Slacker Mike Simonsen on Astronomy.FM Friday night
By Mike on January 25, 2010 at 12:30 am | In Audio Podcasts, Blog Posts | No Comments
Hey, Slacker friends, Mike will be on Astronomy.FM Friday night at 9PM EST, talking with Marty Kunz on the Event Horizon program about AAVSO, variable stars, AAVSO, cataclysmic variables, AAVSO, Mike’s research interests, AAVSO, epsilon Aurigae, AAVSO, telescopes and whatever else comes to mind…which could be just about anything!
new exoplanets.org table
By Ben on January 14, 2010 at 12:09 pm | In Blog Posts | No Commentsnews via twitter.
–Ben
Twitter.com/Exoplanetology
Hey, exoplanets.org just launched their new exoplanets data http://exoplanets.org/exotable/exoTable.html includes plots! Nice!
Carnival of Space #136 is LIVE!
By Mike on January 11, 2010 at 2:52 pm | In Blog Posts | No CommentsThis week’s Carnival of Space is hosted by Simostronomy, resident slacker, Mike Simonsen’s blog.
He’ll take you to the Moon, you’ll fly through the stars, you’ll go visit a friend on the surface of Mars.
So scroll down the page, see what there is to see, the tickets are priced just right..they’re FREE!
Book Review: The Monthly Sky Guide
By Mike on January 5, 2010 at 1:38 pm | In Book Reviews | No CommentsOne of the nice things about publishing an astronomy blog is we get copies of astronomy books from various publishers sent to us to review. Just before Christmas Cambridge University Press sent us a copy of the eighth edition of Ian Ridpath and Wil Tirion’s ‘The Monthly Sky Guide’.
This book is a classic beginner level guide to the night sky that includes a great introductory text on finding your way around the heavens, tips on observing the four brightest naked eye planets, a very nice guide to observing the Moon, complete with detailed lunar maps with features labeled, and star charts for each month of the year.
The attention to detail and practicality are notable. For example, the Moon maps are made large enough to show quite a bit of detail. This necessitates them being printed as roughly half a hemisphere per page. Instead of losing detail in the margins of some of the most interesting features on the lunar surface, the maps overlap quite a bit. This is a handy feature that could easily have been overlooked by less experienced or detail oriented authors or publishers.
Everyone you show the Moon to wants to know where the astronauts landed. In answer to this, the sky guide Moon maps show the locations of the landings of Apollo 11, 12, 14, 15 and 16 (remember Apollo 13 never made it to the surface, “Houston, we have a problem!”)
The real meat and potatoes of the book are the monthly sky charts, depicting the stars, constellations, nebulae, star clusters and galaxies that are visible to the observer with the unaided eye, binoculars or a small telescope. Thee is also a description of the location and brightness of Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn each month from 2010 to 2014, so this book will serve readers well for the next five years. Also listed are lunar and solar eclipses, and meteor showers visible for each month for the next five years.
The star maps are first quality and should make the beginner or intermediate observer anxious to go check out what can be seen each month. I’ve been observing the sky for nearly forty years and I find them to be a pleasure to look at and use. Wil Tirion is widely considered the leading celestial cartographer of our time. This night sky guide is just another example of why.
Featured each month are star maps and text highlighting a particular constellation or region of the sky. January features Orion and all the wonderful nebulae and clusters visible to binoculars and small telescopes. The text is well written and scientifically accurate in every aspect. I expected nothing less from the editor of the Oxford Dictionary of Astronomy and Norton’s Star Atlas.
If you have a young person or friend you would like to share your love of astronomy with, get them a pair of binoculars and this book and you’ll have a star gazing friend for life.
Podcast: Kepler and Extrasolar Asteroids
By Michael on January 3, 2010 at 11:44 pm | In Audio Podcasts | 1 CommentWe have a new podcast on the feed here and over at 365 Days of Astronomy. Mike Simonsen interviews Dr. Steve Howell about the Kepler mission, extrasolar asteroids and Ophiuchans.
Steve is an interesting guy and this is an interesting interview. The version at 365 Days of Astronomy is the short version. The extended version is on the feed as well as below.
Enjoy!
This podcast is brought to you by Swinburne Astronomy Online, offering fully online degree programs in astronomy.

Saturn is of one Time’s top 2009 pictures
By Ben on January 3, 2010 at 11:01 am | In Blog Posts | No CommentsTime Magazine lists an image of Saturn as of one Time’s top pictures of 2009.

see it at :
http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1946595_2010965,00.html
You can get the the Full size 7227 samples x 3847 lines image, or smaller sizes too,
here: http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA11667
or
http://ciclops.org/view/5773/The_Rite_of_Spring
It make’s a great desktop image.
Thanks Cassini and Carolyn Porco
–Ben
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