Astronomy Club shoots for the stars with balloon launch

QUINCY, Ill. (WGEM) - After months of planning, a weather balloon was released Tuesday from Quincy Regional Airport.

Members of the Quincy University Astronomy Club launched the balloon with a capsule attached to it. It also had a GoPro camera and a GPS tracking device inside.

"At 60 thousand feet the GoPro should capture the vastness and the blackness of space," Astronomy Club Member Damien Olejarski said. "We should be able to get a shot of the curvature of the earth.

"It's going to be above pretty much every single cloud layer and we're just trying to get a hold of that footage and be able to find it," Olejarski added.

Olejarski says the capsule could land a couple miles away or a couple states away, but the hope is the GPS will send back signals allowing them to track it down and find it.

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Astronomy Club shoots for the stars with balloon launch

Astronomers harness the galaxy's biggest telescope

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

5-May-2014

Contact: Kirsten Gottschalk kirsten.gottschalk@icrar.org 61-438-361-876 International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research

An international team of astronomers has made a measurement of a distant neutron star that is one million times more precise than the previous world's best.

The researchers were able to use the interstellar medium, the 'empty' space between stars and galaxies that is made up of sparsely spread charged particles, as a giant lens to magnify and look closely at the radio wave emission from a small rotating neutron star.

This technique yielded the highest resolution measurement ever achieved, equivalent to being able to see the double-helix structure of our genes from the Moon!

"Compared to other objects in space, neutron stars are tiny only tens of kilometres in diameter so we need extremely high resolution to observe them and understand their physics," Dr Jean-Pierre Macquart from the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) in Perth said.

Dr Macquart, a member of the ARC Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO), said neutron stars were particularly interesting objects to study, as some of them called pulsars gave off pulsed radio waves whose beams swept across telescopes at regular intervals.

"More than 45 years since astronomers discovered pulsars, we still don't understand the mechanism by which they emit radio wave pulses," he said.

The researchers found they could use the distortions of these pulse signals as they passed through the turbulent interstellar medium to reconstruct a close in view of the pulsar from thousands of individual sub-images of the pulsar.

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Astronomers harness the galaxy's biggest telescope

Piner High SPARQs STEM education

Monday, May 5, 2014, 6:20 am

By Jeff Quackenbush, Business Journal Staff Reporter

SANTA ROSA As STEM education picks up momentum in U.S. schools, the multiscience SPARQ Center opened earlier this month at Piner High School.

Piner High School Geospatial Technology Pathway program coordinator and instructor Kurt Kruger and Principal Sally Brimrose (credit: Tenaya Fleckenstein Photography)

Short for Science, Position, Astronomy, Research and Query Center, SPARQ describes the planned uses for the 5,000-square-foot building. The center opened April 11 with an astronomical telescope, global positioning system (GPS) and geographic information system (GIS) technology (position), climate and meteorological instruments and a multiaxis planetarium.

Named by the Piner High Astronomy Science Club, the center uses astronomy as a way to pull in lessons about physics, mathematics, chemistry, biology and Earth science. And STEM science, technology, engineering and mathematics learning is a major focus of state and national 21st century schools curriculum.

The SPARQ Center includes a planetarium and observatory. (credit: Tenaya Fleckenstein Photography)

Indeed, Piner teachers have noted increased interest in STEM classes and extracurricular activities such as the schools astronomy club because of the construction of the SPARQ Center, according to project designer Quattrocchi Kwok Architects of Santa Rosa.

Piners Geospatial Technology Pathway program has garnered nationwide exposure from construction trade periodicals such as American Surveyor Magazine for bringing GPS and GIS technology and local professional know-how to training high school students.

Bill Carle, president of the Santa Rosa City Schools Board of Education, speaks in front of the SPARQ Center at Piner High School at the April 11 opening. (credit: Tenaya Fleckenstein Photography)

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Piner High SPARQs STEM education

Astronomy: The Big Bang (7 of 30) Cosmic Background Radiation and Earth’s Motion – Video


Astronomy: The Big Bang (7 of 30) Cosmic Background Radiation and Earth #39;s Motion
Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain the cosmic background radiation and the blue- and red-shift.

By: Michel van Biezen

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Astronomy: The Big Bang (7 of 30) Cosmic Background Radiation and Earth's Motion - Video

Astronomy: The Big Bang (8 of 30) E=mc^2 and the Temperature of the Early Universe – Video


Astronomy: The Big Bang (8 of 30) E=mc^2 and the Temperature of the Early Universe
Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain E=mc^2 and how it calculates the temperature of the early universe.

By: Michel van Biezen

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Astronomy: The Big Bang (8 of 30) E=mc^2 and the Temperature of the Early Universe - Video

Voivod – Astronomy Domine (Pink Floyd cover) @ Hangar110, So Paulo, Brazil, 30/03/2014 – Video


Voivod - Astronomy Domine (Pink Floyd cover) @ Hangar110, So Paulo, Brazil, 30/03/2014
Video of the music "Astronomy Domine" played in the end of the show of the band VOIVOD in So Paulo, Brazil. Other videos of the same show: "Voivod" - http://youtu.be/NBlyBAMdehQ "The Unknown...

By: Diego Cabral Camara

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Voivod - Astronomy Domine (Pink Floyd cover) @ Hangar110, So Paulo, Brazil, 30/03/2014 - Video