Lighting Up the Sky

It’s a Waste

There’s a wonderful video splashed across the Web that shows the massive amount of light that human beings are pumping up to the sky. It’s startling to see because it’s from space, from the NASA-NOAA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (NPP).  This satellite has a sensor onboard that lets it look at our planet during the nighttime hours, and the view is startling. Light is splashed across the surface, showing clearly where we live, work, and travel.

I’m jazzed about this latest release from NASA because I’ve been working on a short video for the International Dark-Sky Association called Losing the Dark.  It is being produced for use in planetariums and also in flat-screen theaters. In a few short minutes it details the problems of light pollution, the costs, and the very simple steps we can all take to mitigate the unneeded use of light at night.  The video is in the final stages of completion and should be available early next year free of charge for theaters and anyone who want to use it in outreach.

I was surprised and very pleased to learn last month that the IDA has given me (and my company) an award for our work. I’m very proud to announce that I’m now a “Dark Sky Defender”. In that role, I plan to continue sharing the news about how to safely light our communities!

As a start, here’s NASA’s video, just to impress on your mind the magnitude of humanity’s unanticipated splash to the stars. Click on the image to start the movie. (You can also view it and a larger story about the image here.)

The United States at night. Courtesy NASA/GSFC. (Click on image to see the video.)

This is light pollution as seen from space, folks. It may look pretty, but the price we’re paying for it is not. It costs money to burn the fuel to turn on all those lights. In many places, that fuel is fossil fuel, with its attendant environmental risks.

It also costs us in terms of health for every living thing on this planet. Humans are affected by constant exposure to light at night. Migratory animals die each year due to the confusion brought on by improper lighting practices. This wildlife kill affects everything from birds to sea turtles to insects to marine life. It turns out that life needs regular periods of darkness for good health.

Last, but not least, light pollution wipes out our view of the night sky. There are people in cities who don’t even know what the Milky Way looks like, and may only see a few bright stars and planets in their night skies. For astronomers doing research, light pollution can be catastrophic. There are only a few places left on Earth where an observatory isn’t encroached on by unnecessary lights.

Of course, there’s no question that we need light at night. Nobody’s saying that we should turn off all the lights.  What we are saying is learn to use light properly, just like any other tool that makes our lives easier.

Wise lighting begins at home and in our communities, with assessing the kinds of lights we use for security. Those lights should be pointed down, not up. Same is true of parking lots and other lit-up spaces in our communities. We can also figure out how to cut down the numbers of lights we use and when we use them. For example, there’s no excuse for pointing lights UP at buildings at night. Lighting up a church steeple, or the side of a shopping center, or a tall office building just to show off the name or whatever message it is the building’s owners are trying to send is just no longer cool. Not when we can all save money by using light properly (and find other, better uses for that money saved in our families and communities).

Those are just a few examples of needless light waste. You can find many more around your community.  Point out to those building owners just how much less it would cost them to install full cutoff fixtures shining directly ON their signs and not splashing needlessly up to the sky.  A lot of migrating birds and other animals — not to mention the building neighbors — would thank them for the welcome gift of peaceful darkness overhead (and not shining directly in nearby windows).

In the end, light pollution mitigation is just common sense.

Want to know more about the effects of light pollution and how to wisely use light?  Visit the IDA’s website — become a dark sky defender in your community!

 

Gifting the Universe, Part III

 Music of the Cosmos

Mark C. Petersen performing a live GEODESIUM concert at the Boston Hayden Planetarium. Courtesy Loch Ness Productions.

Does the universe have a soundtrack? You bet it does! And I know the guy who composes the best cosmic soundtrack music around. I’m married to him. His name is Mark C. Petersen, and he composes under the nom de plume GEODESIUM. Mark has spent much of his career creating music that evokes and teaches about the cosmos. He also founded the company that we both work for, Loch Ness Productions (we specialize in cosmically creative content).

If you’ve ever visited a planetarium or listened to Music from the Hearts of Space, or seen some of the productions on Space.com, you may have heard some of Mark’s music. It gives listeners an idea of what it’s like to be exploring the planets, drifting through nebulae, gallivanting through galaxies, and simply enjoying the glittering loveliness of a clear dark night here on Earth.

Mark got started many years ago doing music for soundtracks at the Fiske planetarium at the University of Colorado (we got married under the dome at Fiske). People would come up after the shows and ask where they could get the music they heard, and so he pressed his first album, called “Geodesium”, which is also the name he composes under.

Now he’s got eleven albums of GEODESIUM space music available through our own Web site, as well as CDBaby, iTunes, Amazon, Rhapsody, Spotify, and many other online retailers. I like them all, but I do have my favorates, including A Gentle Rain of Starlight, Stella Novus, West of the Galaxy, and Fourth Universe. A more recent album is an exploration into the rockin’ side of space music for a video-game type show called SpacePark360. He’s also got one called ‘Tis the Season that evokes the timeless traditions that many people celebrate at this time of the year. It’s a space music journey through holiday traditions. So, whether you’re looking to give music that is especially spacey or you want something a little bit rockin’ or even something to enjoy while sipping a warm holiday drink, check out Mark’s music!

Books, Books, Books

Find The Constellations, by H.A. Rey, is a perennial favorite.

People often ask me what astronomy books they should give as holiday gifts. I’ll start here with a couple of stargazing books that are by far my favorites for beginners. The first is H.A. Rey’s Find the Constellations (Houghton Mifflin), a beginner’s book for little (and even not-so-little) stargazers. It’s a great way to get the youngest observers out there and looking up!

Rey also has a book for older stargazers called The Stars: A New Way to See Them. He takes the ideas he introduced in Find the Constellations and expands on them, adding more constellations in, plus discussions about how the seasons work, and distant objects such as supernovae. Both of the H.A. Rey books introduce a system of easy-to-recognize stick figures for constellation. They’re the figures I grew up seeing in the sky and you (or whoever you give the book to) will learn to love them, too.

Terence Dickenson’s well-known book, courtesy Firefly Books.

Another favorite is Nightwatch: A Practical Guide to Viewing the Universe (Firefly Books). This one gets a lot of use when I’m doing shows or, as I’m doing now, writing an astronomy book. It’s a great reference when I want to look up when something is in the sky, and I often use it just before running outside to look at the stars. It’s spiral-bound, which is a big plus in my mind because that means if you take it outside to consult during stargazing, it lies FLAT.

A look at Navajo star legends and cosmology. Courtesy Rio Nuevo Publishers.

If you’re interested in exploring at how other cultures view the sky, I just ran across a lovely book called Sharing the Skies (Rio Nuevo Publishers) It’s written by David Begay and Nancy C. Maryboy, who both bring their cultural viewpoint and their science backgrounds to their work. I first got interested in other astronomies when I did a show for the St. Louis Science Center and we used the Collinsville Mounds as a steppingstone to the stars.

My reference work at that time included a great book by Ray Williamson called Living the Sky: The Cosmos of the American Indian (University of Oklahoma Press). It was published in 1987, but remains a wonderful resource to learn about how other cultures view the sky. And, it’s still in print!

Further along the road of exploring cultural interpretations in astronomy, you can’t go wrong with any of the books on the subject by Dr. E.C. Krupp, director of Griffith Observatory. I have SkyWatchers, Shamans & Kings and Echoes of the Ancient Skies (which is available through Griffith’s online gift shop) and both are first-rate. All these books are available at your favorite bookstores and online retailers (Amazon, Barnes and Noble), and as well as Tattered CoverPowell’s, and maybe your local bookstores, too!

 

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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