No SMCAS Monthly Meeting in January, 2010

 

 

 


There will be no meeting or public Planetarium show in January. 
SMCAS members have been invited to attend the 
Peninsula Astronomical Society's meeting on January 8th.


 

                There will be no SMCAS General Meeting in January, 2010

College of  San Mateo        
1700 West Hillsdale Blvd., Bldg 36-100 ,
San Mateo, California 

       

Hope to see you at the next meeting on February 5th!  We have a really great speaker:  Chris Ford from Pixar Animation Studios.  See the details at:
http://www.smcas.com/events/meetings/upcoming_meetings/

Marion W

CSM Astronomy website

In the Mail and In the eMail

SMCAS will be celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2010. 
If you have documents, pictures or stories about the earlier years of SMCAS, please let me know.

Ed Pieret
President, SMCAS

Table of Contents

Directions to College of  San Mateo

Star Parties at Crestview Park

Events and Club News


The complete Newsletter in .pdf format is available from:
http://www.smcas.com/newsletter/

Other Astronomy Events in Our Area

SMCAS Monthly Calendar

Club Websites, Membership Application

SMCAS patches on sale  

Update, January 30

Final entry for January Newsletter

 

 

 

 

Crestview Star Parties

Number of people in attendance
subject to weather.

Crestview 2010 Sun Chart

Scobee Star Chart
    Scobee Planetarium

The Solar System Live

 

 

January 9 & 16 - February 6 & 13 - March 6 & 13


Come out and see
how many different things you can
identify
in the night sky!

Bring your binoculars, telescopes, star guides, and lounge chairs for some informal star gazing at Crestview Park. Dress warmly, wear a hat. Cars should arrive before dark so that headlights don't affect people's dark adaptation. Bring small flashlights only, with the lens covered with red cellophane or red balloon. Please don't touch a telescope without permission. And parents, please watch your children.

Directions to Crestview Park:  Take Hwy 101 or El Camino to Brittan Avenue in
San Carlos, and turn west (right from El Camino).  From El Camino, follow Brittan
about 2.3 miles to the intersection with Crestview Drive.  From Alameda, go about
1.4 miles to Crestview.  Turn right on Crestview.  A small sign saying "Crestview
Park" is a half-block ahead on the right.  
Look to the left for the park entry road, a small street between houses #998 and 1000.  
If after dark, please park on Crestview to avoid disturbing the observing with headlight glare.

From Highway 280 to Edgewood Road. Go east toward the Bay about 0.8 miles.  Left on
Crestview Drive.  Go 0.5 miles uphill to the intersection with Brittan Avenue.  Go one
short block to the park entrance on the left.

Generally the first star party is around the 3/4 moon and  the second party is a week later (around the new moon).  Our experience is that 4 or 5 days after the full moon the moon rises late enough that it won't bother observing. Some months the calendar and the and the moon phases give us a star party with a new moon or at least less than a quarter moon. This is OK because we all like to do a little moon observing  once in a while. Sometimes we even call it a moon party.  
Leroy Amen

Crestview Park is at W122° 17', N37° 29'


==================================================================
REACH FOR THE STARS AT CSM!

With its planetarium, variety of astronomy courses, top-notch faculty,
and special events such as Star Parties, when the College partners with the
San Mateo County Astronomical Society...or with CSM's many A.A., A.S., and certificate programs, its scenic and historic campus, the ease with which
you can sign up for classes online as a first-time or returning student...
The possibilities are astronomical.

COLLEGE OF SAN MATEO.  Visit us on the web at http://gocsm.net
=================================================================

 

 

 

Astronomy Events in Our Area  ( Edited for January )

Bay Astro,  Ken L's Event List

 

Dean Lectures  
 California Academy of Sciences 
https://www.calacademy.org/event_tickets/.

More info on this website
____________________________________
Benjamin Dean Lecture Series in Astronomy
Morrison Planetarium
California Academy of Sciences
55 Concourse Drive
San Francisco, CA 94118
415-379-8000
deanseries@calacademy.org
http://www.calacademy.org/events/index.php





SLAC Physics Lecture Series at Stanford Linear Accelerator
           http://www.slac. stanford. edu/welcome/ location. html (how to get to SLAC)

 

Silicon Valley Astronomy Lecture Series
 Foothill College 
Los Altos Hills, CA

Public Lecture, Open to Everyone
--------------------------------------------------

Wednesday, Jan. 20, at 7 pm:

The Search for Intelligent Life Among the Stars:
New Strategies

Dr. Seth Shostak, SETI Institute

part of the 11th Annual Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures
in the Smithwick Theater, Foothill College,
El Monte Road and Freeway 280,
in Los Altos Hills, California.

Free and open to the public.
Parking on campus costs $2 and
you should leave some time to get a parking sticker.

Call the series hot-line at 650-949-7888 for
more information and driving directions.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

A half-century ago, astronomers began trying to "eavesdrop" for radio
messages from nearby star systems.  This was the start of the
scientific SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) program,
looking for other civilizations in the universe.  The discovery of
over 400 planets around other stars (including a number super-Earths)
has provided a new foundation for this search. However, today, SETI
researchers continue to point their telescopes at individual stars,
on the assumption that technically advanced societies will inhabit a
watery world like our own.  Seth Shostak will describe these
searches, but then ask a controversial question: Are these familiar
-- and nearby -- star systems the only (or even the best) places to
look for signals?  He will go on to discuss some novel ideas for how
we might pursue the hunt for "cosmic company" and why its possible
that we might find evidence of sophisticated intelligence out there
within only a few decades.

Seth Shostak is Senior Astronomer at the SETI Institute, in Mountain
View, California and one of the best public lecturers in astronomy
today.  If you have never heard one of his energetic and humorous
talks, you are in for a treat.  He appears regularly on national
radio and television programs, hosts his own syndicated radio show
called "Are We Alone?" (broadcast locally on KALW each week), and has
written hundreds of popular magazine and web articles.  He has an
undergraduate degree in physics from Princeton University, and a
doctorate in astronomy from the California Institute of
Technology.  He lectures on astronomy and other subjects at Stanford
and other venues in the Bay Area, and for the last six years, has
been a Distinguished Speaker for the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics.  His most recent book is "Confessions
of an Alien Hunter: A Scientist's Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence" (National Geographic).

No background in science will be required for
this talk.  Seating is first come, first served.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

The lectures are co-sponsored by:
* NASA Ames Research Center
* The Foothill College Astronomy Program
* The Astronomical Society of the Pacific.
* The SETI Institute

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Past Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures are now available
in MP3 format at:
http://www.astrosociety.org/education/podcast/index.html


Seti Seminar Series

The colloquiums are free and open to the public, and run from noon to 1 pm on Wednesdays at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California.

 



UC Berkeley's Lawrence Hall of Science  
http://www.lawrencehallofscience.org




Lick Observatory

  Plan to arrive after noon and before 3 PM for best access to Public Areas.
       This is an all day trip climbing to 4200 feet on the historic 
        Mount Hamilton Road, Route 130. Alum Rock off of 101 or 680.
         Please don't pass bicyclists on the blind curves.
  Gift Shop
   Highway 130 is closed to visitors above Grant's Ranch Park
       during and after snow storms.



Mt Tam Enthusiasts-
  Mt Tam , website:  mttam.net

 

 

Exploratorium in San Francisco
http://www.exploratorium.edu/

 


The Tech Museum, downtown San Jose


Western Amateur Astronomers

Peninsula Astronomical Society


OTHER CLUBS & EVENTS
- For regularly-updated information on other astronomical organizations and events, we refer you to the website of the Astronomical Association of Northern California; 
www.aanc-astronomy.org
Jane H J on your I-Pod,
http://education.jpl.nasa.gov/amateurastronomy/index.html

 


For those of you with an interest in Java Programs and/or
extra-solar planet search see:
http://oklo.org/?page_id=86

This is a forum run by students and instructors at 
Lick Observatory concerning the reduction of extra-solar
radial velocity data.  Update at: http://www.oklo.org/

 

Astronomical Society of the Pacific
 
ASP Website

 

 

U.S. Department of the Interior
U.S. Geological Survey,
       Public Programs:
http://online.wr.usgs.gov/calendar/


The Intel Museum

Computer History Museum

 

For those familiar with the streets of the SF Mission,
Bay Area Science Cafe

http://www.sciencecafesf.com/
http://www.atlascafe.net/

 

Lockheed Martin Palo Alto Colloquia

 

 

 

NASA Ames Research Center
  www.researchpark.arc.nasa.gov

The NASA Exploration Center is open to the public free of charge. For information about the Exploration Center, please visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/home/exploration.html

To learn about other events hosted by NASA Ames, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/events/index.html

More Exploration Center information on this website.

 

 




 

 

 

 

Astronomy at College of San Mateo

College of San Mateo Maps

 

 

Webmaster's Links

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SMCAS Patches

SMCAS-patch.gif (220190 bytes)The SMCAS patches are on sale for six dollars each. 

Actual diameter is 9 centimeters or about 3 1/2 inches.