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Continued from previous message.
removed from the property. This admonition is a fallout from the ongoing revision of access to various lands across the country. As NYC Events is circulated among astronomers all over the world (it's posted into several astronomy Internet newsgroups, for instance), operators of astronomy-related activities are sending in their programs and schedules. As long as they are within the commuting ring of New York, I can include them. NYC Events will ALWAYS be incomplete, simply because there are astroevents out there I didn't learn about. NYC Events is also less than complete because I put in the major public events at which the sponsor has (I hope!) information about its other features. The NYSkies calendar section and NYC Events now are essentially congruent. More over, many NYSkiers lack web service, while NYC Events is emailed to all NYSkiers. Print the calendar in landscape mode to avoid clipping off the far right days. When a new event is noticed, or an existing has substantial change, in the calendar it is tagged with '(CLICK)'. That tells you there are details and a contact behind your mouse click. The American Museum of Natural History extended indefinitely its SuperSaver ticket and the alternating Hayden Planetarium spaceshows. I no longer include these as 'events' being that they are, for the immediate future, permanent features of the Museum. Skywatching --------- The miserable clouds and rain of summer broke in September. Yes, we still had the lousy weather, but there were frequent clear evenings tossed in for good starviewing. NYSkiers continue to inspect Mars and delighted to the still-large disc, polar caps, and maria. No large new dust storms erupted so far. There were few organized Mars watches in September, but the planet was a favorite feature of the ongoing starviewings all over the NYSkies territory. About 2/3 into September several NYSkiers, almost simultaneously from various parts of the City, spotted Venus! She's still a tough target in bright twilight. Once found, she'll be your skymate for the rest of her synodic loop. She'll end that loop in June 2004 with her crossing over the face of the Sun! Creeping into view by month end was Saturn, for those viewing into the midnight hours. The Tribute in Light memorial beams shining thruout the night of September 11th to dawn on the 12th, were totally innocuous toward starviewing. As it turned ot, some parts of the City were clouded over anyway. The beams were visible from as far as 120 kilometers away and reached, based on altitude measurements in hand, as high as 25 kilometers! There was some public grumbling about the short time the beams were shining. They 'should' be lighted permanently. City officials explained that, like Memorial Day and Veterans Day, the anniversary of WTC is a one-day remembrance. Tribute of Light will, according to current plans, return on each future anniversary. Special Events ------------ The Museum reopened its Gem & Mineral Hall and Hall of Meteorites after a renovation on 20 September 2003. Ahnighito is still in place where it was, on stilts reaching to Manhattan bedrock, with its sister displays all redone and updated. Check out, also, the rehabbed adjacent Hall of Gems & Minerals! The megaevent in October is the American Urban Star Fest in Central Park's Sheep Meadow. This is the nation's most festive and romantic of starparties, despite its setting in the middle of Manhattan. Unlike conventional 'star parties', American Urban Star Fest is a public celebration of the starry skies, resulting from New York's ongoing, tho slow, progress toward the mitigation of luminous graffiti. This is accompanied by the crescendo of popular awareness that New York is the hub of the universe, a situation that requires it to have a clear prospect on the surrounding worlds and orbs. This mindset may seem queerly preCopernican. It is, in a philosophical sense, not physical. Most folk here understand that the Earth, with the City, is one of the nine (not eight!) planets. Yet, by a survey made in the 1930s, before the Hubble expansion was widely appreciated and the cosmos was a geometric construct, the exact center of it all is under the southwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street. This is strictly no longer valid, due to the nonEuclid character of space and Einstein's mixing of time into it, but it's still cool to stand there and imagine that in any direction it's as far to the frontier of creation as in any other. So, what better way to let the populance say, 'We are the world!' than a lazy lawn picnic under their own stars? And so, at sundown on Saturday 4 October 2003, several thousand cityfolk will (weather permitting) pour down from their residence towers, out of subway kiosks, off of buses, and troop into Sheep Meadow of Central Park. There they'll spread out their blankets; break out packed suppers; deploy chairs, binoculars, starcharts; wrap in sweaters or shawls. And take in the cosmic view that belongs to New York as much as New York belongs to it. And, with clear skies, stars they will see! All of them to 4 or 4-1/2 magnitude, from the 'basin' of Central Park. They'll see Hercules, Cygnus, Pegasus, Aquarius, Cepheus, Cassiopeia, and many other groups. They'll study Mars, Uranus, Neptune, and a 8- Continued in next message. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
October NYC Events 2/ 9 | JOHN PAZMINO | Amateur Astronomy | 0 | October 1st 03 05:54 AM |
October NYC Events 9/ 9 | JOHN PAZMINO | Astronomy Misc | 0 | October 1st 03 05:53 AM |
October NYC Events 8/ 9 | JOHN PAZMINO | Astronomy Misc | 0 | October 1st 03 05:53 AM |
October NYC Events 7/ 9 | JOHN PAZMINO | Astronomy Misc | 0 | October 1st 03 05:53 AM |
October NYC Events 2/ 9 | JOHN PAZMINO | Astronomy Misc | 0 | October 1st 03 05:53 AM |