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Local Group
Video: An interview with Michael Farmer of Michael Farmer Meteorites
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
The fourth video I shot during my trip to the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show features Mike Farmer of Michael Farmer Meteorites ( meteoriteguy.com or meteoritehunter.com ). Note: When you click the link to the video , you'll find it below the three-part...
Local Group
Video: An interview with the Science Channel's "Meteorite Men"
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
The third video I shot during my trip to the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show features Geoff Notkin and Steve Arnold of Aerolite Meteorites in Tucson . If you’re into meteorites, you know Geoff and Steve (pictured at right) well as the Meteorite Men from the...
Local Group
The best thing about Twitter in space
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
Karri Ferron
In January, crew members of the International Space Station gained access to the Internet for personal use, and NASA encouraged them to tweet anything that interests them. Well, Flight Engineer Soichi Noguchi of Japan (pictured at right), in my opinion...
Local Group
Video: An interview with Anne Black of Impactika Meteorites
1
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
Last week at the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, I shot a number of videos with prominent meteorite dealers who were set up at the Tucson Hotel City Center (formerly the InnSuites). The second one I shot features Anne Black of Impactika Meteorites in Denver...
Local Group
Happy Birthday Pluto(’s discovery)
2
Posted over 3 years ago by
Bill Andrews
In this illustration, NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft approaches its far off destination, the Pluto system. Today marks the 80th anniversary of Pluto’s discovery, and New Horizons just a month ago marked its 4th year in space. NASA/Johns Hopkins University...
Local Group
Video: An interview with meteorite dealer Luc Labenne
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
Last week at the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, I shot a number of videos with prominent meteorite dealers who were set up at the Tucson Hotel City Center (formerly the InnSuites). First out of the gate was Luc Labenne of Labenne Meteorites in Paris, whose...
Local Group
Adam Block’s images hit the road
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
Michael Bakich
If you're traveling down Interstate 10 in Tucson, try to sneak a peek at Adam Block's images as you head through the Speedway underpass. If you read Astronomy magazine regularly, you’re familiar with astroimager Adam Block. Adam has been contributing...
Local Group
Falling Stars: Observing, imaging, and shopping at the 2010 Winter Star Party
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
Mike Reynolds
We finally had a good night of observing at the Winter Star Party (WSP) Thursday night. Winds were calm, and the seeing was good. Telescopes and observers were in overdrive to make up for the un-Keys-like weather this week. The WSP seems to get one or...
Local Group
Seeing the universe like never before
2
Posted over 3 years ago by
Liz Kruesi
On Friday, Dallas got about a foot of snow, which meant our connecting flight to Tucson was cancelled. After a bit of airline shuffling, I got into Tucson Saturday night. On Sunday, I picked up Senior Editor Rich Talcott and his wife Evelyn from the airport...
Local Group
Mining both earthly and deep-sky treasures in New Mexico
3
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
Saturday morning we awoke after a great night of observing to an azure blue sky and a community breakfast before heading off with Gene Turner, John Eicher, Rocky Alvey (director of Vanderbilt University’s Dyer Observatory), and Nashville astroimager Mark...
Local Group
So long, Tucson Gem and Mineral Show. Hello, Rancho Hidalgo
1
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
A newly built observatory (left) building will hold a second telescope for Astronomy magazine use and an instrument for joint educational use between the Astronomical League and Vanderbilt University. The Astronomy Magazine Observatory is on the right...
Local Group
The 2010 Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, Thursday report
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
Each year, the Tucson Gem and Mineral Society presents to the world the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, an event going on for more than 50 years. The many shows that have sprung up at numerous hotels around the city are really “satellite shows,” sprouting...
Local Group
The 2010 Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, Wednesday recap
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
On Wednesday, we explored the Pueblo Gem and Mineral Show at the Riverpark Inn. We found an interesting array of meteorites, including the dealer “Palladot,” cutting and polishing olivine (peridot) gemstones from pallasite mateorites, “gemstones from...
Local Group
Falling Stars: 2010 Winter Star Party, Wednesday recap
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
Mike Reynolds
One of the best ways to shop for that next telescope — whether it’s your first or your tenth — is to go to an event like the Winter Star Party, where observing conditions are (usually!) great. Amateur astronomers bring all types of telescopes, and during...
Local Group
Off to Astronomy magazine’s observatory
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
Liz Kruesi
This weekend Senior Editor Rich Talcott, his wife Evelyn, and I will travel to Astronomy ’s observatory at Rancho Hidalgo near Animas, New Mexico. I’m quite excited, as this will be the first time I’ll get to see the famed dark site. Plus, I haven’t been...
Local Group
On the road: The 2010 Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, Tuesday recap
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
The first big day of activity at the 2010 Tucson Gem and Mineral Show saw me and my dad, John Eicher, an inveterate chemist, astronomy buff, mineralogist, and 88-year-old adventurer, set off for the best of the “satellite shows.” We got to the Hotel Tucson...
Local Group
Falling Stars: The 2010 Winter Star Party, Tuesday recap
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
Mike Reynolds
There is simply something special for me about coming to the Winter Star Party (WSP). I don’t know if it’s the Florida Keys, the weather, incredible (when clear) skies with a terrific southern horizon, or the comradery. It’s probably a combination of...
Local Group
Check out this fireball cloud
3
Posted over 3 years ago by
Michael Bakich
Matt Ayerst III photo I just got an e-mail from Canadian amateur astronomer Matt Ayerst III. On November 24, 2008, he used a Canon PowerShot A710 IS with a 35mm lens to photograph the debris cloud of a fireball (brilliant meteor) over Vancouver. Here...
Local Group
Off to the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show 2010
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
On Monday, my dad and I will fly to Tucson for the annual Gem and Mineral Show, the worldwide mecca for meteorite and mineral collectors. I’ll write two stories for the magazine from the show: a summary of the state of meteorite collecting and dealing...
Local Group
NASA unveils latest robot
1
Posted over 3 years ago by
Bill Andrews
NASA and GM extend their dexterous, robotic hands to the future! NASA photo Given that we have no flying cars, laser guns, or even time machines (1985-era technology!), it’s easy to forget sometimes that we’re living in the future. But, once again, NASA...
Local Group
Orion introduces line of giant telescopes
1
Posted over 3 years ago by
Michael Bakich
Here at Astronomy magazine, several of us have been observers for decades. Needless to say, it takes pretty big news to surprise us on the amateur astronomy front. Well, today a spectacular announcement from Orion Telescopes & Binoculars stunned us...
Local Group
To the Moon
2
Posted over 3 years ago by
Dick McNally
I’m old enough to remember when, on May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy announced that the United States would land an American on the Moon by the end of the decade. The 1960s were difficult years, with the assassinations of President Kennedy and...
Local Group
Meteorites, minerals, and diamonds on display at the Field Museum
0
Posted over 3 years ago by
David Eicher
Allende meteorite slice. David J. Eicher photo Sunday I went to the Field Museum in Chicago to check out their displays of meteorites and minerals, having heard about a great exhibition of diamonds in town. I also wanted to see the kickoff of the newly...
Local Group
Fake stars are better than no stars
2
Posted over 3 years ago by
Bill Andrews
With this giant disco ball suspended 50 meters above Paris, the city got to appreciate once again what a starry night might look and feel like. Michel de Broin photo Or, in French, Aimez-vous les étoiles ? As many of you probably know already, the Moon...