Category: News

Author Talk Event: “Observatories of the Southwest” (Doug Isbell)

By AJG, March 5, 2010
Book Cover

Find "Observatories of the Southwest" on Amazon.com. Click for link.

Join us on Astronomy 2009 island for a talk and Q&A session with Doug Isbell, author “Observatories of the Southwest: A Guide for Curious Skywatchers” co-authored with Stephen Strom and published by University of Arizona Press.

Date:  Thursday March 11, 2010

Time: 7:00pm SLT (Pacific)

Place: Astronomy 2009 island Amphitheater (Click for Teleport)

Type of Event: Voice

We’ll be giving away a natural life copy of “Observatories of the Southwest: A Guide for Curious Skywatchers” during the talk!

The target audience for “Observatories of the Southwest” includes students, young people, teachers, the scientifically interested public, people traveling to the US Southwest, and anyone interested in the state of our understanding of the Universe.  For eight major observatories, this book covers their history, scientific achievements, what visitors can do, resources for educators, and the personal recollections of seven esteemed scientists and administrators.  Able to be enjoyed in sections or as a whole, this popular-level guidebook offers an overview of the biggest scientific challenges facing astronomers today and what is being done to investigate them every clear night and day in the dry desert southwest.  It aims to inspire people to realize that these are wonderful places to visit, to sit in awe and wonder of their achievements and the physical beauty of the surrounding land.

Doug IsbellDoug Isbell is the U.S. national single-point-of-contact for the United Nations-endorsed International Year of Astronomy 2009 (IYA2009), a task that includes major projects in dark-skies awareness, public exhibits of large astronomical images, and the development of a new, inexpensive, high-quality telescope kit with more than 100,000 units in production.

Previously, he was a public information officer and outreach programs director for the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (National Science Foundation) and NASA. He is a former aerospace journalist who earned degrees in astronautical engineering and journalism from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

‘Astronomy 2009′ Acknowledged for Galilean Nights as Exemplary Event!

By AJG, March 5, 2010

Galilean Nights was a global star party event from Oct 22-24, 2009. Educators, amateur astronomers, science museums, scientists and many others took telescopes out into the open to show off the king of our fall skies – Jupiter!  In Second Life, we joined in the global celebration by having special limited time exhibits on Jupiter. During this time, we had roughly 165 unique visitors who enjoyed learning about Jupiter, playing with a simulation of Jupiter and the Galilean Moons, watched the Let There Be Night planetarium show on Galileo, and viewed hourly updates of the view of Jupiter through our IYA2009 telescopes!

On March 4, 2010 our project made it into the Event Awards as “Highly Commended”  in the Most Innovative Event category!  Congratulations to us! And a large thank you to those that donated exhibits (Rob Knop a.k.a. Prospero Frobozz in SL and also Inthe Telling and the Let There Be Night project!).

See the IYA2009 press release here: http://www.astronomy2009.org/news/updates/829/

See our event summary page here: http://secondastronomy.org/events/galilean-nights

We’ll see you in 2010!

By AJG, December 11, 2009

Astronomy2009_Dec09 Wonderful news this week!  Astronomy 2009 island has found a sponsor in the American Astronomical Society and we will continue to have a “legacy” project in Second Life through 2010!  Look for new exhibits (ones we couldn’t get to in 2009), more live events, and more astronomy!  Exhibits currently under development to debut soon include an astrophotography exhibit by h-alpha specialist John Gleason, the completion of our Dark Skies Awareness exhibit, a MIPSGAL/GLIMPSE walkable image, and a telescope experience like none other in SL!  Look for more collaborations with Adler Planetarium and a newly formed alliance with the Pan-STARRS telescope project.

The island will continue to be sponsored by the University of Arizona Department of Astronomy for project management, design, and building though we’ll be hosted by Astrosphere New Media Association in the weeks to come!  Wonderful news all around!

Happy holidays!

New Exhibit! 7 Continents: Trekking Night Skies

By AJG, August 16, 2009

New exhibit now open on Astronomy 2009 island! http://slurl.com/secondlife/astronomy%202009/128/128/50/

Walk the spiral arm pathway and encounter the new TWAN (The World at Night) exhibit “7 Continents: Trekking Night Skies” which covers night sky imagery from 7 continents. Read about the photographers and Mouselook their amazing images!

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