Sign up for free Newsletters

Once a month get new photos and expert tips.

Sign Up

Search Results

Results tagged “public” from Breaking Orbit

If you [heart] space, you probably know by now that this Thursday, April 2, marks the start of 100 Hours of Astronomy.

The event will feature live Web casts, sidewalk astronomy, a literal "Sun Day" for solar science, and scads of other public outreach activities around the world.

Kicking off the whole shebang is the opening in Philadelphia of a new exhibit on Galileo, featuring one of the two remaining telescopes built by the man himself about 400 years ago.

The New York Times has a nice preview of the exhibit with video of the telescope (on loan from Italy) arriving at the Franklin Institute.

The ultimate goal of 100 HA is to get people active in astronomy, which can sometimes seem like a very sedentary science. It's not exactly like a kayak trip down an African river, but there's plenty of discoveries to be made—you just have to go out and look up.

Of course, the products of astronomy have always been good for capturing public imagination (ahem, Hubble photos), and in addition to Galileo's rather unassuming brown tube, the Philadelphia exhibit has some definite winners.

One of my favorites is the armillary sphere, a three-dimensional model of how heavenly objects orbit a common center.

Depending on how many spinning rings were involved, armillary spheres could demonstrate all sorts of astronomical activity, from sunrise and sunset at different points on Earth to the motions of the known planets.

armillary-sphere.jpg

A 1585 armillary sphere supposedly used by Johannes Kepler
—Image courtesy Chris Bainbridge

Some scholars put the invention of the armillary sphere all the way back to fourth-century B.C. China, although the Greeks credit one of their own with developing the device in the first century B.C.

Islamic astronomers improved on the Greek design, and their version made it to Europe in the tenth century A.D.

European armillary spheres were popular calculation and teaching tools until around the 17th century, when a humble professor at the University of Padua in Italy published a range of observations that eventually toppled the notion of spherical astronomy.

Although they stand now as representations of one rather large wrong idea, the complex machines have been credited with helping advance early astronomy.

For me, one of the greatest things about these kinds of scientific tools from the Renaissance was a predilection for marrying form to function.

Today no one would expect to see a graphing calculator on display at the MoMA. But in Galileo's time armillary spheres were often highly decorative objects, and were frequently featured in portraits and paintings as symbols of learning.

Manuel I of Portugal liked the darn thing so much he made it a national symbol, and it survives today as part of the crest on the modern Portuguese flag.

portugal-flag.jpg

Space Fans, Get Your Haiku On

Posted on September 26, 2008 | 0 Comments

When you ask a scientist why they chose their career, quite a few will cite some form of science fiction as an early inspiration. In turn, science fiction is often the source of some the most influential technologies now in use or being actively pursued in research labs.

British novelist Arthur C. Clarke, for instance, is probably most famous for penning 2001: A Space Odyssey. But he is also frequently credited with popularizing the concept of a space elevator in his 1979 novel The Fountains of Paradise.

space-elevator.jpg

Artist's concept of a space elevator
—courtesy NASA

Today the technology is a hot pursuit, inspiring a NASA contest and, most recently, a professional association and international conference in Japan.

For me, one of the more innovative uses of literature to get the public excited about astronomy has got to be the Space Poem Chain, an outreach project run by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA).

jaxai.jpg

"JAXA i" public information center, Marunouchi Oazo, Tokyo
—Photograph by Victoria Jaggard

Volume 3 of this unique collection got underway this month, with JAXA announcing the fifth link in the current chain today.

The idea behind a poem chain is for different authors to create a new poem based on the one that came before it, linking the verses by theme. JAXA's version outlines some very specific rules for contributors to follow.

► Read This Entire Post

About This Blog

The moon
From dwarf planets to hot Jupiters, join NatGeo News space and tech editor Victoria Jaggard in a global discussion about all things extraterrestrial.


news.nationalgeographic.com

Share This

Add to Technorati Favorites
 

Subscribe to This Blog

Get the RSS feed for this blog—and don't miss a single word.

RSS     What is RSS?

Blogroll