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Pedro Duque escribe desde el espacio : La despedida |
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:unsure: A couple of online newsletters that may be of interest;
The Magellanic Clouds Newsletter The Galactic Center Newsletter Planetary News SpaceRef has planet specific news sites for the Moon today, Mars today, Mercury today, Juipiter today and Saturn today. I think Juipiter today was set up mainly for Galileo, and the others as missions began. Worth spliting up and linking seperately under each planet? Astro-Photography sites: Astrophotography By Jon Kolb An Atlas of the Universe has some great links Star Cluster and Nebula within 10000 ly shows the distances for such objects, as the Cats Paw (NGC 6334) All the sky has some great links to catalogs like, E. E. Barnard's Catalog of Dark Nebulae Naoyuki Kurita, stellar scenes ![]() Axel Mellinger in particular his all sky panarama. Star Echoes, I like this site, in particular for the wide shots of Orion Catalogs: I think you may want to add this as a seperate section. First The catalog of catalogs from the CDS, contains brief descriptions, but is one of the most thorough. INSPEC has a lot of technical resources, in particular, a list of astronomical designations. No links to catalogs or databases. I think Simbad stands alone, as far as atlases go. A Timeline of DSO catalogs by Barbara Wilson The Northern Caldwell Objects NRAO Catalogue of SNR (super-nova remnants) LSPM North catalog is a comprehensive list of 61,977 stars north of the J2000 celestial equator that have proper motions larger than 0.15 seconds of arc per year (local-background-stars frame). (spotted by Antoniseb) Astronomy clubs Astronomy Clubs world wide Tri-city astronomy club of Southeast Washington, amongst the offerings on their site is a biography of Charles Messier with guides to THE MESSIER MARATHON and detailed finder charts for CALDWELL objects Ames Area Amateur Astronomers And I have to recomend Hawaiian Astronomical Society for their Deepsky Atlas. For treatment of the different catalogs of stars, most seem to be connected to Astronomy software sites, The Guide is a software package, this page outlines the catalogs it uses, for example. Desktop universe is another The Schmidt Cassegrain website by Ted Kurkowski, has one of the best lists of DSO (deep sky Objects)l catalogs I have found. From Abell to Westr. SEDS Goes further including longer discriptions This is HST Target naming conventions, this includes a link to proposals (in case any of you UT Rouges want to have a go ! Best get in quick before she crash and burns I guess!) Not completely off the topic, but perhaps a History section ?? Sharpless catalog of HII regions. While looking for some close ups of Sh2-3, I came across This site, it has a little bit of history about Sharpless and Lynds. Lynds seems to have moved from studying HII regions in our galaxy to other galaxies, An atlas of dust and HII regions in Galaxies, This article mentions her bright and dark nebula Atlases. Stewart Sharpless is mentioned in This site about the history of the USNO Flagstaff station, and he is mentioned in this site and this site as one of the first astronomers to realise our position within a spiral galaxy. Unfortunately, I still have not found anything of Sh2-16, It looks like a three stars with some nebulosity, any help appreciated!!! I found it extremely helpful in locating the galactic center in the visual wavelength, it appears in This image just below the cross marking the center of our galaxy. For Biographies HAO has some great Bios from Aristotle to Bernard Lyot And we would have to include The Galileo Project ![]() Edward Emerson Barnard Edward Emerson Barnard at the Belmont society. Hope I haven't spwralled this post
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Everyone!!!!
You simply must try these sites! First, there is a nice site at NASA, Near Earth Object Program that has a Java simulation of Near Earth Objects, a highlighted list of Close Approaches(updated daily), and a list of the Orbital Elements for nearly 3000 asteroids. Also, there is a list for Comets. Then, and this is really the neat one, there is a FREE PROGRAM called CELESTIA. Celestia is a real-time 3D space simulation featuring a database of over 100000 stars, nearly a hundred solar system objects, and a complete catalog of neat stuff, like fictional space ships and space stations from 2001: A space Odyssey, Star Trek, Star Wars, Babylon 5, Stargate and others. It's like a joyride through a planetarium! And here's the neat part. You can copy the orbital elements from the Nasa-NEO site into a template(simple text-file) for Celestia, drop it into the resources folder(after you have downloaded Celestia to your computer...for free) and it will appear in the simulation, in the right place. You can go forward and backward in time, and move seamlessly to anywhere, even other galaxies, at light speeds plus. I forgot to eat for nearly a day after I downloaded it. :blink: Download size for Mac and PC versions is about 12+ megabytes, expands to about 18 mb's. They also have a page called The Celestia Motherload which contains links to about 3 gigabytes of additional files for most of the locations and objects in the Universe that you could possibly think to visit.
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Pre-Quote: 'To survive one has to experiment. When the environment changes, the traditional way of doing things doesn't work.' Quote: "It's the outriders, the organisms that seem to be maladjusted before the change, which are the only ones that survive these changes...in that way a species continues." Carl Sagan |
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Sh1-16 even has a listing!Sh2-13, wow doesn't it help when you add words like nebula to your search!
Astronomical Images by George Greaney more astrophotography! Michael A. Stecker Maurice Clark Another site I have to mention is A CCD Tour of the Universe by Jan Wisniewski, in particular for it's lovely illistrations of the constellations The Saguaro Astronomy Club (SAC) has a great Object Detail Search menu that has a lot of detail, Sh2-16 included! Aladin has some black and white images of Gum70 and in colour Put in GUM 70 at the Aladin sky atlas. get an RGB image, there is a very subtle colum near the star HD 161408. ![]()
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Hey, guys, I was looking around and I found a few that might have been visited before but that I think should definitely be noted within this string:
PHYSICS: Tom Potter's web page: tompotter.us, certainly is an intriguing site that can provide basic physics help. Check it out! THEORIES: Called quantumaetherdynamics.com, this site talks about - of course, Quantum Aetherdynamics! A bit of a harder read that Tom Potter's World, but worth the while for those who love QCD, QED, and QAD! Through no fault of my own, I found this FAQ site. Read on! http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/index.html Lastly, I found this site at random: http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/index.html I'm not sure what good it'll do for anybody who reads it, but for Cosmology-minded minds like me, it works fine as a guidesite. |
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Another Catalog
Hickson Compact Groups, this catalog has 100 listings. Arp ATLAS OF PECULIAR GALAXIES HALTON ARP Another list of catalogs If catalogs are to be added, stars, nebula and galaxies would make good sub categories. Nineplanets list of large telescopes, also has a great biography of Ptolemy.
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http://casa.colorado.edu/hhcat/
This is an online list of all know Herbig Haro objects. APOD images and descriptions of Herbig Haro objects My interest in HH objects was rekindled when I found Hubbles Variable Nebula, and a claim that it is a HH object, associated with a T Tauri Star. I wonder if this is common? The closest I have come to finding a catalog of T Tauri stars is http://legacy.gsfc.nasa.gov/W3Browse/all/v.../vstarsusp.html The VSTARSUSP database containing the New Catalog of Suspected Variable Stars (NSV). One of the better lists I have seen for star types. I am not sure how to access it, nor is anyone is interested, I will post when I figure it our though ![]() heres one in Moscow, http://www.sai.msu.su/groups/cluster/gcvs/gcvs/ APOD images and descriptions of T Tauri Stars ATNF Pulsar Catalogue, v1.2: Documentation This looks like a comprehensive treatment of Pulsars, I Have seen a shortlist of about a hundred but this news release from Parkes put the number at over a thousand from Parkes alone in 1998. the search for a thorough list of Pulsars continues. Quote:
I am now looking at catalogs of molecular clouds. This was inspired by the Diagram of objects in between us and LBV 1806 - 20. There are two obvious classifiers W and MC. So far, the best I have managed is an article about W31, the largest HII region in the Milky Way. 2mass Gallery of HII regions Complete Abell Catalog of Planetary Nebulae RCW catalog OK I think I have found it. Westerhout's Catalogue of 82 Discrete Sources A survey of the continuous radiation from the Galactic System at a frequency of 1390 Mc/s (gif) Galactic Radio Sources KES (Abstract) CTB (Abstract) If you come across any other interesting nomenclature for astronomical objects let me know, this has been fun figuring out all this vague designations for astonomical objects ![]()
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I'm not sure where this should go, but it is beautifully presented and worth a look.
A photographic Atlas of Selected Regions of The Milky Way
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AlcyoneThe NASA Astrophysics Data System[/url] is putting full records of Journal articles online, the Sharpless HII article was machine readable, now has PDF and Gif formats! THis is great
Now I am going into the past a bit here, so it could go under history or catalogs. The SBO Palomar Sky Survey Prints Catalogs, Atlases and Databases The survey prints can be quried online from Here The Palomar Globulars and Abstract SEDS catalog of 150 known Globular Cluster A more recent survey ACS Virgo Cluster Survey And on Archaeoastronomy Interactive Atlas of World Astronomy and Studies of Occidental Constellations and Star Names to the Classical Period Contains links such as A (PDF) files copy of Ptolemy's Catalogue of Stars by Christian Peters and Eduard Knobel (1915): I have been looking at a lot of online Star Atlases, historical and current, and was thinking of a UT Star Atlas. This could be done in a number of ways. For starters, I will list the best I have found so far online, then we could sample pictures with links to objects in an Atlas thread, or Fraser could open a seperate section with a thread for each section, maybe in astrophotography, and people could post their astrophotographs by constellation, just an idea, what do you think .Anyway, here are my favorite Star Atlases online The Hawaiian Astronomical Society Storybook and Deepsky Atlas The Deep Photographic Guide to the constellations (all the sky) Jan Wisniewskis tour of the sky Project ASTRO UTAH NASAs SkyView online Virtual Observatory Chandra and of course Simbad and SEDS. Clasical Atlases and Constellations from "Stars" SkyEye and
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Heres a link to my Links page you might find some useful ones there.
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Well, I have an Astronomy website in portuguese, dedicated to scouts and general public. Its Astroescuta
Feel free to drop in ![]() Paulo |