The eclipse is coming! Yes, finally, a total lunar eclipse is coming our way. Haven’t had one visible in our neck of the woods since January 21, 2018. Details: Wednesday, May 26th. For us the penumbral phase of this eclipse starts at
Read More
Friends, family, neighbors, everyone is asking if I know about the Christmas star event coming on December 21st. Then the say “of course you know, you study that stuff”. By the way, December 21st is Winter Solstice. The long night. If you
Read More
When I was a field rep Thanksgiving was my happy time. I planned my schedule to allow a road trip into northeastern Texas and northwestern Louisiana the week of Thanksgiving. OK, I know it’s just Monday through Wednesday and a lot of
Read More
October was the Hill Country Alliance’s first annual Night Sky Month celebration and was so successful I know it will become a tradition. Some of the highlights: Night Sky Month Proclamations – Twenty five hill country jurisdictions, including counties (Comal county too),
Read More
New Zealand is considered an astronomer’s paradise, of course when away from its few large cities, especially on the South Island. So, last year (2019) when Nancy and I made the trip I was pretty pumped. The southern hemisphere sky has treats
Read More
Saying discovery is premature. No one has seen an object within the Oort cloud yet so we cannot be sure it exists. The beauty of science…prediction, calculation, observation, experimentation, and continue until evidence supports or refutes the prediction, the hypothesis. The asteroid
Read More
How far can you get in 43 years traveling at 38,000 miles per hour? Far enough to make it through the Kuiper belt. Both Voyagers 1 and 2 have passed through the Kuiper belt but to be clear, their trajectories took them
Read More
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Asteroid Belt, Jupiter, wait…what, asteroid belt? Yes, our solar system has an asteroid belt, located between Mars and Jupiter. Like detritus on the ocean shore, asteroids appear to be remnants of events that went awry. Tycho Brahe was
Read More
…is not gold. From the Merchant of Venice, William Shakespeare gave us a vision that Led Zeppelin later crafted into song. Not all that glitters is gold, but what makes gold special? Part of gold’s appeal is its longevity; it stays brilliant
Read More
On October 1st, The Hill Country Alliance kicked off its first annual Hill Country Night Sky Month and here are some of the activities and events planned. October 14, 1-4pm: Conservation of the Night, a virtual conference. Hosted by Hays County Master
Read More
Tonight, September 26 is International Observe the Moon Night. Just go outside and contemplate it – it’s an amazing thing. You will be seeing the same Moon as many around the world. NASA is streaming it live and NASA’s website also has
Read More
When I was younger a friend started a conversation about steak. He was related to the owner of a local restaurant noted for its steaks. The gist: You need to age steaks well before cooking to get the best from them, and
Read More
We’re still looking for the elusive body, we think it’s out there, lurking in the Kuiper Belt. Refresher: The Kuiper Belt is far-far away, at the edge of our solar system, composed of asteroids and some Dwarf Planets. Remember Pluto? Pluto is
Read More
I hope you saw Mars and the Moon get close last night. It was even more spectacular if you were in mid-South America, north Africa, or southern Europe. The Moon occulted Mars from those vantage points. An occultation is basically an eclipse
Read More
“It’s business, not personal”- says the new VP as your entire group is eliminated from the “new company” business plan. Could be a break-up, re-organization, spin-off, maybe a merger or take-over. This is the world of business. How funny, this is how
Read More
Nancy and I spent four days in Fort Davis last week, to celebrate my birthday. What a treat! Yeah, I know Fort Davis is a tiny town in dusty west Texas. No nightlife, and only a few restaurants. Also, unfortunately, Fort Davis
Read More
Here we are, at the Sun’s photosphere. What a vision! Seeing it through special filters we witness a vast plum of plasma shooting up and arching back to the photosphere. A prominence! Several Earths could fit into the arch. Above us we
Read More
Sunrise, sunset. It’s been going on for billions of years. Artists of all sorts rely on seeing and recording light. Good light is ethereal, difficult to master in art but when done well, draws us into the work. This light, this source
Read More
Maybe milk in my tea? It’s deep summertime with warm evenings and the Milky Way spilling out of the teapot. Like steam rising, the Milky Way’s presence is prominent in Sagittarius and its famous Teapot asterism. Not familiar with the Teapot? It
Read More
Let’s go to Mars! Mars has become an important target of several nations. In 1971 the USSR became the first to successfully land a craft (Mars 3) on Mars. Its mission was cut short (lasted 14.5 seconds) by a massive dust storm,
Read More
2019 and 2020 have been blessed with the presence of numerous comets. You might ask, WHERE?! Me too. Unless you have a telescope at least 8” in diameter they are just dim smudges and even in an 8” they aren’t anything to
Read More
Oh, the Sahara dust plume will be mostly done by the time you read this. We had hazy skies, our allergies got pumped up, and it of course exacerbated serious respiratory health issues. Weather forecasters had a fun couple of weeks with
Read More
In the early 20th century two astronomers separately developed diagrams to identify classes of stars based on parameters such as luminosity and surface temperature. They got together and a unified diagram, called the Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) diagram came into being. It makes a
Read More
Pluto, the little planet discovered at Lowell Observatory by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 and named by British schoolgirl Venetia Burney. It became our solar system’s ninth planet, yea! Pluto, the Roman mythological ruler of the underworld. Makes it seem a little creepy.
Read More
But you can help heal it! It’s a fact, cannot be argued, the night sky above us is getting lighter and lighter. The cause is indisputable, it comes from outdoor lighting. It’s not liberal vs conservative, or my scientist says this, and
Read More
Like in a kinship chart, stars get placed into historical context and this helps us see how the universe progressed from the big bang. We are star stuff. Most everything around us is star stuff. Yet, stars didn’t exist until about 200
Read More
Technically there is only one Moon, Earth’s Moon, also called Luna. Most planets have their own “Moons”, or satellites. Only Mercury and Venus are without a known satellite. Why is that? Let’s look at how planets get their satellites, their satellite’s varied
Read More
There is a super massive black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy, a cool 25,000 light years away. I like to keep a good distance, don’t want to experience that intense amount of gravity. Get too close, past the
Read More
I know how old I am. Got a birth certificate. What about stars? No birth certificate with cute little footprints…do they still do that? Figuring out a star’s age is a labor of investigative science. Fortunately, we live in a time where
Read More
Conjunctivitis is an inflammation of the conjunctiva, frequently called “pink eye”. Conjunctionitis (my word) is the inflammatory message sent to scare people that the next “super conjunction” will cause a major catastrophe on Earth. I give those folks the “snake-eye”. We have
Read More
In a continuing effort to figure out this universe scientists have gone beyond the electromagnetic spectrum to gather information. The electromagnetic spectrum, with all its information, only presents us with 5% of the universe. Albert Einstein predicted things like gravitational. It took
Read More
Following up from last week, our universe is expanding. Not just expanding, but at an increasing rate and no one knows if it will ever slow or even stop. What if our universe’s expansion doesn’t stop? Let’s take a step back and
Read More
I’m Not talking about coronavirus. Not talking about conspiracy theories that are a constant presence…you know, comet Z, asteroid A, or heaven forbid, planet Nibiru might threaten life on Earth. Because even if they don’t hit us, they are poisonous or will
Read More
I feel lucky…so far. Our neighborhood has been free of Coronavirus (COVID-19) but people are getting stir crazy. Jigsaw puzzles go just so far. Zoom or other video meetings are fun but… So, grab your binoculars, get your hands-on binoculars and forego
Read More
Not kidding, there are galaxies that are transparent! Our Milky Way is not one of them, we are quite obscure thank you. In 1984 Allan Sandage and Bruno Binggeli discovered the first see-through galaxy, in the Virgo supercluster of galaxies. This discovery,
Read More
Let me pull out the old Ouija board. No, to subjective. How about tea leaves, taro, psychic, crystal ball? All too subjective. Ask the old Eight Ball? It’s not subjective, but somewhat random. Darn, there must be a way to predict our
Read More
At first Hiram Bingham, generally credited as Machu Picchu’s discoverer, thought they were for grinding grain. Later scientists discarded this hypothesis as the structures were not like others used in that time period. The current consensus is they were used as astronomical
Read More
Betelgeuse has been acting up lately. As stars go, Betelgeuse is a beast! It’s the bright, orange star defining the constellation Orion’s right (left as we look at it) shoulder. It’s a huge, massive red giant star. Huge, meaning if it were
Read More
In an opium induced dream, poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge experienced a wonderous place he called Xanadu. In Citizen Kane, Orson Welles’ character creates a magical paradise he called Xanadu. However, while the Xanadu of Coleridge was a placid benevolent place, Xanadu in
Read More
Carbon is essential for life on Earth and it takes numerous forms but when a star gets really old and runs out of gas, carbon shows up. Stars begin their lives by fusing hydrogen nuclei and the good news is there’s lots
Read More
Weather forecasters and services get maligned for an occasional miss. It was supposed to be mostly clear for our Astronomy Night, but noooo, clouds rolled in just in time to mess with us! Just saying, weather is still a tricky prediction due
Read More
We can’t see in infrared. For better or worse, our eyes rods and cones just do not have sensitivity to those longish wavelengths of light. What would we see if we could suddenly see in infrared? It would be wild! Everything and
Read More
Space is a cold mistress. When we venture up, higher and higher into the atmosphere it just keeps getting colder and colder. At 29,035 feet it’s never warm at the peak of Mount Everest, with temperatures staying well below zero F all
Read More
Our Sun has a strong magnetic field but there are stars out there with much strong magnetic fields, way beyond what they should have. Stars many times the size and mass of the Sun are expected to have proportionally larger magnetic fields,
Read More
It’s everywhere, except maybe in super clean rooms where the air is constantly filtered. Dust mostly comes from the breakdown of bigger stuff like rocks, planets, stars, people, pets. Nancy and I live with a dust machine. Her name is Blanca and
Read More
Do you own property? Has it been surveyed? Has it been surveyed again? Did the surveys agree? In my experience the possibility of two surveys not agreeing is good. Why? Change. Change in how surveys are done, change in technology, sometimes a
Read More
Why should I care about it? What difference does it make? It doesn’t make a difference for my cozy life in the comfort of mid-sized normalcy. I like it here but it’s fun to explore the extremes, no? Our universe is unimaginably
Read More
In my October 8, 2017 article I wrote about the suspected existence of a planet beyond the orbit of Neptune. It was called planet nine in light of Pluto having been demoted to Dwarf Planet status. There has been considerable interest in
Read More