[ATMoB-discuss] GLOBE at Night 2007

Christine Pulliam cpulliam at cfa.harvard.edu
Wed Mar 7 19:24:02 CET 2007


Passing this item along in case anyone is interested in participating...


Contact:
Douglas Isbell
Office of Public Affairs and Educational Outreach
National Optical Astronomy Observatory
Phone: (520) 318-8214
Cell : (520) 991-0380
E-mail: disbell at noao.edu

March 7, 2007

NOAO: 07-04

Two Ways to Participate in GLOBE at Night 2007: Classic and Digital

The international star-counting activity known as GLOBE at Night returns
from March 8-21 in two flavors: the "classic" GLOBE at Night exercise that
anyone can have fun doing with their unaided eyes, and a new effort to
obtain precise measurements of urban dark skies using digital sky-brightness
meters.

The GLOBE at Night 2007 program is intended to build upon the worldwide
participation sparked by the first GLOBE at Night campaign in March 2006.
This inaugural effort drew more than 18,000 citizen-scientist participants
in all 50 U.S.  states and 96 countries worldwide, who submitted nearly
4,600 observations of the darkness of their local night skies during the
10-day event.  The program is designed to aid teaching about the impact of
artificial lighting on local environments, and the ongoing loss of a dark
night sky as a natural resource for much of the world's population.

The classic GLOBE at Night program directs students, families, and the
general public how to observe and record the number of stars visible in the
constellation Orion, as seen from different locations.  Observers report
their results online by comparing their view of Orion with a set of template
images on the program's Web site, which shows the number of stars in the
constellation for a range of visibilities from bright skies to very dark.

In the process of discussing the results of this first campaign with
educators and the professional astronomy community, GLOBE at Night staff
from the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) learned about a
relatively new, low-cost digital sky-quality meter manufactured by Unihedron
of Ontario, Canada.  This meter takes a direct measurement of the integrated
sky brightness across a wide swath of the night sky.

NOAO has received funding from the National Science Foundation to purchase
about 130 of these Unihedron meters and related materials to share with
educators in Arizona, California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Mexico, Nevada,
New Jersey, Virginia, several other states, 19 small science centers, and
the country of Chile, where NOAO has a major observatory.  A coordinator at
each site will instruct local educators in the proper use of the meters and
develop a plan to share them as widely as possible during the 13-day
window.  The local teams are expected to pool their data for regional
analysis, and to share the results with their schools and local
policymakers.

"We hope to locate and preserve safe, dark locations within towns and
cities in these areas, and make comparisons between cities," says Dr.
Stephen Pompea, manager of science education at NOAO.  "We may uncover some
urban oases that are untapped resources for the local community, or areas
that could become a public asset if they had more efficient lighting."

The GLOBE at Night Web site provides all the information needed to
participate, including instruction guides for teachers, students, and
parents. There is no cost to participate in GLOBE at Night.

For more information, including user-friendly teacher packets and
information on how the activity relates to local science teaching standards,
see the program's Web page at http://www.globe.gov/globeatnight,
or contact globeatnight at globe.gov or outreach at noao.edu.

Participation is open to anyone who lives or works in one of the 109 GLOBE
countries and can get outside and look skyward during March 8-21, 2007.
If you are not located in a GLOBE country, please contact the GLOBE Regional
Desk Officer for your region to learn more about how a country can join.

"If it turns out as successfully as we hope, GLOBE at Night 2007 will
be a major step toward the International Year of Astronomy in 2009, when
we aim to make this sort of digital data collection into a truly worldwide
activity," says Douglas Isbell, associate director of public affairs for
NOAO and co-chairman of the U.S. program committee for the International
Year of Astronomy 2009, under the American Astronomical Society.

For more information on the Unihedron sky-quality meters, see
http://unihedron.com/projects/darksky/.

GLOBE at Night is a collaboration between The Global Learning and
Observations to Benefit the Environment (GLOBE) Program, Boulder, CO; the
National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) in Tucson, AZ; Centro de Apoyo
a la Didactica de la Astronomia (CADIAS) in Chile; Windows to the Universe;
Environmental Systems Research Institute, Inc. (ESRI); and the International
Dark-Sky Association (IDA).



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