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         Astronomy Projects:     more books (100)
  1. Better Homes and Gardens Outer Space (Fun-to-Do Project Books) by Better Homes and Gardens Books, 1990-09
  2. Wh Smith Project Helpers: Space Exploration (WH Smith Project Helpers) by David Wright, Jill Wright, 2001-12-28

141. Sunshine Coast Astronomy Club
Provides coming events, projects, web tools, bulletin board, photography, and links.
http://sunshinecoastastronomy.com/
Sunshine Coast Astronomy Club - British Columbia's newest and most exciting gathering of astronomical enthusiasts. Welcome to the Sunshine Coast Astronomy Club Website Next Event(s
Thursday Sept 15th Executive Meeting
Friday Sept 30th General Meeting - SEE big time speaker after
Elder College Astronomy Courses start Oct 20 Space News Click Here to find us. CLICK HEADLINE TO READ IT ALL Where are we? LATEST SIGHTINGS Please report any website problems
Click Here
Counter started Dec. 15/04 Website by
Bob D'Arcy
Website Changes/Highlights
OUR NEW STORE OPENS Go
Picture album - Send in yours. Go Recent NEW Items in other pages
July 29 minutes posted Go
September Joke posted Go
1000 PARK pictures in album! - SEE Park Newspaper item in Archives Go Cloud Cover Transparency Seeing For Other Scales and Help Click the Click for Help Above Overcast Poor Bad 1/5 50% Cover Average Average 3/5 Clear Transparent Excellent 5/5 While you are visiting please explore all our website pages: Coming Events - for our meetings or universally "acclaimed occurrences". AND review our current projects - Ruby Lake and ''Light Abatement' Review notes About Us and a list of Board Members Post on the Bulletin Board - Check out the Fun Items - Photos and a Smile Take advantage of our Web Space Tools - Moon Phases Check out other Linked sites with good Astronomy material SECHELT SKY - SEE BELOW EXPLORE IT ALL SEE ALL DETAILS

142. Demonstrations And Animations For Teaching Astronomy - D A T A
Webbased demonstrations and animations for teaching astronomy developed at the University of Illinois, department of astronomy.
http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/projects/data/

143. NASA/MSU-Bozeman CERES Project Educational Activities
Classroomready astronomy activities and lessons for levels K-12. Created by a team of master teachers, university faculty, and NASA researchers.
http://btc.montana.edu/ceres/html/EdActivities.html
A team of master teachers, university faculty, and NASA researchers have created a series of web-based astronomy and astrobiology lessons for the CERES Project. These classroom-ready activities for K-12 students represent a robust combination of contemporary teaching/learning strategies from the National Science Education Standards (NRC, 1996), exciting and current NASA science data, and Internet pointers to an endless supply of accurate and timely resources.
Three Types of Classroom-Ready Lessons are Available On-line:
  • STUDENT INQUIRIES / EXTENSION LESSONS

  • Students explore NASA data to construct first-hand knowledge about the astronomical universe. These internet-based lessons require 1 to 4 class hours and are tied explicitly to the NRC National Science Education Standards astronomy objectives. They can be used as an introduction to astronomy topics, as an intermediate activity, or as an extension activity that requires active participation by students.
  • SPACEQUESTS

  • QuestForm Template

  • APPLICATIONS IN ASTROBIOLOGY

  • Students explore interdisciplinary science topics within the context of astrobiology to construct first-hand knowledge about the origin, distribution, and future of life on Earth and beyond. These internet-based lessons require 1 to 4 class hours and are closely tied to the NRC National Science Education Standards and the Principles and Standards for Mathematics. These lessons can be used as stand alone activities or as supplemental materials for standard math and science courses. Many of these activities are suitable for both middle and high school students, even though they may be cited as being appropriate for one group or another.

144. Amateur Radio Astronomy Experiments And Equipment
4 GHz total power/Dicke radiometer for radio astronomy. a 1.4 GHz downconverter LNA for SETI League Project Argus and radio astronomy
http://www.kolumbus.fi/michael.fletcher/ra_test.htm
Different Radio Telescope equipment I have built:
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- some recent photographs from the Artjärvi Telecommunications Society facility - 11 GHz Dicke switch radiometer prototype ( 50k ) , resolution ~1 K ( image of the moon - 11 GHz Dicke switch radiometer ( 66k ) for radio astronomy, resolution 0.06 K - 12 GHz total power radiometer for measurement of radio temperatures - handheld portable 12 GHz radiometer for detecting RF corona, good for demoing RA !!! ( photo - 11 GHz demonstration radio telescope ( can detect moon with 28 cm dish ) - here is a block diagram (9k) of my latest cost effective Dicke switched front end for 10 GHz - and here is a photograph (44k) of the prototype 11 GHz setup with integrated ambient reference latest (18k) prototype of my integrated hot reference load C band Thot/Tcold switcher - 4 GHz total power/Dicke radiometer for radio astronomy - an article ( less figures, images and formulae ) from 1996 on a Dicke Radio Telescope design of mine - some recent circuits I have used: RF detector high level amp downconverter using commercial tuners - photo of the high level IF amp (86k) and the IF AGC (90k) and Detector - a simple prime focus dish focus, gain and beamwidth

145. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
MPE Gamma-Ray astronomy Project Name Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik - Gamma-Ray astronomy - Project INTEGRAL MPE Gamma-Ray astronomy
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue2.pl?limit=225&term1=M

146. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
MPE Gamma-Ray astronomy Project Name Project-Logo Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik - Gamma-Ray astronomy - Project MEGA MPE Gamma-Ray
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue2.pl?limit=3025&term1=

147. PeggySchweiger's Science Fair Topics
astronomy. 1. DETERMINE THE MOON S SIDEREAL MONTH AND ITS SYNODIC MONTH Observing the phases of the moonobserve the moon every few days as it progresses
http://members.tripod.com/~PeggySchweiger/index-13.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod 40 Yr Old Virgin Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Home Page of Peggy E. Schweiger Astronomy: 1. DETERMINE THE MOON'S SIDEREAL MONTH AND ITS SYNODIC MONTH: Observing the phases of the moon-observe the moon every few days as it progresses from new moon to full moon and then one more time near the time of the next new moon. Collect the following data: a) find the position of the moon with respect to nearby stars. Plot this position on a start chart, b) estimate the angle between the sun and the moon by estimating the angle between the moon and the sunset point and adding 15 degrees for each hour since sun set, and c) make a drawing of the moon corresponding to each of your observation dates, accurately drawing its appearance. 2. DIURNAL MOTION OF THE SUN: At intervals during the day, mark the point on cardboard where the shadow of the sun falls from a gnomon. Begin observations before noon and make at least one observation per hour, with observations every fifteen minutes when the sun is near its maximum altitude. Find the altitude of the sun at each observation time. Estimate the direcion of true north on your paper. Measure the azimuth of the sun at each observation. Calculate the maximum altitude of the sun and at what time this occured. 3. DIAMETER OF THE SUN: Use a reflected image of the sun to produce an image of the sun. Knowing the geometry of your setup and the distance to the sun, you can calculate its diameter.

148. Projects At PSI
projects at PSI. MARS GLOBAL SURVEYOR THE ORIGIN OF THE MOON SIBERIA EXPLOSION BUILDING PLANETS AT PSI COMET HYAKUTAKE
http://www.psi.edu/projects/projects.html

149. Amateur Radio Astronomy On The Internet
The Woodbury Research Project is a radio astronomy effort of about 50 students of the Georgia Institute of Technology lead by Dr. Whit Smith from the
http://www.starkenburg-sternwarte.de/radio/links.htm

Amateur Radio Astronomy on the Internet
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(englisch) In recent years backyard radio astronomy has attracted an increasing number of people (radio amateurs and amateur astronomers alike) who have great fun in space exploration by radio. Strong signals are emitted by our sun and the giant planet jupiter. But even sources which are so distant that an optical amateur telescope will barely show them are within the range of amateur radio observatories. You want to know how and when to listen to jupiters radio noise storms? You ask for the current status of solar activity? You wish to buy off-the-shelf components for building your own amateur radio telescope? This page is intended to provide you with some interesting links!
General information and project overviews provided by clubs and individuals The Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers (SARA) introduces the work of SARA and briefly overviews amateur radio astronomy projects. You will also find useful references for further reading and the text of SARA newsletters released in 1993 and 1994. The Woodbury Research Project MIT Haystack Observatory , Westford, Massachusetts, has a ''Small Telecope Project'' also described in the August 1996 issue of Sky and Telescope . A satellite dish was used for an 1420 MHz all-sky survey. Taunton Radio Astronomy Observatory Home Page (Trevor Hill, U.K.), offers a description of a 151 MHz amateur radio telescope. They observed the great comet chrash in 1994 with a 20.4 MHz phase switched interferometer. These data can be downloaded. Further results were observed with a 1420 MHz interferometer made of two 2.4 m dishes.

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