2009
Index
Andy Fraknoi's IYA
Calendar. -|- IYA 100 Hours of Astronomy
January-|-February-|-March
-|-April-|-May-|-June-|-July-|-August-|-September-|-October-|-November-|-December
For individual club calendars, see AANC
Resource Guide.
Events in previous years (Archives):
1996-2002 --||-- 2003 --||-- 2004 --||-- 2005 --||-- 2006 --||-- 2007 --||-- 2008
January-|-February-|-March -|-April-|-May-|-June-|-July-|-August-|-September-|-October-|-November-|-December
January, 2009
- 2009 Jan 2 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
5:01 pm, 36% moon sets 11:13 pm. Star party hours:
7:00 until 10:00 pm.
- 2009 Jan 10 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Dr. Ruslan Belikov of NASA/Ames, Searching For Other
Earths Board meeting at 6:30; General Meeting at 8:00
- 2009 January 12 Mon 7:30pm - Alex Filippenko, University
of California, Berkeley. Benjamin Dean Lecture Series
in Astronomy, Morrison Planetarium, California Academy
of Sciences, 55 Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA
94118; 415-379-8000; deanseries@calacademy.org ; http://www.calacademy.org/events -
Observations of very distant exploding stars (supernovae)
show that the expansion of the Universe is now speeding
up, rather than slowing down due to gravity as expected.
Other, completely independent data strongly support
this amazing conclusion. Over the largest distances,
our Universe seems to be dominated by a repulsive "dark
energy," stretching the very fabric of space itself
faster and faster with time. The physical nature of
dark energy is often considered to be the most important
unsolved problem in physics; it probably provides clues
to a unified quantum theory of gravity. Adults $10,
Seniors $8, California Academy of Sciences Members
$5
- 2009 Jan 16 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
5:15 pm, 58% moon rise 11:57 pm. Star party hours:
7:00 until 10:00 pm.
- 2009 Jan 16 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. The topic will be Telescopes & Eyepieces.
- 2009 Jan 17 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 5:16
pm, 48% moon rise 12:57 am.
- January 17 UC Berkeley Astronomy Department Lecture
- Geoff Marcy The Search for Habitable Planets and
Life in the Universe - in Genetics and Plant Biology
Building, Room 100. http://astro.berkeley.edu/~scroft/iya/
- 2009 Jan 21 Wed at 7 pm, Astronomer Anthony Colaprete
of NASA's Ames Research Center will give a non-technical,
illustrated talk on: Prospecting for Water on the Moon:
The Upcoming LCROSS MIssion as part of the Silicon
Valley Astronomy Lectures in the Smithwick Theater,
Foothill College, El Monte Road and Freeway 280, in
Los Altos Hills, California. Call the series hot-line
at 650-949-7888 for more information and driving directions.
This coming April, NASA will purposely crash two spacecraft
into one of the Moon's polar regions. The impacts should
raise huge plumes of material, visible even to smaller
telescopes on Earth. Astronomers will search for evidence
of water in the plumes to get a better sense of how
much frozen water may lay hidden in the deep, shadowed
craters of the Moon's North and South poles. Dr. Colaprete,
the Principal Investigator for this intriguing mission,
will fill us in on why scientists believe there is
water on the Moon (even though there is no air), and
how we might put such water to use in future exploration.
He will preview the LCROSS mission and discuss the
campaign to observe the plumes from Earth and space.
The lecture is co-sponsored by: * NASA Ames Research
Center * The Foothill College Astronomy Program * The
SETI Institute * The Astronomical Society of the Pacific.
Past Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures are now available
in MP3 format at: http://www.astrosociety.org/education/podcast
- 2009 Jan 24 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 5:24
pm, 1% moon rises 6:59 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved.
- 2009 January 28, Wednesday, 12:00 noon The SETI Institute,
Europa room. Surface modifications by winds on Earth,
Mars, Venus, and Titan - Ron Greeley, Regent's Professor,
Arizona State University. Windblown dunes, ripples,
and erosional features are seen on Earth, Venus, and
Titan, while on Mars these features are ubiquitous
and reflect the dominant agent of surface modification.
Although the fundamental process is similar, the environments
on these planetary objects are substantially different.
Simulations conducted in the Planetary Aeolian Laboratory
at NASA-Ames, coupled with field work and modeling,
enable analyses of wind-related features and processes
on planetary surfaces. Colloquium series webpage: http://www.seti.org/csc/lectures
CSC/ SETI Institute Colloquium Series: The colloquiums
are free and open to the public, and run from noon
to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI Institute, 515 N.
Whisman Road, Mountain View, California.
- 2009 Jan 30 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
5:31 pm, 21% moon sets 10:09 pm. Star party hours:
7:00 until 10:00 pm.
January-|-February-|-March -|-April-|-May-|-June-|-July-|-August-|-September-|-October-|-November-|-December
February, 2009
- 2009 Feb 2. 7:30pm-9:00pm. Dean Lecture - encore
presentation of Alex Filippenko's talk, "Dark
Energy and the Runaway Universe." This special
encore is intended for those who were unable to attend
the original lecture. Reservations for all of the spring
lecture series now available by calling 415-379-8000
and pressing 0 for an agent. We strongly recommend
advance ticketing. We are unable to guarantee tickets
at the door, so please check with our phone representatives
or on our website at www.calacademy.org for the status
of ticket sales. E-mail: deanseries@calacademy.org;
Web: http://www.calacademy.org/events/index.php
- 2009 FEB 2 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- KEPLER’S HUNT FOR HABITABLE PLANETS - Dr. Natalie
Batalha of San José State University and NASA Ames
Research Center will describe the science objectives
of NASA’s Kepler Mission, scheduled to launch in March,
and will also highlight some of the job opportunities
that exist for physics majors in the space sciences.
Sonoma State University Darwin 103, Coffee at 3:30
p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009 Feb 3. Astrophysicist Mario Livio discusses
and signs his latest book 'Is God a Mathematician?
' - 07:30 PM at Kepler's, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo
Park, CA 94025. A fascinating exploration of the great
discoveries of historyâs most important mathematicians
seeks an answer to the eternal question: Does mathematics
hold the key to understanding the mysteries of our
physical world? Mario Livio is a senior astrophysicist
and Head of the Office of Public Outreach at the Hubble
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore,
Maryland. He is the author of The Golden Ratio, a highly
acclaimed book about mathematics and art for which
he received the International Pythagoras Prize and
the Peano Prize, The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved
and The Accelerating Universe. Introduction by Dr.
Keith Devlin, a Consulting Professor in the Department
of Mathematics at Stanford, an author, and "the
Math Guy" on National Public Radio
- 2009 Feb 5. The Commonwealth Club is hosting Neil
deGrasse Tyson, Director of the Hayden Planetarium
and author of The Pluto Files. He'll talk about how
exactly he led the way for the demotion of Pluto as
a planet. There will be a wine and cheese reception
starting at 5:30, followed by the program at 6:00 pm.
The event is in the Blue Room of the Commonwealth Club
office, which is located at 595 Market St., 2nd Floor,
San Francisco, CA 94105. Tickets to the event are being
sold at $18 per person, but for students, tickets are
only $7. For more details about the event, please visit
this website: http://tickets.commonwealthclub.org/auto_choose_ga.asp?area=1 .
- 2009 February 7 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting.
Our speaker is Dr.Chris McKay of NASA, who will tell
us "What We Have Learned From the Mars Phoenix
Lander". Board meeting at 6:30; General Meeting
at 8:00 This is the Annual Meeting, to elect the Board
of Directors.
- 2009 FEB 9 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- THE CONVERGENCE OF PARTICLE PHYSICS AND ASTROPHYSICS:
THE LHC/FERMI ERA - Dr. Michael Dine of the University
of California, Santa Cruz will explain the relation
of some of the big questions in cosmology and particle
physics and how the Large Hadron Collider currently
being commissioned at CERN and the Fermi Gamma-ray
Space Telescope may address them. Sonoma State University
Darwin 103, Coffee at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009 Feb 13, 7-9 pm Sonoma State Univ Observatory
Public Viewing Night - Venus and the Pleiades, a Valentine
treat!. (707) 664 - 2267; http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/observatory/pvn.html
- 2009 Feb 14 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 5:47
pm, 66% moon rise 11:48 Pm.
- 2009/02/18. Multiple Asteroid Systems: New Techniques
to Study New Worlds. Franck Marchis, UC Berkeley and
the SETI Institute. Since the discovery of Ida’s companion
Dactyl in 1993, the number of known multiple asteroids
has been continuously increasing and ~165 of them are
now known. Since 2003, Dr. Marchis and his colleagues
have been conducting a large survey of these interesting
and diverse populations using various ground-based
telescopes and techniques, such as high angular resolution
imaging, lightcurve photometry, and VIS/NIR spectroscopy,
and also the Spitzer and Hubble space telescopes. Dr.
Marchis ' talk will cover the latest insights into
these multiple systems, such as the sizes and shapes
of their components, their bulk-density and their orbital
parameters, which are key to understanding how they
formed and evolved. CSC/SETI Institute Colloquium Series—free
and open to the public, and run from noon to 1 pm on
Wednesdays at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road,
Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 Feb 20 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
5:53 pm, 12% moon rise 4:59 am. Star party hours: 7:00
until 10:00 pm.
- 2009 Feb 20 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Jay Freeman speaks on Binoculars in astronomy.
- 2009 Feb 21 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 5:54
pm, 7% moon rise 5:32 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved.
- 2009 February 21 11am Eliot Quataert - Black Holes:
Monsters Lurking at the Centers of Galaxies, 145 Dwinelle
- UC Berkeley IYA Public Talk - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 February 23 - David Morrison, NASA Ames Research
Center. Benjamin Dean Lecture Series in Astronomy,
Morrison Planetarium, California Academy of Sciences,
55 Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA 94118; 415-379-8000; deanseries@calacademy.org ; http://www.calacademy.org/events.
Long-term habitability of our planet is linked to external
as well as internal influences. In particular, cosmic
impacts are now recognized as a major factor in the
biological history of the Earth. Most dramatic was
the discovery that the end-Cretaceous mass extinction
of 65 million years ago was caused by the impact of
an asteroid or comet. Now that we recognize the importance
of impacts, we can consider ways to protect our planet
from future cosmic disasters. The first step is the
Spaceguard Survey to discover and characterize potentially
threatening near-earth-asteroids. We are also beginning
to study technologies that could deflect future impactors
before they hit. For the first time in history, we
humans have the capacity to predict, and perhaps avoid
entirely, the sort of catastrophe that wiped out the
dinosaurs. Adults $10, Seniors $8, California Academy
of Sciences Members $5.
- 2009 FEB 23 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- THE LIGHT, THE DARK, AND THE HOT GAS: DISSECTING
GALAXY CLUSTERS - Dr. Anja von der Linden of the Kavli
Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology and
Stanford University will explain how multi-wavelength
observations of galaxy clusters can reveal the properties
of dark matter, and how they can constrain cosmological
parameters. Sonoma State University Darwin 103, Coffee
at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009/02/25. Interstellar and Early Solar System Organics
in Samples from Comet Wild 2. Scott Sandford, NASA
Ames Space Science Division. The Stardust mission successfully
returned samples from Comet Wild 2 in 2006. Studies
of these samples have confirmed the presence of organics,
some of which appear to be similar to those found in
meteorites and some of which looks unlike anything
seen in extraterrestrial materials before. The presence
of D and 15N excesses in many of the organics suggests
they have an interstellar chemical heritage. The nature
of these organics, and their possible relationship
to interstellar environments will be discussed. CSC/SETI
Institute Colloquium Series—free and open to the public,
and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI
Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
January-|-February-|-March -|-April-|-May-|-June-|-July-|-August-|-September-|-October-|-November-|-December
March 2009
- 2009 Mar 4, 7pm. Steven Beckwith, former Director
of the Space Telescope Science Institute - The Dawn
of Creation: The First Two Billion Years. Silicon
Valley Astronomy Lecture Series.
- 2009/03/04. Discovery of Strong Cycles in Fossil
Diversity. Richard Muller, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory,
UC Berkeley. Richard Muller and his collaborators have
recently analyzed the most complete record of marine
animal fossils ever compiled, the "Compendium" of
Jack Sepkoski, which lists all known fossil marine
animal genera back 542 million years. When the fossil
diversity (number of distinct genera) is plotted, it
shows a very strong 62 Myr cycle. The cycle is particularly
evident in the species that endured for relatively
short times, as shown in the diagram below (published
in Nature, vol 434, 208-210, 10 March 2005). CSC/SETI
Institute Colloquium Series—free and open to the public,
and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI
Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 March 4, Wednesday, Hitoshi Murayama, Professor
in the Department of Physics at UC Berkeley, and Director
of the Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of
the Universe at University of Tokyo - How Could
We Survive the Big Bang?- East Bay Science Cafe
held the first Wednesday of every month at Cafe Valparaiso
at La Pena Cultural Center from 7 to 9pm. 3105 Shattuck
Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94705. http://bnhm.berkeley.edu/about/sciencecafe.php
- 2009 Mar 6 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
6:07 pm, 84% moon sets 4:20 am. Star party hours: 7:00
until 10:00 pm.
2009 Mar 6 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm, Topic to be announced.
- 2009 March 6. 7:30 pm. SPEAKER: Patricia Burchat,
Chair, Department of Physics, Stanford University -
TOPIC: The Dark Side of the Universe - A 21st Century
View of the Universe: Dark Matter and Dark Energy. TIME:
SCAS General Meeting Friday March 6, 7:30 pm, speaker
at 8:00pm. WHERE: San Mateo County Astronomical Society/College
of San Mateo/
The CSM Planetarium(for map). 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd.
San Mateo, CA 94402. Free and open to the public.
- 2009 Mar 7 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Dr. Kevin Zahnle of NASA/Ames, speaking on the Earth
After the Moon-Forming Impact Board meeting at 6:30;
General Meeting at 8:00
- 2009 March 7, 9:30AM Northern California Historical
Astronomy Luncheon and Discussion
Association(NCHALADA) 87th meeting - discussions on
historical astronomy held in the Board Room at Chabot
Space and Science Center http://www.nchalada.org.
Chabot Space & Science Center, 10000 Skyline Blvd.,
Oakland. Morning discussion, 10 - 12:30: Constellations
of Middle and South America. Chair: John Westfall,
Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers; Lunch
probably at Harry's Hofbrau or Home Town Buffet, then
a brief business meeting. Afternoon discussion, 2 -
5 PM: The Other Moons of the Solar System Chair: Nancy
K. Cox, San Francisco Amateur Astronomers.Contact Norm
Sperling, Editor, "The Journal of Irreproducible
Results" http://www.jir.com; http://www.everythingintheuniv.com
- 2009 Mar 8, 8PM Sunday San Jose Astronomical Association
- Houge Park. General Meeting. Our speaker is Dr. Kevin
Zahnle of NASA Ames. Topic: Earth After the Moon-Forming
Impact
Board meeting at 6:30; General Meeting at 8:00
- 2009 March 8, Sunday. Eastbay Astronomical Society's
2009 Annual Awards Dinner. Doors Open 5:45 pm. Dinner
from 6:30÷8:00 pm. Chabot Space and Science Center,
10000 Skyline Blvd., Oakland, CA
- 2009 Mar 8 -Su- 2 am. DST begins. Advance clocks
1 hour.
- 2009/03/11. Tools for Probing the Universe: from
the Smallest to Largest and All Scales In Between.
Jeffrey Scargle, NASA Ames Space Science Division.
Jeff Scargle will describe non-standard data analysis
methods for extracting scientific information from
time series and other data. Examples include large
scale structure in the distribution of galaxies, detection
of extrasolar planets, "meta-analysis" of
clinical studies and psychic phenomena, variability
of Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope sources, and the
search for quantum gravity effects at the smallest
possible space-time scales. CSC/SETI Institute Colloquium
Series—free and open to the public, and run from noon
to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI Institute, 515 N.
Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 Mar 13, 8-10 pm Sonoma State Univ Observatory
Public Viewing Night - The Orion Nebula and the Beehive
Cluster. (707) 664 - 2267; http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/observatory/pvn.html
- 2009 March 16th-28th, IYA GLOBE at Night project
- http://www.globe.gov/GaN/
- 2009 March 16 Mon 7:30pm - Sandra Faber, University
of California, Santa Cruz/Lick Observatory. Benjamin
Dean Lecture Series in Astronomy, Morrison Planetarium,
California Academy of Sciences, 55 Concourse Drive,
San Francisco, CA 94118; 415-379-8000; deanseries@calacademy.org ; http://www.calacademy.org/events.
Dr. Faber will tour the Universe using the most beautiful
and notable images from the Hubble Space Telescope
and will use these as a springboard to discuss the
impact that modern astronomical images have had on
our thinking about the history of our species and its
role and future in the Universe. Adults $10, Seniors
$8, California Academy of Sciences Members $5.
- 2009/03/18. Google Earth, now with Mars!. Ross A.
Beyer, SETI Institute and NASA Ames. Google, Inc.,
has released Google Earth 5.0 which contains a Mars
3D mode. Working with engineers at Google, we helped
collect, parse, and organize the vast store of Mars
geospatial data available to the public into a form
that could be used by Google Earth. The Mars mode presents
data acquired both from orbit and on the surface, presented
fully integrated into the Google Earth geospatial browser.
Ross will cover a brief history of the project, take
you on a detailed tour of all of the features, and
answer your questions about using Mars mode for science,
education, or fun, as well as answering questions about
how to view your own data in the client. The team behind
this talk includes NASA Ames engineers Matt Hancher
and Michael Broxton. CSC/SETI Institute Colloquium
Series—free and open to the public, and run from noon
to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI Institute, 515 N.
Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 Mar 20 -Fr- Spring begins at 4:44 am, PDT
- 2009 Mar 20 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
7:20 pm, 25% moon rise 4:30 am. Star party hours: 8:30
until 11:30 pm.
- 2009 Mar 21 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:21
pm, 17% moon rise 5:01 am.
- 2009 March 21 11am - UC Berkeley Astronomy Department
IYA Lecture - Dan Werthimer Is Anybody Out There? Searching
for ET with Help from 8 Million Volunteers - in Genetics
and Plant Biology Building, Room 100 - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 MAR 23 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- EXPLORING THE EXTREME UNIVERSE WITH FERMI - Dr.
Lynn Cominsky of Sonoma State University will describe
recent discoveries from NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space
Telescope, which is observing black holes, exploding
stars and more! Sonoma State University Darwin 103,
Coffee at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009 Mar 27 -Fr- SJAA Coe has been requested for
an additional MM night. http://www.sjaa.net
2009 Mar 28 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:27 pm,
8% moon sets 10:12 pm. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. This is the recomended weekend for
a Messier Marathon. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 MAR 30 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- ENERGY RESEARCH IN DENMARK - Jeremy Hieb (’03) of
the University of California, Santa Cruz and Zero Motorcycles
will discuss renewable energy research in Denmark–including
wind, solar, bioenergy, electric vehicles, hydrogen
micro-grids, and smart grids for a sustainable biosphere.
Sonoma State University Darwin 103, Coffee at 3:30
p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
January-|-February-|-March -|-April-|-May-|-June-|-July-|-August-|-September-|-October-|-November-|-December
April, 2009
- 2009/04/01. Weathering on Icy Satellites: Probing
the Near Surface Using Infrared Spectroscopy. Rachel
Mastrapa, NASA Ames Space Sciences Division and SETI
Institute. Infrared spectra of icy satellites contain
information about the surface composition and the phase
state of those materials. For example, the phase of
H2O-ice can be used to interpret the temperature and
radiation history of an icy surface. Optical constants
derived from laboratory data are needed to create model
spectra for comparison to observations and may lead
to a new understanding of surface processes. CSC/SETI
Institute Colloquium Series—free and open to the public,
and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI
Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
-
2009 April 2-5. International
Year of Astronomy (IYA): 100
Hours of Astronomy
Amateur Astronomers around the world will
be out on the streets and in parks showing
off the heavens to the public to celebrate "100
Hours of Astronomy", an event taking
place this weekend, April 2-5. As part of
a global effort to celebrate the 400 year
anniversary of modern astronomy starting
with Galileo in 1609, professional and amateur
astronomers are setting up "star parties" where
anyone can look through telescopes to see
planets and stars. There will also be lectures,
webcasts, and other types of events.
- Streaming webcast - http://www.ustream.tv/channel/100-hours-of-astronomy
- Sonoma State University sponsored events
- http://www.sonoma.edu/pubs/newsrelease/archives/003406.html.
See also flyer (PDF).
- April 2–4 (Thur-Sat) from 7:30 until 9:30
pm. The San Francisco Amateur Astronomers
(SFAA) will be setting up telescopes at Lands
End in San Francisco for stargazing and learning
about the skies. This is an especially good
chance to have children see the wonders of
the universe and get in touch with the night
sky. The SFAA will set up each evening in
the parking area above the Sutro Baths on
Point Lobos near the Cliff House in San Francisco.
For questions email csp@sfaa-astronomy.org or
visit http://www.sfaa-astronomy.org/.
There is no charge to attend this event.
Visitors are encouraged to dress warmly.
- April 2. The Astronomy Department at CCSF
is sponsoring the following activities
FOR IYA 100 Hours of Astrnomy:
- Solar Observation at RAM Plaza
(Noon- 2 PM)
- Public Lecture - Location: Science
200 - Time: 2:15 PM - Title: Kepler's
Hunt for Habitable Planets by Dr. Natalie
Batalha, SJSU
- More Solar Observation at CCSF Rooftop
Observatory (3:30 - 5:00 PM)
- Evening CCSF Observatory and Planetarium
Open House (7:30 -9:30 PM)
- Film Showing at Rosenberg Library
301 (7:30 - 8:30 PM)
- April 2, 2009, 5:00 p.m. Gleeson
Library Associates at the University
of San Francisco Presents: Speaker: Nick
Kanas, M.D., University of San Francisco.
Topic: Mapping the Heavens from Antiquity
to Today. Location: Donohue Rare Book Room,
on the third floor of the Library, opposite
the north elevator, 2495 Golden Gate Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94117-1049 Parking is
available on the street. Gleeson
Library/ Geschke Center University
of San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Nick Kanas's book, Star Maps: History,
Artistry, and Cartography, will be available
for purchase at the reception. For more
information call 415 422 2036.
- Apr 2, 6-10 pm. California Academy of
Sciences' "Night Life." Telescopic
viewing of the sky is a regular activity,
weather-permitting, during the Academy's "Night
Life" program (Thursdays, 6-10pm). A
remote-link to Sonoma State University's
GORT facility (GLAST Optical Robotic Telescope)
will allow visitors to observe Dr. Kevin
McLin of Sonoma State operate the telescope
from 65 miles away and view real-time images
of the universe taken through the telescope.
For information & directions, visit http://www.calacademy.org.
Advance tickets advised.
- Apr 3, 9-11 pm Sonoma State Univ Observatory
Public Viewing Night - Saturn and the Moon,
a worldwide observing event. (707) 664 -
2267; http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/observatory/pvn.html
- Apr 3 and 4, 07.30 - 10.30 Public Telescope
Viewing; Chabot Space & Science Center
- Oakland
- Apr 3 (Fri) 8:30 until 11:30 pm. The San
Jose Astronomical Association public observing
session on the grounds at Houge Park in San
Jose. Featured will be Saturn, the biggish
68% moon, and other show objects of the early
spring sky. For directions, see http://www.sjaa.net/directions.html#Houge_Park.
- Apr 3 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party.
Sset 7:32 pm, 69% moon sets 3:57 am. Star
party hours: 8:30 until 11:30 pm. http://www.sjaa.net
- April 3–4. The “Around the World in 80
Telescopes” Webcast -
The SETI Institute and the University of
California, Berkeley are participating jointly
from the Allen Telescope Array in "Around
the World in 80 Telescopes". The Kepler
Mission is also participating in the same
webcast event. The Allen Telescope
Array has the 4:40 - 5:00 PM time slot on
Friday, April 3. They hope to have
live presentations from both the observatory
and the Institute's "control room" cubicle. Jill
Tarter will speak from the Institute and
Garrett Keating of UC Berkeley will speak
from the observatory. Sonoma State University
is part of the operations of the Fermi and
Swift spacecraft, which will also participate
in the 80 Telescopes web cast.
- Apr 4 -Sa- SJAA Auction rehearsal, 6 pm
until it all works. http://www.sjaa.net
- Apr 4, Lawrence Hall of Science Stargazing
- http://www.lhs.berkeley.edu/planetarium/SatNightStars.html
- Apr 4, 12.00–22.00 Astronomy Open House
at CCSF; City College of San Francisco -
San Francisco
- Apr. 4. 8–11 pm. Star Party at Foothill
College, sponsored by Foothill College and
the Peninsula Astronomical Society. Foothill
College Observatory in Los Altos Hills, provided
the sky is clear. The 16-inch college telescope
will be open for viewing and members of the
Society will bring their own telescopes as
well. Parking on campus costs $2.00. The
Foothill Observatory is near Parking Lot
4 on campus. For directions, see: http://www.foothill.edu/news/maps.html
- 2009 Apr 4, 6-10 pm. California Academy
of Sciences' "Night Life." Telescopic
viewing of the sky is a regular activity,
weather-permitting, during the Academy's "Night
Life" program (Thursdays, 6-10pm).
- April 4, Astronomy Family FUN Day, 4 -
11 PM on College of San Mateo (CSM)'s campus,
co-sponsored by SMCAS and CSM. It will consist
of astro demonstrations, planisphere making,
a solar system model, planetarium shows with
our one of a kind GOTO CHRONOS Hybrid planetarium.
From 8 to 11 PM, there will be "Jazz
Under the Stars" with music from KCSM
radio on our rooftop observatory. View the
moon, Saturn, colorful double stars, and
whatever else is cool!
- Apr 5 -Su- SJAA
Auction XXIX - SJAA Open at noon, selling
1:00 to about 4:00. In the hall at Houge
Park. NOTE: Sunday, daytime. http://www.sjaa.net
|
- 2009 April 6 Mon 7:30 pm - Geoff Marcy, University
of California, Berkeley. Benjamin Dean Lecture Series
in Astronomy, Morrison Planetarium, California Academy
of Sciences, 55 Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA
94118; 415-379-8000; deanseries@calacademy.org ; http://www.calacademy.org/events.
Science fiction assumes that our Milky Way Galaxy abounds
with habitable planets populated by advanced civilizations
engaged in interstellar commerce and conflict. Back
in our real universe, Earth-like planets and alien
life have proved elusive. Has science fiction led us
astray? In 2009, astronomers will launch the first
searches for Earth-like worlds around other stars,
using bizarre, extreme telescopes for the task. These
telescopes fundamentally supersede Galileo's historic
little scope for the first time. A wild race for signs
of inhabited worlds and extraterrestrial life is about
to begin. Adults $10, Seniors $8, California Academy
of Sciences Members $5.
- 2009 APR 6 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- WHISPERS IN THE DARK - Dr. Jodi Cooley of Stanford
University will tell us how a group of physicists from
the U.S. and Canada are searching for dark matter by
listening for faint whispers of their interactions
in the CDMS detector located in the Soudan Underground
Laboratory in Minnesota. Sonoma State University Darwin
103, Coffee at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009/04/08. Convergent evolution of our own and extra-terrestrial
intelligence. John McCarthy, Professor Emeritus, Computer
Science Stanford University. Convergent evolution is
the phenomenon of two or more species of widely different
origins evolving extremely similar features in response
to the same environmental opportunity. Our intelligence
and that of aliens with whom we might communicate are
likely to have converged considerably and to converge
further in the future. Much of this future convergence
is likely to be artificial, i.e. electronic. Professor
McCarthy will discuss some possibilities. CSC/SETI
Institute Colloquium Series—free and open to the public,
and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI
Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009/04/15. The Dynamic Lunar Environment. Jasper
Halekas, UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory. The
lunar environment, serene and unchanging to the naked
eye, seethes with plasma and electromagnetic activity.
Plasma, photons, micrometeorites and energetic particles
constantly bombard the lunar surface, producing a tenuous
exosphere and a dynamic wake region, and charging the
surface to electrostatic potentials reaching kilovolts,
producing surface electric fields large enough to affect
lunar ions and dust. Meanwhile, plasma interacts directly
with crustal magnetic fields, producing perhaps the
smallest magnetospheres in the solar system. Dr. Halekas
will talk about how the Moon provides an ideal laboratory
to study a variety of fundamental physics processes
which are both interesting in their own right, and
potentially applicable to Mars and other planets in
the solar system.
- 2009 Apr 17 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Pete Santangeli will speak on imaging for
beginners. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Apr 17 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
7:45 pm, 42% moon rises 3:00 am. Star party hours:
9:00 until midnight. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Apr 18 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:46
pm, 33% moon rises 3:28 am. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 April 18 UC Berkeley Astronomy Department IYA
Lectures - Cal Day - Chung-Pei Ma The Dark Side of
the Universe
Steve Stahler Why Are There Stars? New Answers to an
Old Question - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 APR 20 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- COSMIC COLLIDERS - Dr. Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz of the
University of California, Santa Cruz will show how
observations of the interplay between black holes,
neutron stars and other objects in dense stellar systems
allow us to draw firm conclusions about the properties
of these extreme forms of matter. Sonoma State University
Darwin 103, Coffee at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009/04/22. First Things in the Universe. Tom Abel,
Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology
Laboratory, Stanford University. The first structure
to form in the Universe can now be predicted from ab
initio simulations starting with the known initial
conditions of our Universe. What is found is a rich
history with massive stars, black holes, UV radiation,
and hydrogen molecules among others playing significant
roles. Using supercomputer simulations allows us to
visually show the origin of the first stars, their
demise and impact on their future, which is our past,
in the Universe' first billion years. CSC/SETI Institute
Colloquium Series—free and open to the public, and
run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI Institute,
515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 Apr 22, 7 pm, Silicon Valley
Astronomy Lectures: Dr. Margaret Race, one of
the leading experts on the contamination danger and
the protection of planets - Planetary Protection
and Hitchhikers in the Solar System: The Danger of
Mingling Microbes. In this timely talk, Dr. Race
will give a behind-the-scenes view of "environmental
management" planning for solar system missions,
and explain the role of the Outer Space Treaty and
other related national and international policies.
She will also discuss the varied societal issues
likely to arise from discoveries about life beyond
the Earth -- issues about the meaning of life, its
future evolutionary trajectory, and environmental
sustainability in the universe. Dr. Race is an ecologist
at the SETI Institute who works with NASA and the
international space community to develop, refine,
and apply planetary protection policies to missions
to the planets.
- 2009 Apr 25 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:52
pm, 2% moon sets 9:07 pm. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 APR 27 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- THE ACOUSTICS OF BAROQUE BASSOONS - Dr. Bryant Hichwa
of Sonoma State University will describe the physical
acoustics of 250-year-old bassoons and show that mathematical
models based on examination of museum bassoons reveal
interesting societal cultural differences. Sonoma State
University Darwin 103, Coffee at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
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May, 2009
- 2009 May 1, 9-11 pm Sonoma State Univ Observatory
Public Viewing Night - The Whirlpool Galaxy, Saturn
and the Moon. (707) 664 - 2267; http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/observatory/pvn.html
- 2009 May 1 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
7:58 pm, 56% moon sets 2:32 am. Star party hours: 9:00
until midnight This is also SJAA's observation of Astronomy
Day. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 May 2 8:00pm John Dillon, Randall Museum - “The
Autopsy of Heaven: Galileo, Telescopes and the Beginning
of Modern Science” - Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy
Program - 400 years ago when Galileo announced his
telescopic discoveries, the story goes, he threw off
the yoke of the ancient Greeks and challenged the authority
of the Church – thus opening the way for “modern” Science.
John Dillon will take a longer view of the history
of science and explore a subtler, more complex, relationship
between Galileo, telescopes, Science and the Church. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
- 2009 MAY 4 Monday at 4:00 p.m. WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
-- THIRTY-NINE YEARS OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY AT SONOMA
STATE UNIVERSITY - Dr. Joseph S. Tenn of Sonoma State
University will conclude his career with some reflections
on his activities and the changes he has seen. Sonoma
State University Darwin 103, Coffee at 3:30 p.m. http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd
- 2009 May 4 Mon 7:30 pm - Jill Tarter, SETI Institute.
Benjamin Dean Lecture Series in Astronomy, Morrison
Planetarium, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Concourse
Drive, San Francisco, CA 94118; 415-379-8000; deanseries@calacademy.org ; http://www.calacademy.org/events Throughout
recorded history, humans have looked at the sky and
wondered whether others exist elsewhere. Until the
middle of the 20th century, there was little we could
do except ask the priests, philosophers, or other wise
individuals what we should believe. Today we have new
observational tools that allow us to try to do experiments
to shed light on the problem. This lecture summarizes
the scientific exploration for extraterrestrial intelligence,
and highlights the newest telescopes that may just
provide an answer. Adults $10, Seniors $8, California
Academy of Sciences Members $5.
- 2009/05/06. Aerosol particle roles in climate change:
How coordinated measurements from aircraft, satellites, & Earth
surfaces are helping to reduce uncertainties. Philip
Russell, NASA Ames Earth Science Division. The 2007
assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) reported that uncertainty in radiative
forcing of climate had been reduced compared to the
previous assessment, a result of improved understanding
of aerosol radiative effects. This talk shows how field
experiments by NASA and collaborators, which coordinate
measurements from aircraft, satellites, and Earth's
surfaces, have contributed to that improved understanding.
Dr. Russell will talk about early results from the
recent ARCTAS experiment in the Arctic and a look at
the future, including next-generation satellites and
advanced aircraft such as the Global Hawk. CSC/SETI
Institute Colloquium Series—free and open to the public,
and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI
Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 May 7 Thur 4pm. The Cosmic Star Formation and
Metallicity History of Galaxies - LeConte Hall, UC
Berkeley Observing the star formation rate and metallicity
since the earliest times in the universe is crucial
to understanding galaxy formation and evolution. Current
cosmic star formation history studies are plagued by
significant discrepancies between star formation rate
estimates and different wavelengths. I apply the new
generation of stellar population synthesis and photoionization
models and show that metallicity is key to resolving
the star formation rate discrepancies. Although the
cosmic star formation history has been studied extensively,
our understanding of the metallicity history of star-forming
galaxies is still largely theoretical. I present the
results of our large ongoing observational investigation
into metallicity history of star-forming galaxies between
0<z<1, and initial results from our new program
to use gravitational lensing to probe metallicities
in galaxies at z>1. I compare our observed metallicity
history with predictions from cosmological hydrodynamic
simulations, and discuss the future directions for
our star formation and metallicity history research.
The goal of this research program is to gain a simultaneous
observational understanding of the gas- phase metallicity
and star formation history of galaxies between 0<z<3
to confront chemical evolution models.
- 2009 May 7 Thurs 6PM Nightlife: DJ Mancub, Astronomy, & Dancing
to the roof -California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco
DJ Mancub, of the world famous Space Cowboys and San
Francisco‚s Sleevin Records, provides the music. Capacitor,
a San Francisco-based interdisciplinary dance company,
performs „Urban Canopy,‰ a piece inspired by the Academy‚s
living roof, in the Piazza at 8 pm. Also, expect some
programming featuring beautiful astronomy imagery.
Every Thursday, the Academy is transformed into a lively
venue filled with music, provocative science, mingling,
and cocktails, for visitors 21 and older. Activities
and performers change week to week.
- 2009 May 8 Fri 7:30PM Peninsula Astronomical Society
mtg. Circumstellar Disks and Extrasolar planets. Dr.
Paul Kalas of UC Berkeley. Foothill Community College
in Los Altos Hills in Rm 8402, Bldg. 8400 next to Parking
Lot#8 near the entrance to the College. The lecture
will emphasize Dr. Kalas's work on high resolution
imaging and other investigations of circumstellar disks
around neighboring stars and their formation and evolution.
A very important result from this work was the announcement
last year of one of two confirmed direct images of
extra solar planets.
- 2009 May 9 Saturday, 7:30PM East Bay Astromical Society
mtg. Speaker: Dr. Jeffrey Oishi UC Berkeley - "From
Stardust to Planets via Silicon: Computer Experiments
and Planet Formation" Place: Physics Lab, 2nd
Flr Dellums Building Chabot Space & Science Center
10000 Skyline Blvd Oakland
- 2009 May 9 Sat 8PM SJAA General Meeting Featuring
guest speaker Dr. Christopher Mauche The X-ray Universe
in the hall at Houge Park, San Jose http://www.sjaa.net/
for mor information
- 2009 May 9 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Dr. Christopher Mauche (LLNL), who will speak on
The X-ray Universe. Board meeting at 6:30; General
Meeting at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 May 13 7:30 PM Sonoma County Astronomical Society.
Norm Sperling, Editor, The Journal of Irreproducible
Results. Booksigning of Norm's latest book, "This
Book Warps Space and Time" - Proctor Terrace School,
Santa Rosa. http://www.sonomaskies.org/This_Months_Speaker.html
- 2009 May 15 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
2009 May 15 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset 8:10
pm, 60% moon rises 1:28 am. Star party hours: 9:00
until midnight http://www.sjaa.net
2009 May 16 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 8:11 pm,
50% moon rises 1:55 am. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 May 16-17 Sat. 10AM-4PM- USGS - 9th Triennial
Open House. Scientists at the USGS Menlo Park campus
are leaders in research on earthquakes, water quality,
volcanoes, coastal and marine geology, mineral and
energy resources, geography, and the San Francisco
Bay ecosystem. USGS Evening Public Lecture Series,
345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park
- 2009 May 16 Sat. 11AM James Graham: Imaging Extrasolar
Planets 100 Genetics & Plant Biology Bldg., UC
Berkeley James Graham, Chair of the UC Berkeley Astronomy
Department, gives a public lecture on extrasolar planets.
Graham was a member of a team of scientists who obtained
the first visible-light images of an extrasolar planet
with orbital motion around the star Fomalhaut, at a
distance of 25 light years from Earth.
- 2009 May 16 Sat. 2-4 PM Take in both SETI and USGS!
Join us at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California
for a celebration of science and imagination! An interactive
Family Science Faire at the SETI Institute at our Celebrating
Science 2009 Family Science Faire, you will have the
opportunity to meet SETI Institute scientists and discover
what the future holds for SETI and astrobiology. Meet
the father of SETI and author of the Drake Equation,
Dr. Frank Drake. Visit the gift shop for a Drake Equation
t-shirt and ask Dr. Drake himself to sign it! Hear
Andrew Fraknoi speak at 2:30 on "Why Falling into
a Black Hole would be a Once-in-a-Lifetime Experience".
Selected as California's Professor of the Year in 2007,
Mr. Fraknoi will be available between 2:45-3:30 to
autograph his latest book, Disney Learning: Wonderful
World of Space. Limited copies will be available in
our gift shop. http://archive.seti.org/celebratingscience2009/ 515
N. Whisman Road, Mountain View. ADMISSION IS FREE!
Register here http://archive.seti.org/celebratingscience2009/form2009.php reserve
your spot early -- this event is very popular!
- 2009 May 20 Wed. 7:30PM Lecture: The Autopsy of Heaven
San Francisco Amateur Astronomers 199 Museum Way San
Francisco Please join the SFAA and the semi-retired
Curator of the Randall Museum John Dillion present "The
Autopsy of Heaven: Galileo, Telescopes, and the Beginning
of Modern Science"
- 2009 May 20, Wednesday at 7 pm, Dr. Patricia Burchat
of Stanford University will give a non-technical, illustrated
talk on: The Dark Side of the Universe: Dark Matter
and Dark Energy as part of the Silicon
Valley Astronomy Lectures in the Smithwick Theater,
Foothill College, El Monte Road and Freeway 280, in
Los Altos Hills, California.
- 2009 May 20 7 pm. Norm Sperling, Editor, The Journal
of Irreproducible Results. Booksigning of Norm's latest
book, "This Book Warps Space and Time" - Diesel
Book Store, 5433 College Avenue, Oakland.
- 2009 May 22-25 BayCon in
Santa Clara (science fiction)
- 2009 May 23 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 8:16
pm, 0% moon rises 5:40 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009/05/27. NEOs Ho!! The Asteroid Option. Robert
Landis, NASA Ames Intelligent Systems Division. In
late 2006, NASA's Constellation Program (CxP) sponsored
a study to examine the feasibility of sending a piloted
Orion spacecraft to a near-Earth Object (NEO). One
of the significant advantages of this type of mission
is that it strengthens and validates the foundational
infrastructure of the United States Space Exploration
Policy and his highly complementary to NASA's planned
lunar sortie and outpost missions circa 2020. Rob Landis
will discuss how human expedition to a NEO would not
only underline the broad utility of the Orion Crew
Exploration Vehicle (CEV) and Ares launch systems,
but would also be the first human expedition to an
interplanetary body beyond the Earth-Moon system. CSC/SETI
Institute Colloquium Series—free and open to the public,
and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI
Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 May 29 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
8:21 pm, 41% moon sets 1:05 am. Star party hours: 9:30
until midnight http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 May 28 7:00 PM. Star Maps: History, Artistry,
and Cartography.UCSF Professor and NASA-funded researcher,
Dr. Nick Kanas provides a fascinating look at the night
sky and answers such stellar questions as: How have
different cultures made sense of the night sky? What
led to the development of the great star and constellation
atlases? What has been the impact of the telescope
on celestial mapping? Larkspur Library 400 Magnolia
Ave Larkspur, CA
- 2009 May 29. application deadline Project ASTRO--connecting
amateur and professional astronomers with teachers
and students in 3rd – 9th grade classrooms. All participants
are required to attend a 2-day workshop to be held
August 7 & 8, 2009, at the San Mateo County Office
of Education in Redwood City. APPLY ONLINE by MAY 29th: http://www.astrosociety.org/education/astro/bayarea/volunteer.html CONTACT:
Allyson Clark, Project ASTRO Coordinator Email: bayareaastro@astrosociety.org
MORE INFORMATION: http://www.astrosociety.org/baprojectastro.html
- 2009 May 30 8:30pm Kenneth Frank, Astronomical Society
of the Pacific - “Your Other Address: Where We Are
in the Universe" - Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy
Program - Our view of where we live is one which most
of us don't think about. OK, Kenneth Frank knows he
has a 94920 address on the Tiburon Peninsula, and if
he takes out a AAA map or browses Google online he
gets a better idea of where he lives. But what else
defines where we are situated? In this talk he seeks
to inform the audience of where we are on a grander
scale and find that sense of place that we call home. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
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June, 2009
- 2009 June 1 Mon 7:30 pm - David Des Marais, NASA
Ames Research Center. Benjamin Dean Lecture Series
in Astronomy, Morrison Planetarium, California Academy
of Sciences, 55 Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA
94118; 415-379-8000; deanseries@calacademy.org ; http://www.calacademy.org/events.
Mars is the planet in our solar system whose past climate
most closely resembled our own. Recent missions have
revealed richly fascinating landscapes and deeply important
discoveries. Mars might have supported life sometime
in the past, and perhaps supports life even today.
Adults $10, Seniors $8, California Academy of Sciences
Members $5.
- 2009/06/03. Field Testing of Utility Robots for Lunar
Surface Operations. Terry Fong, Intelligent Robotics
Group, NASA Ames Research Center. Since 2004, NASA
has been working to return to the Moon. In contrast
to the Apollo missions, two key objectives of the current
exploration program are to establish surface infrastructure
and an outpost. Achieving these objectives will enable
long-duration stays and long-distance exploration of
the Moon. To do this, robotic systems will be needed
to perform tasks which cannot, or should not, be performed
by crew alone. In this talk, I summarize our work at
NASA Ames to develop "utility robots" for
lunar surface operations, present results and lessons
learned from field testing, and discuss directions
for future research. CSC/SETI Institute Colloquium
Series—free and open to the public, and run from noon
to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI Institute, 515 N.
Whisman Road, Mountain View, California. http://www.seti.org/Page.aspx?pid=592
- 2009 June 5 7:30 pm. San
Mateo County Astronomical Society. Norm Sperling,
Editor, The Journal of Irreproducible Results. Booksigning
of Norm's latest book, "This Book Warps Space
and Time" - College of San Mateo planetarium.
- 2009 Jun 6 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is our own Rod Norden (SJAA) who will tell us about
the Pioneer 10-11 missions Board meeting at 6:30; General
Meeting at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Jun 12 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Jun 12 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
8:29 pm, 75% moon rise 11:56 am. Star party hours:
9:30 until midnight http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 June 19-20 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by Sacramento Valley Astronomical
Society (SVAS)
- 2009 June 20, 11 am, Nathan Smith, Live Fast - Die
Young: Monster Stars and their Temper Tantrums - 100
GPB - UC Berkeley Astronomy Dept IYA Public Talk - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 Jun 20 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 8:31
pm, 3 moon rises 4:19 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Jun 20 -Sa- Summer begins at 10:45 pm PDT
- 2009 Jun 26 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
8:32 pm, 26% moon sets 11:35 pm. Star party hours:
9:30 until midnight http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 June 26,27 Yosemite
Star Party
- 2009 June 27 8:30pm Professor Lynn R. Cominsky, Sonoma
State University - “Exploring the Extreme Universe
with Fermi” - Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy Program
- NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (formerly
known as GLAST) mission is exploring the most energetic
and exotic objects in the cosmos: blazing galaxies,
intense stellar explosion and super-massive block holes.
Fermi probes the Universe on scales from the infinite
to the infinitesimal, and future observations may shed
light on the nature of dark matter. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
- 2009 Jun 27 8:00pm Clusters of Stars: Baby stars,
ancient stars. Mt. Diablo Astronomical Society public
astronomy programs on Mt. Diablo. Take a tour through
the telescopes and find out about the lifecycles of
stars. More info at http://www.mdas.net/publicprogram/publicprogram.htm or
call Mt. Diablo State Park - 925-837-2525
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July, 2009
- 2009 Jul 9 Thursday, at 6:30 p.m. The Top Tourist
Sights of the Solar System: Where Bill Gates' Great-Granddaughter
Might Go on Her Honeymoon. Astronomer and popular lecturer
Andrew Fraknoi. In the Sunnyvale Library program room,
665 West Olive Ave., across from City Hall. A limited
number of tickets available free at the Adult Reference
Desk. The illustrated tour will include the 4,000 mile
lava channel on Venus, the towering Mount Olympus volcano
on Mars (three times the height of Mount Everest),
the awesome Verona Cliffs on the moon Miranda (which
are the tallest "lover's leap" in the solar
system), and the mysterious ice-cracks of the moon
Europa, under which may be a global ocean. http://www.sunnyvalelibrary.org or
call the Reference Desk at (408) 730-7300.
- 2009 Jul 11 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Norm Sperling, based on his new book, "This
Book Warps Space and Time". Board meeting at 6:30;
General Meeting at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 July 10-11 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by Santa Cruz Astronomy Club
- 2009 Jul 15 (Wed) Bay Area Skeptics: Are We Alone?
07:00 PM - 09:00 PM La Peña's Café Valparaîso
3105 Shattuck Avenue (3 blks south of Ashby BART) Berkeley,
CA USA 94705. The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
(SETI) has gone on for almost 50 years, but scientists
haven't heard a peep. UC Berkeley SETI pioneer Dan
Werthimer will help us explore why this is not surprising,
and why continuing the search may lead to the most
important discovery in science history.
- 2009 Jul 17 Fri Dinner, a Movie, and the Universe
at Chabot Space Center - 06:00 PM. Chabot Space and
Science Center, Oakland
- Sat 7/18
- 2009 Jul 17 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Jul 17 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
8:27 pm, 19% moon rises 2:03 am. Star party hours:
9:30 until midnight http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Jul 18 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 8:26
pm, 11% moon rises 3:01 am. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 July 17,18 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by San Jose Astronomical Association
- 2009 July 18, 11 am. Roger Hahn - A Troublesome Pioneer:
Galileo Galilei - 100 GPB - UC Berkeley Astronomy Dept
IYA Public Talk - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 July 18 Sat. Star Party At Crestview Park, San
Carlos California. Come out and bring the kids for
a mind expanding look at the universe. The City of
San Carlos Parks and Recreation Department and the
San Mateo County Astronomical Society.... Inclement
weather (clouds, excessive wind and showers) will cause
the event to be canceled without notice. For more information
call Bob Black, (650)592-2166, or send an email to
SMCAS@live.com or call Ed Pieret at (650)862-9602.
Astronomers arrive to set up at around sunset. Observing
starts at about one hour after sunset and continues
for two to three hours.
- 2009 Jul 18 Sat. 40th Anniversary Celebration of
our Moon Landing Missions - 11:00 AM Chabot Space and
Science Center, Oakland
- 2009 Jul 19 Sun. NASA Ames will celebrate past, present,
and future lunar exploration with a public "Moonfest" event.
Sponsored by NASA's LCROSS mission and the NASA Lunar
Science Institute, Moonfest will commemorate the 40th
anniversary of the Apollo XI landing, provide updates
on the current LCROSS and LRO lunar missions, and look
to NASA's future missions to the Moon. This family
event will feature presentations by mission experts,
exhibits, demonstrations, educational activities, displays
of real Moon rocks, model rocket launches, robotics
demonstrations, and astronaut appearances. Admission
to Moonfest is free and the event runs from noon to
6 PM. Take Highway 101 to the Moffett Blvd/NASA Parkway
exit in Mountain View. For more information, see http://moonfest.arc.nasa.gov
- 2009 July 24-25 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by San Francisco Amateur Astronomers
- 2009 Jul 25 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 8:21
pm, 23% moon sets 10:31 pm. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. AANC Star-B-Q at Fremont Peak State
Park http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 July 25 - the 25th annual potluck picnic, super
star party and FPOA annual meeting. Keynote speaker:
Brian Day, NASA LCROSS Lunar Impactor Mission. The
LCROSS mission will impact the lunar South Pole between
October 7-11, 2009.
NASA's Brian Day will present an illustrated talk on
the LCROSS mission and its goals. A special LCROSS
workshop on how you can contribute to the mission will
be held in the observatory meeting room after the regular
program ends. RAFFLE! Orion, Scope City, and Celestron
are the primary sponsors of the raffle prizes. The
winner of the Grand Prize will receive a new Celestron
NexStar 6 SE telescope. Many other cool prizes will
be awarded.
- 2009 July 25 8:30pm Dr. Natalie Batalha, San Jose
State University - "Kepler’s Hunt for Habitable
Planets" - Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy
Program - NASA's Kepler Mission has begun its 3.5-year
quest for habitable planets like Earth in our galaxy.
Dr. Batalha will describe how and where the spacecraft
will look for planets we might call home and what to
expect in the coming years as we work to understand
whether Earth-like planets in our galaxy are common
or rare. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
2009 Jul 31 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset 8:16
pm, 81% moon sets 2:07 am. Star party hours: 9:00 until
midnight http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Jul 25 8:00pm Black Holes: Where are the black
holes in our Galaxy? Take home a map to their locations
in the sky. Mt. Diablo Astronomical Society public
astronomy programs on Mt. Diablo. More info at http://www.mdas.net/publicprogram/publicprogram.htm or
call Mt. Diablo State Park - 925-837-2525
- 2009 Jul 25 Sat. Star Party At Crestview Park, San
Carlos California. Come out and bring the kids for
a mind expanding look at the universe. The City of
San Carlos Parks and Recreation Department and the
San Mateo County Astronomical Society.... Inclement
weather (clouds, excessive wind and showers) will cause
the event to be canceled without notice. For more information
call Bob Black, (650)592-2166, or send an email to
SMCAS@live.com or call Ed Pieret at (650)862-9602.
Astronomers arrive to set up at around sunset. Observing
starts at about one hour after sunset and continues
for two to three hours.
- 2009 July 28 Guest Speaker: Dr. Steven Beckwith -
The Dawn of Creation - The First Two Billion Years.
Mt. Diablo Astronomical Society free public meetings
in Concord, CA - see www.mdas.net for directions/times). http://www.mdas.net
- 2009 July 31-Aug.1 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by Central Valley Astronomers,
Inc. & Tri-Valley Stargazers
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August, 2009
- 2009 Aug 1 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Speaker is
Rob Sigler (Lockheed, retired), to tell us about Glass-Liquid
Apochromats. Board meeting at 6:30; General Meeting
at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Aug 3. 7:30--9:00 pm. Benjamin
Dean Lecture - Astrobiology, Planetary Protection,
and Hitchikers in the Solar System
Margaret Race, SETI Institute. at Morrison Planetarium.
This talk will provide a behind-the-scence view of
how experts from many different disciplines contribute
to searches for extraterrestrial life--and also explain
how the Outer space Treaty and planetary protection
policies urge "responsible exploration' when visiting
other planets. The breadth and depth of pre-planning
may surprise you. Reservations: Advance ticketing is
recommended. Buy tickets online or call 800-794-7576
for reservations. Tickets may be purchased at the door,
but there is no guarantee of availability. Adults $10,
Seniors $8, Members $5.
- 2009 Aug 14 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Aug 14 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
8:00 pm, 33% moon rise 12:47 am. Star party hours:
9:00 until midnight http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 August 14,15 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by Mount Diablo Astronomical
Society
- 2009 Aug 15 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:59
pm, 22% moon rises 1:49 am. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Aug 15 11:00am Astronomy and Evolution: From
the Death of the Dinosaurs to the Stardust in your
Bones. UC Berkeley's Astronomy Department is hosting
a monthly lecture series to celebrate the International
Year of Astronomy. This month's talk takes place from
11am until 12 noon on August 15 in the Genetics and
Plant Biology Building, Room 100 on the UC Berkeley
campus. Doors open thirty minutes before the talk and
admission is free. To celebrate the 400th anniversary
of Galileo's first observations of the sky, as well
as Darwin's 200th birthday and the 150th anniversary
of the publication of "On the Origin of Species",
two speakers will discuss how the Universe evolves
with time, as well as the impact of astronomical events
on the evolution of life on Earth: David R. Lindberg,
Professor of Integrative Biology, and Steve Croft,
a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Astronomy
at UC Berkeley.
- 2009 Aug 15 7:30pm Rocks and Ice in the Solar System:
Comets, meteors, and asteroids: how are they different,
how are they related? We'll be cooking up a comet and
giving you the recipe! Mt. Diablo Astronomical Society
public astronomy programs on Mt. Diablo. More info
at http://www.mdas.net/publicprogram/publicprogram.htm or
call Mt. Diablo State Park - 925-837-2525
- 2009 August 21,22 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by Peninsula Astronomical Society
- 2009 Aug 22 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:50
pm, 11% moon sets 8:58 pm. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Aug 22 8:30 pm Dr. Anthonly Colaprete, NASA-Ames
Research Center - “Prospecting for Water on the Moon”
- Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy Program - In 2009,
NASA will purposely crash two spacecraft into one of
the Moon’s polar regions. The impacts should raise
huge plumes of material, visible even to smaller telescopes
on Earth. Astronomers will search for evidence of water
in the plumes to get a better sense of how much frozen
water may lay hidden in the deep, shadowed craters
of the Moon’s North and South poles. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
- 2009 Aug 28 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
7:42 pm, 68% moon sets 1:53 am. Star party hours: 8:30
until 11:30 pm http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 August 28,29 Yosemite
Star Party hosted by Sonoma County Astronomical
Society (S.C.A.S.)
- 2009 Aug 29 Sat. Peninsula Astronomical Society Star-B-Que
at Hidden Villa at 6PM The PAS and the San Mateo County
Astronomical Society will be holding its annual joint
Star-B-Que at the Hidden Villa Farm and Wilderness
Preserve in Los Altos Hills at 6PM ...pot luck picnic
with members of both clubs bringing a sample of their
favorite home made(or bought) dishes for everyone to
share. Please bring drinks(non-alchoholic) as well.
We will also have Bar-B-Qued hamburgers, sausages,
and chicken provided for by the club. Please let me
know by Email at lum40@comcast.net or
by phone at (650) 508-1879 if you are coming, how many
people you are bringing and what dishes you plan to
bring so I may know how much BBQ meat to bring. After
dinner, Dave Rodriques of the East Bay Astronomical
Society, who plays the "Astrowizard" at the
California Academy of Sciences/ Morrison Planetarium
and Chabot Space and Science Center, will treat us
and the public to one of his rowsing astronomical presentations
followed by a public Star Party, so bring your telescopes
and binoculars as well. Hidden Villa is located at
26870 Moody Rd. in Los Altos Hills and may be reached
by driving west on El Monte Rd. past Foothill College
up to the intersection with Moody Rd. on the left of
a fork. Take Moody Rd. about 2 miles until you see
the Hidden Villa sign on the left side of the road
next to an entrance leading to a wood bridge and subsequently
a ranch house(Visitor Center) where you can park. Below
is a map of the vicinity. The Star-B-Que will be held
at the Visitor Center where there is a kitchen for
cooking.
- 2009 AUG 31 Monday at 4:00 p.m. IMAGING A PLANET
AROUND FOMALHAUT USING THE HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE -
What Physicists Do. Dr. Paul Kalas of University of
California, Berkeley tells us how to spot an extrasolar
planet from Earth. Darwin 103. Department of Physics
and Astronomy, Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park,
CA 94928-3609. (707) 664-2119 Coffee at 3:30 p.m. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
January-|-February-|-March -|-April-|-May-|-June-|-July-|-August-|-September-|-October-|-November-|-December
September, 2009
- 2009 Sep 2. Wed, 12 noon. SETI Institute Colloquium
Series - Kepler's First Peek. Natalie Batalha, Physics
Department, San Jose State UniversityThe Kepler Mission
is designed to find Earth-sized exoplanets by staring
at the same star field for the entire mission and continuously
and simultaneously monitoring the brightnesses of more
than 100,000 stars for the life of the mission÷3.5
or more years. In this way, it will determine the fraction
of stars that have habitable planets - a key part of
the Drake Equation. Kepler was launched on March 6th
on a Delta II rocket. Dr. Batalha will talk about the
first stunning results from Kepler showing the phases
of the atmosphere of a known gas giant planet with
incredible accuracy. Where: 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View, The SETI Institute, Arecibo Rm.
- 2009 Sep 4-5 Fri-Sat. Dinner, a Movie, and the Universe
at Chabot Space Center 06:00 PM. Chabot Space and Science
Center, Oakland Join us for Chabot's unique evening
social rendezvous. Start your night off with dinner
and drinks, then cozy up in the planetarium as you're
whisked to the edge of the universe and cap off the
evening with telescope viewing featuring breathtaking
views of the cosmos. Dinner: Buy advance tickets to
ensure your dinner reservation. Purchase dinner separately
at the cafe ($15).Purchase your advanced tickets online
or call the Box Office at (510) 336-7373.
- 2009 Sep 5 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Slide and Equipment
night. Latest images, latest equipment, being made
by our members. Board meeting at 6:30; General Meeting
at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 September 5 (Saturday), 7:30pm EAS Lecture Meeting:
Alexie Leauthaud & Reiko Nakajima. Talk Title:
Gravitational Lensing: A Tool For Understanding Dark
Matter And Dark Energy. Physics Lab, 2nd Floor, Dellums
Building, Chabot Space & Science Center
- 2009 Sep 9. Wed, 12 noon. SETI Institute Colloquium
Series - Pavilion Lake - Diving Deep to get us to the
Moon and Mars. Darlene Lim, SETI Institute and NASA
Ames Space Science Division. The Pavilion Lake Research
Project (PLRP) is an international, multi- disciplinary,
science and exploration effort to explain the origin
of freshwater microbialites [link] in Pavilion Lake,
British Columbia, Canada. Fossil microbialites represent
some of the earliest remnants of life on ancient Earth,
and were common from ~2.5 billion to 540 million years
ago. Today, microbialites are found in what have been
deemed Îextremeâ environments. However, the microbialites
in Pavilion Lake have provided a new environment for
the scientific community to study that demonstrates
that large, and uniquely shaped structures can also
occur in non-extreme environments that also supports
a complex and thriving ecosystem. *The PLRP activities
integrate real science and exploration field activities
in a hostile environment, hence the challenges associated
with the research are analogous to those we will encounter
on the Moon and Mars. As such, the field program is
also providing scientific, operational and technical
learning relevant to future human planetary exploration.
Where: The SETI Institute, Arecibo Rm. 515 N. Whisman
Road, Mountain View
- 2009 Sep 11 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Sep 11 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
7:21 pm, 48% moon rise 11:39 pm. Star party hours:
8:30 until 11:30 pm http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Sep 11 Fri. Peninsula Astronomical Society Meeting
7:30PM Exploring the Invisible Universe: The Past and
Future of Radio Astronomy Speaker: Peter Williams University
of California, Berkeley. Foothill Community College
12345 Moody Rd. Los Altos Hills Rm 8402, Bldg. 8400
next to Parking Lot#8 near the entrance to the College.
Visible-light astronomy has been practiced for millennia.
Astronomical observations of radio waves are, in comparison,
still a novelty. Over its short lifespan, however,
the field of radio astronomy has still managed to produce
some of the most impressive results of modern science,
including the discovery of extrasolar molecules and
the detection of cosmic microwave background radiation,
the key piece of evidence for the Big Bang. In this
talk I'll discuss the basics of radio astronomy, what
can be seen in the radio sky, and the different ways
in which astronomy is done at optical and radio frequencies.
I'll also talk about what we can expect from radio
astronomy in the near and not-so- near future: an exciting
convergence of recent technological advances promises
do as much for radio astronomy as the invention of
the CCD has done for visible-light astronomy. Special
focus will be put on the Allen Telescope Array, a new
telescope jointly operated by UC Berkeley and the SETI
Institute, which exemplifies some of these advances.
- 2009 Sep 12 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:19
pm, 36% moon rise 12:44 am. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Sep 12 (Sat) -Annual meeting of the Astronomical
Association of Northern California, http://aancstars2009.org,
Westin SFO, Millbrae, California. Register for and
attend this portion of the combined AANC and ASP meeting
or register for all 5 days. http://aancstars2009.org/signup.shtml,
Press Release: http://aancstars2009.org/downloads/AANC_Fall_Astro_Presser.pdf
- 2009 Sep 12, 7pm. Music of the Spheres Concert at
Lick Observatory http://www.ucolick.org/public/music.html Daniel
Roest & Alex de Grassi; Speaker: Geoff Marcy ,
UCB Talk: "Detecting Other Earths" Great
Guitars! 2009. Fingerstyle icon Alex de Grassi joins
classical guitarist Daniel Roest . De Grassi's fame
spans the globe. His playing interweaves melody, counter-melody,
bass, harmony, rhythm, and cross- rhythms, creating
a canvas of sound rarely heard in a solo guitar performance.
He has released sixteen albums albums since "Turning:
Turning Back" helped launch Windham Hill's success
in 1978. His tenth recording, "The Water Garden," garnered
both Grammy and Indie Award nominations. He is the
subject of a PBS concert/interview television show, "Alex
de Grassi: The Artist's Profile."
- 2009 Sep 12 - 16. The 120th Anniversary Meeting of
the Astronomical Society of the Pacific: Science Education
and Outreach: Forging a Path to the Future. Westin
San Francisco Airport Hotel, Millbrae, California.
Sat-Sun September 12-13: hands-on workshops for K-14
and informal science educators and Sunday afternoon
talks on the search for life beyond Earth presented
by leading scientists from the SETI Institute. Submit
abstracts for 90-minute sessions, 10-minute oral papers,
or poster papers. Sunday eve, September 13: opening
reception. See http://www.astrosociety.org/events/meeting.html
- 2009 Sep 14 Mon. Benjamin Dean Lecture - The Voyager
Journey to Interstellar Space. Ed Stone, California
Institute of Technology and Voyager Project Scientist.
Launched in 1977 to explore Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus,
and Neptune, the two Voyager spacecraft revealed the
remarkable diversity of these giant planetary systems.
Now eight and ten billion miles from Earth, the Voyagers
are exploring the outermost layer of the bubble created
by Sun as they continue their journey to interstellar
space that lies beyond. Reservations: Ticket prices:
Adults $12, Seniors $10, Academy members $6. Seating
is limited. To purchase tickets in advance, go online
or call 800-794-7576. Monday, 09/14/09 07:30 PM - 08:30
PM
- 2009 SEP 14 Monday at 4:00 p.m. CONDENSED MATTER
LIGHT SCATTERING - What Physicists Do. Dr. Thomas Peter
Devereaux of Stanford University is the head of the
X-ray Science and Techniques Group at the Stanford
Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences, which
focuses on the scientific foundation related to the
energy challenge facing our society. He will discuss
using the tools of computational physics to understand
quantum materials. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Sep 16. Wed noon. SETI Institute Colloquium
Series - HST Imaging of Fomalhaut: Direct detection
of an exosolar planet and Kuiper Belt around a nearby
star. Paul Kalas, SETI Institute and University of
California, Berkeley. Advances in high-contrast imaging
have produced a new sample of spatially resolved debris
disks with morphologies attributed to the dynamical
effects of planets. I will briefly review several cases,
including our recent non-detection of Beta Pictoris
b using Keck adaptive optics at L-prime. Then I will
focus on the case for a planetary system around the
nearby A star Fomalhaut. Optical coronagraphic observations
using the Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard HST shows
a vast dusty debris belt offset from the star and cleanly
sculpted at its inside border. Follow-up HST images
have further revealed a co-moving point source with
apparent orbital motion 18 AU interior to the dust
belt. I will discuss both the observational and theoretical
evidence that the point source is a planet with < 3
Jupiter masses, making Fomalhaut b the lowest mass
planet candidate detected via direct imaging. I will
give alternate explanations and discuss future plans
for the detailed mapping of Fomalhaut's planetary system.
Where: The SETI Institute, Arecibo Rm., 515 N. Whisman
Road, Mountain View
- 2009 Sep 18, 8-10 pm Sonoma State Univ Observatory
Public Viewing Night - A tour of the center of the
Milky Way Galaxy. (707) 664 - 2267; http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/observatory/pvn.html
- 2009 Sep 19 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 7:09
pm, 2% moon sets 7:25 pm. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 September 19 11am - UC Berkeley Astronomy Department
IYA Lecture - Nathan Smith: "Live Fast - Die Young:
Monster Stars and their Temper Tantrums" - in
Genetics and Plant Biology Building, Room 100- UC Berkeley
Astronomy Dept IYA Public Talk - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya.
- 2009 Sep 19 8: 30pm Wil van Breugel, Ph.D, University
of California Merced - “Astrobiology: What is Life & Where
is It? - Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy Program
- Astrobiology combines astronomy, biology, physics
and chemistry to investigate the origin and evolution
of life in extreme environments, including early Earth,
and guides the search for alien life on other planets
in our Solar System and beyond. Dr. vanBreugel will
discuss how our perception and understanding of life
has evolved, and the close connection of life to the
cosmos. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
- 2009 SEP 21 Monday at 4:00 p.m. CULTIVATING SCIENTIST
AND ENGINEER EDUCATORS - What Physicists Do. Dr. Anne
Metevier of the Center for Adaptive Optics at UC Santa
Cruz will describe her work training early-career scientists
and engineers to teach more effectively by using methods
that promote inquiry and an equitable college classroom
environment. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Sep 22 -Tu- Autumn begins at 2:19 pm PDT
- 2009 September 22 Guest Speaker: Dr. Máté Ádámkovics,
UC Berkeley. The Cassini Mission and the latest about
Saturn's moon, Titan. Mt. Diablo Astronomical Society
free public meetings in Concord, CA. http://www.mdas.net
- 2009 Sep 23 Wed Noon. Where is Mars' Ice? Constraints
from impact craters and lobate debris aprons on a mid-latitude
reservoir. Reid Parsons, Earth and Planetary Sciences
Department, UC Santa Cruz - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Sep 25 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
7:00 pm, 49% moon sets 11:40 pm. Star party hours:
8:00 until 11:00 pm http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Fri. 9/25 and Sat. 9/26 Dinner, a Movie, and
the Universe at Chabot Space Center 06:00 PM Chabot
Space and Science Center, Oakland Join us for Chabot's
unique evening social rendezvous. Start your night
off with dinner and drinks, then cozy up in the planetarium
as you're whisked to the edge of the universe and cap
off the evening with telescope viewing featuring breathtaking
views of the cosmos. Dinner: Buy advance tickets to
ensure your dinner reservation. Purchase dinner separately
at the cafe ($15). ADVANCED TICKETS A Movie and the
Universe: Admission to Chabot includes all access to
our interactive exhibitions, a film in the MegaDome
theater AND a show in the Digital Planetarium. Purchase
your advanced tickets online or call the Box Office
at (510) 336-7373.
- 2009 Sep 26 6:30pm Planets & Moons: View Jupiter
and its moons in the telescopes. Make a scale model
of the Solar System to take home. Mt. Diablo Astronomical
Society public astronomy programs on Mt. Diablo. More
info at http://www.mdas.net/publicprogram/publicprogram.htm or
call Mt. Diablo State Park - 925-837-2525
- 2009Saturday, 09/26/09 03:00 PM - 04:30 PM Tien MegaDome
Theatre Chabot Space and Science Center 10000 Skyline
Blvd Oakland, CA USA 94619 Andrew Chaikin on LCROSS
Enjoy FREE General Admission for you and a guest
- 2009 Sunday, 09/27/09 02:00 PM - 04:00 PM Exploratorium
3601 Lyon Street San Francisco, CA USA 94123 Email:
visit@exploratorium.edu Phone: (415) 561-0360 Website:
http://www.exploratorium.edu/ To the Moon: A Look at
NASA's Upcoming Lunar Impact Mission and the History
of Moon Exploration A Talk with Space Historian Andrew
Chaikin Take a trip to our nearest neighbor in space
with renowned science journalist and space historian
Andrew Chaikin. Relive the achievements of Apollo lunar
astronauts and learn about the ambitious LCROSS (Lunar
CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission,
which will send a rocket crashing into the moon's permanently
shadowed regions to kick up huge plumes of debris in
the hopes of uncovering deposits of ice. Coinciding
with the 40th anniversary of the first moon landing,
Chaikin's talk will introduce the past, present, and
future of lunar exploration and include a visual tour
of the moon's surface from Apollo landing sites to
the LCROSS impact point. In addition, Exploratorium
educators will give an entertaining and interactive
overview of moon science. All free with Exploratorium
admission.
- 2009 SEP 28 Monday at 4:00 p.m. PEEKING AT THE YOUNGEST
STARS - What Physicists Do. Dr. Tom Greene of NASA's
Ames Research Center will describe what infrared spectroscopic
observations are telling us about very young sun-like
stars while they are still accreting their last bits
of mass and before their planetary systems have formed. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009Tuesday, September 29 7:00 pm Orinda Library
26 Orinda Way, Orinda, Free to the general public.
A Fireside Chat with George Hammond previewing Copernicus,
Galileo and Kepler. Join author/performer George Hammond
for a Fireside Chat previewing the upcoming Copernicus,
Galileo, and Kepler: Redefining Our Place in the Universe,
Humanities West's two-day program of lectures, discussions,
music and dance presentations celebrating the International
Year of Astronomy in honor of the 400th anniversary
of modern astronomy and Galileo's first use of the
telescope in 1609.
- 2009 Tues. 9/29 Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory 2575 Sand Hill
Road Menlo Park 7:30 PM, Panofsky Auditorium (overflow
seating available in Kavli Auditorium) Journey to the
Center of the Earth: Exploring High Pressure Wendy
Mao, Photon Science, SLAC/Geological & Environmental
Sciences, Stanford. Abstract: The deeper we go into
the Earth, the higher the pressure. At the pressures
found within the center of our planet, minerals do
not simply compress. Pressure dramatically alters all
materials properties, in the process creating numerous
novel phases not found on the surface. This lecture
will describe how we simulate the conditions found
in planetary interiors in the lab, what kinds of new
behavior we find, and how these observations can explain
what is going on within the Earth. High pressure explorations
also lead to discoveries of novel materials with potential
for practical applications in our low-pressure, environment.
- 2009 Sep 30 Wed Noon. Solar Flares and Coronal Mass
Ejections Observed with STEREO. Markus Aschwanden - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
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October, 2009
- 2009 Oct 2 10-12noon and Oct 3 (Sat) 1:30-4pm. Copernicus,
Galileo, and Kepler: Redefining our Place in the Universe.
Humanities West two-day program of lectures, discussions,
music, and dance presentations celebrating the International
Year of Astronomy in honor of the 400th anniversary
of Galileo‚s first use of the telescope in 1609. Alexander
Zwissler (Executive Director, Chabot Space & Science
Center) moderates Friday night. Presenters include
Roger Hahn (UC Berkeley), Kip Cranna (SF Opera), Kathryn
Roszak‚s Danse Lumiere (SF), Bethany Cobb (UC Berkeley),
Paula Findlen (Stanford University), Geoff Marcy (UC
Berkeley), George Hammond (SF attorney and author),
and Alex Filippenko (UC Berkeley). Herbst Theatre 401
Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco TICKETS: $20 - $100
Tickets are available through City Box Office at 415/392-4400
or online at www.cityboxoffice.com Group tickets: info@humanitieswest.org
- 2009 Oct 3 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Dr. To B. Announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Oct 3 Saturday 11:30 AM - 04:30 PM. Lawrence
Hall of Science 1 Centennial Drive Berkeley, CA USA
94720 Discover Red Planet Mars!: Planetarium Grand
Opening Program Join us for the grand opening of the
NEW Holt Planetarium at the Lawrence Hall of Science!
To celebrate our move to a larger space with a new
digital fulldome projector, we are running drop-in
interactive programs to help you discover the Red PlanetÑMars!
The Red Planet has always held mysteries for us, even
from the most ancient of times. To unravel some of
these secrets, you can learn how to spot Mars in the
night sky. You may study Mars through a telescope,
teasing out the subtle details of the planet's surface.
Ponder what sort of creature might survive in Mars's
harsh environment. Learn how space probes have updatedÑand
changedÑwhat we know about our planetary neighbor.
With missions operating on and around Mars right now
(and more to come), there is a lot to discover! Check
out the new Planetarium, where your participation is
all part of the program! Doors are open 11:30a.m.-1:30
p.m. & 2:30-4:30 p.m. on October 3-4.
- 2009 OCT 5 Monday at 4:00 p.m. THE RICH PHYSICS OF
NUCLEAR MUON CAPTURE - What Physicists Do. Dr. Tom
Banks of the University of California, Berkeley will
describe recent efforts by the MuCap Collaboration
to precisely measure the rate of nuclear muon capture
in hydrogen, and how the process of muon capture--which
involves electromagnetism, the weak interaction, and
the strong interaction--is a unique confluence of a
diverse range of physics. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Oct 7 Wed Noon. Detecting Organics using Fluorescence
Spectroscopy. Nathan Bramall, NASA Ames Space Science
Division - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Oct 7, 7pm, Public Lecture, Hubble Breakthrough:
The First Photos of a Planet Orbiting Another Star.
Prof. Paul Kalas, University of California, Berkeley.
Silicon Valley Astronomy Lecture in the Smithwick Theater,
Foothill College, El Monte Road and Freeway 280, in
Los Altos Hills, California. Free and open to the public.
Parking on campus costs $2. Call the series hot-line
at 650-949-7888 for more information and driving directions.
Paul Kalas was the leader of the team who managed the
long-sought feat of actually taking a photograph of
a planet orbiting another star....He will describe
how they achieved the breakthrough using the Hubble
Space Telescope and discuss the wide range of planets
out there that astronomers are discovering.
- 2009 Oct 9 4:30 am. LCROSS lunar impact.
- 2009 Oct 9. At the Exploratorium. Shoot the Moon!
Phyllis Wattis Webcast Studio or watch live online
at: http://www.explo.tv 1pm,
PDT* Is water ice present or absent in a crater near
the moon’s polar region? Join the Exploratorium for
a live webcast of the LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observing
and Sensing Satellite) mission on Friday, October 9
at 1pm. LCROSS is a NASA mission investigating the
presence of water ice. The Exploratorium Web team will
cover the mission, the explosion on the moon, and the
plume of matter that will shoot 40 feet into the air
from the moon’s surface, visible from Earth! Watch
live online at http://www.explo.tv or at the Exploratorium.
*Time and date subject to change; please check www.explo.tv for
the latest information. This event is included in the
price of admission to the Exploratorium. NASA’s LCROSS
mission is seeking a definitive answer. Join Exploratorium
staff for a special Webcast featuring live coverage
of LCROSS crashing into the moon! We’ll watch the explosion
and investigate how this intentional crash could reveal
the existence of water ice. http://press.exploratorium.edu/shoot-the-moon-october-2009
- 2009 Oct 7 Wed Noon. Detecting Organics using Fluorescence
Spectroscopy. Nathan Bramall, NASA Ames Space Science
Division - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Oct 9 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Oct 9 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
6:39 pm, 62% moon rise 10:37 pm. Star party hours:
7:30 until 10:30 pm http://www.sjaa.net
2009 Oct 10 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 6:37 pm,
51% moon rise 11:56 pm. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Oct 11 at 2pm Grand Opening of "Out of
this World: The Landscapes of Our Solar System" a
new art exhibition at the Hearst Gallery and "The
Top Tourist Sights of the Solar System: Where Bill
Gates' Great-Granddaughter Might Go on Her Honeymoon" A
Free Public Talk by Astronomer Andrew Fraknoi at the
LeFevre Theater both at St. Mary's College of California
in Moraga. reception 3:30 to 5). For information and
directions, see: http://www.hearstartgallery.org Parking
is free. campus
map - The exhibit features the paintings of some
of the best known artists, depicting scenes of alien
worlds. There will also be computer simulations, a
scale model of the Mars Rover, films, Hubble, Mars
Rover, and Cassini planetary images, and more. The
curators of this special show are Carrie Brewster,
the Gallery Director, and Ronald Olowin, Professor
of Physics and Astronomy at St. Mary's. To kick off
the exhibit, which continues through Dec. 13, astronomer
and popular lecturer Andrew Fraknoi will explore the
most intriguing future tourist destinations in our
cosmic neighborhood in an illustrated talk for the
public.
- 2009 OCT 12 Monday at 4:00 p.m. FIRST RESULTS FROM
THE KEPLER MISSION TO FIND EARTH-SIZED EXOPLANETS -
What Physicists Do. Dr. Gibor Basri, Professor of Astronomy
and Vice Chancellor for Equity and Inclusion at the
University of California at Berkeley, will discuss
the latest from NASA's new exoplanet-hunting Kepler
space telescope. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Oct 14 Wed Noon. Fermi-LAT Observing the Universe
with high-energy gamma-ray eyes. Dr. Stefan Funk, Associate
Professor, Department of Physics, Stanford University
- http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Oct 17 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 6:28
pm, 0% moon rises 7:57 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 October 17 11am - UC Berkeley Astronomy Department
IYA Lecture - Imke de Pater - Fascinating Objects in
our Solar System - in Genetics and Plant Biology Building,
Room 100 UC Berkeley - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 OCT 19 Monday at 4:00 p.m. FORMATION AND EVOLUTION
OF MASSIVE GALAXIES - What Physicists Do. Dr. Mariska
Kriek of Princeton University will discuss the formation
and evolution of massive galaxies. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Oct 21 Wed Noon. Special Panel: LCROSS Mission
- the first results of the impact. Tony Colaprete,
Jennifer Heldmann and Diane Wooden - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Oct 23 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
6:20 pm, 33% moon sets 10:26 pm. Star party hours:
7:30 until 10:30 pm http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 October 23rd 8-11pm. Evening Star Party at Foothill
College: Free and Open to the Public. Foothill
College and the Peninsula Astronomical Society is
holding a "star party" with telescopes
at the Foothill College Observatory in Los Altos
Hills, provided the sky is clear. The Observatory's
16-inch telescope will be open for viewing and members
of the Society will bring their own large telescopes
as well. Among the objects we will be able to see
in the telescopes Oct. 23rd is the giant planet Jupiter,
whose moons Galileo discovered -- thus demonstrating
that not everything had to go around the Earth, as
many people believed. The Foothill event is free,
but parking on campus costs $2.00. Foothill College
is located just off Freeway 280, going west on the
El Monte Road exit. Los Altos Hills is between Palo
Alto and Mountain View. The Foothill Observatory
is near Parking Lot 4 on campus. For a map, see: http://www.foothill.edu/news/maps.html
Hints for Participants:
1. Dress warm and bring a small flashlight (one per
family)
2. Parking Lot 4 is closest to the observatory, but
may fill up quickly
3. You can park in lot 3 and walk forward (keeping
to the sidewalk) to the observatory
4. Or you may park in lot 5, and walk back to the observatory
5. Children should be especially careful of the traffic
on the one-way ring road that surrounds the campus
6. Be prepared for a short wait if there are crowds
- Galilean Nights:
- 2008 Oct 24 Fall Astronomy Day
- 2009 Oct 24 7:30pm Professor Michael Dine, University
of California Santa Cruz - “The Dawn of the LHC Era:
The Convergence of Particle Physics and Astrophysics”
- Mt. Tamalpais State Park Astronomy Program - Over
the past year, the Large Hadron Collider, an extraordinary
scientific instrument, has begun to operate in Geneva.
It offers the possibility of answering some of the
great questions we confront in understanding the universe,
including the identity of the dark matter and the asymmetry
between matter and antimatter. http://www.mttam.net/Default.aspx?tabid=843
- 2009 Oct 24 6:00pm Discovering New Worlds: Where
are astronomers looking for habitable planets outside
of the Solar System? How will NASA's Kepler Mission
find them? Mt. Diablo Astronomical Society public astronomy
programs on Mt. Diablo. More info at http://www.mdas.net/publicprogram/publicprogram.htm or
call Mt. Diablo State Park - 925-837-2525
- 2009 OCT 26 Monday at 4:00 p.m. SOFIA - THE STRATOSPHERIC
OBSERVATORY FOR INFRARED ASTRONOMY - What Physicists
Do. Dr. Dana Backman, the director of education and
public outreach for SOFIA, will give us a status report
NASA’s new airborne observatory, a 2.5-meter telescope
mounted in a Boeing 747. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Oct 26, 7-8:30 pm. Dark Secrets: What Science
Tells us About the Hidden Universe
A free panel discussion open to the public. Part of
Berkeley Lab’s "Science at the Theater" Series.
Berkeley Repertory Theatre, 2015 Addison St., Berkeley,
CA
http://www.lbl.gov/Community/.
KTVU Channel 2 health and science editor John
Fowler will moderate a panel of Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory scientists Saul Perlmutter
(heads the Supernova Cosmology Project), David
Schlegel (Berkeley Lab astrophysicist and the
principal investigator of Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic
Survey), Alexie Leauthaud (Chamberlain Fellow
at Berkeley Lab).
- 2009 Oct 28 Wed Noon. The Inner Structure of a Floating
Water Bridge. Elmar Fuchs, Wetsus - Centre of Excellence
for Sustainable Water Technology, The Netherlands - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
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November, 2009
- 2009 Nov 1 -Su- SJAA 2 am. DST ends. Set clocks back
1 hour. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 NOV 2 Monday at 4:00 p.m. THE MILKY WAY’S HIDDEN
PAST - What Physicists Do. Dr. Constance Rockosi of
the University of California, Santa Cruz will talk
about what we've discovered about our Galaxy's hidden
past and how we can use that past to connect observations
of the early universe with the galaxies we see today. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Nov 4 Wed Noon. The search for intelligent life
in the Universe, and why it will fail. Ben Zuckermann,
Physics and Astronomy Department, UCLA - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Nov 6 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
5:05 pm, 77% moon rises 8:38 pm. Star party hours:
7:00 until 10:00 pm http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Nov 6 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Nov 7 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 5:04
pm, 66% moon rises 9:50 pm. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 NOV 9 Monday at 4:00 p.m. EXTREME PLANETARY
ATMOSPHERES - What Physicists Do. Dr. Jonathan Fortney
of the University of California, Santa Cruz will show
how our understanding of planetary atmospheres is being
revolutionized by observations of the super-heated
class of Jupiter-like planets that orbit very close
to their parent stars. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Nov 10 Wed Noon. Water, Molecular Oxygen and
Ice in Star-Forming Molecular Clouds. David Hollenbach,
SETI Institute - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Nov 11, Wednesday, at 7 pm. LIFE AT THE EDGE:
Life in Extreme Environments on Earth and the Search
for Life in the Universe. Dr. Lynn Rothschild, NASA
Ames Research Ctr. - 11th Annual Silicon Valley Astronomy
Lectures in the Smithwick Theater, Foothill College,
El Monte Road and Freeway 280, in Los Altos Hills,
California. Free and open to the public. Parking on
campus costs $2. Call the series hot-line at 650-949-7888
for more information and driving directions. Past Silicon
Valley Astronomy Lectures are now available in MP3
format at http://www.astrosociety.org/education/podcast/index.html
- 2009 Nov 14 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 4:58
pm, 2% moon rises 5:48 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 NOV 16 Monday at 4:00 p.m. THE MILKY WAY’S HIDDEN
PAST- What Physicists Do. Dr. Constance Rockosi of
the University of California, Santa Cruz will talk
about what we've discovered about our Galaxy's hidden
past and how we can use that past to connect observations
of the early universe with the galaxies we see today. phys.astro@sonoma.edu http://phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
- 2009 Nov 20 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
4:54 pm, 17% moon sets 8:13 pm. Star party hours: 7:00
until 10:00 pm http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 November 21 11am - UC Berkeley Astronomy Department
IYA Lecture - Maryam Modjaz - Cosmic Fireworks: The
Explosive Deaths of Massive Stars - in Genetics and
Plant Biology Building, Room 100, UC Berkeley - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 Nov 25 Wed Noon. Deep Space Flight and Communications:
SETI, KLT and Astronautics in a 2009 book. Claudio
Maccone, Co-Vice Chair of the SETI Permanent Study
Group, International Academy of Astronautics - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Nov 28 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Dr. To B. Announced. Board meeting at 6:30; General
Meeting at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Nov 29 -Su- SJAA Will there be a Fall Swap?
Where? http://www.sjaa.net
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December, 2009
- 2009 Dec 2 Wed Noon. Titan's Ontario Lacus: Smoothness
constraints from Cassini RADAR. Lauren Wye, Department
of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University - http://www.seti.org/colloquium -
at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain
View
- 2009 Dec 7. Benjamin Dean Lecture - At Saturn, Speaker:
Dr. Carolyn Porco, Director of CICLOPS, Space Science
Institute, Boulder, CO. For seven years, the Cassini
spacecraft and its Huygens probe traveled invisible
interplanetary roads to the place we call Saturn. Their
successful entry into orbit, the mythic landing of
Huygens on the cold, dark equatorial plains of Titan,
and Cassini's subsequent explorations of the Saturnian
environment are already the stuff of legend. What they
have shown us, and the images they have collected,
have revolutionized our views of this very alien planetary
system and the planetary processes responsible for
its configuration. Reservations: Ticket prices: Adults
$12, Seniors $10, Academy members $6. Seating is limited.
To purchase tickets in advance, call 800-794-7576 or
Buy online at: http://bit.ly/5B94u8
- 2009 Dec 9 Wed 12 Noon SETI Institute Colloquium
Series 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View - Arecibo
Rm. The search for intelligent life in the Universe:
some great challenges for SETI. Finding Planets Around
Nearby Stars: The Lick-Carnegie Extrasolar Planet Search
Program. Steven S. Vogt, UCO/Lick Observatory, UC Santa
Cruz. There are currently over 350 known extrasolar
planets, the vast majority discovered through detection
of periodic barycentric reflex motion of the planet's
host star via high-precision Doppler radial velocity
measurements. The Lick-Carnegie Extrasolar Planet Search
Program is one such precision Doppler-based planet
survey. It is currently monitoring over 1330 nearby
F,G,K, and M stars for planets at 2-3 m/sec precision,
and has contributed over 70% of the presently- known
exoplanets. These extrasolar planetary systems display
an unexpected diversity of orbital period, size, and
eccentricity, and the emerging database is providing
new insight into the origins and evolution of planetary
systems. This talk will give a brief review of our
program, reviewing details of the detection method,
recent results, and future directions. The talk will
also highlight the 2.4- meter Automated Planet Finder,
nearing completion at Lick Observatory.
- 2009 Dec 10 Thurs 4PM Lockheed Martin's Advanced
Technology Center Lockheed Martin ATC Auditorium in
Building 202, 3251 Hanover Street, Palo Alto, CA 94304.
The Palo Alto Colloquia: ROSETTA, IN-SITU MISSION TO
AN ACTIVE COMET Dr. Stephan Ulamec, Project Manager
for the Rosetta Lander, Philae. Rosetta is a Cornerstone
Mission of the ESA Horizon 2000 Programme. It is going
to rendezvous with comet 67/P Churyumov-Gerasimenko
after a 10 years cruise and to study both its nucleus
and coma through an orbiting spacecraft and a landed
platform. The latter, named Philae, after the island
where the obelisk was found which helped together with
the stone of Rosetta to decipher the Egyptian hieroglyphs,
has been designed to land softly on the comet nucleus
and is equipped with 10 scientific instruments to perform
in-situ studies of the cometary material. http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=31445
- 2009 Dec 10 7:30PM Geek Out: Why We Must Colonize
Space - 12/10/2009 07:00 PM Lawrence Hall of Science,
Berkeley It's been four decades since humankind took
its first tentative steps in the realms beyond Earth,
as bulky-suited astronauts stomped their boots in the
lunar dust. But despite florid pronouncements and grandiose
expectations, we still haven't gone very far into space.
- 2009 Dec 11 Fri. Peninsula Astronomical Society meeting
7:30PM. Foothill Community College Peninsula Astronomical
Society Meeting 7:30PM Foothill Community College 12345
Moody Rd. Los Altos Hills Rm 8402, Bldg. 8400 next
to Parking Lot#8 near the entrance to the College.
Computer Graphics: From Hollywood, NASA, and Beyond
with Chris Ford of Pixar Animation. Astronomy and the
art of astronomical visualization have always been
closely linked. The traditional paintings of artists
such as Chesley Bonestell, Don Dixon, or Ron Miller
are well known and have educated and inspired millions.
Witness the birth of the galaxy, navigate through Saturn's
rings and take a trip on the Mars rover. Join us for
this visually-rich multimedia exploration through the
universe as Mr. Ford describes how the evolution of
computer graphic techniques has allowed us to experience
spectacular celestial settings with data-driven accuracy.
- 2009 Dec 11 -Fr- SJAA Houge Park star party. Sset
4:50 pm, 16% moon rises 3:39 am. Star party hours:
7:00 until 10:00 pm http://www.sjaa.net
2009 Dec 11 -Fr- SJAA Astronomy Class at Houge Park.
7:30 pm. Topic to be announced. http://www.sjaa.net
2009 Dec 12 -Sa- SJAA Dark-Sky weekend. Sset 4:51 pm,
9% moon rises 4:43 am. Henry Coe Park's "Astronomy" lot
has been reserved. http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 Dec 12 Sat. 2:00PM. Exploratorium, 3601 Lyon
Street, San Francisco, CA. Blast! - 12/12/2009 02:00
PM. Exploratorium, San Francisco. In celebration of
the International Year of Astronomy we will screen
Blast! (2009, 53 min.) by Emmy winner Paul Devlin.
Blast! follows the story of the filmmaker's brother,
Mark Devlin, who leads a tenacious team of scientists
in launching a revolutionary new telescope under a
NASA high-altitude balloon. BLAST (the Balloon-borne,
Large- Aperture, Submillimeter Telescope) was created
to capture images of light from the cosmos that can
help us understand the formation of stars, planets,
and galaxies. The adventure takes scientists from Sweden,
Canada, and the Arctic to Antarctica, where catastrophic
failure forces the team to start all over again on
the desolate ice. Blast! also examines the dedicated
life of the scientists involved. Their professional
obsessions, personal and family sacrifices, and philosophical
questioning all give emotional resonance to suspenseful
scientific pursuit.
- 2009 Dec 12 Sat. Star Parties At Crestview Park,
San Carlos. Sunset 4:51PM. Come out and bring the kids
for a mind expanding look at the universe. The City
of San Carlos Parks and Recreation Department and the
San Mateo County Astronomical Society has open Star
Parties twice a month. These events are held in Crestview
Park, San Carlos California. For more information call
Bob Black, (650)592-2166, or send an email to SMCAS@live.com
or call Ed Pieret at (650)862-9602.
- 2009 Dec 14 Mon. 4:15pm. Extrasolar Planetary Systems.
Bruce Macintosh, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Location: SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, 2575
Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA. Panofsky Auditorium.
Event is open to the public. More than 300 extrasolar
planets are now known. Almost all have been detected
indirectly through radial velocity measurements or
eclipses of their parent star. Direct detection spatially
resolving the planet from the star opens up new areas
of exoplanet phase space and new avenues for planet
characterization. Macintosh will discuss the challenges
in detecting such faint signals a mature Jupiter-like
planet is a billion times fainter than its parent star
and approaches to overcoming them. The promise of this
approach was recently demonstrated with images of a
planet orbiting Fomalhaut (Kalas et al 2008) and a
three-planet system orbiting the young A star HR8799
(Marois et al 2008). Macintosh will discuss the latter
in detail, and will summarize future prospects in this
field, including advanced ground-based instrumentation
and the path towards detection and characterization
of Earthlike planets. Bruce Macintosh is currently
a physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
working in astronomical adaptive optics, and an associate
director for the National Science Foundation Center
for Adaptive Optics. He is principal investigator for
the Gemini Planet Imager, a next- generation instrument
for the 8 meter Gemini South telescope designed to
directly detect and spectroscopically characterize
Jovian planets orbiting nearby stars.
- 2009 Dec 16 Wed. Noon. SETI Institute Colloquium
Series 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View. Exploring
Alternative SETI Search Algorithms with the ATA. Gerry
Harp , SETI Institute. As a novel, many-element interferometer,
the ATA supports radically different observing modes
than any single-dish, yet performs very well in single-dish
mode using beamformers. The cutting edge technology
of ATA allows simultaneous data processing in 3 different
modes: spectral imaging, ultra-high resolution single-point
observing, and high speed data capture. The latter
mode allows the application of any algorithm you can
imagine on time-series data. In this talk Dr. Harp
describe several new or "almost new" SETI
algorithms that have been explored or implemented on
the ATA. Recent results from prototype SETI observations
are shown. These new algorithms are contrasted with
standard SETI analysis and Dr. Harp will show how they
may augment the search on next generation of SETI analyzers.
- 2009 Dec 19 -Sa- SJAA General Meeting. Our speaker
is Dr. To B. Announced. Board meeting at 6:30; General
Meeting at 8:00 http://www.sjaa.net
- 2009 December 19 11am - UC Berkeley Astronomy Department
IYA Lecture - Dick Plambeck - UC Berkeley - http://astro.berkeley.edu/iya
- 2009 Dec 21 -Mo- Winter begins at 9:47 am PST
Additions should be sent to Alan
Gould
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