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Western Slope Skies

English, Space/Cosmology, 2022 seasons, 58 episodes, 3 hours, 22 minutes
About
A bi-weekly short feature on astronomy, produced by members of the Black Canyon Astronomical Society.
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Western Slope Skies - The Stories of the Stars

Stories, such as the one I’ve just shared and many others around the globe, were used to interpret the stars and celestial objects that people have seen sparkling in the night sky.
9/27/20243 minutes, 52 seconds
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Piazzi’s Flying Star” & Stellar Parallax

Throughout history, a belief in the “fixed” and changeless stars was held by many cultures. But at the beginning of the 19th Century, Italian astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi repeatedly measured the position of a star called 61 Cygni. Piazzi’s work overturned such long-held beliefs and led to research that ultimately allowed astronomers to accurately measure the scale of the Milky Way Galaxy and to learn of our location within it.
9/13/20243 minutes, 22 seconds
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What is solar maximum and what does it mean for us?

The Sun has been ‘in the news’ these days. You may have read about various phenomena associated with the Sun, including sunspots, flares, and auroras or Northern Lights. So why all the interest in the Sun now?
8/30/20243 minutes, 22 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - AstroFest 2024

AstroFest 2024 will feature dark night skies along the entire Gunnison River corridor from Curecanti National Recreation Area (certified Dark Sky in 2021) all the way to Gunnison Gorge National Conservation Area – celebrating their recent certification as a Dark Sky Place.
8/14/20243 minutes, 22 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Meteor Showers

Every year, right in the middle of August, my cousins and I drag all our sleeping bags andpillows up to their roof and wait for the sky event that goes highly unnoticed every year: the Perseid meteor shower.
8/2/20243 minutes, 3 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Sundogs and Moonbows

Halos arise from sunlight refraction through microscopic ice crystals, usually aloft in cirrus clouds.
7/19/20242 minutes, 58 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Discovering Planets Outside Our Solar System

A star begins its life as a cloud of gas and dust. These are called molecular clouds, and they can range between 1,000 to 10 million times the mass of the sun.
7/5/20243 minutes, 45 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Planetary Alignment versus Conjunction and how Hollywood gets it wrong

A planetary alignment means that 3 or more planets line up in a row, as seen from the Earth, in the same area of the sky, that is, a “parade of planets”. The planets lie ROUGHLY on a line called the ecliptic, the path that the Sun appears to follow against the background of stars as we on Earth orbit the Sun. The parade can be tens of degrees in length.
6/21/20243 minutes, 20 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - How Stars Become White Dwarfs

When a star dies what is left behind is called a stellar remnant. The type of stellar remnant is dependent upon the star’s mass.
6/7/20243 minutes, 23 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Rings of Saturn

Saturn's rings are one of the most astonishing things to see with your own eyes.
5/24/20243 minutes, 8 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: LAKE CITY’S 2024 STARFEST

This year’s Lake City Star Fest will be held June 7-9. We invite the public to celebrate the incredible starry night skies in our area along with some of Lake City’s rich and colorful cultural heritage.
5/10/20243 minutes, 13 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: The Wonder of a Twinkling Star

While gazing at that mystical point of light, time and space seem to disappear, if only for a moment. Even us older stargazers can still find plenty to wonder about when it comes to twinkling stars.
4/26/20243 minutes, 38 seconds
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Total Solar Eclipse USA! – April 8, 2024

On Monday, April 8, 2024, we’ll be able to see a total solar eclipse from parts of Mexico, the U. S., and Canada. Another such eclipse won’t be visible from the 48 contiguous States for 20 years.
3/29/20243 minutes, 30 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Coalition

The Coalition, a 501c3 non-profit, is an umbrella organization dedicated to supporting Dark Sky Places.
3/15/20243 minutes, 21 seconds
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The Orion Nebula: A Stellar Nursery

The Sun is a star that provides Earth with the energy that drives most of our diverse and amazing biology. But where and how do stars form?
3/1/20243 minutes, 32 seconds
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Spot Some Earth Satellites!

On clear, dark nights, we can see dozens of satellites with our eyes alone. Most satellites travel within a zone called Low Earth Orbit that ranges in altitude from 150 to 1200 miles.
2/16/20243 minutes, 18 seconds
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The Mystery of the Maunder Minimum

Today, we explore a curious solar phenomenon that occurred from 1645 to 1715.
2/2/20243 minutes, 9 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Traveling through time with a telescope

What if I told you that you could travel through time with a telescope? No, a telescope cannot take you back to 1955 to fix your parent’s relationship. However, through a telescope, the possibilities to discover events that happened eons ago are opened by gazing at the colossal night sky.
1/19/20243 minutes, 42 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Dark Matter

In the vast expanse of the cosmos, there exists a mysterious force that challenges the very fabric of our understanding — dark matter. Let's embark on a journey into the cosmic unknown, exploring the enigma that comprises 85% of the universe's mass.
1/5/20243 minutes, 15 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Presidents, Cows, and Eclipses

Lyndon B. Johnson National Historical Park and the surrounding Hill Country will be offering many events over eclipse weekend.
12/22/20233 minutes, 37 seconds
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Wonders of a Dark, December Sky

In December, it’s tempting to stay inside and avoid the cold night air. But the December night sky is impressive! Find a star chart or planetarium App, then go out on a clear night, at least briefly, to enjoy the spectacle!
12/8/20233 minutes, 25 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Stars Above, Stars Within

You may fondly remember the classic Eighties science program Cosmos, narrated by the late great astrophysicist Carl Sagan. In the episode “The Shores of the Cosmic Ocean”, he famously uttered “we’re made of star stuff”. We are the products of nucleosynthesis, a set of processes that created the chemical elements, the building blocks of all we see and are.
11/24/20233 minutes, 34 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Astronomy Highlights for 2024

2024 is almost here, and in astronomy, a lot will be happening.
11/24/20233 minutes, 39 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Shedding Light on Dark Matter

Dark matter. You’ve probably heard of it, maybe in a Sci-Fi novel or movie, and you’ve probably wondered what it is exactly. Well, welcome to the club. Scientists have been asking themselves this question since its discovery in 1933. Dark matter is an invisible, mysterious substance that makes up 22% of the universe, but we know very little about it.
10/27/20233 minutes, 44 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Rings in Space

Ring nebulae and the rings of Saturn are among some familiar rings that exist in space. But consider ring galaxies!
10/12/20234 minutes, 5 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Ring of Fire Solar Eclipse

In a total eclipse, the moon covers the sun completely and the sky darkens as if it were dawn or dusk.
9/29/20232 minutes, 48 seconds
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The Universe Got Bigger

On the night of October 5, 1923, using the 100-inch Hooker telescope on Mt. Wilson, Edwin Hubble captured a photographic plate image of M31, the Andromeda “Nebula”.
9/15/20233 minutes, 26 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - ASTROFEST 2023

This year’s festival will run from September 14 through 16th, to coincide with the September new moon.
9/1/20233 minutes, 29 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - The Hubble Space Telescope

If you’ve been paying attention to the news in the past year you’ve no doubt heard about the James Webb Space Telescope. However, there is another space telescope that still deserves your attention.
8/18/20233 minutes, 11 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Meteors and Dark Skies

One of the best meteor showers of the year will peak during the second weekend of August, presenting the perfect opportunity to spot shooting stars streaking across the sky.
8/4/20233 minutes, 45 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - Echoes Across a Cosmic Ocean

Recently, scientists announced detection of a persistent gravitational wave background (GWB), continually rippling the cosmos like a calm ocean breeze.
7/21/20234 minutes, 4 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - The Real Hubble

When people hear the name “Edwin Hubble,” they typically think of the Hubble Space Telescope. However, the Hubble Space Telescope was built after Edwin Hubble’s death as a way to honor him.
7/7/20233 minutes, 26 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Scotobiology

The concept of scotobiology as a science was developed at a conference on light pollution held in Muskoka, Ontario, in 2003. Just as the word “photo” relates to light, “scoto” is the word that relates to “darkness.” Therefore, Scotobiology is the study of the role darkness plays in living organisms.
6/23/20233 minutes, 10 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: The Magic Behind Shooting Stars

Have you ever wished upon a shooting star? For most of us, the novelty of wishing on a shooting star has faded since the days of our childhood.
6/9/20232 minutes, 48 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Gran Telescopio Canarias

The telescope’s most important discovery to date has been finding the farthest black hole located at the center of a rare type of galaxy.
5/26/20232 minutes, 48 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: NASA DARTS an Asteroid

On September 26, 2022, a NASA spacecraft ran into the asteroid Dimorphos at nearly 15,000 miles per hour. Far from being a multi-million-dollar boondoggle, this collision is precisely what astronomers had planned. The spacecraft was part of the Double Asteroid Redirection Test mission, or DART for short. The goal: to test technology that could potentially divert a large asteroid, should we ever locate one on a collision course with Earth.
5/12/20233 minutes, 19 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Lake City’s Starry Skies

From June 7-11, we will hold our first ever StarFest to celebrate Lake City’s starry skies and gather other dark sky advocates and interested folks from the western slope, the San Luis Valley, and throughout Colorado to see what more can be done to assure our precious night skies can be enjoyed by future generations. Unfortunately, light pollution is getting worse around the world so taking action is critical to turning things around.
4/28/20233 minutes, 50 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: The Saga of Venusian Exploration

Gleaming naked-eye apparition, Venus has captivated civilization since antiquity, garnering epithets of divine power and beauty-- Chac-Ek (“Great Star”) in Mayan, Jin-xing (“Golden Planet”) in Chinese, Phosphoros (“Lightbringer”) in Greek.
4/14/20233 minutes, 58 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Lunar Delivery Driver

Back when our beloved western cities were still young and their skies still dark, customers waited weeks or even months for basic household items to reach their local mercantile shelves.
3/17/20233 minutes, 21 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Charles Messier: Comet Hunter

Imagine being a poor 13-year old boy living in France in 1744 and observing a 6-tailed comet in the daytime. What aspirations might that have generated in a teenager?
3/3/20233 minutes, 26 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: The Winter Milky Way

The name Milky Way means two things: the star-packed photogenic river of stars across sky for one. It also refers to the hundreds of billions of stars that make up our galaxy. No matter where you look in the Western Slope sky, every star is part of our galaxy.
2/17/20233 minutes, 45 seconds
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Western Slope Skies: Comets: Icy, Dusty Visitors from Afar

Comets, once considered portents of doom, have long puzzled us. They move rapidly against the starry background. They grow tails, which may explain why the ancient Greeks called them “hairy stars.” Their brightness and even their exact paths can be hard to predict. So, what are these mysterious visitors that sometimes appear in our sky?
2/3/20233 minutes, 9 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - The Late, Late Show: Getting Personal with the Moon

In the very early hours of November 8, the second total lunar eclipse of 2022 will be visible from Western Colorado.
10/28/20223 minutes, 49 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - NASA’s Juno at Jupiter

This month is a great time to view Jupiter, because this 86,000 mile-wide, giant planet is visible nearly all night long.
10/14/20223 minutes, 17 seconds
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Western Slope Skies - June 10th - Olbers’ Paradox

Olbers’ Paradox - A familiar constellation in the dark night sky.
6/9/20223 minutes, 33 seconds