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International Year of Astronomy 2009 >> Cornerstone Projects

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Pedro Russo
member


Reged: 09/27/08
Posts: 20
100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new
      #2919500 - 02/10/09 12:23 PM

http://astronomy2009.org/news/pressreleases/detail/iya0904/

Feb 10, 2009, Paris

The International Year of Astronomy 2009 (IYA2009) is about to reach new heights as the Global Cornerstone Project, 100 Hours of Astronomy, scheduled to take place from 2–5 April 2009, ramps up. The project invites amateur astronomers, educators, professional astronomers, planetaria, science centres and more to arrange events around the world during this 4-day period and to publicise them now on the project website. For those wishing to visit the frontiers of astronomy from their home, a 24-hour webcast from the largest telescopes on the planet will take a unique look behind the scenes at state of the art research facilities.

100 Hours of Astronomy is the single largest event taking place during IYA2009. It is a worldwide celebration composed of a broad range of activities aimed at involving the public. The event will take place over four days and nights, from 2-5 April 2009 (local time). During this period, people from around the globe will share the experience of observing the sky. For many, it will be their first glimpse of the wonders of the heavens through a telescope. For others, it is the perfect opportunity to impart their knowledge and excitement, helping unveil the cosmos to fresh and eager eyes.

The two highest profile activities are a live 24-hour observatory webcast from the largest telescopes in the world, and 100 hours of sidewalk astronomy events. The former will take place from 3 April 09:00 UT to 4 April 09:00 UT, when astronomers at professional observatories around the world will show their telescope domes and control rooms, giving an insider's view of these cutting-edge scientific facilities.

Mike Simmons, Co-Chair, elaborates: "This 100 Hours of Astronomy project is key to the International Year of Astronomy 2009. Astronomers are known for their enthusiasm and love of sharing knowledge, which are the main ingredients of 100 Hours of Astronomy. It's going to be an amazing time, as nothing of this scale has been attempted before. Every participant will be making history!"

For the 100 hours of sidewalk astronomy events, amateur, enthusiast and professional astronomers will combine their efforts to encourage as many people as possible to look through a telescope as Galileo did for the first time 400 years ago. The sidewalk events will peak with a 24-hour Global Star Party on 4 April (from local dusk to dawn), organised together with Sidewalk Astronomers and International Sidewalk Astronomy Night. Here telescopes around the world will be available for use, free of charge, allowing people to peer into space at breathtaking objects. Some traditional favourites will be ideally placed in the night sky for observation. These include the Moon, which is an astounding sight through a telescope, with its alien, yet strangely familiar, cratered landscape; and the planet Saturn, with its beautiful rings, once seen, never forgotten. That people from so many nations will be gazing up at the sky simultaneously, linked together by their common home in the Universe, is an inspiring realisation.

To keep track of developments and to promote sidewalk astronomy events effectively during the 100 hours, events are registered on www.100hoursofastronomy.org. Hundreds of activities have already been added, and the number is expected to balloon to even more impressive levels over the coming weeks. Anyone can set up an event, whether it is screening astronomy videos for a few hours on a single day or a 100-hour marathon event; only imagination sets the limit. The activities and events of 100 Hours of Astronomy will bring fresh audiences to astronomy and perhaps inspire young and budding scientists to pursue a career in astronomy.

Douglas Pierce-Price, 100 Hours of Astronomy Co-Chair, notes: "Every day we receive information about more events planned during the 100-hour window. The list is getting longer and pins are popping up all over our map of the world!"

The 100 Hours of Astronomy Opening Event will take place on 2 April 2009 at The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, USA. Hosted by US national spokesman Derrick Pitts and featuring world-renowned Galileo expert Dr. Paolo Galluzzi, the interactive educational event will showcase Galileo's original telescope - the telescope first trained on the night skies - on loan for an exclusive exhibition entitled "Galileo, the Medici and the Age of Astronomy". There will also be a live science centre webcast discussing hot topics in astronomy.

Thousands of local events are being planned by science facilities and astronomy enthusiasts around the world, including telescope observing sessions, exhibitions, special shows and more. In many countries there will be public lectures by specially selected speakers, experts in astronomy, keen to participate in this planet-wide venture.

100 Hours of Astronomy is a venture of breathtaking scope that seeks to involve people from all walks of life around the globe and conveys a multitude of messages, from the personal benefit of astronomical knowledge to the pressing issue of curbing light pollution. Clear your agenda now for 100 hours of discovery!

Links

100Hours of Astronomy website: www.100hoursofastronomy.org
IYA2009 website: www.astronomy2009.org


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George N
professor emeritus


Reged: 05/19/06
Posts: 672
Loc: Binghamton & Indian Lake NY
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: Pedro Russo]
      #2962129 - 03/03/09 10:45 PM Attachment (34 downloads)

Quote:

.......100 Hours of Astronomy is a venture of breathtaking scope that seeks to involve people from all walks of life around the globe and conveys a multitude of messages, from the personal benefit of astronomical knowledge to the pressing issue of curbing light pollution. Clear your agenda now for 100 hours of discovery!

Links

100Hours of Astronomy website: www.100hoursofastronomy.org
IYA2009 website: www.astronomy2009.org



I see the list of events listed on the 100 hrs website continues to grow! I’m really starting to look forward to this.

Here’s what we are doing in the Binghamton NY area: http://tinyurl.com/dkp9dz

--------------------
George N

Obsession 20
Optical Guidance Systems 10" F/9 R-C Cass
6" F/5 & 8" F/8 home-made Newts
MI-250 mount
SBIG STL-1301E CCD
Member, International Dark-Sky Association


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janehoustonjones
sage


Reged: 10/21/07
Posts: 400
Loc: 34 N 118 W, 637.0 feet
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: George N]
      #3022686 - 04/03/09 07:32 PM


For those of you who would like to go back and view (or show) some of the "Around the world in 80 telescopes" segments after the live broadcast, the 100 Hours of Astronomy website conveniently has links to each telescope feature in a separate Ustream segment. http://www.100hoursofastronomy.org/ easy for viewing later.

Just around "my" corner, Caltech is projecting the show on the outside walls of the new astronomy building all day today! 1216 California Boulevard in Pasadena. I think I'll drive by on my way to do sidewalk astronomy tonight in Pasadena. :-)

JPL's website has great coverage too -- right on the main page:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/

And speaking of telescopes, 4 orbiting telescopes are featured in this
months new What's Up Podcast. The topic is NASA's IYA observing object of
the month -- The Whirlpool Galaxy. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup.cfm

In the sky tonight 8 day waxing moon, 9 day moon on Saturday.

You can use this great map to locate many of the Apollo landing areas:
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=804

And if it is cloudy, you can imagine that little golden Saturnian dot in the sky looks like this Ian Sharp (UK) image from Wednesday night:
http://www.astro-sharp.com/images/saturn2009/sat-2009-04-01-20-40-IDS.jpg

Jane

--------------------
Jane Houston Jones
New! What's Up Podcast for November (The Crab Nebula)
New NASA web feature: Hunting Leonids









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Hrundi
Pooh-Bah


Reged: 02/06/08
Posts: 1229
Loc: Estonia
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: janehoustonjones]
      #3023187 - 04/04/09 01:52 AM

I'm helping host a 100 hours of astronomy thing, but it's looking like it's going to be a 100 hours of clouds type of affair.

--------------------


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ido
sage


Reged: 06/29/06
Posts: 366
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: Hrundi]
      #3023287 - 04/04/09 05:40 AM

We will be opening our remote Internet Telescope for FREE TO ALL THE INTERESTED, as a part of the IYA2009 100HRA project.

http://bareket-astro.com/telescope_in/intro_100hra.htm

--------------------
http://bareket-astro.com/en.htm
Bareket observatory, Israel.


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phanfave
Pooh-Bah
*****

Reged: 08/21/06
Posts: 1436
Loc: Pioneer Valley
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: ido]
      #3023393 - 04/04/09 08:19 AM

This is very cool. Thanks for posting this info.

--------------------
IDA Member
Astro League At-Large Member
Amherst Area Amateur Astronomer Association


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phanfave
Pooh-Bah
*****

Reged: 08/21/06
Posts: 1436
Loc: Pioneer Valley
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: phanfave]
      #3023394 - 04/04/09 08:20 AM

My local club (5A's) are hosting a 100 hours of Astronomy event, but unfortunately we're going to be clouded out as well. Isn't that always the way?

--------------------
IDA Member
Astro League At-Large Member
Amherst Area Amateur Astronomer Association


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George N
professor emeritus


Reged: 05/19/06
Posts: 672
Loc: Binghamton & Indian Lake NY
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: phanfave]
      #3023861 - 04/04/09 01:09 PM

Quote:

My local club (5A's) are hosting a 100 hours of Astronomy event, but unfortunately we're going to be clouded out as well. Isn't that always the way?




We had clear sky Thursday afternoon and evening, but clouds and snow for Friday and it looks like Saturday night. Plus we’ve had other “problems” here in the Binghamton NY area. Nevertheless, we have had good attendance at our ‘100hrs’ events at Kopernik Observatory, the Library, and a local in-door shopping mall. We’ve been giving presentations, showing the webcast and videos, showing off telescopes, and selling lots of coffee! It also looks like our solar program on “sun day” afternoon will have clear sky for some h-alpha solar viewing. If you live in the Northeast, you get use to clouded-out astronomy events, always followed by clear sky as soon as the public leaves!

The thing our club learned from this was how great the event at the local library went. We had about 100 people looking at the moon and sun (h-alpha with a PST), and a lot of astronomy books went out of the library that day. We have decided to do another quarter-moon astro-event there later in the year.

--------------------
George N

Obsession 20
Optical Guidance Systems 10" F/9 R-C Cass
6" F/5 & 8" F/8 home-made Newts
MI-250 mount
SBIG STL-1301E CCD
Member, International Dark-Sky Association


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Charlie Hein
Postmaster
*****

Reged: 11/02/03
Posts: 7961
Loc: 26.06.08N, +80.23.08W
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! new [Re: George N]
      #3024488 - 04/04/09 08:14 PM Attachment (33 downloads)

Check the live Webcam feeds at http://www.sfaaa.com/webcast/ for a look at what's happening right now at Fox Observatory in Broward County, Florida. We have views of the observatory itself as well as a live sky cam (last I checked it was overcast) and a telescope view if something is available to look at. Attendance has been good considering the weather has been very hit or miss - we tend to go from dead quiet to almost having more people on hand than we can handle. Right now we're showing videos and doing demonstrations (self produced presentations as well as the very popular Nasa Night Sky demos) while things are clouded over - last I checked we were playing the "Ringworld" video.

I'll log at least 30 hours at the observatory this weekend - a tiring but rewarding venture.

--------------------
"He's dead, Jim - I'll get his wallet, you get his tricorder." - Leonard "Bones" McCoy

Weston CSC:

Edited by Charlie Hein (04/04/09 09:46 PM)


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Beverly Stayart
newbie


Reged: 07/07/09
Posts: 1
Re: 100 Hours of Astronomy project kicks off! [Re: Charlie Hein]
      #3206038 - 07/08/09 11:44 AM

Thanks for the photo of Telescope Room 2 which houses the observatory's permanently mounted telescopes. The roll-off roof must make this room extremely popular.

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