This is an online event! Find the link to join, on the box above. Install Zoom beforehand to be ready. The 3rd session of the Beginners Astronomy Class covers different methods of finding objects in the night sky. Special topic is learning the constellations. Free and open to the public as well as members of […]
Event: O'Neill Park Girl Scout Campover Date: Saturday, 5/2/2020 Time: Viewing at 8:30 PM, Sunset at 8:30 PM Place: Held at O’neill Regional Park Address: 30892 Trabuco Canyon Rd.; Trabuco Canyon, 92679 Location: 33°39'05"N, 117°36'03"W
This was an online event! Please help us by submitting the feedback form. The link is on the box above. Deploying Astronomy-Inspired Techniques to Help Reduce the Damage from Wildfires Over the last decades, we have developed image acquisition, processing, and analysis systems for finding distant supernovae. Such efforts resulted in the Berkeley Automated Supernova […]
Event: Gates Elementary School Date: Friday, 5/15/2020 Viewing at 8:45 PM, Sunset at 7:45 PM Place: Gates Elementary School Address: 23882 Landisview; Lake Forest Location: 33°36'57"N, 117°41'47"W Directions: Take the 55 Fwy south to the I-5 south. Go south on the I-5 20 miles to the El Toro Rd exit. Turn left on Avenida de […]
Trey Mcgriff is reserving the Kuhn telescope for the night for some private viewing.
The Kuhn has been reserved by Barbara and Alan for private viewing session.
An online talk open to all in which Kin Searcy, one of the Palomar Docents, will survey the many questions in astronomy that have been addressed for the last 70 years by professional researchers at Palomar Observatory. Use the link on the top box to join. Zoom Meeting ID: 996 5232 6483
This online event has ended. The 4th session of the Beginners Astronomy Class covers the science behind the telescope. How do our eyes actually perceive objects we see in the telescope and what is the physics that allows that perception. For details, please visit here and download the sample information PDF package. Free and open […]
This event has passed. To provide feedback about the meeting, click here. Our Dusty Universe The two first images of ESO’s GigaGalaxy Zoom project combined to show a whole view of the Milky Way as could be seen with the unaided eye, and a more central region observed with an amateur telescope. Most of […]