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Romance in the stars
117
Since the dawn of civilization, the ways of love have been so important, yet so
unpredictable, that every method from the pedestrian to the bizarre has been
employed to confirm our hopes or dispel our fears in the tangled and uncertain
minefield of romantic affairs.
Not surprisingly, astronomy and astrology were used to predict the opportunities
and pitfalls that lay ahead in affairs of the heart. Today, astrology is the
only one of this pair that takes on this task, as the horoscopes in modern
magazines show.
So what about astronomy – what has it to offer those seeking romantic advice?
Well, nothing, actually! True, much of what happens in the sky can now be
predicted well in advance, but this has been the result of slow, methodical
observation. Complex as the laws are that predict the movements of the stars,
they are child’s play compared to the complexities of romantic entanglements.
Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle may explain complex features of quantum
mechanics, but couldn’t cope with the wilder uncertainties in the chemistry of
interpersonal relations.
However, astronomy and romance do have one similarity: they are both about
attraction, though of very different kinds. Attraction as studied in astronomy
is not the hormone fuelled, starry-eyed (pardon the pun and those that follow)
version we have all experienced when in love. However, it does explain much of
what goes on in our world, our solar system, our galaxy and beyond. The
attraction in question is gravity, in whose inescapable embrace everything
exists and moves. Size affects gravity, which is why on the Moon, we would weigh
only one-sixth of our Earth-weight. Perhaps there is a future for instant weight
loss here?
In November 2005 the Japanese space probe ‘Falcon’ lightly kissed the
surface of the small asteroid Itokawa, (which exerts very low gravity), took
samples of its dust and will return them to Earth in 2010. On a much grander
scale, galaxies express their mutual attraction in a gravitationally driven
tango surrounded by magnificently streaming arcs of stars that whirl like the
costumes of frenzied dancers. Examples of these are NGC 4038/9, ‘The
Antennae’ in Corvus, and NGC 4676, ‘The Mice’, in Coma Bernices.
Incidentally, ‘NGC’ refers to the New General Catalogue of celestial
objects, compiled in the 1880s and cataloguing about 8000 objects, many of them
observed by astronomer William Herschel.
And finally, the cosmos also has its ‘fatal attractions’ and it provides
them on a grand scale. At the centre of our own galaxy there is a ‘black
hole’ thousands of times more massive than our sun, which shreds and swallows
anything, including stars that come too close. Its matter has been reduced to a
single point by overwhelming force and nothing, not even light, can escape its
intense gravity.
Now that’s the ultimate ‘crush’! Clear skies!
In the image two galaxies perform an intricate dance in this new Hubble Space
Telescope image. The galaxies, containing a vast number of stars, swing past
each other in a graceful performance choreographed by gravity. The pair, known
collectively as Arp 87, is one of hundreds of interacting and merging galaxies
known in our nearby universe.
Arp 87 is in the constellation Leo, the Lion, approximately 300 million
light-years away from Earth. These observations were taken in February 2007 with
the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. Image credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble
Heritage team (STScI/AURA).
Visit www.shannonsideastronomy.com
or call Conn on 061-301493.
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