The FAS Astronomers Blog
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Happy Pi Day and The Hierarchy of Numbers
Young Astronomers Blog, Volume 28, Number 6. It’s March 14, 2020. So, HAPPY PI DAY! Yes, Pi = 3.14, get it? Anyway, Pi is a number. It’s one of many numbers. Pi is actually a calculated number. It is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. Check it out – it…
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The Great Observatories
Young Astronomers Blog, Volume 28, Number 5. Light is all around us. When we look at the world, we can see incredible colors. However, visible light is only a very small part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Light is a particle and a wave. Light waves can be measured in terms of its wavelength and frequency.…
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Discovering Pluto
Young Astronomers Blog, Volume 28, Number 4. Remember Pluto? Yes, Pluto. It was a planet for a long time, then it wasn’t. Pluto was discovered ninety years ago on February 18, 1930. This is the story. Shortly before the turn of the century, that is the turn of the 19th century, there were five planets,…
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Gravitational Waves
Young Astronomers Blog, Volume 28, Number 3. In 1915, Albert Einstein overturned Newton’s theory of gravity. He published his General Theory of Relativity which said that gravity is the result of the warping of space/time rather than a force that extends across space. Einstein’s theory was based on his equivalence principle, which states that the…
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Betelgeuse is Dimming
Young Astronomers Blog, Volume 28, Number 2. Astronomers measure the magnitude of a star in a bit of a strange way that dates to Hipparchus. A negative magnitude is brighter than a positive magnitude. A difference of one magnitude is actually a 2.5 times difference in brightness. A star’s apparent magnitude is the perceived magnitude…
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Underground Oceans
Young Astronomers Blog, Volume 28, Number 1. Two of the most interesting moons in the solar system, other than Titan, are Enceladus and Europa. Enceladus is one of the smaller spherical moons of Saturn. Europa is one of the Galilean moons of Jupiter. Both moons are covered with water ice and astronomers believe they both…
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Happy New Year – changes coming soon
With the new year, The Forsyth Astronomical Society will be changing the format of the Young Astronomers Newsletter. Rather than a publication published on a monthly basis, the newsletter will become a series of on-line articles. The articles will be posted to this location: https://www.fas37.org/wp/category/astronomy/youngastronews/ We would like to extend a huge THANK YOU to…
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Young Astronomers Newsletter December 2019
The Young Astronomers Newsletter Volume 27 Number 12 December 2019 By Bob Patsiga In this month’s edition of the newsletter Bob discusses: Three separate international space agencies are planning on sending missions to Mars next summer. Asteroid Hygiea may have all the right characteristics to be classified as a dwarf planet. The unique…
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Young Astronomers Newsletter November 2019
The Young Astronomers Newsletter Volume 27 Number 11 November 2019 By Bob Patsiga In this month’s edition of the newsletter Bob discusses: NASA publishes striking images of the center of the Milky Way taken by the X-ray space observatory, Chandra. Astronomy is featured in this year’s Nobel Prizes in physics. This year marks the…
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