Showing posts with label astronomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label astronomy. Show all posts

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Top 5 Best NASA Websites

NASA logo, sometimes called
the "NASA meatball"
I don't know about you, but I love NASA.   I think what the scientists, engineers, and educators do there is important and I hope you do, too.  But maybe you don't.  And maybe you don't know much about them.  Here are descriptions of some of my favorite NASA websites.  These are not in any specific order, but together represent some of the best science websites on the internet.

TOP 5 BEST NASA WEBSITES

1. NASA Goddard Scientific Visualization Studios:

NASA Goddard
Scientific Visualization Studio
Webpage
This is probably the NASA website I use more than any other.  The Scientific Visualization Studios or SVS is made up of a team of scientists and artists that take NASA data and turn it into beautiful images and videos.  This is an archive of thousands of images and videos produced by NASA.  When I need new images or videos for a planetarium show or presentation, this is the place I go.  Although the front page does have a few categories to browse through, the site is mostly just a search engine that may bring up a couple hundred items for each search.  Many people will find this site a bit intimidating, but I assure you that your time here is well spent.  There is so much to learn.

2. NASA Visualization Explorer App

NASA Visualization Explorer
If I had an ipad, this would be one of the first apps I would get.  This is a FREE application available for ipads or usable online.  It is currently not available for any other platforms, but at some point it should be.  This app presents many of NASA's cool visualizations, like the ones on the SVS page, but is very user friendly.  The SVS team adds a new article twice a week.  Check it out!!!

3.  NASA Earth Observatory

NASA Earth Observatory
website
Many people don't know this, but NASA does a ton of research on the Earth.  Seeing the Earth from space offers wonderful opportunities for science.  Not only did NASA design the weather satellites that provide the information you see on the Weather Channel, but they  take all types of measurements of the Earth's atmosphere, land, oceans, and even biology.  This site is a great place to find high quality and accessible visualizations.

4.  NASA Global Climate Change Website

NASA Global Climate
Change Website
NASA's Global Climate Change website is fantastic.  Trying to figure out what is going on with climate change can be a frustrating experience, but the information and design of this site make it a lot easier.  Climate Change is a topic that we should all be educating ourselves about.  This site has information for kids, adults, and teachers.  Please check it out.

5.  NASA TV

NASA TV website
NASA TV!  What more needs to be said.  Now you can stay caught up on NASA's missions and discoveries 24 hours a day.


Monday, June 11, 2012

Sun-Earth Day 2012 Transit of Venus


June 5th was NASA's Sun-Earth Day! This was a celebration of the 2012 Transit of Venus.  A transit is when something passes through something else, and in this case the planet Venus was passing across the face of the sun. Since it is dangerous to look at the sun directly and because Venus won't appear to transit the sun again for over 100 years, my fellow science educators and I decided to become part of the celebration. We often teach people about astronomy at the MOST, but this was the first time our team tried to have a public viewing event. The MOST is located in downtown Syracuse and is surrounded by tall buildings and plenty of light pollution. Since this event involved the sun and would take place in a area of the sky we could see from outside the building, we knew it could work. We started putting the event together a few months beforehand and spreading the word. We put together a number of activities to do inside, as well as a live webcast of the event from Hawaii, and arranged to have sun-safe telescopes set up outside. One of our volunteers brought a couple and the Syracuse Astronomical Society brought the rest.

For my part, I helped organize a computer lab with Sun-Earth Day videos from NASA, gave two planetarium shows that focused on debunking 2012 "end of the world" nonsense, and a station that tough people how to write numbers like the Ancient Maya. The Ancient Maya were Venus experts, and calculated their data with a very different number system than the decimal system we use today.

As June 5th approached the skies grew overcast and I came down with the flu. The event at the MOST started at 6pm, and I arrived a few hours earlier to finish setting up. I was also thinking that I might have to leave before the event, and stay home sick. When I arrived, however, I learned that people had been calling the museum non-stop. I thought that because of the bad weather we might get thirty people to show up, but we already had more than 80 reservations! Staying home sick was not going to be an option. A short trip to the pharmacy later and I was ready to give it my best.

Venus is covered by thick clouds.  Image: NASA
 Our event ended up succeeding beyond our expectations. The weather cleared up, the astronomy society did a great job with their telescopes, our activities were a hit, and over 150 people participated! I really wasn't sure I would have a chance to actually see the transit. While inside I was enjoying teaching people about the ancient Maya counting system, which is a base 20 instead of a base 10 system. My first guest was a mathematician and it certainly didn't take him long to catch on. I was also impressed by an elementary student who loved numbers.  He did a great job taking the time he needed to learn the system.  If you are curious about the Maya system, you can learn it from the Calendar in the Sky website. I was fortunate to recently participate in a 2-day training at the NYC Natural History Museum run by the Calendar in the Sky people. If you go to the resource section of the website, there are a number of lesson plans you can view or download. A couple of these will teach you about the counting system. The planetarium shows were both almost filled to capacity. There wasn't a lot of questions asked, unfortunately, but the shows went well. Often groups with a lot of adults don't ask questions. If I hadn't been sick, maybe I could have coaxed a little more out of them, but I think most everybody enjoyed the show.

The surface of Venus if you could look
through the clouds.
Image: NASA
 And now for the best part! Just as I finished the second planetarium show and the event was ending, my girlfriend surprised me by showing up. She had already seen the transit and urged me to get outside to the telescopes while there was still time. The sun was pretty low in the horizon and most of the scopes were already taken down. Luckily, I was able to look through one just before the sun went behind a phone pole or something. In fact, I may have been the last one to see it that day.

I did go home and spend the night with a nasty fever and little sleep, but I'm still glad I worked the event and that Emily showed up to bring me outside. I will never again have a chance to see this happen, but now I can remember it and talk of it for the rest of my life.

The day before the event I went on Channel 9's Bridge Street morning show to promote Sun-Earth Day as well as other things happening at the MOST.  If your curious, you can watch the clip below.

 

 I was also on Bridge Street a couple months ago to promote our Nano Science Week. You can watch that video below, too.