Posts Tagged ‘2009’
Golden Space Craft filmed Jan 2009 with a 12″ meade telescope.
filmed by john Lenard Walson using a camcorder and 12″ meade telescope jan 2009 Gridkeeper Music channel http://www.youtube.com/gridkeepermusic Latest audio release from Gridkeeper – Moon Transmissions e.p.
Duration : 0:4:27
MOON CELESTRON TELESCOPE 4.50″ MIRROR
Hello everyone, this is a close-up of our moon with a celestron GT4 4″ telescope 1325mm=F 102mm=D. The eyepiece for viewing was a 32mm with a 4x barlow. viewing power was 165x. I recorded the images from a canon powershot A1100is video mode 640×480 pixels. thanks everyone-Mark
Duration : 0:1:2
MOON CELESTRON TELESCOPE 4.50″ MIRROR
Hello everyone, this is a close-up of our moon with a celestron GT4 4″ telescope 1325mm=F 102mm=D. The eyepiece for viewing was a 32mm with a 3x barlow. viewing power was 124x. I recorded the images from a canon powershot A1100is video mode 640×480 pixels. thanks everyone-Mark
Duration : 0:1:5
Starfleet Caught On Amateur Telescope.flv
Starfleet Caught On Amateur telescope.
This is footage is from an amateur astronomers telescope,he has pictures and video evidence of large space craft in space around our planet.The government deny it but its there,if it is are governments up there then why are they there? and what are they there for?,if it isn’t our governments then who is it? where are they from? and what are they doing there?
Duration : 0:8:56
NASA – Whats Up for April 2009
Whats Up for April? Did you know you can see other galaxies through modest telescopes or binoculars? Well you can!
Hello and welcome. I’m Jane Houston Jones at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California During 2009, were celebrating International Year of Astronomy by taking you on a tour of one of the months best celestial objects. This month, its the Whirlpool Galaxy!
Join me as we step away from our solar system, look beyond our own galaxy, and view the spiral arms of another galaxy.
Because we are inside our own galaxy – about two-thirds of the way from the galactic core, we can’t see the whole thing. But we can see the spiral arms and so we know we live in a spiral-shaped galaxy.
Early astronomers looked up in the night sky and saw patches of light which appeared like faraway clouds. They called these patches nebulae.
In 1845, Irelands Third Earl of Ross, William Parsons, used his huge telescope at Birr Castle in the center of Ireland to observe and sketch the spiral structure of the Whirlpool Galaxy.
Other 18th and 19th century astronomers, including father and son William and John Herschel, noted the structure of this galaxy, too.
A galaxy is an enormous collection of gas and stars held together by gravity. Since the 19th century, astronomers have aimed telescopes at galaxies, discovering their composition.
In the 20th century, NASAS orbiting telescopes have looked at this amazing galaxy to see it in many portions of the electromagnetic spectrum, from radio to infrared, on to visible light, and past visible to ultraviolet, X-Ray and on to gamma ray.
NASAs Spitzer Space Telescope looks at galaxies in the infrared part of the spectrum. It can see long lanes in the spiral arms. They are stars and gas laced with dust.
The Hubble Space Telescope sees similar views in a different wavelength. It looks at the optical part of the spectrum or what we think of as visible light. Thats the light we can see.
NASAS Chandra X-ray observatory reveals black holes, neutron stars and a glow between the stars of the Whirlpool Galaxy.
And last, but not least, the GALEX telescope shows that hot young stars produce a lot of ultraviolet energy.
Dont forget to view Saturn this month either. Its higher in the sky and easier to see.
You can read all about the Whirlpool and other galaxies in the distant universe this month on NASA’s International Year of Astronomy website: astronomy2009.nasa.gov
And you can learn all about NASA’s missions at: www.nasa.gov
That’s all for this month. I’m Jane Houston Jones.
Duration : 0:3:1
Celestron FirstScope Telescope Product Tour
Named Official Product of International Year of Astronomy 2009, FirstScope pays tribute to the men and women who brought us one step closer to understanding the universe around us!
Duration : 0:5:2
SOHO Sun