Blue Oyster Cult - Astronomy
from album Secret Treaties (1974) Lyrics: The clock strikes twelve and moondrops burst Out at you from their hiding place Like acid and oil on a madman #39;s fac...
By: VaPedja
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Blue Oyster Cult - Astronomy
from album Secret Treaties (1974) Lyrics: The clock strikes twelve and moondrops burst Out at you from their hiding place Like acid and oil on a madman #39;s fac...
By: VaPedja
Originally posted here:
Apple Academy Solar Astronomy June 28th 2013
Please support The Charlie Bates Solar Astronomy Project with your tax deductible donation at http://www.charliebates.org (a nonprofit 501c3 corp. in Atlanta, GA) w...
By: Stephen Ramsden
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Has history been tampered with Astronomy cancels Antiquity
credits and subscribe to: http://www.youtube.com/user/mithec?feature=watch Has history been tampered with? Traditional history vs modern astronomy: who shall...
By: NoLongeraTheory
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Has history been tampered with Astronomy cancels Antiquity - Video
Astronomy: State of the Art. Live Session with Professor Chris Impey
Astronomy: State of the Art. Live Session with Professor Chris Impey.
By: Matthew Wenger
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Astronomy: State of the Art. Live Session with Professor Chris Impey - Video
WRFG interview with Charlie Bates Solar Astronomy Project June 27 2013
Please support The Charlie Bates Solar Astronomy Project with your tax deductible donation at http://www.charliebates.org (a nonprofit 501c3 corp. in Atlanta, GA) w...
By: Stephen Ramsden
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WRFG interview with Charlie Bates Solar Astronomy Project June 27 2013 - Video
New NASA observatory is changing astronomy
NASA #39;s "Sofia Mission" takes astronomers to the sky in a 747 that has a powerful telescope built into it.
By: GlobeTrendy
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One Minute* Astronomy Lessons: Sidereal vs. Synodic
Just some astronomy for your day. Please rate, comment, subscribe, and like me on Facebook.
By: Outdoorastronomer
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The History of Astronomy
Blake #39;s History project on the history of astronomy. He does not own the rights/copyright to the music or photos used in this video.
By: HistoryReligionLFS
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Heather dawn astronomy wise
Space, astronomy-wise.com, hdawnx, my love of the universe.
By: Heather Dawn
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A Paradigm Shift in Space-based Astronomy: Jayant Murthy at TEDxBNMIT
Dr. Jayant Murthy has been involved with many space missions starting with a payload on the Space Shuttle running through to the TAUVEX and UVIT missions at ...
By: TEDxTalks
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A Paradigm Shift in Space-based Astronomy: Jayant Murthy at TEDxBNMIT - Video
Astronomy Cast Ep. 307: Pacific Ring of Fire
The Pacific Ring of Fire wraps around the Pacific Ocean, including countries like Japan, Canada, New Zealand and Chile. And the inhabitants within those coun...
By: astrospherevids
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When Graphic Artists Get Bored - Amazing Astronomy 5 [Worth1000]
More image galleries at http://www.worth1000.com Worth1000.com hosts amazing daily art contests around photo-editing, photography, illustration and more! All...
By: worth1000
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When Graphic Artists Get Bored - Amazing Astronomy 5 [Worth1000] - Video
Astronomy Cast Ep. 309: Creating a Sciency Society
Our modern society depends on science. It impacts the way we eat, work, communicate and play. And yet, most people take our amazing scientific advancement fo...
By: astrospherevids
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Its a clear summer night and the waxing crescent moon is but a sliver in the sky over Jenny Jump State Forest. Thats good news for the more than 40 amateur astronomers who have gathered here because the fuller the moon, the harder it is to stargaze.
When you have a dark sky, youre trying to get a good view of very faint things. And the moons light spoils that, says Dale Gary, a radio astronomer and professor of physics at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Even the moon is boring when its full. At least when its a crescent, theres some interest in looking at the moon itself you can see the shadows of the mountains and craters.
There are about 10 observatories in New Jersey. In most cases, regional amateur astronomy clubs own, operate and maintain the telescopes, while leasing a property to house their equipment on college campuses, state parks and elsewhere. And club members are eager to share their love of astronomy, often offering free programs for families, scouting groups and other members of the public to view the wonders of space.
The nice thing about the stars is that they keep changing. So, to see all of the stars, you actually have to observe every season, says Gary, 59, a Berkeley Heights resident and past president of the United Astronomy Clubs of New Jersey (UACNJ). Theres not really a best season (to view), but I would say that summer and winter are both somewhat more interesting because the Milky Way is up during those times.
Sure, you can go out in your backyard or to a park where, depending on the weather, you can spy with the unaided eye certain stars and constellations, maybe even five of the eight planets Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. (Lest you forget, Pluto was demoted to dwarf planet status in 2006.)
But theres nothing quite as spectacular as a formidable telescopic view of a deep sky object that is millions of light years away, keeping in mind that one light year is a distance of about 6 trillion miles.
When you look through a telescope, youre really looking through a time machine, says Gil Jeffer, 59, a retired research scientist from Hope and a UACNJ member. When you look at the nearest star, Proxima Centauri, youre actually looking at light that left there four-and-a- half years ago. And most of the nebulae and galaxies that we see through our telescopes are much, much older than that. So we may see light that left there a billion years or more ago when multi-cellular life was just beginning to evolve on Earth. Youre seeing far, far, far into the past.
Jenny Jump State Forest, near Hope, is home to UACNJs observatory. (Since UACNJ is a consortium of 13 astronomical clubs in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York, all of its members belong to other amateur astronomy clubs, as well.)
On this particular night, with the help of the groups 16-inch Newtonian telescope, Saturn appears flawless, bright and close enough to touch.
I learned that (Saturn) has rings. And I saw the rings, says 6-year-old Marco DeLeon, of Hackettstown. That was pretty cool.
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van Saders Pinsonneault (2013): OSU Astronomy Coffee Brief
This is an OSU Astronomy "Coffee Brief" for the van Saders Pinsonneault paper "Fast Star, Slow Star; Old Star, Young Star: Subgiant Rotation as a Populatio...
By: OSUAstronomy
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CHARLESTON Local graduate Chris Richardson recently obtained his doctorate in astrophysics/astronomy from Michigan State University after successfully defending his dissertation on plasma simulations in astrophysical environments.
During his graduate studies, he was under the direction of professor Jack Baldwin.
Richardson has participated in research in Munich, Germany; London, England; Anchorage, Alaska; and Santa Barbara, Calif.
In addition, he has given informational lectures in Boulder, Colo. and Lexington, Ky.
He also has won numerous graduate awards during his studies at Michigan State University. Richardson has numerous publications regarding his area of expertise.
While attending Eastern Illinois University, Richardson won numerous awards from the Department of Physics.
Richardson also was named to the EIU deans list and the top 100 sophomores, and he received numerous scholarships due to his academic excellence.
He completed a research program at Indiana State University under the direction of professor James Musser, with the focus of developing more efficient merging algorithm for the simulation of the Cosmic Ray Electron Synchrotron telescope detector.
Richardson has accepted a position as an associate professor at Elon University in Elon, N.C..
He is the son of Sheri (Richardson) Paul of Charleston and of David Paul, and the grandson of Joyce Shull and the late Daniel Shull of Mattoon.
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