WHAT WE DO


JOINRENEWJOIN

Your 2012 Year in Space Calendar
 

The Planetary Society Blog

Archive

Archived posts are listed in reverse chronological order.


  • Dec. 9, 2011 | 17:44 PST | Dec. 10 01:44 UTC
    Watch a Live Webcast of the Lunar Eclipse
    By Mat Kaplan The good folks behind the SLOOH Space Camera have made their webcast of Saturday's eclipse available to us. Live coverage will begin at 1300 UTC on January 10. That's 0800 EST and 0500 PST. SLOOH will rely on images from telescopes... More»
  • Dec. 9, 2011 | 12:32 PST | 20:32 UTC
    Mariner 9 approaching Mars: a movie!
    Image magician Daniel Macháček has done it again. This time, he's celebrating the 40th anniversary of Mariner 9's arrival at Mars (November 13, 1971) with a morphed animation of the images that Mars' first orbiter took while approaching... More»
  • Dec. 9, 2011 | 10:41 PST | 18:41 UTC
    Total lunar eclipse tomorrow
    There's a lunar eclipse tomorrow that will be fully visible from Asia, Australia, and above the Arctic circle, not at all from South America, and partially so for everyone in between. Eclipses are pretty sky events to see, but this one will be... More»
  • Dec. 8, 2011 | 14:55 PST | 22:55 UTC
    W.M. Keck Observatory Lecture
    By Mat Kaplan The webcast of "Oodles of Exoplanets: The Search for other Habitable Worlds" will be available here at 9:00pm PST. Dr. Greg Laughlin of the University of California, Santa Cruz will come to us live from the Kahilu Theater in Hawaii,... More»
  • Dec. 8, 2011 | 14:19 PST | 22:19 UTC
    Notes on Dawn at Vesta from the 2011 American Geophysical Union meeting
    Vesta is proving tricky to interpret. Dawn has been there for only a few months, and the data gathered so far has already disproven a number of preconceived notions and generated dozens of new puzzles. Fortunately, scientists love puzzles! But... More»
  • Dec. 7, 2011 | 19:42 PST | Dec. 8 03:42 UTC
    Webcast of W.M. Keck Observatory Lecture
    By Mat Kaplan Our friends at the Keck Observatory have invited us to help make another of their events available. Dr. Greg Laughlin of the University of California, Santa Cruz will give a talk titled "Oodles of Exoplanets: The Search for other... More»
  • Dec. 6, 2011 | 13:39 PST | 21:39 UTC
    Good news, everyone: We're getting as good at space weather forecasts as we are at Earth weather forecasts
    If you can't figure out whether or not I'm joking with the title to this blog post, it's OK, because I'm not sure either! It's great news that we can predict space weather at all; but experience with Earth weather predictions inspires caution in... More»
  • Dec. 6, 2011 | 07:52 PST | 15:52 UTC
    Guest Post: Jason Davis: Sungrazing with Lovejoy's Comet
    On December 2, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) celebrated its 16th birthday. SOHO is a joint NASA/ESA satellite packed with twelve instruments to study the sun. An amateur astronomer in Australia has given it a wonderful birthday... More»
  • Dec. 5, 2011 | 15:13 PST | 23:13 UTC
    From the 2011 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU): Voyager 1 at the edge of the solar system
    For two days I will be reporting from San Francisco, home every year to the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union. This is by far the largest meeting that I attend on a regular basis. This year, more than 20,000 are registered to attend... More»
  • Dec. 3, 2011 | 06:34 PST | 14:34 UTC
    Guest Post by Jason Davis: Curiosity, from a 1935 perspective
    On Saturday, November 26 at 10:02 ET (15:02 UT), an Atlas V rocket carrying the Mars Science Laboratory lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The launch was a success -- NASA's next great rover, Curiosity, is coasting gently towards Mars. It will... More»