Category Archives: ‘Casts

My vodcasts can be found here. Happy viewing!

Visit 80 Telescopes in 24 Hours

Around the World in 80 Telescopes

Ever wonder what it’s like on top of all those mountains and in the institutes where astronomy gets done? I know I always did — until I actually spent time observing on Mauna Kea back in the 1990s.  It was everything I expected, and more!

If you’re interested in knowing what it’s like in those places, the European Southern Observatory is doing a free 24-hour public video webcast called “Around the World in 80 Telescopes.” This event is part of “100 Hours of Astronomy” which is part of the International Year of Astronomy. It’s designed and produced to let everybody who logs in to the site to visit some of the most advanced observatories on — and above — the planet. The stream begins on April 3 at 09:00 GMT (that’s 5 a.m. on the U.S. East Coast) until April 4 at 09:00 GMT.  During that time you’ll see new images of the cosmos, find out what observatories are doing, and have the opportunity to send in questions and messages to the folks doing Big Astronomy.

A map of observatories participating in Around the World in 80 Telescopes.  (Click to embiggen.)
A map of observatories participating in "Around the World in 80 Telescopes." (Click to embiggen.)

Participating telescopes include those at observatories in Chile such as ESO’s Very Large Telescope and La Silla, the Hawaii-based telescopes Gemini North and Keck, the Anglo-Australian Telescope, telescopes in the Canary Islands and the Southern African Large Telescope. A number of space-based telescopes such as the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, ESA XMM-Newton and Integral are also taking part in this 24-hour “Observatory-a-thon”.  Around the World in 80 Telescopes will take viewers to every continent, including Antarctica!

Read more about this great chance to visit the world’s observatories at the event’s website. There, you’ll find links to the webcast and a whole lot of background on the production.

On a personal note, Mark’s music is being used on the Gemini Observatory webcast for this event. Right now, it’s the first one up in the rotation, which means we’ll need to get up early to catch it!  For you folks in Europe, you can start enjoying the full-day event over morning tea or coffee!!   So, wherever you are, check it out!

Space Weather FX Hits iTunes

WooHoo!

Space Weather FX hits iTunes!
Space Weather FX hits iTunes!

Mark and I have been working on a series of “vodcasts” (video podcasts) about space weather as part of a NASA-funded project with the folks over at MIT’s Haystack Observatory. Each episode covers a different aspect of space weather and the research that atmospheric scientists do about the causes and effects of space weather.  When we finish filming and editing them all, there will be 8 episodes.

The first two are up now (you can find them here at Haystack’s web site and here and here on YouTube) and we just found out last week that they’re available (for free) on iTunes. If you’re an iTunes devotee, click here for a link to the first two shows (you’ll need to have iTunes installed on your computer for this to work).

The third episode goes up after Christmas sometime, and the rest are slated for release in the first half of 2009 along with an online survey for audience members to fill out.

We encourage you to watch them; if you’re a teacher, please feel free to point your students toward them. The Haystack web pages have some additional material for teachers, so if you’d like to use these in the classroom, point your browser there for more details.  If you’re an AAS member and will be attending the Long Beach meeting, please stop by the poster paper our team is presenting on Wednesday, January 7 at the conference.