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FAQ: Why did Herschel Name His Planet Uranus?

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ANSWER: Herschel did not name the planet Uranus, he called it “the Georgium Sidus” (the Georgian Planet) in honor of King George III of England. The name “Uranus” was first proposed by German astronomer Johann Elert Bode in order for it to be in conformity with the other planetary names – which are from classical mythology. Uranus is the ancient Greek deity of the Heavens, the earliest supreme god. This name did not achieve common use until 1850.

Astronomy is very old science – with at least 4,000 years of history. Many of the names of objects that have been known for a long time are historic in nature. The planets and their moons were given names which came from Greek or Roman mythology. This seemed sensible long ago when the objects were named.

These days, so many objects are known that names tend to come from the satellite or observatory which discovered (and catalogued) them and a series of numbers which tell astronomers something about where they are located in the sky. The International Astronomical Union (IAU) is officially in charge of assigning astronomical names.


FAQ: Can you hear the Shuttle’s Sonic Boom inside the Shuttle?

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ANSWER: No, you cannot. The crew cannot hear the sonic booms (there are two of them) when the Orbiter passes through Mach 1 and becomes subsonic over Cape Canaveral.

The booms are the interpretation of the human ear on the ground when hit by the expanding shock waves at the nose and at the tail of the Shuttle Orbiter. These shocks happen when pressure of the air stream around the Shuttle changes too abruptly to be able to dissipate (i.e. spread out) in accordance with the (slower) natural ability of the air to handle it – its local “speed of sound”.

These shocks would appear as a cone each, with the object generating it at its point, and spreading out behind it while being dragged along by it. There’s a shock generated by the nose and another by the tailing edge of the tail fin. When the bottom portions of these conically spreading wakes hit the ground, the ear drum perceives the sudden pressure change as a boom (it’s more like a crack, really – thus: CRACK — CRACK always announces the Shuttle a few minutes before it lands). If you measure the pressure jumps, their signature look like the letter “N”, and that’s why aerodynamicists call the phenomenon the “N wave”.

Since the crew is inside the cabin and not subjected to the expanding shock wave, it cannot hear the booms.


FAQ: Can I get a star named after someone I know?

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The International Astronomical Union is the only sanctioned body that has the authority to name celestial bodies. Any names that you or any commercial enterprise should care to attach to a celestial body would not be recognized, nor would they be used by the astronomical community in technical journals, etc. Naming conventions for both solar system and deep space objects are strictly adhered to.

In Short:

If you do by a star name from a company claiming to sell them, you will only get an expensive piece of paper and a temporary feeling of happiness.

Learn more about official scientifically recognized star names at The International Astronomical Union


FAQ: Can Hubble see the Apollo landing sites on the Moon?

apollo_11_base

ANSWER: No, Hubble cannot take photos of the Apollo landing sites.

An object on the Moon 4 meters (4.37 yards) across, viewed from HST, would be about 0.002 arcsec in size. The highest resolution instrument currently on HST is the Advanced Camera for Surveys at 0.03 arcsec. So anything we left on the Moon cannot be resolved in any HST image. It would just appear as a dot.


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