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Telepath
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Finally taking the plunge and signing up to my local astronomical society. Have been fretting that I'll be out of my depth, with my relative 'n00b' naivety and entry-level gear. However, all fears have been overcome by interest and excitement at learning that the first meeting I'm attending will include a lecture on the Antikythera Mechanism. No, me neither, so I looked it up.

Holy.....

:shock: 8)
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Dayvan Cowboy
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Mexicola wrote:Finally taking the plunge and signing up to my local astronomical society. Have been fretting that I'll be out of my depth, with my relative 'n00b' naivety and entry-level gear. However, all fears have been overcome by interest and excitement at learning that the first meeting I'm attending will include a lecture on the Antikythera Mechanism. No, me neither, so I looked it up.

Holy.....

:shock: 8)
that thing is cool as fuck :)

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Mexicola wrote:Finally taking the plunge and signing up to my local astronomical society. Have been fretting that I'll be out of my depth, with my relative 'n00b' naivety and entry-level gear. However, all fears have been overcome by interest and excitement at learning that the first meeting I'm attending will include a lecture on the Antikythera Mechanism. No, me neither, so I looked it up.

Holy.....

:shock: 8)


whoa, nice find! I wish there was something like that around here.. I'll have to look into it haha

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Telepath
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I've found an old BBC4 documentary about it if anyone is interested?
Watching it right now and - wow - it's an incredible tale of eclipses, prime numbers, bronze gear wheels, hidden inscriptions....

Anyone want an upload? Long since removed from iPlayer.
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Sherbet Head
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Mexicola wrote:I've found an old BBC4 documentary about it if anyone is interested?
Watching it right now and - wow - it's an incredible tale of eclipses, prime numbers, bronze gear wheels, hidden inscriptions....

Anyone want an upload? Long since removed from iPlayer.


I'd love that actually. Thanks man! :D
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Happy Cycler
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I read about this a while back, safe to say I was in need of a beer to help comprehend it all.

Also, I recently found out my girlfriends grandfather writes articles for a French astronomy periodical, pretty neat !
Sagan: In order to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

Basinski: I wanted Cascade to become this crystalline organism like a star or a liquid crystal spaceship, a jellyfish traveling through the galaxy…

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Telepath
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chronical wrote:
Mexicola wrote:I've found an old BBC4 documentary about it if anyone is interested?
Watching it right now and - wow - it's an incredible tale of eclipses, prime numbers, bronze gear wheels, hidden inscriptions....

Anyone want an upload? Long since removed from iPlayer.


I'd love that actually. Thanks man! :D


I'll sort out a dropbox. Watch this space :wink:
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Telepath
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Apologies - my internet is running like a dog. Taking forever and a day to upload.
Might be easier to grab a torrent the most commonly known torrent site. Yaarrrr (etc).
Search for 'Two Thousand Year Old Computer' and you'll find at least four torrents at different resolutions. :wink:
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Telepath
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So the Rosetta probe has been in orbit around comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko for a few days now. Here's it's view. Seems to support the theory that the comet is actually two that have joined together. If this doesn't drop your jaw, check your pulse....

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Telepath
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A rather successful hour or so with the telescope tonight.

First viewings of M57 (The Ring Nebula)...

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...a STUNNING view of M13 (The Great Globular Cluster)...

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...plus I managed to split 'the Double-Double' stars of Epsilon Lyrae - one point of light to the naked eyes, splits into two stars in the scope, but which then split yet again, into yet another 2x pairs of stars if you ramp the power up and have a dark enough sky. Nice! (images aren't mine)

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Happy Cycler
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August is a good month for the skies in Britain.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/galleries/p024gb8s
Sagan: In order to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

Basinski: I wanted Cascade to become this crystalline organism like a star or a liquid crystal spaceship, a jellyfish traveling through the galaxy…

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Those are awesome pictures, Mex!

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Telepath
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mechanismj wrote:Those are awesome pictures, Mex!


Thanks. To be clear though - not mine! Just wanted to give people an idea of what I'd seen :wink:
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Happy Cycler
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Mexicola wrote:
mechanismj wrote:Those are awesome pictures, Mex!


Thanks. To be clear though - not mine! Just wanted to give people an idea of what I'd seen :wink:


Well ya fooled me too so you should've just played along :lol:
Sagan: In order to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.

Basinski: I wanted Cascade to become this crystalline organism like a star or a liquid crystal spaceship, a jellyfish traveling through the galaxy…

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Jagged cliffs and prominent boulders are visible in this image taken by OSIRIS, Rosetta’s scientific imaging system, on 5 September 2014 from a distance of 62 kilometres from comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The left part of the image shows a side view of the comet’s 'body', while the right is the back of its 'head'. One pixel corresponds to 1.1 metres.

Credits: ESA/Rosetta/MPS for OSIRIS Team MPS/UPD/LAM/IAA/SSO/INTA/UPM/DASP/IDA


Touch the Source (with HiRes).

Also, selfie (with HiRes). <-- this looks SCI-FI as fuck... well, it's reality, so I guess it looks just "SCI as fuck".

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Telepath
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Just incredible - thanks for sharing, I'd missed these 8)
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I see what you did there :wink:
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Mexicola wrote:Just incredible - thanks for sharing, I'd missed these 8)


Your pictures are only fantastic.

Should I mention that I have a pair of Nikon 8x40 EX bino's (yeah they are so cheap today makes me wanna cut myself for paying almost 300$ some years ago). They really really cool when you're in the middle of nowhere (although even in the city they show LOTS of more stars than the naked eye can see). No color though (and no nebulae either...), but being able to just stare through the bino's is a special kind of feeling.

PS: If anybody thinks about getting binoculars for stargazing be sure to read all the reviews or at least select one with a WIDE viewfield - although preferably with a better magnification than 7x, no matter if it's a 7x50.

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Mexicola wrote:


I see what you did there :wink:


I was hoping to see some aurora here in the midwest but none last night.

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