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Buy My Stuff
Keep Bad Astronomy close to your heart, and help make me
filthy rich. Hey, it's either this or one of those really
irritating PayPal donation buttons here.
December 21,2000:
The New York Times (!) has an article in today's issue about
pseudoscience.
The article quotes me and mentions the Bad Astronomy site! My name is
misspelled though. ;-) To use that link, you will need to sign up on the
New York Times website. It's free.
Also, I was interviewed by a student newspaper at Kent State University about
astronomy misconceptions in movies.
The interview is online now.
December 6, 2000
A new Mad Science answer has been added to the list. It answers
a very common question: can Hubble point at the Earth?
December 6, 2000
A new Mad Science answer has been added to the list. It answers
a very common question: can Hubble point at the Earth?
November 20, 2000
Yes, that is indeed an ad you see at the top of every page of this site.
I was initially reluctant to put advertising here, but
a friend of mine
convinced me that a group of astronomy-related websites can put
advertisements up that are actually relevant and not annoying, so I
went for it. ;-) The Discovery Channel will be airing a documentary
about the International Space Station December 10th. To
find out more, click the ad!
November 13, 2000
The Leonid meteor shower may storm again on Thursday and Friday nights.
Check out this page (NOTE: link disabled; no longer exists) for more
info and links!
November 9, 2000
Do you think that NASA faked the Apollo mission, and that we never went
to the Moon? Well, you're wrong.
Check this new page out to see why.
November 1, 2000
A Yahoo!News article grossly overestimates the space station's
brightness. Read about it
in the Bad News page.
October 24, 2000
Alert readers may have noticed a new edition to the menu for
this site: Die Zeitung,
which is a link to an astronomy column I am writing for the German newspaper
die Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
Read all about it!.
October 17, 2000
The prestigious scientific journal Nature chose Bad Astronomy
as one of their highlighted astronomy websites. I am deeply honored
to have my website on their list.
September 20, 2000
The magazine Popular Science picked Bad Astronomy as one of their
top 5 Eclectic Science sites on the (entire!) web in the October 2000
issue. I am honored and pleased by this distinction. I am also thrilled;
I am getting quite a few page views from it!
You can read about it here!
June 13, 2000
I will be attending a ``Space:1999'' convention from September 1-3 of
this year, giving talks about astronomy based on the show.
Read more about it here,
or you can check out
Main Mission:2000, the convention's website. I just found out (July
18 2000) that Academy Award winner and star of the series Martin Landau
will be attending. That's very cool. For a complete guest list of the
con,
go to the Main Mission confirmed guest page.
June 10, 2000
Regular Bad Readers will see something very new at this site: the
whole thing has been redesigned. I have removed the javascript
menu, which was cool, but slowed downloads. I have added new pages
(including 1999 and 2000 to my Mad Science pages), and plan
on adding new sections as time goes on. There are still a couple of
bumps in the road which I will hopefully smooth out in the coming few days.
If you encounter problems (like a link that takes you to the wrong place)
please let me know!
May 31, 2000: The Home Shopping Network is not a good place
to buy a telescope. I usually don't use language this strong, but in this
case it's warranted: The HSN lied about the capabilities of one of their
products. Yup, false advertising, pure and simple. Read
all about it.
May 17, 2000: The tightest arrangement of planets (despite doomsayer's
cries) was actually today, and again, no effects. However, on every cool
thing about it: Venus and Jupiter passed each other in the sky from our
viewpoint, and they got very close together (the astronomical term
is ``appulse'' for such an event). You can see this firsthand from the
vantage point
of the SOHO satellite. It's an amazing animated GIF. One warning:
it's big; choose the 1/4 resolution image. It'll still take some time
to download, but it's worth it. You can see the Pleaides in the image
too! (For more details, check the entry below for May 3).
May 5, 2000: Surprise! The alignment came and went, and hopefully
the only damage was to Richard Noone's and
the Survival Center's reputations. I have a prediction of my own:
the shameless people spreading this bit of Bad Astronomy will recoup and
say it's May 17 that's the doomsdate now, when the planets actually
align as tightly as they can this time (May 5 was chosen initially because
the Moon was in he configuration as well). Then, when May 17 comes and
goes with no incidents, hopefully those folks will dry up and go away.
I do a lot of hoping, of course. I wonder what the next silly bit of business
will be for these types? Oh well, there's always a comet or asteroid that
might hit us.
NEW(and very cool)!
May 3, 2000: The telescope SOHO is positioned between the Earth and Sun, and
take images of the Sun continuously. At the SOHO website they have images
and animated images of the Sun, where you can see it give off streamers
and all sorts of fun things. You can actually watch the planets get closer
too as they get ready for the ``alignment''! Go to
http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/gif/ and click
on the far right image labeled ``C3''; an animated GIF will load and you
can see the planets moving. The planets are the bright stars with horizontal
lines through them (an artifact of the detection device). The Sun is
located behind a mask which blocks its light, and a white
circle is drawn where it sits and also shows its size.
check out this image for an identification of the planets
in that image.
Countdown To The Planetary Alignment (0800 UT 05 May, 2000)
More info: I was interviewed by Alexandra Witze of the
Dallas Morning News about the alignment too!
April 18, 2000: Even in today's supposedly enlightened
society, women are underrepresented in the sciences. I don't
blame diapers, but they can be a curious indicator of the
real problem.
Read about this topic to find out what I mean.
I have added two books to the Bad Astronomy
bookstore: Astronomy for Dummies by Stephen Maran and Magnificent
Universe by Ken Croswell. I was the technical editor for both books and I
am very proud to have been a part of their creation.