Review: The Telescope by Geoff Anderson.
June 4, 2010 by David Dickinson
Filed under Astro Culture, Astro News, Astro News & Commentary, Great Books of Science
Few inventions are as near and dear to our hearts as that of the telescope. Before its invention, astronomy was scarcely better than its pseudo-science companion of astrology in its knowledge of predicting the universe as it truly is. In this week’s review, we’ll look at The Telescope by Geoff Anderson out from Princeton Press [...]
15.05.10: A Speedy Binary.
May 15, 2010 by David Dickinson
Filed under Astro News, Astro News & Commentary
Think that new Ducati in your garage is fast? Let me introduce you to HM Cancri. An unassuming +21 magnitude binary in the constellation Cancer, HM Cancri is comprised of two white dwarfs locked in a tight embrace. In fact, this binary system has the shortest orbital period known, handily knocking down distant contender [...]
LIGO: A Quest for Gravity Waves.
March 12, 2010 by David Dickinson
Filed under Astro News, Astro News & Commentary, Extreme Astronomy, Observational Astronomy
LIGO, Livingston. (All Photos by Author).
We had to go there… last month’s NASA Tweetup at the Johnson Spaceflight Center saw us undertake the great American road trip from Astroguyz HQ north of Tampa, Florida, to Houston on the other side of the Gulf of Mexico and back. Ever the opportunists, we scoured the route for [...]
March 2010: Life in the Astro-Blogosphere.
March 2, 2010 by David Dickinson
Filed under Astro News, Astro News & Commentary
The Full Snow Moon capping off February as seen from Astroguyz HQ! (Photo by Author).
This month, spring and the vernal equinox are in the air in the northern hemisphere; time for warmer temps, shortening nights and hopefully, a buffer between the cold of winter and the eventual swarms of summer mosquitoes that are the [...]
02.02.10 In Search of Life, Gravity Waves, and Everything.
February 2, 2010 by David Dickinson
Filed under Astro News, Astro News & Commentary
Astronomers have added a key tool to their arsenal in probing the very early universe. LIGO, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory, is a pair of “observatories” one in Hanford, Washington, and one in Livingston, Louisiana that monitor the universe for that most exotic of beasts; gravity waves. Each L-shaped detector is comprised of two [...]






