Author - Charles M0OXO

Huge CME footage

K800 sun

Rare footage of an eruption of solar material surging off the sun has been captured by Nasa.

A coronal mass ejection (CME) happens when huge clouds of superheated particles are emitted from the sun’s corona – the outermost and hottest layer – and can reach speeds exceeding one million miles per hour.

The CME, captured on the 9th May was the first seen by Nasa’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS.

To capture the phenomenon, the IRIS must be pointed at the sun a day ahead of time and involves a degree of luck, according to Nasa.

The field of view seen in the footage is about five Earth’s wide and about seven and a half Earth’s tall.

Click image to see movie.

TO4C & VK2/G7VJR cards mailed…

g7vjr

Qsl Cards for VK2/G7VJR (OC-001) and TO4C (NA-007) arrived this morning and all have been processed. Direct cards will be mailed this week and bureau cards first week in June with my next batch.

Your Qsl Cards are NOT required so please do not send them via the Bureau.

The fastest way to receive any Qsl Card I manage is to request them via M0OXO OQRS

 

ZM90DX – 50K Qso’s

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ZM90DX is a special event station celebrating 90 years of DX in ZL.

Great news from the team in that they have now passed the 50,000 qso mark and still have around 6 months of the event still to run.

”1923 and 1924 marked the zenith of long distance communication records and which culminated on the 18th of October 1924 with the First Trans-Global radio contact. Between 0615 and 0730 UTC Frank Bell (a sheep farmer) Z4AA (ZL4AA) in Shag Valley Otago New Zealand and Cecil Goyder (an 18 year old student) at Mill Hill School in London using the school callsign G2SZ communicated on the 90 metre band”.

Thanks to all that have supported and worked the station so far.

A beautiful Award is available for contacts wmade with ZM90DX and the special Callsign will run until October 31, 2014, See their website for more information http://www.zm90dx.com/.

Jupiter’s Red Spot gets smaller

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Jupiter’s trademark Great Red Spot – a swirling anti-cyclonic storm larger than Earth — has shrunk to its smallest size ever measured.

Recent NASA Hubble Space Telescope observations confirm the Great Red Spot now is approximately 10,250 miles across, less than half the size of some historical measurements. Astronomers have followed this downsizing since the 1930s.

Historic observations as far back as the late 1800s gauged the storm to be as large as 25,500 miles on its long axis.  NASA Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 flybys of Jupiter in 1979 measured it to be 14,500 miles across. In 1995, a Hubble photo showed the long axis of the spot at an estimated 13,020 miles across. And in a 2009 photo, it was measured at 11,130 miles across.

NASA’s Juno spacecraft is hurtling toward Jupiter now, due to reach the giant planet in July 2016.  Point-blank examination by Juno’s instruments will undoubtedly help unravel the mystery.

 

FO/KHØPR

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Thanks to Yoshi JJ8DEN for 3 IOTA confirmations received yesterday.

FO/KH0PR IOTA Tour in 2013 gave me PukaPuka Atoll (OC-062), Napuka Atoll (OC-094) and Reao Atoll (OC-238), all 3 party of the islands that make up the Tuamotu Islands in French Polynesia.

Thanks Yoshi-San!

FO 1 001

DXCC Milestone (LOTW)

M0OXO DXCC LOTW

 

A new milestone achieved this morning when I did my latest upload to Logbook of the World (LOTW).

I now have 300 DXCC (Mixed) confirmed with 318 DXCC (Mixed) worked. Mode breakdowns are;

DXCC Mixed (All time) 321 (W) 303 (C)

DXCC Mixed (Current) 318 (W) 300 (C)

DXCC SSB (Current) 318 (W) 295 (C)

DXCC CW (Current)  293 (W) 253 (C)

DXCC RTTY (Current) 186 (W) 156 (C)

All the above are Statistics for LOTW only.

New Sunspots

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Huge Solar Plasma eruption in progress right now! Here it is shown with Earth to scale.

The sunspot number is increasing this week as a crowd of dark cores emerges over the sun’s eastern limb.

K800 newspots anim

MDXC Qsl Service

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Thanks to the Mediterranean DX Club (MDXC) for their great Qsl Service.

Today I received confirmations from T33A (Banaba), S21ZBB/S21ZBC (Bangladesh), W8A (American Samoa) and also XR0ZR (Juan Fernandez).

These four cards alone confirmed 26 Band Slots and one all time new DXCC.

Check out the MDXC on this link http://www.mdxc.org/

 

VK2/G7VJR

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Michael G7VJR will be visiting Australia in May 2014.

He will be qrv occasionally as VK2/G7VJR. Qsl Cards have been ordered and will arrive in due course. They will be available via M0OXO.

Your Qsl Cards are NOT required so please do not send them via the Bureau.

The fastest way to receive any Qsl Card I manage is to request them via M0OXO OQRS

Earth-size Planet found in the ‘Habitable Zone’

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Kepler-186f orbits its parent M dwarf star once every 130-days and receives one-third the energy that Earth gets from the sun, placing it nearer the outer edge of the habitable zone. On the surface of Kepler-186f, the brightness of its star at high noon is only as bright as our sun appears to us about an hour before sunset.

However, “being in the habitable zone does not mean we know this planet is habitable,” cautions Thomas Barclay, a research scientist at the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute at Ames, and co-author of the paper. “The temperature on the planet is strongly dependent on what kind of atmosphere the planet has. Kepler-186f can be thought of as an Earth-cousin rather than an Earth-twin. It has many properties that resemble Earth.”

Kepler-186f resides in the Kepler-186 system, about 500 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus. The system is also home to four companion planets: Kepler-186b, Kepler-186c, Kepler-186d, and Kepler-186e, whiz around their sun every four, seven, 13, and 22 days, respectively, making them too hot for life as we know it. These four inner planets all measure less than 1.5 times the size of Earth

The diagram compares the planets of our inner solar system to Kepler-186, a five-planet star system about 500 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus. splash4

 Although the size of Kepler-186f is known, its mass and composition are not. Previous research, however, suggests that a planet the size of Kepler-186f is likely to be rocky.

“The discovery of Kepler-186f is a significant step toward finding worlds like our planet Earth,” said Paul Hertz, NASA’s Astrophysics Division director at the agency’s headquarters in Washington.

The next steps in the search for distant life include looking for true Earth-twins — Earth-size planets orbiting within the habitable zone of a sun-like star — and measuring the their chemical compositions. The Kepler Space Telescope, which simultaneously and continuously measured the brightness of more than 150,000 stars, is NASA’s first mission capable of detecting Earth-size planets around stars like our sun.

Looking ahead, Hertz said, “future NASA missions, like the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite and the James Webb Space Telescope, will discover the nearest rocky exoplanets and determine their composition and atmospheric conditions, continuing humankind’s quest to find truly Earth-like worlds.”
Credits:

Production editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA>