Astronomy

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ASTROLETTERS


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Shadow bands
Mr. O’Meara, I was paging through the
February 2018 issue of Astronomy maga-
zine, which arrived a few days ago, and I
noticed your article about Earth’s shadow
bands. While reading it, I was reminded
of our January 2011 trip to Antarctica,
where I took this photo of the Full Moon
rising (11:55 p.m. local time) while we
were in the Lemaire Channel.
The Sun was just setting over my right
shoulder, thus some direct sunlight illu-
minated both the ice f loating in the chan-
nel and the snow-covered mountain in the
distant left. My photo also has Earth’s
shadow and the Belt of Venus, which you
described. Regards, and I enjoy reading
your monthly articles. — Bob Bedell,
Mansfield, TX

The next billion years
I just read David Eicher’s editor’s note for
the December 2017 issue of Astronomy.
Like Mr. Eicher, I often tell myself and oth-
ers that we have less than a billion years
before increasing solar output boils off our
oceans. But then it occurred to me that
even with just a thousand years of effort,
we could likely build a protective barrier
around Earth that limits the amount of
solar radiation we are exposed to.
Such a structure could buy the planet a
few billion extra years of habitability
(though the Sun’s red giant phase would
be a much tougher nut to crack). We could
also maintain the position of our protec-
tive barrier by using highly specific
impulse ion thrusters powered by solar
energy and Moon-mined fuel.
Anyway, all of a sudden (as of 10 min-
utes ago), I’m more optimistic than ever
that the Sun’s increasing power output
doesn’t have to render Earth uninhabit-
able in the next billion years. Assuming
that we don’t wipe ourselves out (which
is very possible), it seems we may have
the capacity to tame our star for at least
3 billion to 4 billion more years.
— Michael W. Schimpf, Pacific Grove, CA

Praise for prose
Tania Burchell’s article on the ALMA
project in the December 2017 issue is eas-
ily worth the cost of a year’s subscription.
Any science writer can lay out the facts
of a subject, although the writing may be
tedious or opaque. In contrast, Ms.
Burchell’s effortlessly graceful prose is a
joy to read. She clearly explains the meth-
ods and findings of the ALMA research-
ers, but also communicates their sense of
scientific curiosity and the joy of discov-
ery. I hope to see more of her lyrical writ-
ing in future. — Michael Silverglat, Missoula, MT

Entropy?
In his November 2017 column “Entropy
redux,” Jeff Hester talks about the Second
Law of Thermodynamics and its build-
ing of structure. He says all of that
complexity (due to increasing entropy)
arose from random and unguided pro-
cesses. I disagree with his assumptions.
Reality already tells me that information
is responsible for complexity and order,
a truth Hester seems to ignore.
In his October 2017 column, Hester
talked about the entropy of an interstellar
cloud that collapsed to form stars and
planets. However, that process had to be
guided by information (that is, by the
inherent laws that govern our universe).
And when we talk about life, any attempt
to use a reduction in entropy to produce
information fails because entropy is not
equivalent to the functional information
in cells.
Also, Hester chides creationists for
their claim that entropy stands in the way

of evolution. Well, Hester also stands in
the way of evolution when he claims that
order arose from random and unguided
processes. Such dogmatic assumptions
prohibit science to explore other possibili-
ties. Mr. Hester, stop holding back science.
Let it be free! — Paul Kursewicz, Epping, NH

Jeff Hester responds
The reader uses the phrase, “Reality
already tells me.” How does that commu-
nication occur? Does reality tap him on
the shoulder and whisper in his ear? Does
it slip him notes under the desk when the
teacher isn’t looking?
Reality doesn’t “tell” us anything.
Reality has to be interrogated. One of the
coolest things about science is just how
surprising and counterintuitive reality’s
secrets can be! Discovering reality means
setting aside assumptions and dogma. It
means brutally confronting ideas with
evidence from observation and experi-
ment, then throwing out the ideas that
can’t take the heat. My articles on entropy
discuss fundamental insights forged in
that unforgiving crucible over the last
century and a half. That doesn’t hold
science back; that is how science works.
The reader is correct that evolution and
structure formation can be discussed in
terms of information. But applying infor-
mation theory doesn’t change the
answers. Contrary to the reader’s asser-
tion, information entropy is equivalent to
the average amount of information pro-
duced by a stochastic (random and
unguided) process. That might make a
fun column ...

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BOB BEDELL
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