[image: aohrodite.jpg]
*Aphrodite:  * *The Love Goddess*
Cupid rules us all, or so the saying goes.  Neither god nor mortal can
resist love's allure.   Desperate love seekers have ascended imposing
summits, traversed harrowing deserts, slain ferocious monsters, and -in the
most extreme example-sat through a Sunday afternoon Rom-com during the NFL
post season to curry the favor and win the hearts of those they most
adore.    While some philistine biologists ascribe these irrational
behaviours to the "procreational imperative," the rest of us know that
Aphrodite, goddess of love, is responsible.    She has not only instilled
this sweetest strain of insanity into our souls, but in some cases, has
aided the lovelorn in their quests to ensnare elusive prey.   Though her
interventions deprive some fair ladies and fine men of their free will,
Aphrodite at least strives to bring about an abundance of happy endings and
to expand the human population.

Ironically, Aphrodite's birth was not the result of the coital act.   After
castrating his father Ouranos, god of the sky, Cronos cast his detached
member into the sea of the Cypriot coast.      From the foam that bubbled
up from the submerged genitals arose Aphrodite along with a wide assortment
of less eye-pleasing creatures., such as the dreaded furies.   Having been
born out of the organ from which all prurient passions originate,  it is
natural that Aphrodite became the goddess presiding over love, sexual
commerce and sensual pleasure.   Though not as omnipresent as Zeus,
Aphrodite has appeared numerous times throughout these mythological
excursions.     She cast a spell on Ariadne to make her fall in love with
Theseus so that she would help him to escape the labyrinth.   She gave
Hippomenes three golden apples with which to win the hand of Atalanta, the
huntress who, to Aphrodite's chagrin, had resolved to remain celebate. The
crafty and swift Atalanta had promised to marry the first man to beat her
in a foot race.  Many men tried, but failed to do so.   When she raced
Hippomenes, he cast a golden apple in front of her at three separate
times.   The apples were so beautiful that she stooped to retrieve all
three. As a result, she fell behind and lost the race.

Of course, Aphrodite showed another side of herself when her son Eros fell
in love with Psyche, whose beauty was equal to her own.    Having lost Eros
when she tried to look at him in full light, Psyche appealed to Aphrodite
for assistance, only to be given a series of exceedingly difficult labors
to complete in order to prove her love was genuine.   She did finish them
all - with assistance- and eventually was reconciled to Eros and  even made
peace with his mother.

Perhaps the greatest irony was that the love goddess was desperately
unhappy in her marriage.  She has been required to marry Hephaestus, the
malformed god of fires, furnaces and craftsmen.  Their union was hardly
blissful and, to nobody's surprise, she cuckolded him almost at once with
the war god Ares, the one male for whom she harbored the most intense
passion.    Even though Hephaestus ensnared his faithless wife and her
paramour in a trap and humiliated them in front the other Olympians,
Aphrodite and Ares remained lovers throughout.

As was true with Zeus yesterday, so much more could be said about
Aphrodite.   Yet, suffice it to say that if you've ever been consumed with
unbridled passion, behaved beyond all rationality, plunged into despair's
unsounded depths due tos lost love or found yourself at heaven's highest
pinnacle over a love requited, you can attribute it all to Aphrodite,
goddess of love.  She rules us all, though at times, not too gently.


THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM
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2020-2021:  LX

THE DAILY ASTRONOMER
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Remote Planetarium 133:  Quasar Light, Quasar Bright
___________________________
*Happy Birthday, Brother Richard!*
Look at it this way.   You'd be a two year old toddler if we lived on
Saturn.
____________________________

[image: ChangingQuasar_2880x1800.jpg]
*Quasars, or quasi-stellar objects.*
These strange and distant quasars are some of the Universe's most energetic
entities.      Today, our penultimate day of our quest toward the
observable Universe, we discuss quasars through the lovely use of the
question/answer format.


*What are quasars?*
We believe that quasars are active galactic nuclei.    Supermassive black
holes with masses millions or sometimes billions of times greater than the
Sun are the center of these active nuclei.    The black holes are
surrounded by large collections of gas called accretion disks. As this
gaseous material falls into the black holes, immense amounts of energy are
generated.  In fact, the energy output is more than 1000 times greater than
that of our entire galaxy.

*Why are they named "quasars?"*
The name is a contraction of the term "*quasi-stellar radio source*." The
first observations showed them to be star-like objects that produced
unusually high levels of radio emissions.    These objects were quite
mysterious because they were so far away and they seemed so luminous.
 When first observed (1950s), astronomers knew of no mechanism capable of
generating such prodigious amounts of energy.

*How far away are they?*
While some quasars are some of the most distant objects ever observed
-because they were around during the earliest epochs of the Universe- some
are closer.  The quasar 3C 273, the first quasar to be discovered, is about
2.5 billion light years away and is one of the closest quasars.

[image: Best_image_of_bright_quasar_3C_273.jpg]
*Quasar 3C 273   *A quasar within the constellation Virgo, 3C 273 is 2.5
billion light years away, making it one of the closest quasars to us.   If
it were 30 light years away from us, it would appear as bright as the Sun!
 Image:  Hubble Wide Field/Planetary Camera 2

*How do astronomers know the distance to objects as far away as quasars?*
Redshifts. The light emitted by extremely remote objects will red-shifted
as a consequence of their movement  away from us.  Light waves are
elongated by this recession.  Consequently, the light is shifted toward the
lower energy region of the electromagnetic spectrum.   We refer to this
stretching as red-shifting because red light is at  a lower energy than
blue light.  The more distant the object, the greater the red shift.

*How many quasars exist?*
Astronomers have counted about 750,000 quasara, many of which have  been
found with the Sloan Digital Survey.


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