Zodiacal Light

Photo credit - Malcol - CC-BY

Photo credit – Malcol – CC-BY

Cloud of the Day – Zodiacal Light

Photo credit - Brian Minkoff - CC-BY-SA

Photo credit – Brian Minkoff – CC-BY-SA

Brian May played guitar for Queen. That’s Queen, not The Queen, although Queen might have played for The Queen. I don’t know. It seems unlikely, though. On the other hand, Brian May was awarded a CBE (Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) in 2005, so maybe he got to play for The Queen after that.

Photo credit - Faulkes - CC-BY-SA

Photo credit – Faulkes – CC-BY-SA

More importantly for our purposes here, May has a PhD in astrophysics. He began his studies as a young man, graduating from London’s Imperial College with a BSc, before beginning his PhD studies on phenomena related to zodiacal light. The success of Queen distracted him from his studies and he wasn’t able to complete his PhD thesis until 2007, more than thirty years later. Fortunately for him, interest in the zodiacal light was so sparse in the interim that his thesis was still valid.

Photo credit - A. Fitzsimmons - CC-BY

Photo credit – A. Fitzsimmons – CC-BY

Zodiacal light is a faint glow that can sometimes be seen in the sky just before dawn or just after sunset. Sometimes it’s called false dawn because it can fool you into thinking that the Sun is about to rise. Zodiacal light is faint. It’s fainter than the Milky Way. You won’t see it if you’re in a city, or subject to any other light pollution. Even moonlight can wash it right out. The source of zodiacal light is sunlight reflecting off cosmic dust in a disk around the Sun. The disk is flattened by its rotation and lies on the plane of the ecliptic, just like the planets. Hence the zodiac, which is the collection of constellations around the plane of the ecliptic. It’s best observed in spring after evening twilight, and in autumn before morning twilight.

Photo credit - Y. Beletsky - CC-BY

Photo credit – Y. Beletsky – CC-BY

Zodiakallicht - Public domain

Zodiakallicht – Public domain

Zodiacal light isn’t really a meteorological phenomenon, but it’s pretty close.

Some of the pictures link to larger versions.

rjb

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My Stalker

Image credit - Helgi Halldórsson - CC-BY-SA

Image credit – Helgi Halldórsson – CC-BY-SA – Click for larger image

It’s time to see if my stalker has given up. On July 22, 2014, I changed the settings on this blog to require users to log in before they can vote on the thumbs up/thumbs down. I didn’t want to do that but my stalker forced my hand. He was coming to Green Comet and systematically giving my posts thumbs down. That was okay. Everyone should be allowed to express their honest opinion here. But my stalker went too far. He showed that he is either simply crass, or he was giving the thumbs down votes without reading the posts. On July 12 I put up a tribute post to Pery Burge, and my stalker immediately gave it his usual thumbs down. Who does that to a lovely tribute to a deceased person? My disgust meant it was time to act.

Image credit - Szilas - Public domain

Image credit – Szilas – Public domain – Click for larger

It was successful. My stalker was either too afraid or too lazy to register to continue his campaign. This site has been free of his distasteful contributions for over a month. Now it’s time to remove the barrier to voting and see whether we’ve shaken him off for good. The voting on thumbs up/thumbs down is again open to all without the requirement to register.

Click at will, and wish me luck.

rjb

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Sullivan Green

Book cover - Kimberly Voll

Book cover – Kimberly Voll

Denny Bastian

Denny Bastian

Review – The Amazing Adventures of Sullivan Green – Denny Bastian – Smashwords – $2.99 – 75,000 words – ePub, Kindle, PDF

This book is not published under a Creative Commons license, but Denny is a friend so he gets special dispensation.-)

Denny Bastian is a retired city bus driver, and what’s he supposed to do with himself now? According to Denny, write a children’s book of course. And so we have The Amazing Adventures of Sullivan Green, a bedtime story for children six and up. Its thirty-four chapters are laid out for reading to them one per night.

Sullivan Green is a frog who goes on an adventure with two of his pals. The story is light hearted, even though the three adventurers find ways to put themselves in danger. The book’s cover, by Denny’s step-daughter, Dr Kimberly Voll, reflects the tone of the book very well.

The book could have benefited from more editing – there are errors – but if you can ignore that, then it doesn’t distract from the fun. The author’s bright and colorful imagination is evident throughout. Denny obviously spent many hours putting himself in the green skin of the little frogs. It’s enough to make you think that the germ of some of these stories came from his own childhood.

Sullivan Green and his pals, Willy and Squeaky, endure a storm, separation, getting lost and having to hide from the evil Derdy Rats. In spite of the danger, they persevere, showing us how clever and brave they are. In The Amazing Adventures of Sullivan Green, Denny Bastian has given us a delightful story, needing only a little more care and polish to live up to its potential.

rjb

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