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Science from the South Pole Karina Leppik Science Museum of Minnesota September 5, 2003
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Science from the South Pole

Dec 31, 2015

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Science from the South Pole. Karina Leppik Science Museum of Minnesota September 5, 2003. Aerial View of Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station February 2003. The South Pole. Climatology and Aeronomy. Astronomy and Astrophysics. Clean Air Sector. Dark Sector. Quiet Sector. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Science from the South Pole

Science from the South Pole

Karina Leppik

Science Museum of Minnesota

September 5, 2003

Page 2: Science from the South Pole

Aerial View of Amundsen-Scott South Pole StationFebruary 2003

Page 3: Science from the South Pole

The South Pole

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Climatology and Aeronomy

Geophysics, Glaciology and Seismology

Dark Sector

Quiet Sector

Clean Air Sector

Page 4: Science from the South Pole
Page 5: Science from the South Pole
Page 6: Science from the South Pole

Objects emit more than one kind of light

X-Ray(image from ROSAT)

Ultraviolet(image from UIT)

Visible(image from

IAC/RGO/Malin)

Infrared(image from 2MASS)

Radio(image from VLA/WSRT)

M33, a spiral galaxy

Page 7: Science from the South Pole

Receiver Room

TREND Dewar230 GHz Dewar

PoleSTAR Dewar

Page 8: Science from the South Pole

– Galactic Center• CI (3P1-3P0)

• CO (4-3)

• CO (7-6)

SgrB

SgrA

Page 9: Science from the South Pole

Why Astronomy at the South

Pole?

Page 10: Science from the South Pole

Water in the atmosphere

Page 11: Science from the South Pole

Weather at the South Pole

• Data are binned by week.– Large dots show median

– Thick bar shows 25%75%

– Thin bar shows 10% 90%

– Small dots show maximum and minimum measured values

• Top panel shows PWV as measured by AIR Model 4a balloon flights 1991 to 1996

• Bottom 3 panels summarize hourly NOAA weather data from 1977 to 2001

Week of Year

Page 12: Science from the South Pole

Climate

• Temperature:– Average annual: -56.9 F – Record high: +7.5 F (December 1978)– Record low: -117.0 F (June 1982)

• Average wind: 12.4 mph• Average pressure: 681.4 millibars• Average pressure altitude: 10,576 feet

Page 13: Science from the South Pole

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association

(NOAA)

Page 14: Science from the South Pole

Other Dark Sector Science:

VIPER, DASI, AMANDA

Page 15: Science from the South Pole

What do I do?

Page 16: Science from the South Pole
Page 17: Science from the South Pole

Liquid Helium Fills

Page 18: Science from the South Pole

A day in the life of a polie

Page 19: Science from the South Pole

The dome

Page 20: Science from the South Pole

The New (Elevated) Station

Page 21: Science from the South Pole

South Pole Greenhouse

Page 22: Science from the South Pole

Waste Disposal

Page 23: Science from the South Pole

The Ceremonial Pole

Page 24: Science from the South Pole

The Geographic South Pole

90o South Latitude

Page 25: Science from the South Pole

Other South Poles

90o SouthPole of Inaccessibility

Dipmeter reading 80o at the geographic South Pole

South Polar Axis of Rotation

Magnetic Dip Pole

Geomagnetic Pole

Page 26: Science from the South Pole

Solar Halos

Page 27: Science from the South Pole
Page 28: Science from the South Pole

March 20, 2003: two days before sunsetMarch 20: two days before the equinox

Page 29: Science from the South Pole

March 23, 2003: one day after the equinox

March 24, 2003:two days after the equinox

Page 30: Science from the South Pole

Green/Blue Flash: March 26, 2003

Pillar: March 25, 2003

Page 31: Science from the South Pole

The terminator: the line between night and dayApril 1, 2003

Page 32: Science from the South Pole

Venus

April 5, 2003: two weeks after sunset

Page 33: Science from the South Pole

Fisheye image of skyWinter 2001Photo: Chris Martin

Aurora (green)

Mars

Page 34: Science from the South Pole

Fisheye image of skyWinter 2001Photo: Chris Martin

Aurora

Moon

Page 35: Science from the South Pole
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Page 37: Science from the South Pole

Q&A