Astronomical summer begins – AccuWeather.com (blog)

Astronomy blog By Dave Samuhel, AccuWeather senior meteorologist 6/21/2017, 3:08:57 PM

Happy summer! Astronomical summer is here. The day of the summer solstice, usually features the longest day of the year.

The sun will not set north of the Arctic Circle today.

The sun simply circles the horizon as the Earth rotates.

Farther south, the sun will set at its northernmost point on the horizon. You may notice sun shining through windows in your house that usually dont get any sunlight.

So what is going on? Is the Earth bouncing around on its axis to change the sun angle? NO

The Earth is permanently tilted as it orbits the sun. We know the Earth spins around an axis that extends from the North Pole to the South Pole, but that axis is tilted at 23.5 degrees.

So, its all about where the Earth is during its journey around the sun. Today, the axis of rotation points toward the sun. However, when the planet moves to the other side of the sun (aka winter solstice), that axis of rotation points away from the sun.

The farther north you are, the longer the day is. Lets take a look at the day length in different parts of the world...

June 21st Solar Information Table

As a side note, today was not the longest day of the year in some cases. Since the solstice was at 12:24 a.m. daylight time, this is actually closer to sunset yesterday than sunrise today. So, yesterday was the longest day of the year in many locations!

Thanks for reading! Just look up, you never know what you will see!

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Astronomical summer begins - AccuWeather.com (blog)

Bringing astronomy down to earth – Mountain View Voice

For the last 45 years, astronomy professor Andrew Fraknoi has made it his mission to translate groundbreaking astronomical studies and the complex inner workings of the cosmos into everyday language. If a spectacular discovery about new earth-like planets or black holes splashes across headlines, it's a safe bet that radio hosts and Bay Area stargazers will look to Fraknoi to make sense of what's going on.

But after serving as the face of astronomy department at Foothill College for two decades, and playing a large part in shaping the way regional astronomers communicate with the public, Fraknoi said he's ready to retire. His final year teaching introductory astronomy concludes this month, leaving him more time to focus on public talks and a budding career as a science fiction writer.

Fraknoi said it's been the thrust of his career to turn astronomy into a subject that everyone can access, understand and enjoy, swapping out technical jargon and dry, raw data for easy-to-understand analogies and humor. Even a person who is deathly afraid of science, he said, ought to be able to understanding the new developments in the field.

Strong analogies can also be used as a springboard to convey to students the unimaginable size of celestial bodies, massive distances between stars and extreme temperatures and pressures present in space. Fraknoi said he explains the density of a neutron star -- the remains of a star after it dies and collapses into a small, tightly-packed object -- by telling students it would be like squeezing every human on earth into an area the size of a raindrop.

Oddly enough, Fraknoi's early career was shaped not just by what he learned in the classroom, but what he learned in radio. In the mid 1970s, he was invited to do an hour-long interview with KGO radio host Jim Eason. It put him in a completely different mindset: he had no blackboard, no slides and just a three-minute window to explain whatever astronomy topic got dumped into his lap.

"Jim (Eason) and I just hit it off, some chemistry just happened between us," Fraknoi recalled. "He took me under his wing and mentored me on how you answer science questions on the radio. He gave me lots of practice because he kept inviting me back every six weeks or so."

Fraknoi made frequent appearances on Bay Area radio, as Eason and other talk show hosts would use him as the station's de facto astronomy expert, a "nerdy but cool" resource to rely on when a big discovery or astronomical event becomes news. He spoke on KQED's Forum earlier this year about NASA's recent discoveries of seven earth-sized planets -- some of which appear to be habitable -- and what the New Horizons satellite taught researchers about the atmosphere and surface of Pluto.

Throughout his career, Fraknoi said there's been a "golden age" of new discoveries in astronomy that have fueled public interest and excited people, giving his students a timely angle on what they're learning in class. The field never gets boring, which is probably why the radio invitations keep coming, Fraknoi said.

"The big telescopes and our space probes have turned astronomy into a font of discoveries, it's like being a kid in a candy store," he said. "In my whole career it's just one exciting discovery, one giant telescope, after another."

Fraknoi's legacy goes beyond Foothill and local radio. He led the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) for 14 years, and molded the organization into a resource for education and outreach programs with a presence all over the world. Under his leadership, ASP launched a nation-wide program called Project ASTRO, which pairs professional and amateur astronomers with teachers in order to bring astronomy to the classroom. The local chapter includes 250 active astronomers in over 150 schools in the greater Bay Area.

Linda Shore, the executive director of ASP, said the society used to be a relatively small, locally focused organization, with more of a "spectator's role" in astronomy education before Fraknoi took the helm. Now it couldn't be any more different, she said. ASP has a presence in schools, museums and planetariums, works with park rangers and Girl Scouts, and launched a "diversity initiative" to make sure students from all backgrounds have a chance to learn about the stars.

"We're in India working with Tibetan monks and nuns in exile, teaching them astronomy," Shore said. "We're working in Chile to help astronomers do outreach in their community."

Astronomy teachers hardly have an easy task, translating complex ideas and complicated contemporary research into information that students -- regardless of background -- can digest without feeling lost or confused. Shore said Fraknoi does his best to share his tricks and strategies, but he seems to have a special knack for finding the "essence" of what's going on in space and giving it an easy-to-understand explanation.

"He's really is good at conveying the magic about what's happening, and he does it in extremely few words with a single image or idea," she said. "Part of that is an art that you're sort of born with."

ASP still serves its original role as a professional resource for astronomers, publishing technical journals that are reviewed, or "refereed," by experts in the field. But because of Fraknoi, the organization has a new role as a leading organization in how to teach astronomy to the general public, said Michael Bennett, a former executive director for the society.

"When we start talking to scientists about being better communicators with the public, they're dealing with what they perceive as a legitimate scientific organization," said Bennett.

Outside of the classroom, Fraknoi has been working for years to prepare as many people as possible for the upcoming 2017 solar eclipse, a spectacular astronomical event where the moon blots out the sun during the day. Anyone standing in the path of the "total eclipse" zone, which spans from Oregon to South Carolina, will get a precious few minutes to see the sun totally blocked out, revealing a vibrant halo that shows the sun's expansive upper atmosphere.

But how prepared are we for this all-American eclipse? At a pubic talk last month, Fraknoi said said there's a long list of logistics problems and public health concerns for the upcoming Aug. 21 eclipse that are "keeping astronomers up at night." Millions of people are going to be tempted to stare directly at the sun to watch the eclipse without eye protection, he said, which can cause serious eye damage, even during a partial eclipse. What's more, the total eclipse path includes almost entirely rural cities, meaning small towns need to start planning ahead for a massive influx of visitors, traffic jams and a sudden need for public restrooms.

Fraknoi said he began planning for the eclipse about four years ago because he predicted it would be a big deal: It's the first eclipse of the internet age that's entirely over populated land, its path includes the entire United States, and the partial eclipse is going to be visible to nearly 500 million people.

Initially, he said his dream was to have Starbucks sell safe viewing glasses that would allow people to watch the eclipse without damaging their eyes. It seemed like a foolproof idea, he said, but for whatever reason Starbucks wasn't interested. He was later able to get Google and the Moore Foundation to agree to distribute 2 million viewing glasses at 4,800 public libraries all over the country, which he believes are an ideal location to reach as many people as possible.

"Despite the internet taking over things, libraries are still thriving enterprises," he said.

After wrapping up his teaching career, Fraknoi said he plans to shift gears toward writing, particularly science fiction that about science and astronomy. He said he's already joined a writers group and is coming up with stories regularly. So far, it's been a humble start to his budding hobby.

"Like many beginning authors, I have a bulletin board with rejection slips from the most important science fiction publishers in the world," he said. "But two of my stories have been published!"

A guide to the upcoming eclipse, co-written by Fraknoi, can be found online at bit.ly/2bkGSvA.

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Bringing astronomy down to earth - Mountain View Voice

Sexist Comments Spark Outrage at Major Astronomy Festival – Motherboard

The Starmus Festival is now in full swing in Trondheim, Norway, with artists, scientists, and other thinkers gathered around topics relating to space exploration and astronomy. Already, Stephen Hawking has made headlines there for suggesting that humans need to colonize Mars and the Moon ASAP, or move on to Alpha Centauri.

But on Wednesday, some heavy criticism began to emerge on Twitter that the famous festival is heavily skewed towards male panelistscriticism that became louder after Chris Pissardes, a Nobel-winning economist, suggested from the stage that he trusts Siri more when it has a "male" voice, a comment that can be heard in this video.

In a Q&A with the audience, astronomer scientist Jill Tarter got up and took the panelists to task for "piss[ing] off half the world's population," singling out Neil deGrasse Tyson for not stopping the negative comments. (At that point, deGrasse Tyson can be heard speaking up.)

Some high-profile attendees, including astrobiologist Sara Seager and physicist Jim Al-Khalili, who last year won the festival's Stephen Hawking Medal for Science Communication, said on Twitter that they'd left as a result.

"Starmus is a unique festival of science and music," Al-Khalili wrote me in an email. "Last year, [we] all acknowledged that there was a marked lack of women invited speakers and to a large extent this was addressed this year." At this year's festival, he continued, he heard excellent talks from Seager, Nobel laureate May-Britt Moser, and other female speakers.

Read More: Machine Learning Reveals Systematic Sexism in Astronomy

"My criticism on Twitter referred to a particular comment by a male panellist who made a highly sexist remark that was not picked up by moderator Larry King and should have been," Al-Khalili said, calling it "offensive to many."

Representatives from Starmus could not immediately be reached for comment.

Ellinor Alseth, a PhD student at the University of Exeter, is originally from Trondheim and attended the Starmus festival for the first time this year. After Tarter called out the panelist, Alseth sent her a tweet thanking her as a "young female scientist."

I phoned Alseth in Trondheim. She she was grateful for Tarter for calling out sexist remarks from the panel. "It was very nice to have her stand up and make a comment about this," Alseth told me, adding that "overall, the festival has been great."

Panels have been skewed male, she agreed, but partly it's because there are way more male Nobel laureates than females (its own problem originating with the Nobel Foundation's selections), and Nobel Prize winners are heavily represented here.

Alseth agreed that more female voices are needed in science. "I think diversity is the way to go."

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Sexist Comments Spark Outrage at Major Astronomy Festival - Motherboard

India’s First Astronomy Resort In Rajasthan Is Every Stargazer’s … – Indiatimes.com

For most people living in todays cities and towns, night sky is only about dust and pollution. There is literally no trace of a twinkle on the sky, all thanks to the atrocious levels air pollution.

Astroport Sarika

But for people who love to stargaze, here's some good news. Located in Rajasthan, Astroport Sariska near the Sariska National Park, is THE place to be for stargazing. The newly opened resort is just a five-hour drive from Delhi and is the second most dark place in India.

This gives on a chance to see the entire Milky Way streaking through the night sky and the view is nothing less than fantabulous.

Apart from just stargazing, the resort has brilliant camping facilities and many other activities like rock climbing, nature walk, jungle safari, village tours, track n sign, camel safari, horse riding, pottery, organic farm tour, yoga and aerobics.

Astroport Sarika

Astroport in its larger view aims at providing employment or creating entrepreneurs in the field of astronomy. Astroports are fully equipped to execute these trainings and provide certifications that can be used later to earn a livelihood, reads the information on their website.

The resort currently offers two types of accommodations, Galaxia which houses two king-size beds takes up to six people at a time. The total cost with meals amounts to approximately INR 13,000.

Astroport Sarika

The second accommodation is the Nebula which has 8 queen-size beds and can accommodate anywhere up to ten people at a time. It is priced at INR 22,000, including meals.

If you are planning the next vacation and are waiting for that perfect Instagram story. this is where you should head!

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A lecture on astronomy at MOG – The Navhind Times

NT BUZZ

President of the Association of Friends of Astronomy, Goa and the Public Astronomical observatory at Panaji, Satish Nayak will deliver a lecture on the topic Is astronomy the only alternative to mankind?on June 25 at 11 a.m. at Museum of Goa (MOG).

The MOG Sundays talk will cover howthe 21st century has brought a lot of technological innovation to humans, but how are we the humans, going in the right direction?The lecture will also focus on how fundamental problems of the survival of the planet have been ignored as mankind slips deeper into a morass of consumerism and self-gratification.The lecture will touch upon how man needs to deal with challenges of the future pertaining to astronomy.

Satish has dedicated himself to the field of astronomy and science outreach in Goa. He has conducted more than 700 presentations, lectures, workshops, sky observations, quizzes and other outreach programmes in and around Goa as well as established seven astronomical observatories in different parts of Goa to spread the love for the science of the Universe. He has also designed a special programme of astronomy education for children below15 years titled The Astro-Kids Club, Goa which has grown in popularity in the last 10 years. He has also written on space for various Goan dailies and has designed and anchored popular astronomy shows on different television channels in Konkani and Marathi likeBramhandchi Sahal,Star Trek and Antariksh Up Up and Away which has completed 150 episodes. He has done a special project on the rich history of Vedic and modern Indian astronomy and a booklet and exhibition.

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A lecture on astronomy at MOG - The Navhind Times

Astronomy Cast Ep. 453: Favorite Things We’ve Done These 10 Years – Universe Today


Universe Today
Astronomy Cast Ep. 453: Favorite Things We've Done These 10 Years
Universe Today
10 years of Astronomy Cast wow. It's been a long, fun journey. What are some of our favorite episodes and adventures over the decade we've been doing this show. Visit the Astronomy Cast Page to subscribe to the audio podcast! We usually record ...

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Astronomy Cast Ep. 453: Favorite Things We've Done These 10 Years - Universe Today

Wildfires in Arizona are threatening important observatories – Astronomy Magazine

As the Frye Fire ranged in Arizona, it crept up too close for comfort to several important observatories, including the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT), the Vatican Advanced Technology Telescope (VATT), and the Heinrich Hertz Submillimeter Telescope (SMT).

An article in the Arizona Daily Star reported that a Bible camp and a camping cabin area were also threatened.

While some Twitter reports claimed that the VATT was destroyed in the fire, Gila Valley Central says it just suffered a close call, as did the LBT. Neither was directly touched by the flames, though both sustained heat damage in the inferno.

The fire was initially sparked by a lightning strike in dry weather and hot temperatures. It is now estimated to encompass more than 11,000 acres as firefighters work to contain the blaze. The Eastern Arizona Courier reports that essential staff are still on site. The firefighters were able to contain the blaze even while battling strep throat.

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Wildfires in Arizona are threatening important observatories - Astronomy Magazine

Badlands astronomy festival to be out of this world experience – Rapid City Journal

This month, stargazers will have a great opportunity to enjoy a star-filled sky over an otherworldly landscape.

The 6th annual Badlands Astronomy Festival will bring together space science professionals, amateur astronomers, educators and youth groups for several events this weekend. The event features a weekend of planetariums shows, solar education and public stargazing.

Aaron Kaye, Badlands supervisory park ranger and festival coordinator, said the festival is a great opportunity to celebrate the beautiful night sky and learn more about space.

Because Badlands National Park is isolated from major towns and has vast stretches of land, there is very little light pollution in the park, making it a perfect spot to host an astronomy festival.

"Thankfully, this area is one of the darker places the country at this point," Kaye said.

On clear nights, visitors can see thousands of stars and the Milk Way Galaxy with amazing clarity from the park. Visitors are also treated to fly-overs by numerous satellites and the International Space Station when they peer through telescopes at the night sky.

This three-day celebration at Badlands National Park will support the continued protection and enjoyment of our incredible night skies as a precious natural resource.

The event will host planetarium shows that take place at The Ben Reifel Visitor Center Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Journey Museum will be providing the portable planetarium.

A solar observing event will take place starting Friday, June 23 and running each day through the weekend, at the visitor center from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Participants can view solar flares and sunspots through a special solar telescopes.

Each night will feature a guest speaker and public stargazing eventmultiple state-of-the-art telescopes and amateur astronomers providing constellation tours. On Friday, presenters from the Black Hills Raptor Center will talk about owls. Saturday will feature Tom Durkin of the NASA S.D. Space Grant Consortium, and on Sunday, Kevin Poe of Dark Ranger Telescope Tours will give a presentation.

Evening programs will be held at the Cedar Pass Campground Amphitheater starting at 8 p.m. on Friday and 9 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.

Astronomy Festival events do not require advance registration or tickets.

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Badlands astronomy festival to be out of this world experience - Rapid City Journal

Low-Mass Stars are Born in Pairs, Astronomers Claim – Sci-News.com

According to a team of astronomers from Harvard University and the University of California, Berkeley, low-mass stars are always born with a companion, but many, like the Sun, split up.

This artists impression shows the dust and gas around a binary star system. Image credit: ESO / L. Calcada.

Many stars have companions, including the triple star system of Alpha Centauri, just 4.3 light-years away.

Scientists have long sought an explanation. Are binary and triple stellar systems born that way? Did one star capture another? Do binary stars sometimes split up and become single stars?

Astronomers have even searched for a companion to our Sun, a star dubbed Nemesis because it was supposed to have kicked an asteroid into Earths orbit that collided with our planet and exterminated the dinosaurs. It has never been found.

Radio image of a very young binary star that formed within a dense core (oval outline) in the Perseus molecular cloud. All stars likely form as binaries within dense cores. Image credit: Sarah Sadavoy / Steven Stahler.

The new assertion is based on a radio survey of the Perseus molecular cloud, a giant stellar nursery about 600 light-years away in the constellation Perseus, and a mathematical model that can explain the Perseus observations only if all Sun-like stars are born with a companion.

We are saying, yes, there probably was a Nemesis, a long time ago, said Dr. Steven Stahler, an astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley.

We ran a series of statistical models to see if we could account for the relative populations of young single stars and binaries of all separations in the Perseus molecular cloud, and the only model that could reproduce the data was one in which all stars form initially as wide binaries.

These systems then either shrink or break apart within a million years.

Combined ALMA and VLA image of the L1448 IRS3B system, a member of the Perseus molecular cloud, with two young stars at the center and a third distant from them; spiral structure in the dusty disk surrounding them indicates instability in the disk. Image credit: Bill Saxton / ALMA / ESO / NAOJ / NRAO / AUI / NSF.

In this study, wide means that the two stars are separated by more than 500 AU (astronomical units).

A wide binary companion to our Sun would have been 17 times farther from the Sun than Neptune.

Based on this model, the Suns sibling most likely escaped and mixed with all the other stars in our region of the Milky Way Galaxy, never to be seen again.

The idea that many stars form with a companion has been suggested before, but the question is: how many? said Dr. Sarah Sadavoy, a NASA Hubble fellow at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Harvard University.

Based on our simple model, we say that nearly all stars form with a companion.

The Perseus molecular cloud is generally considered a typical low-mass star-forming region, but our model needs to be checked in other clouds.

The idea that all stars are born in a litter has implications beyond star formation, including the very origins of galaxies, Dr. Stahler added.

The findings were published recently in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (arXiv.org preprint).

_____

Sarah I. Sadavoy & Steven W. Stahler. 2017. Embedded binaries and their dense cores. MNRAS 469 (4): 3881-3900; doi: 10.1093/mnras/stx1061

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Low-Mass Stars are Born in Pairs, Astronomers Claim - Sci-News.com

Astronomy club to host NASA ambassador Wednesday – Longview Daily News

If youve ever been curious about NASA or the universe, Wednesday night might be the perfect time to get some answers.

The local Friends of Galileo Astronomy Club is featuring guest speaker Les Hasting, a NASA ambassador, for its upcoming monthly meeting Wednesday night. This free event will take place from 6 to 8 p.m in the basement of the Longview Public Library.

FOG President Chuck Ring said Hasting, a native of Skamania County, will cover a multitude of topics.

(Hasting) gives a pretty good lecture about what you can see right now and whats going to happen in the near future, Ring said. He may talk about the solar eclipse. Its just good information.

On Aug. 21, all of North America will be treated to an eclipse of the sun, which NASA describes as one of natures most awe-inspiring sights. The path of totality, in which the moon will completely cover the sun, will stretch from Lincoln Beach, Ore., to Charleston, S.C. Observers outside this path will still see a partial solar eclipse where the moon covers part of the suns disk.

In Southwest Washington, about 90 percent of the sun will be eclipsed.

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Astronomy club to host NASA ambassador Wednesday - Longview Daily News

Gravitational Astronomy? How Detecting Gravitational Waves … – Universe Today


Universe Today
Gravitational Astronomy? How Detecting Gravitational Waves ...
Universe Today
Just a couple of weeks ago, astronomers from Caltech announced their third detection of gravitational waves from the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave ...

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Gravitational Astronomy? How Detecting Gravitational Waves ... - Universe Today

Selena screening, Astronomy on Tap and more events for Tuesday fun – Austin American-Statesman

Selena Screening at the Paramount

7 p.m. June 20. $7-$12. 713 Congress Ave. austintheatre.org.

Celebrate the 20th anniversary screening of the movie Selena, starring Jennifer Lopez. It comes complete with the Paramount Theatres Anything for Selenas happy hour starting at 6 p.m. and featuring music by Selena tribute band Bidi Bidi Banda, Home Slice Pizza, a photo booth, $2 Lone Stars and more. Bustiers are encouraged. Selena is the story of Tejano music sensation Selena Quintanilla, whose life was tragically cut short at the age of 23 when she had just become a rising star with a dynamite stage presence.

Steve Earle at Waterloo Records

5 p.m. June 20. Free. 600 N. Lamar Blvd. waterloorecords.com.

The Texas-born, New York-based troubadour will feature songs from his new album, So You Wannabe an Outlaw, at this solo acoustic in-store performance. Hell be back in a couple of weeks as part of the lineup for Willie Nelsons Fourth of July Picnic, joined at that show by his longtime backing band that includes former Austinites Eleanor Whitmore and Chris Masterson, but these will be your only opportunities to hear Earle play live. Peter Blackstock

7 p.m. June 20. Free. The North Door, 502 Brushy St. northdooraustin.com/queueapp.com/events/32637.

The monthly event highlighting the cosmos over a pint of beer or two will present three exciting talks focusing on dusty star-forming galaxies, nearby galaxies and the disks around young stars, with speakers including Kimberly Sokal, Sinclaire Manning and Sydney Sherman. Hope for good weather: Astronomy on Tap organizers will have telescopes on hand to look for cool objects in the night sky. There will be a segment about astronomy in the news, as well as trivia and new giveaways.

In Good Company Dinner at Alcomar

The final installment in Alcomars dinner series featuring Chefs Alma Alcocer-Thomas and Jeff Martinez favorite local vendors highlights East Austins Boggy Creek Farm. The four-course dinner will feature fresh produce from the farm paired with cocktails and wines. Courses include items like crab-stuffed squashed, roasted heirloom tomato chipotle salsa and avocado pumpkin seed salad. Boggy Creek has become beloved in town for its tasty fruits, vegetables, fresh eggs, local honey and more.

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Selena screening, Astronomy on Tap and more events for Tuesday fun - Austin American-Statesman

First Endowed Fund at ‘Imiloa Astronomy Center – Big Island Now

Ilima Piianaia. Courtesy photo.

Earlier this year, the Imiloa Astronomy Center in Hilo announced the establishment of the first permanently endowed fund.

The fund honors the legacy of the late educator and government planner Ilima Piianaia.

Gordon Piianaia of Honolulu and Norman Piianaia of Kamuela launched the endowment in memory of their sister, and thanks to generous matching gifts from the community, the fund has already reached $55,000 and is still growing.

The Piianaia familys stated goal for the endowment is to expand access to educational programming at Imiloa by local elementary, middle and high school students. The funds are being invested in perpetuity by the University of Hawaii Foundation, and Imiloa will use the annual earnings to subsidize items such as admission fees and/or transportation to the center, scholarships for Imiloa programs, and/or program outreach to rural parts of Hawaii Island and the state.

About Ilima Piianaia (19472006) Born and raised on Oahu, Piianaia pursued a noteworthy career in the public sector, starting with her service as a Hawaii County planner helping to develop a general plan for the island. She later served with the Hawaii Community Development Authority and worked on the Kakaako Improvement District, among other projects.

She lecturedabout geography and planning at UH Mnoa from 1980 to 1984, administered the Task Force on the Hawaiian Homes Commission from 1982to 1983, then held appointments as Hawaii County deputy planning director, director of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, director of the Office of International Relations and Affairs, and deputy director of the state Department of Agriculture.

A longtime friend of Ilima, Deanne Lemle Bosnak, remembers her as a perfect embodiment of aloha. She personally represented Hawaiis beautiful blend of cultures, its warm hospitality and its welcoming aloha spirit. She was also a diplomat who worked hard to build bridges between disparate communities and cultures, demonstrating in everything she did a deep respect for the land and the values of its people.

Courtesy photo provided by Imiloa Astronomy Center.

This spring, Imiloa marked the 11th anniversary of our opening, so this is a propitious time to be launching the centers first permanent endowment, which will ensure that we share our unique brand of programming with both current and future generations of schoolchildren, Imiloa Executive Director Kaiu Kimura said about the gift.We are humbled by the generosity of the Piianaia family and the many friends of Ilima who have stepped forward to support our mission and help us reach more young people throughout our second decade and beyond!

This wonderful gift will benefit the children of Hawaii for years to come, said University of Hawaii at Hilo Chancellor Donald Straney.

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First Endowed Fund at 'Imiloa Astronomy Center - Big Island Now

Kepler yields a handful of promising planetary candidates – Astronomy Magazine

The newest Kepler catalog draws out 219 new planetary candidates and infers that 10 of them may be habitable doubling the number of planetary candidates in the habitable zone of their star. The Kepler catalog now stands at 2,335 confirmed planets and 4,034 strong candidates.

This catalog marks the final results of the first Kepler mission, which stared at the same portion of the sky for three-and-a-half years before a busted reaction wheel forced NASA to pivot the mission to other forms of planet hunting. There were only a small number of newly confirmed planets.

The data of the final catalog also suggests that there is a certain point at which super-Earths become more Neptune like, with a jump in mass as planets accumulate. This is why there seems to be so few planets between three and 10 Earth masses.

The Kepler telescope looked for planetary transits, when a planet passes in front of its star and causes a slight dip in its light. The original mission took a small sample of the sky in the Cygnus constellation to act as a sort of statistical survey. When a signal is sufficiently strong, its considered confirmed. If it cant quite be confirmed, its considered a candidate until further observation can verify a planet there.

You can scroll the list of all discovered exoplanets here.

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Kepler yields a handful of promising planetary candidates - Astronomy Magazine

The central peaks of Tycho – Blastr

One my favorite things about living in Colorado is the view of the mountains. Even in late spring,the Rockies nearby are tall enough to have snow on them, and a decent rainfall where I live means more snow on the loftier peaks. If its deep enough the mountains lose all contrast, just appearing as eye-achingly white figures thrusting up into the sky.

And that may be why I love the above image so much. Truthfully, if I didnt tell you, would you have guessed that those are mountains on the Moon?

But they are. That cluster of peaks sits right in the center of the large crater Tycho, in the Moons southern hemisphere on the near side. Check out the peaks in context:

Ah, get it now? In this oblique view taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter when it was a mere 59 kilometers above the Moons surface, Tychos far crater rim wall can be seen above the mountains, and the near rim below them. The Sun was high in the sky when this was taken, so shadows are short, giving the landscape its luminous quality.

Usually LRO observes the area of the Moon directly below it, but it is sometimes commanded to look off to the side to get a wider view of the moonscape. In this case, it helps get context for these mountains, instead of just seeing them from straight above.

Contrast this with how they appear when the Sun is low:

I know, right? That was also taken by LRO, back in 2011. I love the long shadow of the cluster stretching behind them, and the shadow of the crater rim encroaching on the lower right.

As much as they might look like the mountains I can see out my window, they formed very differently. The Rockies were pushed up by tectonic forces under the Earths surface, taking millions of years (the current mountains formed near the end of the Cretaceous period).

The Tycho peaks formed in a few minutes. Yes, minutes.

About 100 million years ago, an asteroid something like 5-10 km across slammed into the Moons surface. The huge energy released was far, far larger than what youd get out of every nuke on Earth today if you detonated them all simultaneously. The explosion created a colossal shock wave in the Moons surface, carving out many cubic kilometers of material, creating the crater in just a few minutes. Material ejected from the center flew upward and outward for hundreds of kilometers, and when the plumes collapsed onto the surface they formed bright rays, all pointing back toward the impact center.

As for the central peaks ... take a glass, fill it with water, and then let a drop fall into it from a height. It will form a temporary crater in the water surface that quickly collapses. Thats due to gravity; the displaced water is in a wave that is above the surface of the rest of the water, so it falls down and flows back inward. This creates a wave rushing toward the center from all sides. When it reaches the center, that water all crashes into itself, sending a column of water up into the air.

Thats what happens when craters form, too! The rock flows outward after the impact, but then once its momentum dies it starts to flow back toward the impact point. That shrinking circle of material meets at the center, then flies upward. It solidifies like that, forming those mountains.

Mind you, the peaks in Tycho are 2000 meters high! That must have been a helluva flow. Incredible.

Over the years, Ive seen Tycho through telescopes hundreds of times. Its best at full Moon when the rays are bright, and its beautiful. But its formation was an event so colossal that had that rock hit Earth instead, the dinosaurs wouldve been wiped out much earlier.

By the fortunes of trajectory and velocity they got an extra 35 million years to rule the Earth, but then were wiped out by a similar event anyway. We know no asteroid that big is headed our way anytime soon, but it doesnt take one 10 km across to give us a bad day. Hopefully, when we do see one coming our way, well be able to do better than just watch it come in.

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The central peaks of Tycho - Blastr

Chinese astronomy satellite placed into orbit by Long March rocket – Spaceflight Now

Chinas Long March 4B rocket lifts off Thursday with the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope. Credit: Xinhua

Chinas first X-ray astronomy satellite launched Thursday on a mission to survey the Milky Way galaxy for black holes and pulsars, the remnants left behind after a star burns up its nuclear fuel.

The Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope will also detect gamma-ray bursts, the most violent explosions in the universe, and try to help astronomers link the outbursts with gravitational waves, unseen ripples through the cosmos generated by cataclysmic events like supernova explosions and mergers of black holes.

The orbiting X-ray observatory, renamed Huiyan, or Insight, following Thursdays launch, is Chinas first space telescope and second space mission dedicated to astronomy after a Chinese particle physics probe was sent into orbit in 2015 to search for evidence of dark matter.

Before its launch, we could only use second-hand observation data from foreign satellites, said Xiong Shaolin, a scientist at the Institute of High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. It was very hard for Chinese astronomers to make important findings without our own instruments.

The only way to make original achievements is to construct our own observation instruments, Xiong said in a report by Chinas state-run Xinhua news agency.Now Chinese scientists have created this space telescope with its many unique advantages, and its quite possible we will discover new, strange and unexpected phenomena in universe.

The X-ray telescope launched at 0300 GMT Thursday (11 p.m. EDT Wednesday) aboard a Long March 4B rocket from the Jiuquan space center in northwestern Chinas Gobi Desert. Liftoff occurred at 11 a.m. Thursday Beijing time.

The Long March 4B booster, powered by three hydrazine-fueled stages, delivered the Huiyan telescope into a 335-mile-high (540-kilometer) orbit tilted 43 degrees to the equator, according to tracking data released by the U.S. military. That is very close to the X-ray telescopes intended operating orbit.

Ground controllers plan to activate and test the observatory over the next five months before entering service late this year, fulfilling a mission first proposed by Chinese scientists in 1994 and formally approved by the Chinese government in 2011, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

The 5,500-pound (2,500-kilogram) Huiyan spacecraft is designed for a four-year mission. Its three X-ray instruments, sorted to observe low, medium and high-energy X-rays, are sensitive to 1,000 to 250,000 electron volts, an energy range that encompasses the energy of a medical X-ray.

Earths atmosphere absorbs X-ray light signals, so astronomers must build and launch satellites for the job. X-ray observatories are uniquely suited for studies of black holes and neutron stars, two of the densest types of objects in the universe created in the aftermath of supernovas, the explosions at the end of a stars life.

Unlike X-ray telescopes launched by NASA and the European Space Agency, Chinas Huiyan mission does not use grazing mirrors, which must be extremely flat to reflect high-frequency X-ray waves. Chinese officials said they do not have the expertise to build such flat mirrors, so scientists came up with a backup plan that does not rely on traditional imaging.

The observing method, called demodulation, can help reconstruct the image of X-ray sources by using data from relatively simple non-imaging detectors, such as a telescope with collimators that collects and records X-ray photons parallel to a specified direction, Xinhua reported.

Scientists said the Chinese X-ray telescope will be able to observe brighter targets than other X-ray missions because the demodulation method diffuses X-ray light. Other telescopes reflect and focus X-ray photons onto detectors.

No matter how bright the sources are, our telescope wont be blinded, said Chen Yong, chief designer of Huiyans low-energy X-ray instrument, in an interview with Xinhua.

We are looking forward to discovering new activities of black holes and studying the state of neutron stars under extreme gravity and density conditions, and physical laws under extreme magnetic fields, said Zhang Shuangnan, the X-ray missions lead scientist. These studies are expected to bring new breakthroughs in physics.

Another set of detectors on the Huiyan telescope, originally added to shield against background noise, can be adjusted to make the observatory sensitive to even higher-energy gamma rays, according to the Xinhua news agency.

The detection of gravitational waves by ground-based sensors in Washington and Louisiana opened a new door in astronomy. Created by distant collisions and explosions, gravitational waves are ripples through the fabric of spacetime, and astronomers now seek to connect the phenomena with events seen by conventional telescopes.

Since gravitational waves were detected, the study of gamma-ray bursts has become more important, Zhang said in Xinhuas report on the mission. In astrophysics research, its insufficient to study just the gravitational wave signals. We need to use the corresponding electromagnetic signals, which are more familiar to astronomers, to facilitate the research on gravitational waves.

The launch of the Huiyan space telescope comes as NASA scientists turn on and calibrate another X-ray instrument recently delivered to the International Space Station.

After its launch June 3 on a SpaceX supply ship heading to the space station, NASAs Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer will spend the next 18 months studying the structure and behavior of neutron stars.

Three other satellites joined Chinas Huiyan spacecraft on Thursdays launch.

The OVS 1A and 1B satellites are the first two members of a commercial constellation of Earth-imaging craft for Zhuhai Orbita Control Engineering Co. Ltd. based in southern Chinas Guangdong province. The two 121-pound (55-kilogram) satellites will record high-resolution video from orbit, and future spacecraft in the Zhuhai 1 fleet will collect hyperspectral and radar imagery.

TheuSat 3 microsatellite owned by Satellogic, an Argentine company, was also aboard the Long March 4B rocket Thursday.

Built in Montevideo, Uruguay, by a Satellogic subsidiary company,uSat 3 weighs around 80 pounds (37 kilograms) and is identical to twouSat satellites launched on a Chinese rocket in May 2016.

Each uSat craft hosts cameras to capture imagery in color, infrared and in the hyperspectral regime, which gives analysts additional information about the makeup of objects, plants and terrain in Earth observation products. The satellites can resolve features on Earth as small as 3.3 feet (1 meter) across.

uSat 3 is nicknamed Milanesat, after the traditional Argentine steak dish Milanesa. The first twouSat satellites launched last year were named after Argentine desserts.

Satellogic is one of several privately-funded companies launching sharp-eyed commercial Earth-viewing satellites to collect daily images of the entire planet. The company says its satellite constellation, which could eventually number from 25 to several hundred spacecraft, will help urban planners, emergency responders, crop managers, and scientists tracking the effects of climate change.

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Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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Chinese astronomy satellite placed into orbit by Long March rocket - Spaceflight Now

Prairie Astronomy Club will have solar telescopes set up – Lincoln Journal Star

The monthly meeting of the Prairie Astronomy Club is 7:30 p.m. Tuesday (June 27) at Hyde Memorial Observatory on the south side of Holmes Park. The club will have a special solar observing event that same evening starting at 6 p.m.

Club members will have special solar telescopes set up to safely look at the sun. The public is encouraged to come and observe the sun through these telescopes. The Total Solar Eclipse on Aug. 21 is considered a once-in-a-lifetime event. Youll want to be as prepared as possible to enjoy this occurrence.

Come to the Prairie Astronomy Clubs monthly meeting June 27 and let us assist you in being as prepared as possible, says club spokesman Jim Kvasnicka.

The Prairie Astronomy Club will answer any questions you have regarding the upcoming Total Solar Eclipse which will occur Aug. 21 at the clubs monthly meeting in June.

Topics to be discussed are likely to include:

- When will the eclipse begin?

- How long will it last?

- What will I see?

- What do I need to safely look at the sun?

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Prairie Astronomy Club will have solar telescopes set up - Lincoln Journal Star

Best stargazing spots in Northern Virginia

Despite a dense population and seemingly denser traffic, Northern Virginia has its fair share of prime stargazing spots, many of which host regular educational classes and programs. Photo courtesy of Allexxandarx/Adobe Stock

For both amateur and seasoned astronomers, there are plenty of ways to get lost looking into space in D.C., like the National Air and Space Museumand farther out at Shenandoah National Park and Richmonds Virginia Living Museum. But despite a dense population and seemingly denser traffic, Northern Virginia also has its fair share of prime stargazing spots, many of which host regular classes and programs to grow a fledgling hobby and learn more about the sky above.

Burke Lake Park

Burke Lake Parks open fields lend themselves well to stargazing, and on Jan. 21, the parks resident astronomical naturalist will lead acampfirewith a discussionabout stargazing. There, you can learn more about constellations and try outprovided telescopes. //7315 Ox Road, Fairfax Station

C.M. Crockett Park

C.M. Crockett Parks expansive open field is an ideal location to spot constellations, planets, star clusters and galaxies. The Northern Virginia Astronomy Club holds monthly public viewings, and club members and nonmembers of all experience levels are welcome. The next viewing will take place Jan. 28. // 10066 Rogues Road, Midland

David M. Brown Planetarium

Located at the Arlington Schools Education Center, the David M. Brown Planetarium hosts itsStars Tonightprogram on the first Monday of every month at 7:30 p.m. Regular attendeescan track changes in the solar system. //1426 N. Quincy St., Arlington

GMU Observatory

While George Mason Universitys observatory is typically reserved for students, it frequently hosts its Evening Under the Stars program, where participants can look through the schools primary telescope. //George Mason University College of Science: 10401 York River Road, Fairfax

Meadowkirk at Delta Farm

Meadowkirks Brinton Observatory, also partnered with the Northern Virginia Astronomy Club, is an ideal spot check out the night sky, featuring a number of telescopes and regular astronomy programs. There are programs geared toward both children and more experienced stargazers that explore the moon and planets, the greater solar system and constellations and deep space. //38012 Delta Farm Lane, Middleburg

Observatory Park at Turner Farm

Out in Great Falls, you can see the stars from one of the regions darkest locations, and even better, Turner Farmrecently opened a new roll-top observatory that offers programs and equipment for optimal viewing. The Analemma Society helms educational programming at the park, including weekly Fridayobserving sessionsfrom 7:30-9:30 p.m. Participants who stop by this month might just be able to seeVenus, the Andromeda galaxy and the Orion nebula. // 925 Springvale Road, Great Falls

Sky Meadows State Park

Sky Meadows offers a dedicated observing fieldnear the Bleak Hill House for Northern Virginia Astronomy Club members as well as nonmembers, and the parkregularly partners with the National Air and Space Museum for events. // 11012 Edmonds Lane, Delaplane

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Best stargazing spots in Northern Virginia

Planetarium sees solar eclipse as opportunity to raise interest in astronomy – Deseret News

Adobe Stock photo

FILE With an impending deep solar eclipse overshadowing their efforts, the Clark Planetarium hosted a gala to foster excitement for astronomy education.

SALT LAKE CITY With an impending deep solar eclipse overshadowing their efforts, the Clark Planetarium hosted a gala Thursday to foster excitement for astronomy education.

In anticipation a solar eclipse that will be viewable across much of the United States on Aug. 21, the Clark Planetarium has renewed its efforts to offer education resources and draw excitement to its programs for students with the help of former NASA scientist Phil Plait.

"Total eclipses are rare, and we haven't had one in the United States for quite some time," said Tom Beckett, an organizer of the planetarium gala. "This is a great opportunity to use an astronomical event to get people interested in astronomy."

Though Salt Lake City will not see the totality of the eclipse only a 91 percent partial coverage people may see the complete event from as close as Driggs, Idaho.

The planetarium's gala is a fundraiser to create astronomy education resources.

Plait returned to the planetarium for his third speaking appearance. Known as the "Bad Astronomer," he offered a keynote speech to explain the mechanics behind the eclipse and dispel some of the misunderstandings about eclipses.

"There are a lot of eclipse myths like, if you look at it, you'll go blind," Plait said.

Plait, who began public speaking while he was working for on the Hubble telescopes, said he sees his speaking engagements as something of a stand-up routine for science. He refers to himself as a science communicator and earned the title of the "Bad Astronomer" through his efforts at dispelling scientific misconceptions and creating humor around the concepts.

The risk associated with viewing an eclipse, he explained, comes after the roughly two-minute period of totality where the moon passes in front of the sun. That period of time allows the pupil of the eye to dilate, adjusting to the shadow cast by the moon, and the risk of injury follows as the moon continues forward, suddenly exposing the brightness of the sun once again.

Plait noted that despite this effect, he has yet to encounter a documented case of anyone becoming totally blinded by a passing eclipse.

"You can lose a little bit of your vision forever, or all of it for a short time, but your eye can heal," he said.

Beckett said there will be educators and telescopes available at the planetarium and throughout Salt Lake County during the eclipse to accommodate viewers who are not able to drive to Idaho to see the full eclipse.

Beckett also said the planetarium will have a viewing party as the Earth comes into alignment with Saturn and the sun, creating the best chance for people to see the rings of Saturn for another 17 years.

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Planetarium sees solar eclipse as opportunity to raise interest in astronomy - Deseret News

Jupiter has two new moons | Astronomy.com – Astronomy Magazine

As if the gas giant wasnt impressive enough, Jupiters already long list of moons has just grown by two.

While on the hunt for Planet X, DTM staff scientist Scott Sheppard, along with David Tholen from the University of Hawaii and Chadwick Trujillo from Northern Arizona University, decided to point their telescopes toward Jupiter. From there, the team could study Jupiter in the foreground while continuing their search for Planet X in the background.

While making those observations, they discovered many lost moons in addition to two new, mile-wide moons theyre calling S/2016 J 1 and S/2017 J 1. The new moons lie about 13 million miles (21 million kilometers) and 15 million miles (24 million kilometers) from Jupiter.

Several of the moons Sheppards team found qualify as lost moons - despite their discovery back in 2003, there was not enough information to define their exact orbits, so astronomers lost track of them as they circled Jupiter. Some moons have been found since that time, but at the beginning of 2016, 14 were still considered lost.

While observing, Sheppard and his team added their data from 2016-2017 to data from 2003 and found five of those lost moons. They will continue observing for another year to see if they can identify the rest of the lost moons; they may find more new moons, too.

In the meantime, after checking their 2016-2017 data against images taken in 2003, the team confirmed that S/2016 J 1 and S/2017 J 1 are previously undiscovered moons, bringing the number of Jupiters moons up to 69.

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Jupiter has two new moons | Astronomy.com - Astronomy Magazine