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  • Happy birthday, William Herschel

    Today marks the birth of 18th-century astronomer Frederick William Herschel. Born November 15, 1738, Herschel made many discoveries during his lifetime. Most notable among his contributions to astronomy include determining the shape of the Milky Way, determining the rotation period of Saturn's rings...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Laura Layton on 11-15-2007
    Tags: Laura Layton, solar system, history
  • The four greatest astronomy books

    If you've followed my blogging, you know I love books. On Friday, November 2, I visited Linda Hall Library in Kansas City with Astronomy Editor David J. Eicher and contributing editor Raymond Shubinski. Linda Hall ranks as one of the world's finest science libraries, and it has a terrific collection...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Michael Bakich on 11-09-2007
    Tags: Michael Bakich, history
  • A golden anniversary

    This month brings the 50th anniversary of two events that changed the world. The first, of course, needs little explanation: On October 4, 1957, the Space Age began with the Soviet Union's launch of the Sputnik 1 spacecraft. I want to talk about the event you probably aren't aware of. The October...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Rich Talcott on 10-19-2007
    Tags: Rich Talcott, spacecraft, history
  • How bright is yonder star? (part 1)

    In this blog and my next, I'm going to try to demystify the magnitude system — the scale astronomers use to measure the brightness of a celestial object. Let me start with a little history. The first known observer to describe and catalog differences in star brightnesses was Greek astronomer Hipparchus...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Michael Bakich on 08-27-2007
    Tags: Michael Bakich, observing, history
  • Lost in translation?

    An interesting question hit my inbox this week. How far south can an aurora be seen? Specifically, are the “northern lights” ever visible from Timbuktu? A 2004 New York Times article about medieval Arabic manuscripts triggered the question. The city of Timbuktu, Mali, was one of Africa’s intellectual...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Francis Reddy on 08-23-2007
    Tags: Francis Reddy, history
  • Reflections on the eclipse

    With a statue of Lenin in the foreground, Boris Stromar imaged the eclipse from Novosibirsk, Russia. It looked grim the day before and grim the day after. But we stood under a blistering hot sky near Novosibirsk, Siberia, with nary a cloud in the sky on eclipse day. Never have I seen such perfect eclipse...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by David Eicher on 08-08-2008
    Tags: David J. Eicher, observing, solar system, history
  • Women in astronomy resource guide

    I have to commend Andrew Fraknoi and the Astronomical Society of the Pacific on a great new web resource that came across my desk yesterday. “Women in Astronomy: An Introductory Resource Guide to Materials in English” is an excellent index for astronomy and history enthusiasts who want to learn more...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Karri Ferron on 08-30-2008
    Tags: history, astronomy clubs, publications, Karri Ferron
  • Ho, ho, ho for Halley’s Comet

    On Christmas Day, 1758, a German amateur astronomer and farmer named Johann Georg Palitzsch did something that would have made a great Christmas gift for English astronomer Edmond Halley. Johann “recovered” Halley’s Comet, meaning he was the first to observe this previously observed “dirty snowball”...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by Daniel Pendick on 12-25-2008
    Tags: Daniel Pendick, solar system, history, comets
  • Galileo’s big day

    Once a week I’ll pick an image from a recent trip of mine that will cast some light on an astronomical subject — or maybe sometimes it’ll just be a cool image that will stray a little from astronomy. To start things off, here’s an important place: St. Mark’s Square in Venice, Italy. The tower shown at...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by David Eicher on 01-09-2009
    Tags: David J. Eicher, history, destinations, Galileo
  • Early human settlements and the stars

    When I was in the British Museum this summer I again stumbled across an object that fascinates me every time I see it — the Jericho Skull. In 1953 in the city of Jericho, in what’s now the West Bank, Palestinian territories, archaeologists discovered 10 skulls in several caches, including this one. Jericho...
    Posted to Astronomy.com blog (Weblog) by David Eicher on 01-22-2009
    Tags: David J. Eicher, history
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