Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Stargazing the Cosmos


Neil deGrasse Tyson is the man. He's an astrophysicist, author, lecturer, planetarium director, and the presenter of the remake of Carl Sagan's Cosmos, which was on TV earlier this year (and is incredibly good). I found this awesome mural of him gazing dreamily off into space in downtown Baton Rouge last Friday when going for an after-work beer. Apparently it's part of a series of paintings by local artists which are being made into murals for buildings (http://www.thewallsproject.org), which is a cool concept, especially if the art looks as good as this!

I was lucky enough to "see" Neil deGrasse Tyson give a talk at Tulane University in New Orleans earlier this year with my labmate and friend Ganesh and his wife Sara. I use quotation marks because while we were at Tulane University, we weren't even in the same room as deGrasse Tyson. So many people turned up and waited in the rain that they couldn't fit everyone in the lecture hall, or even the overflow room, where we had to settle for watching a video feed of the lecture. The talk was titled This Just In and it was excellent. He could have had a career as either a scientist of a stand-up comedian as he has a rare ability to be simultaneously funny and informative. The lecture has made its way to YouTube and I highly recommend watching it if you desire to learn the latest happenings in the cosmos and be thoroughly entertained in the process.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

The Milky Way

Browsing the internet the other day I found some amazing work one man and his father had completed over the past year. Nick Risinger quit his job and travelled around the globe taking extremely well-planned photos to piece together an entire picture of the Earth's night sky. The picture itself is 5 gigapixels in size (5,000 megapixels) and was stitched together from 37,440 individual photographs. It features ten of millions of stars, red clouds of glowing hydrogen, and is absolutely breathtaking. The fact that the stars seen in this photo are thought to be less than 0.001% of the total in our galaxy alone is beyond belief and really poses the question - in time, what amazing thing will we discover throughout the universe?

The night sky