HOWARD
ASTRONOMICAL
LEAGUE
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HAL Meetings in 2022
HAL General Meetings (Open to the Public)
- Meetings are currently held virtually via Zoom. Watch for updates!
- For specific meeting dates, see the HAL Calendar.
- Additional information is announced via the HowardAstro Google Group.
- All HAL Meetings (and star parties) are held in locations which are smoke free by law. Help us protect our ability to use these facilities by not smoking.
General Meetings are held from 7:00PM to approximately 9:00 on the 3rd Thursday
of every month via Zoom (until further notice).
HAL Planning Meetings (Open to All Members)
Planning Meetings to discuss future club direction, events, meeting topics, outreach, etc. are open to all members. Attendance is encouraged.
They are usually held from 7:00 to 8:00PM on the 1st Monday
of every month via Zoom (until further notice).
Sometimes these meetings are rescheduled or cancelled due to holidays or board member unavailability.
Check our home page, posts to the HowardAstro Google Group, or the HAL calendar.
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HAL's COVID-19 Policy for Events - Updated May 2023
- In Howard County, COVID-19 community level is Low. We are following Howard County guidelines:
https://www.howardcountymd.gov/health/covid-19
https://www.howardcountymd.gov/News021822
- Face coverings are optional inside the Alpha Ridge HALO building. People may choose to mask at any time.
- If you are experiencing any flu-like symptoms or have tested positive for COVID, please be
considerate of others and refrain from attending HAL events.
- For HAL impromptu and member-only star parties, participants should wait for an invitation before approaching to look through others’ telescopes; respect each other’s desires for social distancing.
2022 General Meeting Topics / Speakers |
Jan. 20 |
Thursday, January 20, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: Paulo's Discoveries from his Personal Observatory
Presenter: Paulo Cacella, Senior Consultant, Central Bank of Brazil
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
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Paulo has a background in Electrical Engineering with MBA in Big Data and
A.I. He has been an amateur astronomer since 9 years old and an active
researcher in fields like finance, philosophy and astronomy. His
observatory includes a 20in reflector on a HD32 Chronos mount, C14 with
Hyperstar, Meade 12ACF with LHIRESIII spectroscope, RC10 for astroimaging,
Meade 10 with a DSS7 spectroscope, FLT98 and Z71 APOs, Solar 120mm scope
and some others.
He is going to talk about discoveries that were made in his observatory,
software he developed for searching transient and asteroid/comets; he will also show
some of his astrophotos.
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Feb. 17 |
Thursday, February 17, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic #1: Space Art: Personal Experiences of an Artist/Author
Presenter: Ron Miller -- Space Artist, Science Fiction Illustrator and Author
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
Ron Miller
is an author and illustrator specializing in space and astronomy.
His work appears regularly in magazines such as Astronomy and Scientific American.
He is also the author and illustrator of 70 books, including:
Space Art: Starlog Photo Guidebook,
Cycles of Fire: Stars, Galaxies, and the Wonder of Deep Space,
The Grand Tour: A Traveler's Guide to the Solar System,
The Art of Chesley Bonestell,
The History Of Science Fiction,
The Art of Space: The History of Space Art, from the Earliest Visions to the Graphics of the Modern Era,
and many others.
The most recent is
Natural Satellites: The Book of Moons, which came out in 2021.
He also designed a set of postage stamps celebrating the exploration of the solar system.
The "Pluto Not Yet Explored"
stamp is attached to the
New Horizons spacecraft. It is now
in the Guinness Book of World Records as having traveled further than any other stamp in history.
He has also worked on motion pictures, probably most notably the David Lynch
Dune.
This will be a very interactive session. Ron Miller will begin with an overview of his
nearly 50-year career as a space artist, science fiction illustrator and author
(which you can read about on Wikipedia)
-- what he has done previously as well as his current focus.
Then we'll open it up to questions, giving everyone a chance to ask about any aspect
of his career you'd like to know more about.
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Topic #2: Quantum Tunneling in Nuclear Fusion
Presenter: Arjun Meenashi Sundar
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Arjun is 11.8 years old kid. He is in 6th grade and is very interested in
Asteroid mining and
Quantum Mechanics
which are some of his lifetime passions. This is his current desired career path. He also has other interests,
such as Visual Arts, playing guitar, and astrophotography, which is a very recent hobby.
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Mar. 17 |
Thursday, March 17, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: Filters
Presenter: Phil Whitebloom and other HAL members
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording
| YouTube
| Chat Log
| Related Blog (Jim Tomney)
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Our March 2022 HAL Meeting is coming up Thursday, March 17th beginning at 7:00PM EST.
Note: This will be a Zoom meeting only. We will not be at Robinson Nature Center.
Our primary discussion topic will be "Filters". A panel of experts will discuss what
filters to use for both observational astronomy and also for astro-imaging. They will
share their knowledge answer all of your questions. Knowing what filters to use for
what conditions and objectives will greatly enhance your night-out and solar experiences.
In addition we are going to discuss a new members only platform known as "Discord".
Some of you have already been using our Discord server to share information and experiences.
We are now ready to roll it out to the membership. And there is more, including
our new YouTube Channel
and sharing your recent picture submissions.
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Apr. 21 |
Thursday, April 21, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: Six Impossible Things
Presenter: Dr. Benjamin Schumacher, Professor of Physics at Kenyon College
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
Some things are possible and some are not. That line between the
possible and the impossible can tell us a lot about the way Nature
works. In this talk we will ponder a few impossibilities, from the
notorious (time travel, escape from a black hole) to the obscure
(quantum cloning), using them to discover some of the physical
principles that govern information in our quantum universe. As one
might expect upon a journey into wonderland, our constant companion
will be Alice
-- thanks to her creator Lewis Carroll and her most
famous illustrator Sir John Tenniel. Many surprises await beyond
the looking-glass of the impossible.
Bio: Dr. Benjamin Schumacher is Professor of Physics at Kenyon
College, where he has taught for 20 years. He received his Ph.D. in Theoretical
Physics from The University of Texas at Austin in 1990. Professor Schumacher is
the author of numerous scientific papers and two books, including Physics in
Spacetime: An Introduction to Special Relativity. As one of the founders of
quantum information theory, he introduced the term qubit, invented quantum data
compression (also known as Schumacher compression), and established several
fundamental results about the information capacity of quantum systems. For his
contributions, he won the 2002 Quantum Communication Award, the premier
international prize in the field, and was named a Fellow of the American Physical
Society. Besides working on quantum information theory, he has done physics
research on black holes, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics. Professor
Schumacher has spent sabbaticals working at Los Alamos National Laboratory and as
a Moore Distinguished Scholar at the Institute for Quantum Information at
California Institute of Technology. He has also done research at the Isaac Newton
Institute of Cambridge University, the Santa Fe Institute, the Perimeter
Institute, the University of New Mexico, the University of Montreal, the
University of Innsbruck, and the University of Queensland.
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May 19 |
Thursday, May 19, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: International Latitude Observatory
Presenter: Karen Yaffe Lottes, Gaithersburg Community Museum
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
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Special presentation by Karen Yaffe Lottes on a historical site that is in our own backyard, the "International Latitude Observatory".
Karen Yaffe Lottes is an historian and museum educator at the Gaithersburg Community Museum
where she creates informal educational
opportunities in history and STEM at the museum and the Latitude Observatory. Her book
In Search of Maryland Ghosts: Montgomery County was
published in 2013 and she has written for In Gaithersburg Magazine, the Gazette,
and other area publications.
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June 16 |
Thursday, June 16, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic #1: Possible Causes of Hydration of Vesta's Oppia Crater
Presenter: Dominic Alfinito, Senior, North County High School in Glen Burnie, MD
Artifacts (for both topics):
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
Establishing conclusive evidence of
hydration on solar system bodies
is a key step in gaining a better understanding of our solar system's evolution
and present composition.
Oppia crater
is a location on asteroid
Vesta
where a hydration feature has been detected but there is no direct
evidence/reason for how it got there. This
research project
hoped to start answering this question.
Dominic is a senior at North County High School in Glen Burnie, MD who will
be graduating next month. He has been a very active member of the Mock
Trial team as well as the Astronomy Club throughout his high school
career. Dominic will be attending college at UMBC right here in Baltimore
and plans to study Physics with an emphasis in Astronomy.
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Topic #2: Directly Imaging Exoplanets, Determining Their Orbits and Modeling Their Atmospheres
Presenter: William O. Balmer, PhD Student - Johns Hopkins University, Graduate Research Assistant at Space Telescope Science Institute
Artifacts: Links appear above under Topic #1.
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William Balmer is a PhD student at the Johns Hopkins University and
graduate research assistant at the Space Telescope Science Institute.
He and his colleagues research the growth, evolution, and composition
of giant planets, brown dwarfs, and very low mass stars using some of
the world's largest optical and infrared observatories (WIYN 3.5m,
Magellan 6.5m, Gemini 8.1m, VLT 8.2m, the VLT-Interferometry Array, and
soon JWST). You can read more about their research and other projects
online at https://astrowill.page.
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July 21 |
Thursday, July 21, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: The Great North American Solar Eclipse of 2024: Part 2 – HAL Lessons from the Great American Solar Eclipse of 2017
Presenter: Jim Johnson, former HAL President and Secretary
Artifacts:
Meeting PDF
| Jim's Eclipse Presentation
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
The Great North American Solar Eclipse of 2024 will be
Marylanders’ next readily accessible opportunity to witness
firsthand one of the grandest of all astronomical phenomena, a
total solar eclipse. As April 8th, 2024, is about 1 ½ years
away and long-range planning is required for a successful
eclipse experience, now is a great time to start getting ready.
This talk will be a very interactive discussion that builds on
the foundational eclipse material presented in
Part 1 of this series at the June 2021 HAL general meeting
(PDF slides /
Zoom recording on YouTube ).
Part 2 of this
series will revisit The Great American Solar Eclipse of 2017: The Collective Experience of the Howard Astronomical League
presentation to explore how HAL members and guests prepared for
the eclipse, traveled to eclipse viewing sites, and dealt with
difficulties that were encountered five years ago, and how
these lessons might be applied to preparations for the 2024
eclipse.
Jim Johnson has been a HAL member since 2012. He is a retired
Marine and a retired Federal civil servant, and has served HAL
in many capacities over the ten years of his membership. Within
two years of joining, he was a park keyholder hosting public,
members only and impromptu star parties. Also at around this
time he served on the observatory committee as plans to build
HALO and install the Watson telescope were being finalized, and
he participated in placing the observatory in service after the
building was complete. Jim first served on the HAL Board as
secretary during the 2015 and 2016 terms, and as president
during the 2017 and 2018 terms. Under Jim’s leadership, the
Board resolved to replace the Watson telescope with an
instrument more appropriate for public outreach, and
subsequently accept and install the
Illig telescope in HALO.
After moving off of the Board, he has continued to support HAL
by serving as HAL Elections Committee chair in each election
since 2019. Jim also enjoys leading an occasional HAL
AstroSchool session or appearing as a guest speaker at a
monthly meeting. His personal astronomy journey continues in
the art of planetary and deep space object astrophotography,
and he is a frequent contributor of astrophotos presented at
the monthly meetings.
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Aug. 18 |
Thursday, August 18, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: Jupiter – Big Fun for the Amateur Astronomer!
Presenter: Jim Tomney, HAL 2nd Vice President
Artifacts:
Jupiter Presentation PDF
| Download Presentation PPT
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
| August Meeting Slides w/Images
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Get ready for Jupiter’s opposition
next month with this presentation by
HAL’s Jim Tomney on the ins & outs
of observing the giant planet. As a Jovian enthusiast since getting his
first 60mm refractor in the 60’s,
Jim has spent hours behind the eyepiece sketching and photographing this
fascinating planet. He will be
sharing tips on viewing Jupiter that he has learned along the way and provide an
overview of features the
amateur observer might be able to see for a variety of instruments. There also
will be a primer on getting
into imaging Jupiter using video camera and open source software.
By day Jim is a software developer currently working as a contractor for the Social
Security Administration. He is currently serving as HAL’s 2nd vice-president and
has been a member of the club since 2014. As a long-time member of the
Association of Lunar & Planetary Observers (ALPO)
he is currently serving as their Assistant
Coordinator for the Online section where he processes the images and sketches
submitted by observers around the world. He also pens an
astronomy blog, Shallow Skies,
where he offers his take on the joys and challenges of exploring the night
sky amid Bortle 8 light pollution.
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Sept 15 |
Thursday, September 15, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: I Thank My Lucky Stars
Presenter: Al Nagler, Founder - Tele Vue Optics
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
Al put his lifelong love of amateur astronomy to work as a professional optical
designer in 1958. But, it was his involvement in designing NASA lunar landing
simulators (as seen in the movie "Apollo 13") that most directly influences Tele Vue
products of today. Al wanted his own observing equipment to deliver that seemingly
limitless vista created for the astronauts. Producing wide, full-field sharpness and
high contrast images are the keys.
Al's "Nagler" series heralded its own revolution in eyepieces. Called "remarkable" by
the author of "Telescope Optics", it has an 82° apparent field, and 10 times the field
sharpness of any previous eyepiece. Nagler eyepieces approached the realization of Al's
dream for "spacewalk" viewing, even more so with the long eye relief Nagler Type 4
models, long focal length Type 5 models, and short focal length Type 6 models. The next
generation Nagler, Al's son David (full time at
Tele Vue Optics for more than 25-years and
currently company President) took the next step in the "spacewalk" experience by laying
the conceptual ground work for a 100° eyepiece to be designed by Al's in-house protégé
Paul Dellechiaie. The result is everything a Tele Vue eyepiece represents. It's the
Tele Vue Ethos.
Also, look at the celebrated Panoptic eyepieces for "tack-sharp," low power, 68°
fields. And, the 72° Delos series and 62° DeLite eyepieces both with 20mm eye relief,
offer the most performance possible for eyeglass wearers. These, along with many other
long eye-relief Tele Vue eyepieces accept DIOPTRX, the unique optical "missing link"
between you and your equipment. It corrects your eyesight astigmatism so you can
replace your eyeglasses for the best possible visual experience. Planetary enthusiasts
can enjoy the Nagler Zoom with a constant 50° field and parfocal, 3-6mm focal length
zoom range.
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Oct 20 |
Thursday, October 20, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: What is the Best Telescope and Mount For You?
Presenter: Phil Whitebloom and HAL Members
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
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A question we hear quite often is; "What is the best telescope for me"?
On Thursday, October 20th, beginning at 7:00PM EDT we are going to be addressing that
question and many related questions. If you are considering your first telescope, adding
another telescope, upgrading to a more advanced system, this is the meeting for you. It
is also a meeting for our more experienced HAL members to participate. I will be looking
forward to your added input to what could be a complicated subject as we work to
simplify the answer. This is not only going to be a fun and informational session, it
could also help you to build your holiday wish list.
We will also be featuring timely news and your astro-images, sketches, artwork, and more.
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Nov 17 |
Thursday, November 17, 2022 beginning at 7:00PM
Topic: Cometary DUIs:
Detected Under the Influence (of the Sun, that is)
Presenter: Dr. Lori Feaga, Research Professor at University of Maryland
Artifacts:
Presentation PDF
| Video Recording on YouTube
| Chat Log
Comet C/2017 K2 (PanSTARRS)
will make its closest approach to the Sun on
December 19, 2022. A distantly active comet discovered in 2017, C/2017 K2
will not be visible to the naked eye, but long-term community-wide studies of
this comet through its apparition will shed light on what drives distant
cometary activity, how that activity shifts as the comet nears the Sun, and
which primordial ices comprise a cometary nucleus that has been stored in the
cold outer Solar System for millions of years. One of the unique properties
of C/2017 K2 is that it was discovered in 2017 at distances beyond Saturn,
where it was already shedding gas and dust. Most cometary activity is very
minimal at these distances from the Sun because the comets are not yet warm
enough for their ices to change into the gas phase. Additionally, many comets
are known to have large concentrations of water and much less carbon monoxide
or carbon dioxide, which are activated at colder temperatures. Observations
have shown that C/2017 K2’s activity is being driven at least in part by
carbon monoxide at large distances and continuing studies will show how that
behavior evolves as the comet gets closer to the Sun, water turns on, and
then recedes again. New advanced telescopic assets like the James Webb Space
Telescope, as well as many large and small telescopes around the world, have
been and will continue to observe C/2017 K2 and contribute to the
understanding of what makes this comet different than others. I will share
recent results about C/2017 K2, putting it into context with the general
comet population,
and will describe some other temporal studies of comets as
well as look to the future for
comet missions.
Dr. Lori Feaga received her Bachelor of Science degree with High Honors
in Astronomy from the University of Maryland in 1997. She then continued
her education at the Johns Hopkins University where she successfully
defended her doctoral thesis and received her Ph.D. in Astrophysics in
2005 studying the atmospheric composition and variability of Jupiter’s
moon Io.
Currently a Research Professor at the University of Maryland,
Dr. Feaga is a planetary scientist focusing on the molecular composition
and distribution of ice and gas surrounding small bodies in the Solar
System (e.g., comets, asteroids, and Kuiper Belt objects) and how they
relate to the protoplanetary disk from which the Earth formed. Her
observing techniques include ultraviolet to infrared spectroscopy,
visible imaging, and time-domain surveys. Dr. Feaga has extensive NASA
mission experience, having held instrument, science, and outreach roles
on the
Deep Impact,
EPOXI,
Comet Hopper, and
Rosetta missions, and
intends to lead her own small satellite mission in the future. From an
early age, Dr. Feaga received encouragement and support from her family
to pursue a career in astronomy and enjoys sharing her own science,
promoting science literacy, and inspiring others to enter the STEM
fields.
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Dec 15 |
Thursday, December 15, 2022
Holiday Party & Swap Meet at Robinson Nature Center
Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87471743002?pwd=ZWFEdEIrNE9vd3VJNS9kVi9PdzFvdz09 Passcode: 596316.
We will once again be holding our HAL Holiday Party in-person at
Robinson Nature Center
on Thursday, December 15th.
Doors will open at 6:30PM.
As in years past, this will be a "pot-luck" dinner. The food is
always great.
Note: This is a Members only event. You can bring family members.
If you can come please RSVP ASAP.
RSVP to philwhitebloom@yahoo.com
Subject line: HAL Holiday Party RSVP
Include in your RSVP:
- How many people in your group
- What do you anticipate bringing (not required to attend)
Sampling of food from past Holiday parties:
- Meatballs
- Ham
- Salads
- Potato salad
- Coleslaw
- Desserts
- Juices and Sodas
- Vegetables
- Casserole
- Chips
- etc.
In addition to the food and fun, if you want to bring in telescopes and
related products to swap, sell, or giveaway, bring the items with you.
It is a great way to pick up items you have been looking for and to
unload items you no longer need or want.
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Archives:
2013 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2014 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2015 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2016 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2017 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2018 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2019 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2020 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2021 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
2022 Meetings - Speakers and Topics
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