the big screen in the mid-1990s. If we all entered the new millennium somewhat fearful, blame it on this. Prior to this science fiction disaster movie, as purists like to classify them, aliens were hiding out in distant places. Now, they were hovering over our cities in larger-than-life spaceships. After a devastating attack, survivors gather in the Nevada desert to stage a counter attack and comeback. The film had a staggering 3,000 special effects shots to finish, and it grossed over $817 million at the box office, the second-highest take ever. After this movie, Will Smith was firmly entrenched as our first line of defence against any future alien invasion. Films like Men in Black and more would follow. Now the reality check? Surely, in the deep southern parts of the US, heroes are seldom men of colour?
FACT: ET was Spielberg’s response to the “stalled space program.” In 1981 Spielberg said: “If the government
won’t fund the space program, to allow people’s imagination to soar, then all I can do is make movies that bring
space down to earth and make it more accessible to the imagination.”‘
COCOONWhen eighty year olds start acting as if they are on Spring Break, there may be something wrong with the water. For three residents of an old age home, Sunny Shores, who occasionally sneak into their neighbours’ pool, that is exactly the case. Why? Because the neighbours are aliens who rented the place and filled the pool with a life force intended to revive 20 of their species who had been cocooned for millennia after a previously failed trip. As other residents of Sunny Shores sniff out the truth, they join in the pool. Soon, grandmas are climbing trees with their grandsons, yet they drain all the life force from the water. Now, the cocooned Antareans cannot go back and are returned to the ocean floor. We are certain that these aliens are not like us in any way, because no right-thinking human would do what they did next. Having had their plans scuppered, basically by the greedy exhaustion of their life force by the elderly, they turn the other cheek and offer to take these geezers on the return trip with them, to live forever. I hope there is one sequel that shows that this greed got suckered and that these humans ended up as slaves or slugs in that foreign constellation where the Antareans came from. Did we mention Captain Jack falling in love with the alien neighbour?
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SPECIESThis film is about a group of
scientists who try to track down and trap a killer alien seductress
before she successfully mates with a human male. Dream on. Enough
said that if we encounter foreign life forms one-tenth as attractive as lithe Natasha Henstridge, the main
alien character in this 1995 film and the first in a three-part series, we
will rethink religion. Did we mention the star-studded cast, including
Natasha Henstridge, Ben Kingsley, Forest Whitaker and Natasha
Henstridge? Scientific reality check – dudes in white coats should know
there is something fishy if they suddenly are about to get lucky
after all these years.
MEN IN BLACKWe have been invaded. Unknown to us, hiding inside zipped-up human-lookalike
costumes and in dark alleys and Chinese restaurants, and living and working side by
side to us, are gazillions of really ugly aliens. And there is this super agency that employs
the gruff Tommy Lee Jones and the too upbeat and witty Will Smith to smooth over
any possible transgressions of our foreign visitors (and I am not speaking of the French). I have lost count how many MIBs there have been and I am sure it will overtake the Rocky
franchise one day, because the stories are just too good, the characters (human and alien alike) truly enjoyable, and
the recipe just works so well as entertainment. The first MIB grossed $589 million. Our only concern with how closely this movie may be
mirroring reality is that we have little doubt that some far-left-leaning civil rights group would long ago have made some stink about the rights to
memory and therefore would have started complaints about how the MIB wipe memories with the click of a switch.
AVATARScience fiction went 3-D big time with this 2009 epic movie that turned the aliens into good guy humanoids called the “Na’vi” and humans into the pigs who threatened their peaceful and harmonious existence. This takes place on Pandora, a lush habitable moon of a gas giant in the Alpha Centauri star system. I heard kids and grown-ups cry in the theatre when that beautiful big tree in which the Na’vi lived came tumbling down in front of the mega-bulldozers. Genocide on a inter-galactic scale. The scientific inventions in the movie are awesome – starting with the concept of having a genetically-
engineered avatar out on your behalf doing all the dirty and downright dangerous work. But, could one not please swop back into yourself for the moments when you fall in love? (Director James Cameron, after all, gave us Titanic and other romantic movies). The furthest stretch in the movie? What greedy industrialist would ever call a precious mineral “Unobtanium?” And by the way, Avatar again features Sigourney Weaver, of Alien fame.
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MUSIC
PETER SCHILLING MAJOR TOM (Coming Home)http://youtu.be/N0sb1SZxCAs With a character unofficially related to “Major Tom,” the theme of David Bowie’s 1969 album “Space Oddity,” this song is also about an astronaut being caught in an accident in space. It was first released in German in 1983. There is also a possible connection between Elton John’s Rocket Man and Major Tom, a connection notably made by Bowie himself, who while singing Space Oddity in concert would sometimes call out, “Oh, Rocket Man."
4 3 2 1Earth below usdrifting fallingfloating weightlesscalling calling home...
DAVID BOWIESPACE ODDITYhttp://youtu.be/D67kmFzSh_o“Space Oddity” became a hit at the time of the first Apollo lunar landings, and later proved to be strangely prophetic when the near-tragedy of Apollo 13 occurred only months after the song’s release. In the cutting-edge video, Bowie plays both Ground Control and Major Tom, the ill-fated space voyager who dutifully follows orders and tells his wife “he loves her very much.”
Ground Control to Major TomCommencing countdown, engines onCheck ignition and may God’s love be with youHere am I floating round my tin canFar above the MoonPlanet Earth is blueAnd there’s nothing I can do.
NO ORDINARY COUNTDOWNBY TANYA GOODMANSpace exploration, alien invasions, and imaginary worlds have sparked the creative genius in many an artist. Music also plays an important role in some of the most famous films about space – think 2001: Space Odyssey.” And for the astronauts themselves, music is a central part of maintaining some sort of normal life (NASA has kept the song list for the wake up tune which is beamed up every day to get them “out” of bed.)Welcome to some of our favourite pieces on the subject. Haunting, triumphant, tentative and some just simply out of this world. (PS: Use your smartphone to snap the QR codes and watch videos for many of these too.)
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“I understand
the world through
music and I believe that
music shapes the universe.
Mankind has always had a
sense of wonder about space,
has always been curious. It’s
something that’s implanted in
us. It’s natural to want to travel
and discover. It is, always has
been, and is always going
to be like this. We are
space.” – Vangelis
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THE KINKS SUPERSONIC ROCKET SHIPhttp://youtu.be/thXmHW4-WC4This song offers visions of a utopia on board a rocket ship where no one is discriminated against and no one needs to be "hip" to fit in. It’s got a groovy Calypso sound with hints of steel drum in the background. An all round happy picture, indeed.
On my supersonic rocket shipNobody has to be hipNobody needs to be out of sight. Out of sight.Nobody’s gonna travel second classThere’ll be equalityAnd no suppression of minorities. Well alright.We’ll take this planet, shake it roundAnd turn it upside down.My supersonic rocket ship.
ELTON JOHNROCKET MANhttp://youtu.be/RncBJaNloyMThe lyrics in the song, inspired by the short story “The Rocket Man” in The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury, and written by John’s longtime collaborator Bernie Taupin, describe a Mars-bound astronaut’s mixed feelings at leaving his family in order to do his job. The song echoes the theme of David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” but seems to be more about how the perception of an astronaut’s job was becoming normalized. Among numerous other performances, John played “Rocket Man” at the launch site of Space Shuttle Discovery in 1998.
She packed my bags last night pre flightZero hour 9:00amAnd I'm gonna be high, as a kite by thenI miss the earth so muchI miss my wifeIt’s lonely out in spaceOn such a timeless flight
CHRIS DE BURGH A SPACEMAN CAME TRAVELLINGhttp://youtu.be/sVakQ5aegLYHumankind’s venture into space has also raised the question of whether other lifeforms have or will visit Earth. Chris de Burgh’s song brings a message of peace and goodwill wrapped up in a religious metaphor.
A spaceman came travelling on his ship from afar,‘Twas light years of time since his mission did start,And over a village he halted his craft,And it hung in the sky like a star, just like a starHe followed a light and came down to a shed,Where a mother and child were lying there on a bed,A bright light of silver shone round his head,And he had the face of an angel, and they were afraid
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RADIOHEADSUBTERRANEAN HOMESICK ALIENhttp://youtu.be/N0sb1SZxCAs We think it’s a brilliant essay question, and so does Radiohead: “If you were an alien from another planet arriving on Earth, how would you describe what you saw?” Apparently, the question was part of the inspiration for this haunting, sad song about alienation and loneliness.
Up aboveAliens hoverMaking home moviesFor the folks back homeOf all these weird creaturesWho lock up their spiritsDrill holes in themselvesAnd live for their secrets
MOBY WE’RE ALL MADE OF STARShttp://youtu.be/5iJ6mLb8r00Richard Melville Hall, known by his stage name Moby, is an American singer-songwriter, musician, DJ and photographer. He is well known for his electronic music, vegan lifestyle, and support of animal rights. This is a sweet, hippy kinda song about the interconnectedness of it all.
People they come together, people they fall apartNo one can stop us now cause we are all made of stars
EUROPE THE FINAL COUNTDOWNhttp://youtu.be/9jK-NcRmVcwBig hair not withstanding, the sound on this track is huge. Epic orchestral arrangements kick this one off and it only goes up from there. The lyrics speak of a departure from Earth. Is it for exploration or for escape?
We’re leaving together,But still it’s farewellAnd maybe we’ll come back,To earth, who can tell ?I guess there is no one to blameWe’re leaving groundWill things ever be the same again?SUN RA & HIS ASTRO-SOLAR-INFINITY
ARKESTRA TAPESTRY FROM AN ASTEROID http://youtu.be/8_f5e9eJpLwFrom the album We Travel the Space Ways on Saturn Records, Sun Ra’s tune (with yet another astronomical word – asteroid – in it) is about as spacy as you can get. Sun Ra was a prolific jazz composer, bandleader, piano and synthesizer player, poet and philosopher known for his “cosmic philosophy,” musical compositions and performances. This one is purely an instrumental piece so there are no lyrics. You’ll have to take his word for it that it’s about space. And since he claims to come from some other world, maybe he’s right.No one can stop us now cause we are all made of stars.
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GOLDFISHMOONWALK AWAY (MOONLANDING MIX) http://youtu.be/wbNJR2JYn7IAn electronic duo from the Southern-most tip of Africa, Goldfish (Dave Poole and Dom Peters) have gone from impromtu jams at a tiny beach club in Cape Town to headlining Amsterdam’s Olympic Stadium, cracking a top 10 on the US iTunes Dance chart, a residency at Pacha Ibiza with David Guetta, and DJ’s like Fedde le Grand knocking at their door to remix their tracks. Their genre-defying mix of live instruments, house beats and searing live performances make them one of SA’s hottest musical acts at the moment. Their recent video release of the remix of “Moon Walkaway” has awesome footage from NASA and the International Space Station. Plus some cool retro voice overs from Mission Control.
DAVE MATTHEWS BAND’SSATELLITEhttp://youtu.be/LEGV9H0aZaQThough Dave Matthews has been living abroad for quite some time, we like to claim him as our own. Some say this song is about a girl. Others claim it’s just a reworking of the childhood rhyme, “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.” We think it’s a bit more unsettling and somewhat prescient as the song seems to predict the ever-present surveillance that advanced technology brings to modern society. And the fact that whoever controls it is both Peeping Tom and king. Who is the “king of the satellite castle”?
Satellite in my eyesLike a diamond in the skyHow I wonderSatellite strung from the moonAnd the world your balloonPeeping Tom for the mother station
Among Vangelis’ many other pieces, you might want to also listen to the track that was the theme music to Carl Sagan’s Cosmos series: http://youtu.be/xOf4SktPDak
VANGELISMYTHODEA: MUSIC FOR THE NASA MISSION: 2001 MARS ODYSSEYhttp://youtu.be/G_U4k_lc3pEThis dramatic piece of music was performed as a concert conceived and designed by Vangelis at the Temple of Zeus in Athens Hellas ( Greece) along with the London Metropolitan Orchestra and the chorus of the Greek National Opera. The record was officially released on 23 October 2001, to coincide with the 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft entering the orbit of planet Mars. Vangelis described the connection he felt between the music and the mission on the 2001 Mars Odyssey official website:
“I made up the name Mythodea from the words myth and ode. And I felt in it a kind of shared or common path with NASA’s current exploration of the planet [Mars]. Whatever we use as a key – music, mythology, science, mathematics, astronomy – we are all working to decode the mystery of creation, searching for our deepest roots.”
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BRIAN ENO AN ENDING (ASCENT) http://youtu.be/UVa94VdRqZMhttp://youtu.be/gtblKaNtJWUKnown as the father of modern ambient music, Eno started his musical career early, with the band Roxy Music. Eno has gone on to produce a number of highly eclectic and increasingly ambient
electronic and acoustic albums, and also works frequently as producer for many popular artists. You might also recognise his music in a number of films. The piece we selected is a track from his 1983 composition Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks, which was commission by Al Reinert for his film, For All Mankind – a documentary of the Apollo missions. Eno says: “I was excited by this project, it afforded an opportunity to explore
ERIC IDLE/MONTY PYTHONTHE GALAXY SONGhttp://youtu.be/buqtdpuZxvkThis hilarious song is an astronomy lesson set to music and originally part of the movie, The Meaning of Life. The science in it has remarkably stood the test of time (an analysis of the lyrics determines that the facts stated in the song are largely correct: http://ephemeris.sjaa.net/0312/b.html). It’s a great tune to listen to if you need a little perspective on life and your place in the universe. We are but a mere speck.Whenever life gets you down, Mrs BrownAnd things seem hard or toughAnd people are stupid, obnoxious or daftAnd you feel that you've had quite enoughJust remember that you're standing on a planet that's evolvingAnd revolving at nine hundred miles an hourThat's orbiting at nineteen miles a second, so it's reckoned
the feelings of space travel: being weightless, seeing the night time campfires of Saharan Nomads from high above the Earth, looking back to a little blue planet drifting alone in space, looking out into the endless darkness beyond, and finally stepping onto another planet.”
We suggest you listen to the whole thing. And watch the documentary here: http://youtu.be/h9fNX81-H8s
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Start fulfilling your ambitions withEY. Our global positioning enablestruly inspired ideas through the cross-pollination of diverse perspectives. This is your opportunity to build a better working world. Around the world.
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TAKE ON THEWORLD, NOTJUST A BIT OF IT.
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FAMOUS BOOKS ABOUT
You Build It; They Will Come
Would scientists and engineers even know what kind of
future to dream about and work towards if it weren’t for
science fiction writers? As outrageous as some authors
might often be, like when suggesting travel at faster
than the speed of light, or positing zero-gravity without rotational spin
(2001: A Space Odyssey actually got that one right), collectively, this
genre of literature has inspired and intimidated homo sapiens to develop
some amazing technologies.
It would be an understatement to suggest that science fiction writers
are not easily distracted by the laws of physics or logic. Consider the
ease with which they envision us communicating with aliens, using
devices such as Star Trek's Universal Translator or the Babel Fish in
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Or the dictorobitron in Plan 9 from
Outer Space. With each of these sparks of the imagination, however,
science fiction authors have created and continue to create possibilities,
leaving it up to our scientists and engineers to fill in the detail and make
it reality. Soon, much later, or never?
Within the body of works of science fiction and fantasy, there is little
that has grabbed the imagination as wildly as has space and its infinite,
unexplored frontiers. The final frontier, perhaps? But the frontier of
limitless possibility? Beyond any doubt. In what follows then, we pay
homage, in no particular order, to great works of science fiction literature
that have set this spark of possibility alight and have kept it blazing
brightly. Everyone has their own list of favourites, and there are surely
some great works we have omitted in compiling this list. If this genre
grips you, then you should also visit the Hugo and Nebula Awards (see
sidebar) websites for lists of their winning authors and titles through the
years. As it is often said: “Life is too short to read bad books.”
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Arthur C Clarke
One of the most awarded, enjoyed and heralded creations in the science
fiction genre, Clarke wrote a novel about a scientific mission that ensues
after a 3 million-year-old enigmatic monolith is found buried on the moon
and pointing towards Saturn. First released as a film under the direction
of Stanley Kubrick, who co-wrote the movie script with Clarke, the latter
filled out the pieces after the film’s release and released it as a novel.
Quite unusual.
In the story, the best of earth's scientists are sent on an epic journey
in the direction of Jupiter to investigate with the ultra-advanced HAL
9000 computer. But HAL's programming has been patterned after the
human mind, and he is capable of guilt, neurosis... and even murder.
Thematically, the story further deals with elements of human evolution,
technology, artificial intelligence, and extra-terrestrial life. This is a cult
movie. If you have not seen it yet, plan a weekend with friends. Watching
the movie of 162 minutes is an epic of its own. Else, retreat by yourself
and read the book. It is well worth the read.
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
DUNE Frank Herbert
Years ago, after the band The Police disbanded
and before Sting started composing elevator music,
he starred in the movie adaptation of this classic.
The images of Sting, struggling through a sandy
wasteland, parched and without a drop of water,
battling giant underground worms that looked
like seven-storey-high earthworms are right up
there in terms of timelessness. To many sci-fi fans,
Herbert's Dune is essentially to science fiction what
Lord of the Rings is to fantasy.
In this epic series, Herbert was able to create
complete histories, politics, religions, and ecological
systems for his feudal interstellar society. Set on the
desert planet Arrakis, Paul Atreides transforms into
a mysterious man known as Muad'Dib as he sets
out to avenge the murder of his father, and leads a
revolution that earns him the emperor's throne.
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THE HITCHHIKER’S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY Douglas Adams
This is some of the most hilarious science fiction ever
written and the first book, in a trilogy of four or more
books (you get it?), that has totally crept into popular
culture. If you have not yet had someone offer you a
Galactic Gargleblaster, or if no one in your presence has
joked that the answer to life and the universe is 42, you
are definitely hanging out with the wrong crowd.
The first book starts off with an explosion and nothing is
ever the same again as Arthur Dent and his friend Ford
Prefect – a secret researcher for the interstellar travel
guide "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" – set off
on their travels. The pair escapes on an alien spaceship, and the book follows their bizarre
adventures around the universe along with frequent and memorable quotes like “Flying is
the art of throwing yourself at the ground and missing.” It is sad that Adams recently passed
away. Hopefully he is in Section 42, wherever that may be.
FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON
Jules Verne
Jules Verne is the granddaddy of all science fiction writers,
and he wrote this novel back in 1865. It tells the story of
the Baltimore Gun Club, a post-American Civil War society
of weapons aficionados, and their attempts to build an
enormous sky-facing Columbiad space gun and launch
three people – the Gun Club's president, his Philadelphian
armour-making rival, and a French poet – in a projectile
with the goal of a moon landing.
Perhaps not Verne’s most famous book, when one thinks
of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea or Journey to
the Centre of the Earth for instance, but it is a remarkable book in that Verne attempted to
calculate some of the distances to the moon. And he did so with uncanny accuracy. This
book too, is often credited by early 20th century rocket scientists, on whose shoulders later
space programmes would stand, for their early interest and inspiration.
THE HUGO & NEBULA AWARDS
Science fiction writers receive recognition
for their work by competing for two major
awards. They are called “The Hugos” and
“The Nebula” respectively.
The Nebula was introduced in 1966 by the non-
profit association of writers called the Science
Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Amaerica (SFWA) and
was modelled on The Edgars – the awards system
for mystery writers. Annual awards go to four
works of different length. With ever-changing rules,
there have been periods where film and television
scripts also competed for annual recognition, but
today those categories compete separately for The
Bradbury Award. For The Nebula, authors nominate
their favourite literature from the previous year (never
their own writing) and six final authors are submitted
to the ballot cast among members of SFWA. The
winner receives a trophy but no cash prize; the
trophy is a transparent block with an embedded
glitter spiral nebula and gemstones cut to resemble
planets. Some claim that if there is any distinction
between The Nebula and The Hugos, it is that The
Nebula relates more to literary judgment versus The
Hugos’ emphasis on readership popularity.
The Hugos are named after Hugo Gernsback, the
founder of the pioneering science fiction magazine
“Amazing Stories,” and were officially named the
Science Fiction Achievement Awards until 1992.
The awards have been organised since 1953 under
the auspices of the World Science Fiction Society.
The actual award is based on the design of hood
ornaments of 1950s cars and consists of a finned
rocket ship on a wooden base. The Hugo Awards
recognise a significantly more expansive range of
categories, among them science fiction magazines,
fanzines and websites, and artists and editors alike.
Regardless, along with The Nebula, The Hugos are
the most prestigious awards for any science fiction
or fantasy writer.
www.thehugoawards.org
www.sfwa.org/nebula-awards
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CONTACT
Carl Sagan
Sagan needs no introduction. He single-handedly popularised
the study of space globally with his TV series called Cosmos.
For the younger generation, the new Cosmos recently
screened is just an update by Neil deGrasse Tyson.
In this best-selling novel, Earth receives several messages
from extra-terrestrial beings. Many of the messages are
based in the international language of mathematics, allowing
the humans to reach out to and eventually interact with alien
life. The protagonist, played by Jodi Foster in the movie
version, has to battle scepticism and ridicule, until... (that would be giving it away).
STARSHIP TROOPERS Robert A Heinlein
First published in 1959, Starship Troopers is a classic in
military adventure and tells the story of Juan Rico, who
decides to join Earth's marine fighting force to combat alien
enemies. The book follows the rigorous training the men
go through in the boot camp, and the psychological state
of the recruits and their commanders. Rico and the other
characters discuss moral and philosophical aspects of
suffrage, civic virtue, juvenile delinquency, capital punishment,
and war. One of the original sci-fi greats, Starship Troopers
went on to inspire many other military science fiction novels,
like Joe Haldeman's The Forever War. The 1997 Paul
Verhoeven film of the novel was ranked as one of the top films of its decade.
WAR OF THE WORLDS
HG Wells
Be afraid. Be very afraid. That is exactly what happened in
1938 when New York-based dramatist Orson Welles aired
a CBS radio broadcast of this novel, and created a panic
across America when people thought he was live-reporting
an invasion by Martians. Wells' novel was first published
in 1898, and has had amazing staying power, culminating
in the 2005 Spielberg movie (the final sign of greatness,
one wonders?). It
is written in the first
person and gives
the account of an
invasion by Martians,
having been shot
across space in large
tubes and emerging
from holes in the
ground inside of large,
death-spewing and
tentacled machines.
The narrator faces
questions of morality,
such as the choice to lock-up and starve someone who
may alert the Martian machines to their whereabouts.
Also, as part of the
invasion literature of
that time, he speaks
of the masses of
displaced people and
their experiences as
they hopelessly, and
without much clue
as to the cause of
their suffering, join
the mass exodus
from their besieged
homes and cities. The
book is a great read
for many reasons, among others to also witness how the
English language and its idioms have changed within the
span of a little over one hundred years.
ASIMOV’S TRILOGIES
Isaac Asimov
The author of I, Robot, popularised by Will Smith’s epic movie, is better known among
serious fans for his three trilogies, Empire, Foundation and Robots, which all end up
connecting together into the same fictional universe in later books. Asimov wrote no
aliens into this universe (a fact he explains in another related story), but the exploration
of different human societies, of trudging through a graveyard of our own grandfathers, is
awe-inspiring stuff.
The Best
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TECHNOLOGY
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What is World Space Week?World Space Week is an international celebration of
science and technology, and their contribution to the
betterment of the human condition. The reason the
celebrations are held each year from October 4 – 10
is to commemorate two events:
• 4 October 1957: Launch of the first human-made
Earth satellite, Sputnik 1, thus opening the way for
space exploration.
• 10 October 1967: The signing of the Treaty on
Principles Governing the Activities of States in the
Exploration and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space,
including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies.
Where and how is World Space Week celebrated?World Space Week consists of space education and
outreach events held by space agencies, aerospace
companies, schools, planetaria, museums, and
astronomy clubs around the world in a common
timeframe.
What are the goals of World Space Week?
• Provide unique leverage in space outreach and
education.
• Educate people around the world about the
benefits that they receive from space
• Encourage greater use of space for sustainable
economic development
• Demonstrate public support for space
programmes
• Excite young people about science, technology,
engineering, and math
• Foster international cooperation in space
outreach and education
2014 Theme: Space: “Guiding Your Way”World Space Week 2014 highlights the benefits of
satellite navigation to humankind. In 2014 we are
seeing the rollout of many improved and brand new
Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), like
3rd generation GPS, Glonass, Beidou and Galileo.
With the increase in systems we are also seeing an
enormous increase in satellite navigation applications,
in road navigation, but also in aviation, shipping,
agriculture, disaster recovery and many other areas
in society.
Navigation satellites not only accurately pinpoint our
position on the planet, they also provide time signals
to keep clocks in sync, which is critically important
for global trading and many other time-sensitive
sectors.
In times of disaster, navigation satellites help
rescuers quickly find spots where people need help.
Using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) we can
compare maps before and after things changed. And
GNSS satellites are important to help you planning
your trips and tell you where it will rain and where it
will shine.
And let’s not forget about the GPS receiver in your
own smartphone, helping you to find your way or
locate places in your neighbourhood!
CELEBRATING WORLD SPACE WEEK
Since its United Nations declaration in 1999, World Space Week has grown into the largest public space event on Earth. More than 1,400 events in 80 countries celebrated the benefits of space and shared the excitement about space exploration in 2013. The theme for 2014 – “Space: Guiding Your Way” – is based on the importance of satellite navigation.
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SPACE SCIENCE
SERVING HUMANITYHUMANITY
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HUMANITY
South Africa has a world class Space Agency which was launched in December
2010. The Agency is mandated to provide for the promotion and use of space
and cooperation in space-related activities, foster research in space science,
advance scientific engineering through human capital and support the creation of an
environment conducive to industrial development in space technologies within the framework of
national government policy.
When South Africa invested in space, the focus was on developing capabilities and forms
part of the larger national plan to improve information and communications technology (ICT),
infrastructure, agriculture and education, safety and security. These are all essential elements for
building a resilient economy that is underpinned by sustainable development.
Due to the specialised skill sets needed for space programmes, government invests in education
and outreach programmes in schools through
to higher education institutions to generate
a skilled technical workforce. Science,
technology, engineering and mathematics
(STEM) education develops the advanced skills
required for a competitive workforce that can
generate economic growth.
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These engagements provide opportunities to develop the human
capital within SANSA through interaction and knowledge sharing with
global experts as well as provide collaborative opportunities for our
expert scientists and researchers in South Africa.
EDUCATION, OUTREACH & PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
SANSA has embarked on a
successful Eminent Speaker
Series that provides a
platform for the local public
to engage with renowned
scientists and thought
leaders on pertinent space
related topics.
There are courses offered
to various industries,
research institutions and
universities covering aspects that bring benefit from remote sensing
and digital elevation modelling to airforce skills training. The Agency
accommodates interns in earth observation and space applications
across the directorates.
In addition, staff members continue to provide external examiner
services for students in South African universities and engagement with
the Department of Education for development of material for school
curriculum. This has enabled a valuable contribution to be made by
SANSA scientists and researchers.
SANSA AIMS TO BRING THE FOLLOWING BENEFIT TO ALL SOUTH AFRICANS
Societal Capital: improving quality of life by using space science and
technology for day-to-day societal benefits.
Human Capital: training and developing critical skills, promoting
science appreciation among our youth and improving the scientific
literacy and engagement of our populace.
Intellectual and technological capital: the cornerstone of vibrant
and innovation-rich space science and technology programme,
responsive to changing needs and increasing global space knowledge,
market share and self-dependence.
Economic capital: increasing global competitiveness and enhancing
efficient logistics and cost-effective production, trading and distribution.
Global capital: creating global partnerships and international
engagements.
The Agency does this through merging and re-packaging the existing
national capacity, competence, experience and expertise in space
science and technology into six thematic focus areas:
• Earth Observations – drives and coordinates South Africa’s earth
observation efforts to sustainably benefit all South Africans in an earth-
friendly manner. Our activities are aligned with the South African Earth
Observation Strategy (SAEOS) and other related international initiatives
like GEO, GEOSS and CEOS.
• Space Operations – SANSA provides state-of-the-art ground
station facilities and services, including satellite tracking, telemetry and
command, as well as launch support, in-orbit testing, mission control
and space navigation.
• Space Science – focuses on basic and applied space science
research and related services, as well as human capacity development,
science advancement and public engagement activities
• Space Engineering – will lead space system and sub-system
development activities. Our efforts are aligned with South Africa’s
strategic drive to become self-reliant with its own satellite system
development capabilities, unique technologies and related skills to
create a technology base for our industry and promote initiatives in
advanced manufacturing technology.
• Human Capital Development – aims to train and develop South
Africans in key areas of national importance, develop scarce and
transferable skills and contribute to transforming the country into a
knowledge-based economy.
• Science Advancement and Public Engagement – aims to increase the
uptake and appreciation of science among our youth and improve the
overall scientific literacy and engagement of the general public.
The Agency has made some milestone achievements since its inception.
Building capacity through outreach
programmes and public engagement
Space expert sharing exciting technologies we utilise with young learners
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As part of knowledge creation and development, SANSA developed
and distributed the unique Fundisa school edition for high school
learners. This important resource is intended to help promote
an understanding of earth observations among Grade 10 to 12
learners. The existing Fundisa Disc programme, which targets
university students and contains satellite imagery, open source image
processing software and geospatial datasets were distributed to
most national HEIs.
Engagements with South African learners and the public is aimed at
increasing the uptake and appreciation of science among the youth
and to improve overall public scientific literacy. The space experts can
be engaged with at various events and exhibitions such as: national
school visits, guided tours of SANSA facilities, National Science Week
Events, World Space week activities, Eding Festival, Sasol Techno X,
ScifestAfrica, Science Tube, SAASTEC Conference and other career
showcasing outreach and awareness programmes. The SANSA
Science Centre in Hermanus hosts successful public “Open Days” to
showcase what SANSA does and how it impacts on our daily lives.
The centre also hosts Winter and Summer schools for undergraduate
students over the vacation periods, which prove invaluable in
increasing the volume of bursary applications SANSA receives for
further study in space science and engineering disciplines.
The SANSA Space Lab, a mobile vehicle that is used to bring
learners in rural areas a mobile science laboratory, has reached
many schools in rural Oudtshoorn, George, Mosselbay, Ceres
and Mdantsane areas. This has contributed significantly in raising
understanding of practical science and mathematics amongst these
learners who would otherwise not have access to a science laboratory.
KEEPING OUR EYE ON THE SUN
SANSA houses the Regional Warning Centre on space weather in
Africa. An extreme space weather event, or solar superstorm, is one of
a number of potentially high impact, but low probability natural hazards.
In response to a growing awareness in government, extreme space
weather now features as an element of national risk assessment in
numerous countries.
Space weather can cause detrimental effects to the power grid, satellites,
avionics, aircraft over polar regions, HF radio communication, mobile
telephones, internet and GPS systems to name a few. Consequently it has
been identified as a risk to the world economy and society.
The most important social and economic aspects of space weather
are related to being aware of and possibly avoiding the consequences
of space weather events by efficient warning systems allowing for
preventive measures to be taken. With society's growing dependency
on technological systems, it has become vital to monitor the effects of
space weather.
The Space Weather Centre provides an important service to the
nation by monitoring the Sun and its activity, providing space weather
forecasts, warnings, alerts, and environmental data on space weather
conditions to government and private-industry users in Africa.
LOOKING BACK ON EARTH
Earth observation is a significant part of the Agency’s offering to
government departments and public sector stakeholders who utilise the
data for service delivery priorities such as infrastructure development,
resource management, agriculture and disaster monitoring, and safety
and security of the country.
SANSA utilises its access to the SPOT 5 Earth observation satellite to
The Space Lab stimulating practical science at schools
Solar flares erupt on the SunIM
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produce and distribute the National Mosaics to government and industry
stakeholders for their use in addressing national challenges or for research
purposes. The Mosaic is comprised of scenes of multiple images (called
tiles) taken through a satellite (SPOT 5) and combined together to give
comprehensive information about every part of the country.
Some of the examples of the use of the Mosaic include measuring the
growth of informal settlements over the years, monitoring the quality of
water in dams, industrial development, monitoring agricultural land and
crop yields.
The Agency also became one of the first ground stations in the
world to be in possession of a moving window display for Landsat 8.
A moving window display is a visual representation of a satellite pass
over the footprint area commonly referred to as a pass. This display
aids technical operators that monitor the pass to validate the quality of
a pass while the satellite imagery is being downloaded. It also enables
users to pinpoint the current position of Landsat 7 & Landsat 8 satellites
as they move along their orbit in space. The acquisition of this tool
places SANSA one step closer to becoming the world’s foremost
authority on technology in the field of Earth Observation.
During the rainy season, SANSA was able to proactively demonstrate
the value of earth observation in post disaster assessment to the National
Disaster Management Centre (NDMC) by providing flood maps of the
affected areas in Matatiele, Eastern Cape. In another disaster of fire,
assessment and analysis was done for the Aliwal North and Dewetsdorp
areas for use in adjudication and dispute settlement processes.
THE BIG BUSINESS OF SPACE
Space is big business around the world and South Africa aims to seize
the opportunities we have to capitalise on the global market. At the
SANSA ground station in Hartebeesthoek, a recent Ka-band antenna
upgrade gave South Africa a uniquely competitive position to monitor
a new wave of satellites launched over the southern hemisphere. By
updating the antenna, SANSA is able to offer clients the entire range
within the Ka-band frequency, thus creating new possibilities for
international business and partnerships.
This latest addition to the growing number of technologically advanced
antennae on-site will enable South Africa to have a greater advantage and
opportunity for managing the increasing demand for high-quality space
operations products and services, thus contributing to our economy while
positioning the country among reliable space nations around the world.
Fields of Petrusberg from the National Mosaic
Searching the skies with antenna at SANSA
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India's Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM)
SANSA recently undertook support for some significant and well-
publicised global space missions. The expert teams provided launch,
in-orbit testing and TT&C services to NASA on the Mars Rover mission
and the recent LADEE and Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 missions as
well as the Indian Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM). If successful, India would
be the fourth space agency to explore the Red Planet.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) launched
the LADEE spacecraft on a Minotaur V vehicle during a five-day launch
period that started on 6 September 2013. The LADEE mission is
divided into mission phases: Launch, Ascent, Activation and Checkout,
Phasing Orbits, Lunar Orbit Insertion, Commissioning, Science, and
Decommissioning.
SANSA has been supporting the mission as of the launch date. Our
facilities, the technical knowledge and our team's years of expertise in
supporting missions of such magnitude are what attracted NASA to
SANSA. The facility's location in the Southern Hemisphere also plays in
our favour on such missions.
Back here on Earth, SANSA continues to provide cutting edge services
in our quest to maintain our reputation as the leading ground station on
the continent.
A PROMISE FOR THE FUTURE
SANSA is proud to have been involved in the development of South
Africa’s first CubeSAT in partnership with the Cape Peninsula University
of Technology (CPUT). ZACUBE-1, now TshepisoSAT, was launched on
21 November 2013, carrying a High Frequency (HF) Beacon transmitter
that will be used to calibrate the HF Radar Antenna System in Antarctica.
SANSA provided assistance with design, construction and assembly of
the payload to CPUT on this student development project.
Another significant space engineering milestone for South Africa
is the development of an earth observation satellite that will help to
independently manage challenges unique to the African continent
as part of the African Resource Management Constellation. Once
operational, this satellite will provide data to assist in responding to
the needs of society (across Africa) in areas of food security, disaster
management and land use. Some of the uses foreseen include
management of natural disasters such as floods and fires at the Kruger
National Park and/or management of disease in crops by enabling
farmers to take timeous corrective action.
The technical coordination of satellite system and sub-system
development will enable establishment of Centres of Competence (CoC)
in space sensors (payloads) and in satellite sub systems, which will
enhance the country’s core capabilities in satellite development.
Development of a satellite is an exciting opportunity to develop new
intellectual capital across a variety of disciplines. The design of the
physical structure requires ingenious electronic engineering; computer
engineering used for communications with Earth; and radiation
protection to name a few associated engineering requirements. Design
of sub systems provide an opportunity to build highly sensitive sensors
and historically these have resulted in advances in other fields of
science, such as medicine.
SANSA continues to push the boundaries on South Africa’s space
capacity and capability to bring benefit to all citizens
while developing the next generation of space scientists
and engineers.
Learn more at:
www.sansa.org.za
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EDUCATION
Several universities undertake research in
astronomy and offer courses in astronomy.T he
University of Cape Town (UCT) Astrophysics,
Cosmology and Gravity Centre, a research
group consisting of the Dept of Astronomy and
the Cosmology and Gravity group in the Dept
of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics, has
access to optical, near-infrared and radio facilities
(SAAO, SALT and MeerKAT) and contains a
theoretical cosmology group. The University
of South Africa (UNISA) Dept of Mathematical
Sciences offers a number of postgraduate study
opportunities. The University of the Free
State Dept of Physics offers undergraduate and
graduate programmes in astrophysics. The Dept
of Physics at North-West University runs the
Centre For Space Research, with a Masters and
a PhD programme in Space Physics. The Dept
of Computational and Applied Mathematics at
the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits)
offers MSc and PhD courses in astronomy. The
Astronomy Group at the University of the
Western Cape (UWC) researches cosmology
and galaxy evolution studies relevant to the
MeerKAT/Square Kilometer Array project and to
SALT, but also includes stellar evolution studies.
Simulations of galaxy evolution are carried out
at the Centre for High Performance Computing.
The Dept of Physics and Electronics at Rhodes
University specialises in radio astronomy and
has its own observatory outside Grahamstown.
NASSP (National Astronomy and Space
Sciences Programme) was established as a joint
project of all the universities offering Honours
and Masters degrees in astronomy. The African
Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS),
situated in Muizenberg, Cape Town, is a
collaborative project of the Universities of Cape
Town, Stellenbosch, Western Cape, Cambridge,
Oxford and Paris-Sud-XI. AIMS offers an
intensive nine-month postgraduate course
which concentrates on developing research
skills. The Astrophysics and Cosmology
Research Unit (ACRU) based in the School of
Mathematical Sciences at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal was established to promote
research in, and increase public awareness of,
astrophysics and cosmology.
ASTR NOMY IN SA
LOCAL RESOURCES
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HARTEBEESTHOEK
The Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy
Observatory (HartRAO), 30km north-west of
Krugersdorp, is a national research facility for
radio astronomy managed by the NRF. The
26-m telescope operates at 18, 13, 6, 5.0, 3.6,
2.5 and 1.3-cm wavelengths and is used for
observations of interstellar and circumstellar
molecules, pulsars, quasars and active galaxies.
The 15-m-diameter radio telescope antenna
prototype for the Karoo Array Telescope
(XDM, the eXperimental Development Model)
constructed at Hartebeesthoek in 2007 has
been converted for operational use with 13
and 3.6-cm receivers. The 7.6-m antenna is
being used to test the C-BASS (C-Band All
Sky Survey) receiver; when operational, the
receiver will be moved to its sister antenna
near Carnarvon in the Northern Cape. The
Observatory provides research facilities for local
and international astronomers and participates
in global networks of radio telescopes using
the Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
technique. This has two purposes: high-angular
resolution imaging for astronomical purposes
and high-precision position determination
for geodetic purposes. The Space Geodesy
programme also operates a Satellite Laser
Ranger for precise measurement of satellite
orbits and a network of Global Navigation
Satellite System (e.g. GPS, GLONASS) base
stations for geodetic research. Tours of the
Observatory are held once a month on a
Saturday from 16:00 to 20:00. It is essential to
book for all visits at 012 301-3100 office hours or
email aware@hartrao.ac.za.
HESS
The HESS (High Energy Stereoscopic System)
Gamma-Ray Telescopes are located in the
Khomas Highland of Namibia, about 100km
south-west of Windhoek. HESS is an array of
four gamma-ray telescopes, each with a 12-m
hexagonal segmented mirror. Each telescope is
equipped with an advanced electronic camera
with 960 high-speed detectors, designed
to detect the weak flashes of light emitted
by high-energy gamma rays in the Earth’s
atmosphere to an accuracy of 0.1°. These can
detect gamma ray sources with intensities a
few thousandths of the flux of the Crab Nebula.
The first telescope became operational in 2002
and since January 2004 the four-telescope
array has been in regular operation. On 26 July
2012 the HESS II telescope, with a 28-m mirror,
came online, making it the largest Cherenkov
telescope ever built. HESS is operated by an
international collaboration of institutes from
Germany, France, UK, Ireland, Czech Republic,
Armenia, Namibia and South Africa (North West
University). Access to the site is restricted and
tours are by arrangement only.
METEOR IMPACT SITES
The Tswaing (Soutpan) Meteor Crater is located
about 40km north of Pretoria. This crater is the
result of a meteoritic impact about 220,000
years ago and is 1.4km in diameter. The Hoba
Meteorite is an iron-nickel meteorite located
on a farm 18km from Grootfontein in northern
Namibia. Believed to have fallen some 80,000
years ago, this 60-ton meteorite, claimed to
be the largest in the world, measures 3m x
3m x 1m. The Vredefort structure is currently
regarded as the oldest and largest clearly visible
impact structure on Earth, formed when a
gigantic meteorite (larger than Table Mountain)
hit the Earth some two billion years ago. The
original crater is estimated to have been 250-
300km in diameter. In 2005 July it was declared
a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
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KAT, MEERKAT, SKA
The Karoo Array Telescope (KAT-7), MeerKAT
and the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) are
three radio telescope projects currently being
developed. KAT-7, located at Klerefontein,
11km outside Carnarvon in the Northern Cape,
is already operational and is the world’s first
radio telescope made of composite materials.
MeerKAT, currently under construction, will
consist of 64 antennas and will be part of
the Phase 1 dish array of the SKA. When
commissioned in 2014, MeerKAT will be a
premier instrument in its own right. When
completed in 2024, the SKA will be the world’s
biggest radio telescope, consisting of thousands
of antennas spread out over 3,000km. At
least 13 countries are already involved in its
development. About 70% of the SKA will be
built in South Africa. The SKA will be made up
of three different kinds of receiving technologies:
a mid-frequency array of about 3,000 steerable
15-m-diameter dishes, a dense aperture array of
250 60-m mid-frequency dishes, and a sparse
aperture array consisting of thousands of low-
frequency fixed-orientation dipole antennas. The
sparse aperture array will be built in Western
Australia.
PLANETARIA
The Iziko Planetarium is located within the Iziko:
South African Museum in Queen Victoria Street,
Cape Town. It is equipped with a Minolta Series
IV projector and seats 140 people. Contact
021 481-3900. The Johannesburg Planetarium
is situated in the grounds of the University of
the Witwatersrand. It is equipped with a Zeiss
projector and has seating for more than 400
persons. Contact 011 717-1392. The Museum
of Science and Technology in Pretoria (012
322-6406) and the Unizul Science Centre in
Richards Bay (035 797-3204) each operate a
Starlab inflatable planetarium. The new Naval
Hill Planetarium in Bloemfontein is the first
digital planetarium in sub-Saharan Africa. The
auditorium, seating 80 adults, is integrated with
the 86-year-old Lamont-Hussey Observatory.
Contact: Prof M J H Hoffman AT 051 401-2924
or email: HoffmaMJ.SCI ufs.ac.za.
SALT
The South African Large Telescope (SALT) is
located in the small Karoo town of Sutherland
where clear skies offer one of the world’s
largest telescopes clear access to observation.
Functioning on a SAOO field station, it is
funded by an international consortium involving
South Africa, the United States, Germany,
Poland, India, the United Kingdom and New
Zealand and has been operational since
September 2011. SALT collects light from
astronomical objects and accurately focuses
it to one of four points. From there the light
proceeds into an optical instrument while the
telescope tracks the relative movement of the
object across the sky to maximise exposure
time. The massive telescope’s construction is
quite an achievement in itself, with an almost
30-ton dome shutter, a telescope ring that is
reputedly the smoothest concrete slab ever
poured in SA, special aluminium cooling walls,
and several other features. Visit www.salt.ac.za
or call 023 571-1205.
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SAAO
The South African Astronomical Observatory
(SAOO) is funded by the National Research
Foundation and located in the Southern Suburbs
of Cape Town. Twice a month, members of the
public are invited to visit this nerve centre for
optical and infrared astronomy in the country.
SAOO runs an active Outreach programme
that includes hosting school groups and also
offers visits to the SALT facility in Sutherland.
The Observatory has a fascinating history dating
back to 1820, which is when the main building
was constructed, making it one of the oldest
permanent structures in Cape Town. Owing
to light and air pollution in the city, most of the
actual observing happens in Sutherland in the
Northern Cape, about 380km from Cape Town.
SAOO is an active research centre and offers
a wide range of equipment for collaborating
scientists. Visit: www.saoo.ac.za or call
021 447-0025. email aware@hartrao.ac.za.
ASSA
The Astronomical Society of Southern Africa
(ASSA) is a body consisting of both amateur
and professional astronomers. Membership
is open to all interested persons, regardless
of knowledge or experience. Shortly after the
1910 apparition of Halley’s Comet, the Cape
Astronomical Association was established
in 1912. In 1918, the Johannesburg
Astronomical Association was created. In
1922 the two Associations merged to form
ASSA. The declared objectives, as recorded
in the Constitution, are the encouragement
and stimulation of the study of astronomy
in Southern Africa; the association of
observers and their organisation in the work of
astronomical observation and research; and
the dissemination of such current astronomical
information as may be helpful to observers
and others interested in astronomy. In addition
to the annual Sky Guide, the Society issues
the peer-reviewed Monthly Notes of the
Astronomical Society of Southern Africa
(MNASSA), published electronically six times
per year. The Society awards the ASSA
Scholarship, and administers the SAAO-ASSA
Scholarships. www.assa.saao.ac.za.
BOYDEN
Boyden Observatory, situated at Mazelspoort
(25km east of Bloemfontein), is managed by
the University of the Free State. Professional
observing facilities include the third-largest
optical telescope in Africa, namely the 1.52-m
Boyden-UFS reflector. The robotic 0.41-m
Watcher reflector was recently installed by
the University College, Dublin, Ireland. Other
instruments include the 0.41-m Nishimura
reflector, the 0.33-m Alvan Clark refractor, the
historic 0.25-m Metcalf triplet refractor and a
0.20-m coelostat. A stellar auditorium, seating
100 inside and 200 on the roof, is used during
the Observatory’s many public evenings. The
auditorium includes an interactive Personal
Response System with large screen multimedia
facilities. Visits are by appointment only. Contact:
Prof P J Meintjes on 051 401-2191 or email
him on meintjpj.sci@ufs.ac.za. Alternatively,
Prof M J H Hoffman on 051 401-2924 or
email HoffmaMJ.SCI@ufs.ac.za.
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ANIMALS
In 1947 (American) fruit flies are the first animals in space. On 3 November
1957 the Russians place the first animal in orbit with a dog called Laika. She was never to
return to Earth. On 31 January 1961, the first tasks in space are performed by Hominidae chimpanzee
Astrochimp #65, now renamed Ham (after the Holloman Aerospace Medical Center in the USA, where
training for this flight was conducted). Ham’s capsule was retrieved from the Atlantic Ocean after 16 minutes and 39 seconds in orbit. Curious George, the popular
character from the children’s books of the same name, undertook a similar mission in the story
Curious George Gets a Medal published four years before Ham’s flight.
A VERY SHORTHISTORY OF SPACESPACE
YESTERDAY
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FIRST PEOPLE
12 April 1961, aboard the Vostok 3KA-3 (Vostok 1), Russian Yuri Gagarin becomes
both the first human to travel into space, and the first to orbit the earth. On 5 May 1961, after a delayed
October 1960 flight that created the chance for Gagarin to pip him, American Alan Shepard pilots the Freedom 7 mission and becomes the second person, and the first
American, to travel into space. Unlike Gagarin, whose flight was strictly automatic, Shepard takes some control of
the Freedom 7. (Shepard returns to space 10 years later as Commander of the Apollo 14 mission.) Within two years, on 16 June 1963, the Russians also send the
first woman into space with Valentina Tereshkova and Vostok 6. Meanwhile, on 3 June 1965
Edward H White II becomes the first American to step outside his
spacecraft and let go.
HISTORY OF SPACE
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THE MOON
In January 1959, the USSR’s Luna 1 capsule arrives in the vicinity of the Moon
for the first time. On 14 September 1959 Luna 2 successfully impacts with the lunar surface east of
Mare Imbrium. Less than a month later, Luna 3 sends pictures of the far side of the moon. On 3 February
1966, Luna 9 performs the first soft landing. By April of the same year, satellite Luna 10 orbits the Moon. The US performs a soft landing with Surveyor on 2 June 1966 and send home pictures. In 1968, Americans Borman, Lovell, and Anders in Apollo 8 become the
first to directly see the far side of the Moon. On 21 July 1969, the Americans Neil Armstrong
and Buzz Aldrin famously step on the moon during the Apollo 11
mission.
THE MISSIONS
The USSR shows uncanny marketing savvy by naming their early missions in a
far more memorable manner, yet the Americans catch on soon. Here are the names of missions
since the late 1950s. Sputnik (Russian), Explorer (US), Luna (R), Venera (R), Vostok (R), OSO (US), Mariner (US), X-15 (US), Voskhod (R), Gemini (US), Surveyor (US), Mir (The USSR’s space station), Galileo (US),
Cosmos (R), Apollo (US), Magellan (US), Lunokhod (R), Salyut (R), Mars (R), Viking (US), Pioneer (US), Ulysses
(US/European Space Agency), Orion (R), Voyager (US), Pathfinder (US), Stardust (US), Shoemaker
(US), Messenger (US), Cassini-Huygens (US/ESA/Italy’s ASI), RadioAstron (R) and
Hayabusa (Japan).
YESTERDAY
48
THE PLANETS
Since the first planetary fly-by of Venus by Mariner 2 (US) on 14 December 1962, further fly-
bys and impact or soft landings on planets follow soon. Mariner 4 gets within 9,846 kilometres of Mars in 1965.
Venera 3 (USSR) impacts Venus by March 1966. Venera 7 performs a soft landing on Venus by December 1970 and sends back signals. Mars 2 (USSR) impacts Mars by November 1971.
During December 1973, Pioneer 10 (US) comes within 130,000km of Jupiter and in March 1974, Mariner 10 (US) gets within 703km of Mercury. Venera 9 (USSR) orbits Venus in 1975. Within another four years, Pioneer 11 (US) reaches within 21,000km of Saturn. By
1983, Pioneer 10 (US) becomes the first spacecraft beyond the orbit of Neptune and the first spacecraft to pass beyond all Solar System planets. In 1986, Voyager 2 (US) gets within 81,500km
of Uranus and continues for a 1989 Neptune fly-by. With the Russians out of the space race, the US and others orbit
Jupiter (1995), Saturn (2004) and Mercury (2011). And in 2005, Cassini-Huygens performs a soft
landing on Saturn’s largest moon, Titan.
Wearable Tech
THE ACCIDENTS
American President Richard Nixon had prepared a statement in case Neil Armstrong and
Buzz Aldrin were left stranded and to die on the moon: “Fate has ordained that the men who went to the moon to
explore in peace will stay on the moon to rest in peace.” They were, however, more fortunate than others. The first fatal accident
in a space mission befell Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov, whose
problem-plagued Soyuz 1 capsule crashed onto Russian soil in 1967.
In 1971, the Russian cosmonauts Georgi Dobrovolski, Viktor Patsayev,
Vladislav Volkov died while returning to Earth from the Salyut 1 space
station. Their Soyuz 11 craft performed a textbook-perfect landing but
the rupture of a ventilation valve left them without oxygen and exposed
to air pressure that killed all three. The Americans did not escape death
either, with the Apollo program losing astronauts with ground fires and flight tests. Yet, most memorable is the explosion of spaceshuttle
Challenger in 1986, killing the whole crew, including Christa McAuliffe, a teacher being followed by millions of school
children as she was to teach from space. Seventeen years later, in 2003, the Columbia space shuttle
blew apart upon re-entry. Both these American events were viewed on live
television.
49
SA WOMEN IN ASTRONOMY
Women play a big role in astronomy in South Africa. Dr Patricia Whitelock,
who recently headed up the South African Astronomical Observatory, uses the variable Mira
stars to establish distances. Dr Sharmila Goedhart of South Africa’s SKA project is an expert on the
formation of high-mass stars. Dr Claire Flanagan at the Johannesburg Planetarium studies neutron
stars. Dr Catherine Cress at the University of the Western Cape is a cosmologist. Professor
Renee Kraan-Korteweg is the Chair of the Astronomy Department at UCT
and studies galaxies.
SOUTH AFRICANS IN
SPACE
Two South Africans have been into space. IT millionaire Mark Shuttleworth from Cape
Town spent a week as a “space tourist” in the International Space Station (ISS). He was launched into space in a Russian Soyuz three-person space
capsule from the Baikonur cosmodrome on 25 April 2002. The first privately built spaceship was
Spaceship One, designed by Burt Rutan. The commercial pilot who first took it all the way into space – higher than 100km above the
ground – on a test flight on 21 June 2004 was Mike Melvill, who
comes from Durban.
YESTERDAY
50
FAMOUS WOMEN IN
ASTRONOMY
Jocelyn Bell-Burnell (1943–, British) discovered pulsars in 1967 as a PhD student at Cambridge
University, while supervised by Antony Hewish (who received the Nobel Prize for the discovery). Annie Jump
Cannon (1863–1941, US) was the first astronomer to classify the heavens systematically. She worked as an astronomer
and published information about 225,000 stars. Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin (1900–1979, British). Her PhD dissertation, showing
stars are made primarily of hydrogen and helium, was said to be one of the best in 20th century astronomy. Henrietta Swan Leavitt (1868–1921, US) discovered that a particular
type of variable star known as a Cepheid could be used as a distance marker, making it possible to determine astronomical distances to objects such as far away
galaxies. Carolyn Shoemaker (1929–, US) had discovered 32 comets by 2002, more than
any living astronomer. She has also discovered more than 300
asteroids.
FAMOUS SA
ASTRONOMERS
While serving as the Director of the Union Observatory in South Africa, Robert Innes showed that Proxima Centauri was the nearest star to the
Sun. He was a brilliant self-taught mathematician and astronomer who left school at age 12 and became a Fellow
of the Royal Astronomical Society when he was only 17. Dr Bernie Fanaroff studied radio galaxies and has classes of
galaxies named after him. He now leads the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) project and was awarded the prestigious Order of Mapungubwe: Silver in 2013 for his work. Dr Thebe Medupe
grew up near Mafikeng. He earned his MSc (cum laude) in Astrophysics and then obtained his Astrophysics Doctorate at the University of Cape Town. He is the
founding director of Astronomy Africa and is perhaps best known for his work on the Cosmic Africa project that attempts to
reconcile science and myth.
51
ARE WE ALONE?
A re we alone in the universe? Are there other habitable planets we earthlings could move to if (when?) we destroy our own? Is someone or something watching us? Is there intelligent life out there?
These are questions that have driven astronomers and writers, scientists and religious cults to pursue lifelong journeys of exploration and discovery.
INTELLIGENCE
52
Now, with 11 countries
participating in the
construction of SKA,
the Square Kilometre
Array, designed to be the largest
and most sensitive radio telescope
ever, scientists and lay people alike
may finally have an answer. Among
its five goals, SKA aims to be able
to help detect Earth-like planets
and examine the way they were
formed. It will search for complex
molecules, the building blocks of
life in space and will also offer the
possibility of detecting very faint
radio transmissions that might
provide evidence for intelligent life
among the stars.
The sole purpose of another
organisation, SETI (the Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence) is to
seek evidence of life in the universe
by looking for some signature of its
technology. SETI was established
by Dr Frank Drake (see the Drake
Principle sidebar) in the 1960s.
Although SETI was initially derided
by some and has struggled, at
times, to get funding, it has now
become accepted as a legitimate
science, assisted by NASA grants
and acknowledgment by the
National Research Council, and
attracting some of the brightest
scientific minds. (You may have
seen the film Contact, a story
written by Carl Sagan, where
Jodie Foster portrays the film's
protagonist, Dr Eleanor “Ellie”
Arroway, who is a SETI scientist
who finds strong evidence of
extraterrestrial life and is chosen to
make first contact.)
Part of the search for intelligent
life requires scientists to search
for exoplanets in the “habitable
zone” – a range of orbital distances
at which surface water on a planet
with an atmosphere would neither
freeze nor boil. Of the nearly 1,800
confirmed exoplanets found in the
past two decades, approximately
twenty orbit their host star in
the habitable zone. However, all
of these previously discovered
worlds are larger than Earth, and
consequently their true nature –
rocky or gaseous – is unknown.
In April 2014, the discovery of
Kepler-186f, a planet estimated by
astronomers to not only be roughly
the same size as the Earth but
also located in a habitable zone,
was met with great excitement.
“The discovery of Kepler-186f is a
significant milestone in humanity’s
efforts to find evidence of life
elsewhere in our galaxy,” said Dr
David Black, President and CEO of
the SETI Institute. “Finding similar
planets around other stars, and
ultimately being able to sense
remotely signposts of life on
those planets, is the next key step
toward understanding our place in
the cosmos.”
KEPLER-186FTHE FIRST EARTH-SIZE PLANET IN THE HABITABLE ZONE
This artist’s concept depicts Kepler-186f, the first validated
Earth-size planet to orbit a distant star in the habitable zone. The
discovery of Kepler-186f confirms that Earth-size planets exist in
the habitable zones of other stars and signals a significant step
closer to finding a world similar to Earth.
The size of Kepler-186f is known to be less than ten percent larger
than Earth, but its mass, composition and density are not known.
Kepler-186f orbits its star once every 130 days and receives
one-third the energy that Earth does from the sun, placing it near
the outer edge of the habitable zone. If you could stand on the
surface of Kepler-186f, the brightness of its star at high noon would
appear as bright as our sun is about an hour before sunset on Earth.
Kepler-186f resides in the Kepler-186 system about 500 light-years
from Earth in the constellation Cygnus.
Find out more about SETI: www.seti.org
See what the Kepler telescope is seeing
right now: http://kepler.nasa.gov/
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THE DRAKE EQUATION“What do we need to know about to discover life in space?”In 1961, Dr Frank Drake, working as a a radio astronomer at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, West Virginia conceived an approach to bound the terms involved in estimating the number of technological civilisations that may exist in our galaxy. The Drake Equation identifies specific factors thought to play a role in the development of such civilisations. Although there is no unique solution to this equation, it is a generally accepted tool used by the scientific community to examine these factors.
Where,N = The number of civilizations in The Milky Way Galaxy whose electromagnetic emissions are detectable.R* = The rate of formation of stars suitable for the development of intelligent life.fp = The fraction of those stars with planetary systems.ne = The number of planets, per solar system, with an environment suitable for life.fl = The fraction of suitable planets on which life actually appears.fi = The fraction of life bearing planets on which intelligent life emerges.
fc = The fraction of civilizations that develop a technology that releases detectable signs of their existence into space.L = The length of time such civilizations release detectable signals into space.According to the Drake Equation, given the limits of our existing technology, any practical search for distant intelligent life must necessarily be a search for some manifestation of a distant technology. Besides illuminating the factors involved in such a search, the Drake Equation is a simple, effective tool for stimulating intellectual curiosity about the universe around us, for helping us to understand that life as we know it is the end product of a natural, cosmic evolution, and for making us realize how much we are a part of that universe. A key goal of the SETI Institute is to further high quality research that will yield additional information related to any of the factors of this fascinating equation.
KEPLER-186 AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
The diagram compares the planets of our inner solar system to
Kepler-186. The five planets of Kepler-186 orbit an M dwarf, a star that
is half the size and mass of the sun.
The Kepler-186 system is home to Kepler-186f, the first validated Earth-
size planet orbiting a distant star in the habitable zone.
The artistic concept of Kepler-186f is the result of scientists and artists
collaborating to imagine the appearance of these distant worlds.
INTELLIGENCE
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A PLANET IN THE HABITABLE ZONE
By refining the orbit of the planet Gliese-581d, first discovered in 2007, a team of astronomers has shown that it lies well within the habitable zone, where
liquid water oceans could exist. This diagram shows the distances of the planets in the Solar System (upper row) and in the Gliese-581 system (lower
row), from their respective stars (left). The habitable zone is indicated as the blue area, showing that Gliese 581-dis located inside the habitable zone
around its low-mass red star.
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OWN YOUR OWN
STAR?W
hat do you give the person
who already has everything?
Why not name a planet or
star in their honour? Great
graduation gift, you say?
Perfect Father’s Day present? Do a quick Google
search on “name your own star” and you will turn
up a plethora of results. There are many websites
who promise to facilitate such a purchase, let
you choose your own star in any galaxy on their
register, and will send you a fancy, embossed
certificate. Sound too cool to be true? It is.
So, can you really name your own star or
planet? Well, “yes and no,” says Fraser Cain,
author of a website called www.universetoday.
com. Yes, if you want to waste a little money
for the sheer fun of it, but not if you really want
to lay claim to a celestial body because such
ownership cannot actually be bought or sold.
Only the International Astronomical Union
(IAU) has authority to designate stars, planets,
asteroids, comets, and other heavenly bodies
according to internationally accepted rules. And
the IAU does not sell naming rights nor does it
authorise any other company or organisation
to do so. The IAU does not recognise any star
registry as having the right to name stars. In fact,
the IAU cautions consumers that products and
services marketed by such registries have no
formal or official validity whatsoever. With a few
exceptions of ancient or Arabic names, nearly
all stars are actually designated by catalogue
numbers rather than names as a means of
making their identification easier for astronomers,
professional and amateur alike.
The IAU, while serious about the work they do
and having zero tolerance for those they deem
charlatans in the star-naming business, also
have a sense of humour. “Like true love and
many other of the best things in human life,” they
explain, “the beauty of the night sky is not for
sale, but it is free for all to enjoy.”
But what if you just want the novelty of naming
a star or “giving” one as a gift to a lover or friend?
Help yourself, says the IAU. What you’ll get is “an
expensive piece of paper and a temporary feeling
of happiness, like if you take a cup of tea instead
of the doctor’s recommended medicine. But at
least you do not risk getting sick by paying for a
star name, only losing money.”
If you are serious about giving the gift of
opening someone’s eyes to the beauty of
the night sky or the awe-inspiring science of
astronomy, rather go to your nearest planetarium
or observatory. They can direct you to the local
astronomy club or society where enthusiasts
will be happy to show you (and your friend!)
the real stars through their own telescopes.
Maybe you’ll get infected and end up buying a
telescope yourself. Alternatively, if you do wish
to have a personal star but prefer to stay inside,
you can now also explore the entire sky in the
comfort of your own home. Digital sky surveys
have become freely available on CD-ROM or as
downloadable Apps and allow you to browse
through many hundreds of millions of stars on
your home computer and print out a chart of any
one that pleases you. These public digital maps
are in fact the main database of at least some of
the commercial star naming enterprises and cost
about the same as the name of a single star. So
why pay a mark-up for buying your stars one at
a time?
“Like true love and many other of the best things in
human life, the beauty of the night sky is not for sale, but it is free for all to enjoy.” – International Astronomical
Union (IAU)
SIZE COMPARISON FOR EXOPLANETS GJ 436B AND GJ 1214B This illustration compares the sizes of exoplanets GJ 436b and GJ 1214b with Earth and Neptune. These so-called super-Earths have masses between those of gas giants like Neptune, and smaller, rocky planets like Earth. No such type of planet exists in our Solar System. (This artistic rendering of the exoplanets is speculative and does not necessarily reflect what their true appearance might actually be.)
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NAME AN EXOWORLD CONTEST
People have been naming celestial
objects for millennia, long before
any scientific system of names
ever existed. Even today, almost
every civilisation and culture uses
common names to describe the stars and
planets visible to the naked eye, as well as
their apparent distribution in the sky.
For the first time, in response to the public’s
increased interest in being part of discoveries
in astronomy, the International Astronomical
Union (IAU) is recently announced that it
is organising a worldwide contest to give
popular names to selected exoplanets
along with their host stars. The proposed
names will be submitted by astronomy clubs
and non-profit organisations interested in
astronomy, and votes will be cast by the
public from across the world through the web
platform NameExoWorlds. Once the votes are
counted, the winning names will be officially
sanctioned by the IAU, allowing them to be
used freely in parallel with the existing scientific
nomenclature, with due credit to the clubs or
organisations that proposed them.
The project has been launched in partnership
with Zooniverse – home to the internet’s largest,
most popular and most successful citizen
science projects. Check it out here:
www.NameExoWorlds.org
NameExoWorlds contest: a
crowdsourcing process to name
ExoWorlds.
ExoWorlds: 350 well-studied, confirmed
exoplanets and their host stars.
Zooniverse: a citizen science web portal
owned and operated by the Citizen Science
Alliance. The organization grew from the
original Galaxy Zoo project and now hosts
dozens of projects which allow volunteers
to participate in scientific research.
AN EXOPLANET SEEN FROM ITS MOON (artist’s impression)
The diversity of exoplanets is large – more than 800 planets outside the Solar
System have been found to date, with thousands more waiting to be confirmed.
Detection methods in this field are steadily and quickly increasing – meaning that many
more exoplanets will undoubtedly be discovered in the months and years to come.
IMAGE CREDIT: IAU/L. CALÇADA 57
Conditions on Mars vary wildly
from what we know on our own
planet, despite the fact that it
has similar characteristics like
polar ice caps and clouds in its
atmosphere, seasonal weather patterns,
volcanoes, canyons and other recognisable
features. Over the past three decades,
spacecraft have shown us that Mars is
rocky, cold, and dry beneath its hazy,
pink sky. Among our discoveries about
Mars, one stands out above all others: the
possible presence of liquid water on Mars,
either in its ancient past or preserved in the
subsurface today. Water is key because
almost everywhere we find water on Earth,
we find life.
The defining question for Mars exploration
has, therefore, become: Was there life on
Mars, are there any signs of life today, and
can life be sustained there in the future?
Building on the success of the two rover
geologists that arrived at Mars in January
2004, NASA’s next rover mission, the Mars
Science Laboratory, carrying the Curiosity
rover, arrived at Gale Crater on Mars in
August 2012. Twice as long and three times
as heavy as the Mars Exploration Rovers
Spirit and Opportunity, the Mars Science
Laboratory is busy collecting Martian soil and
rock samples and analysing them for organic
compounds and environmental conditions
that could have supported microbial life now
or in the past.
More recently, MAVEN, the Mars Atmosphere
and Volatile Evolution mission, arrived at Mars
in September 2014. The mission’s goal is
to explore the planet’s upper atmosphere,
ionosphere, and interactions with the Sun
and solar wind. By studying ions, or small
electrically charged particles, in and above the
Red Planet’s tenuous atmosphere, the Solar
Wind Ion Analyzer will help answer why Mars
has gradually lost much of its atmosphere,
developing into a frozen, barren planet.
Probably the biggest news on Earth
regarding the Red Planet, however, was India’s
celebration of a major technological coup
when their Space Agency (the ISRO) reached
a significant milestone in September. Their
first mission to Mars successfully entered
orbit, making them the first Asian nation to
do so. What is most remarkable is that the
Indian Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) cost a
mere $74 million, just a fraction of the $671
million the US space agency NASA spent on
its newly arrived MAVEN Mars mission (and
substantially less, as many suggested, than
the Hollywood movie Gravity). Mangalyaan,
as the craft is known, is expected to spend
six months in orbit, sending back data
on Mars’ surface features, morphology,
mineralogy and atmosphere. With the orbital
insertion of MOM achieved, India became
only the fourth nation/space programme to
reach Mars (behind the former Soviet Union,
NASA, and the European Space Agency).
MISSIONSTOMARS
IN OUR NEIGHBOURHOOD
NASA's Curiosity Rover self-portrait
Indian Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) reaches the Red Planet58
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59
There is a rich history of folklore and belief among local cultures about the origin, meaning and role of different astronomical bodies. In what follows, we share with you some of these more ancient interpretations, with the courtesy of Dr Peter Alcock, the author of the book Venus Rising.
THE SKY AND THE STARSA wide-spread African concept is that the sky is
a solid dome, perhaps made of blue rock, resting
on the Earth, upon which the Sun moves. The
traditional Tswana idea is that stars are holes in the
rocky vault that is the sky.
The Nyae Nyae !Kung Bushmen saw the sky as the
dwelling place of all the divine beings and spirits of
the dead. The “things of the sky” generally do not
influence or reflect the affairs of man, the !Kung
taught, nor do they affect the weather, the growth of
vegetation, or other conditions of the earth; they are
in a realm of their own.
While the /Xam Bushmen believed the stars were
formerly people, some !Kung Bushmen taught that
stars are, in fact, small creatures, and look like tiny
porcupines – they have little legs, ears, teeth and
are covered with tiny spines. Another !Kung account
says that stars are actually ant lions, watching
from overhead with their bright eyes. When they
are hungry and see an ant, they quickly fall to the
ground to catch it. Some say that all the stars fall
to the ground each morning, and we see them
on earth as insects. The Ibibio of Nigeria spoke
picturesquely of the stars as “Sand of the Moon.”
THE SUNThe Nyae Nyae !Kung Bushmen think of the Sun as
a “death thing” because of its searing heat and the
association with thirst, hunger, and exhaustion.
The /Xam Bushmen would ask the Sun, early in the
morning before they set out to hunt, to steady the
hunter’s arm when aiming at game. The Sun was
originally a man, the /Xam said, whose head shone
brightly. But he was a lazy fellow and would
sleep late, keeping his light to himself.
So one day, out of desperation, the
First Bushmen chopped off his
head and threw it up into
the sky so that his light
could be shared with
everyone.
On rare
occasions,
the Moon
passes
AFRICAN ETHNOASTRONOMY
HISTORY
IMAGE CREDIT: COMMONS.WIKIMEDIA.ORG60
between the Earth and the Sun, resulting in a solar eclipse. If the
alignment is exact, then the entire Sun is momentarily blacked out.
Such a total eclipse was not a welcome sight to the Xhosa, who saw
it as an ill omen. In Zulu, Sotho and Tswana traditions this was called
“the darkening of the Sun,” ukufiphala kwelanga and fifalo ya letsatsi
respectively. The Venda spoke picturesquely of mutsha-kavhili, “the
two dawns.”
THE MOONThe Moon – iNyanga to the Xhosa and Zulu, Nwedzi to the Shona
and Venda, and Ngwedi to the Sotho and Tswana – is probably the
most obvious feature in the night sky, because of its
size, brightness, and changing appearance
(phases). As the Moon orbits the
Earth it goes through a
sequence of phases,
from New Moon
(invisible) to
crescent,
half-
moon, Full Moon, half-moon, and back to New Moon.
To the Kora KhoiKhoi, the Moon was kham, “the Returner;” the Nama
KhoiKhoi spoke of khab. The KhoiKhoi also considered the Moon as
“the Lord of Light and Life”, and would sing and dance at times of New
and Full Moon.
The Nyae Nyae !Kung Bushmen said that the crescent phases with
sharp points was male, while the Full round Moon was female.
The Xhosa considered the time of New Moon as a period of inaction.
When it reappeared as a crescent in the evening sky, it was cause for
celebration. Important events were scheduled to take place around the
time of Full Moon. Also at Full Moon the mothers would de-worm their
children, believing that at this time the worms collected in one place
and could be effectively treated.
The Naro Bushmen taught that when the crescent Moon slopes
downward, it is said to be looking into a grave and this is a sign that
many people will die in that season. A crescent pointing upward was a
favourable sign. The round Full Moon is a sign of satisfaction and that
people will find plenty of food.
In /Xam Bushmen mythology, the Moon is a man who has made the Sun
angry. The Sun’s sharp light cuts off pieces of the Moon until almost the
whole of the Moon is gone, leaving only one small piece. The Moon then
pleads for mercy and the Sun lets him go. From this small piece, the
Moon gradually grows again until it becomes a Full Moon. The /Xam also
have another account of how the Moon came to be. In the old times, it
was said, the Moon was one of the leather sandals of the Mantis-god /
kaggen. The sandal was placed in water to soften it somewhat, but
this angered the water spirit who then froze the water, locking the
sandal in ice. When /kaggen saw the frozen sandal he discarded
it, throwing it up into the sky, where it became the Moon.
Whatever its origin, the /Xam considered the New Moon as
being able to influence hunting and the gathering of ants’
eggs, and when the crescent was sighted, they would ask
for its assistance.
The surface of the Moon has dark and bright markings;
flat lava plains and rocky highlands, respectively. In many
African traditions these markings are said to resemble the
figure of a man or woman carrying a bundle of sticks.
When the Earth’s shadow falls on the Moon, a lunar
eclipse occurs. The Nyae Nyae !Kung Bushmen said
that this was caused by the lion, putting his paw over
the Moon to darken the night so he could have better
hunting.
Under certain atmospheric conditions, a “moon bow”
can form, appearing as a large ring around the Moon. To
the /Gwi Bushman, such a ring was a sign that food will
be plentiful.
61
ASTRONOMIC GROWTH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
With some of the most exciting
scientific and technological
developments in the field of
astronomy happening right here
in our Southern African backyard, countries in
the region are seeing a growing interest and
involvement in the field of astronomy, supported by
the international community of scholars in this field.
Zambia was the most recent country to take
a major step forward when its Copper Belt
University (CU) opened a regional node of the
International Astronomical Union’s (IAU) Office for
Astronomy for Development (OAD). The proposal
to open a regional office in Zambia enjoyed
the support of astronomy collaborators in
Mozambique, Namibia, Zambia and South Africa,
including the South African Square Kilometre
Array (SKA) Project office.
The IAU is the international organisation that
brings together almost 11, 000 distinguished
astronomers from more than 90 countries. Its
mission is to promote and safeguard the
science of astronomy in all its aspects
through international cooperation. The
IAU also serves as the internationally
recognised authority for assigning
designations to celestial bodies and the
surface features on them. Founded in 1919, the
IAU is the world’s largest professional body for
astronomers.
On 16 April 2011, the IAU opened the OAD
in partnership with the South African National
Research Foundation (NRF) at the South African
Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) in Cape Town.
Since then three Regional Nodes (China, Thailand,
Ethiopia), one Language Expertise Centre and
three Task Forces have been established. Zambia
now joins this programme.
The establishment of this Southern African
regional node is significant as this part of the
continent is currently very active in terms of the
development of world-class astronomy facilities,
including the
optical Southern
African Large
Telescope (SALT),
the radio Karoo Array
Telescope (MeerKAT), the
gamma-ray High Energy Stereoscopic System
(HESS) as well as the SKA. The office in Zambia
will exploit all these advantages to benefit the
region at large. This office will also reach out to
other countries in Africa which, like Zambia, form
part of the SKA Project. This is a key task to
ensure that all countries involved in the SKA have
the skills and personnel required both to derive
maximum benefit from the major telescope
project and to help make the SKA a scientific
success.
Signing the agreement on behalf of the IAU,
Assistant General Secretary Piero Benvenuti had
the following to say: “Astronomy is possibly the
most ancient science and the IAU is committed
to maintain and spread worldwide this precious
heritage. But astronomy is not only pure science,
it is a fascinating cultural adventure that engages
the entire society and brings many benefits.
It has a powerful attraction for young people,
encouraging them to follow mathematical and
scientific curricula, and it fosters advanced
technological developments.”
Learn more:
www.iau.org
www.astro4dev.org
DEVELOPMENT & OUTREACH
IMAGE CREDITS: IAU
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SKA IN AFRICAThe SKA has an active bursary and capacity
development programme ranging from artisan and
in-service training programmes to advanced studies
at postgraduate level.
Block Grant Undergraduate Support Programme
Call for Applications 2015
The annual grant provided by the SKA SA for the
Undergraduate Support Programme is equivalent to
four freestanding SKA SA undergraduate bursaries
(except if less than four students are supported by
the programme in any particular year, in which case
the grant will be reduced accordingly).
Closing date for applications: 17 October 2014
http://www.ska.ac.za/students/ugblock.php
Contact: amashemola@ska.ac.za
Bursary ProgrammeNational Diploma and Bachelor of Technology
Call for Applications for January 2015
The South African SKA Project supports students
who wish to study towards a National Diploma or a
Bachelor of Technology in Electronic or Mechanical
Engineering.
Call for applications for bursaries for the January
2015 intake is now open to National Diploma
(Theory Semesters Only: S1, S2, S3 and S4)
students, and to Bachelor of Technology students.
(Note: This particular call does NOT support
students completing / wishing to complete the
Experiential Learning component of a National
Diploma).
Closing date for applications: 17 October 2014
http://www.ska.ac.za/students/uhbp.php
Application form: nrfsubmission.nrf.ac.za
Contact: amashemola@ska.ac.za
The SKA SA project supports science and
engineering students and researchers around the
country for work related to MeerKAT and SKA
challenges. This group working at the University of
Cape Town is (from left to right) Bradley Frank, Prof
Erwin de Blok and Moses Mogotsi. Frank is a PhD
student working on a large study of the rotation of
galaxies, as measured using the Doppler shift of
the gas in these galaxies. His study will enable us
to say more about dark matter in galaxies. Moses
Moses Mogotsi is a Masters student measuring
the random motions in cold gas in nearby
galaxies. These measurements can be used to
determine under what conditions gas in galaxies
can turn into stars. Their studies are supervised
by Prof Erwin de Blok, an expert on dark matter in
galaxies, as traced by the dynamics of the neutral
gas observable with radio telescopes. Both Brad’s
and Moses’ studies will be important in interpreting
observations of the very distant universe that
MeerKAT and the SKA will deliver.
IMAGE CREDITS: SKA SOUTH AFRICA
WWW.SKA.AC.ZA
63
Usually, pictures of the Space Shuttle, taken from space, are snapped from the International Space
Station (ISS). And, vice versa, pictures of the ISS are snapped from the shuttle. How, then, can there be a
picture of both the shuttle and the ISS together, taken from space?
The answer is that during the Space Shuttle Endeavour's last trip to the ISS in May 2011, a
supply ship departed the station with astronauts who captured a series of rare views. The supply ship
was the Russian Soyuz TMA-20, which landed in Kazakhstan later that day.
This spectacular image captures the relative sizes of the ISS and the docked shuttle. Far below, clouds of
Earth are seen above a blue sea
CHECK OUT MORE ASTRONOMY PICS OF THE DAYDiscover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is
featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
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The Space Shuttle and the International Space Station Photographed Together
A RARE MOMENTSNAPSHOT
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