Ocean Acidification

By Karen A. Bellenir

Many people talk about problems associated with increased amounts of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. One often-overlooked concern relates to the consequences this has for the world’s oceans.

The ocean absorbs 25–30% of the carbon dioxide added to the atmosphere. This leads to chemical changes that increase the acidity of seawater. Even tiny changes in acidity can impact marine plants and animals. Effects interfere with respiration and photosynthesis, building shells and skeletons, and reproducing.

Shellfish, including oysters and clams, and other marine organisms such as sea urchins, corals, and various species of plankton are especially at risk. Plankton may not be a topic discussed in typical everyday conversations, but these organisms play a vital role in the marine food web and phytoplankton (marine plants) produce 70% of the oxygen in our atmosphere.

To learn more about ocean acidification, visit the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration’s National Ocean Service information page on Ocean Acidification.

Shellfish represent just one group of organisms threatened by ocean acidification (image from Thesaurus conchyliorum, or, Monographs of genera of shells, London: Sowerby, G.B. 1847-1887; via biodiversitylibrary.org/page/43936640).

Shellfish represent just one group of organisms threatened by ocean acidification (image from Thesaurus conchyliorum, or, Monographs of genera of shells, London: Sowerby, G.B. 1847-1887; via biodiversitylibrary.org/page/43936640).

Looking at 2020 Skies

Dillon Beach, California, United States. Photo by Bryan Goff on Unsplash.

Dillon Beach, California, United States. Photo by Bryan Goff on Unsplash.

By Karen A. Bellenir

In optical terms, 20/20 refers to good vision. In sky terms, the year 2020 will bring many opportunities to see celestial marvels.

 As the year starts, the planet Venus will sparkle in the western sky after sunset. April evenings will see it shine at its maximum brightness. By summer, the planets Jupiter and Saturn will be lined up in the constellation Sagittarius. As the year progresses, these two gas giants will draw closer and closer together until their great conjunction on December 21, 2020, an event that happens only once every twenty years. In the fall, Mars will be in position for excellent observing.

To be prepared to view these events and many others throughout the year, a good sky map will come in handy. You can download one for the current month from SkyMaps.com. Each monthly map will show you the locations of the visible constellations, identify stars and planets, and mark the locations of other significant objects. The map’s second page provides a list of things that can be observed without optical aid, things that can be viewed with binoculars (7x35 mm or bigger is best for astronomical observations), and some things for which a telescope is required.

If your night skies are washed out by light pollution, you may want to learn more about how the International Dark-Sky Association is working to protect the night sky and steps you can take to help preserve this wonderful resource.

The Geminids and Other Meteor Showers

by Karen Bellenir

A meteor seen over Durango, CO. Photo by averie woodard on Unsplash

A meteor seen over Durango, CO. Photo by averie woodard on Unsplash

The Geminid meteor shower arrives annually in mid-December. This year, the peak will be on December 14. Although light from the nearly full moon will overpower the dimmer meteors after moonrise, if skies are clear some meteors will likely still be visible.

Meteor showers occur when the earth’s orbit takes it through debris fields where other solar system bodies have passed and shed particles. Typically, they are associated with comets.

Comets have been likened to dirty snowballs, roughly spherical chunks of ice and rock. As they orbit the sun, the solar wind causes them to shed material. When a comet is visible in the sky, its tail structure is created by the venting of particles. Most meteor showers are associated with specific comets.

Halley’s comet is linked to two meteor showers. Earth’s orbit intersects with Halley’s orbital path at two points. The first, the Eta Aquarids, occurs in early May when Earth crosses the path made by the comet as it approached the sun. The second, the Orionids, occurs in the latter half of October as Earth crosses the path created by the comet as it moved away from the sun.

Comet Swift-Tuttle is associated with what is arguably the year’s most famous meteor shower, the Perseids. The Perseids peak in mid-August. Warm summer temperatures create favorable conditions for outdoor viewing, even during the frequently cooler pre-dawn hours, which are associated with the thickest portion of the meteor stream. Under ideal viewing conditions, the Perseid shower produces around 100 meteors per hour.

The Geminids are different. They are created by fragments left behind by an asteroid rather than a comet. Dubbed 3200 Phaethon, the asteroid responsible for the Geminid meteor shower follows an orbit that brings it closer to the sun than most other asteroids. For this reason, it was named for the character in Greek mythology who lost control of the sun’s chariot and scorched part of the earth. The bits of material responsible for the meteors it creates tend to have more mass than other meteors, and they move more slowly. This combination of characteristics can make them appear brighter in the sky. The Geminid shower can yield up to 120 meteors per hour, depending on viewing conditions. In my opinion, the Geminids produce the year’s best meteor show, but viewing enthusiasm is sometimes hampered by December’s chilly nights.

 Meteor showers are named for the constellation associated with the point from which they seem to radiate, called the radiant. Although the momentary streaks of light can appear anywhere in the sky, if you could trace their lines back to their origin, they would converge at a particular spot. For the Geminids, that location is near the two brightest stars in the constellation Gemini. The Perseids have a radiant in Perseus, the Eta Aquarids in Aquarius, the Orionids in Orion, and so on.

The meteors themselves are created by particles that are smaller than many people realize, from the size of a grain of sand to as large as a pea. When the earth passes through an area where a line of such crumbs exists in space, the tiny objects encounter the molecules of earth’s upper atmosphere. The friction caused by this collision creates heat, which vaporizes the particle. This in turn transfers energy to the molecules and atoms of the atmosphere, creating a momentary streak of glowing light. Meteorites, objects that actually strike the ground, are associated with much larger objects that orbit the sun randomly rather than the debris zones that create meteor showers.

[December 6, 2019; excerpted from the author’s newspaper column, which appears monthly in the Farmville Herald.]