Light Pollution
17 August 2003 10:24I hope the people who were blacked out went outside that night and looked up. There are stars up there! I never realized how bad light pollution is until my trips to the UK in the 80s. A dozen bright stars and light-haze is not a night sky.
no subject
Date: 16 Aug 2003 17:30 (UTC)no subject
Date: 16 Aug 2003 17:36 (UTC)Where I live now, it's a 10 minute drive to turn light pollution into a smudge on the horizon. Lights in the sky hold no fears for me.
no subject
Date: 16 Aug 2003 17:46 (UTC)No such luck...
Date: 16 Aug 2003 17:36 (UTC)It's a shame, since I tried to go look while it was blacked out.
I did go camping for a week at the end of July, and I know how bad the light polution is. My favorate open globular cluster is the Pliedies, which are sometimes hard to see with the light polution. (Hmm, are the Seven Sisters visible from Australia?)
Re: No such luck...
Date: 16 Aug 2003 19:10 (UTC)no subject
Date: 16 Aug 2003 18:52 (UTC)It was nice watching the stars last night ... until the fire brigade arrived a few doors down and we were swamped with flashing lights!
no subject
Date: 16 Aug 2003 18:57 (UTC)no subject
Date: 16 Aug 2003 21:15 (UTC)Down in south florida it's pretty much impossible to escape the light pollution - large sprawl on the west coast, larger sprawl on the east coast - 200 miles of light pollution on the east coast - no exaggeration.
I remember when I was little staring into the sky and getting lost in the stars. I wish more kids were able to experience that now.
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Date: 17 Aug 2003 11:13 (UTC)I got a good view of Mars though.
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Date: 17 Aug 2003 20:02 (UTC)no subject
Date: 18 Aug 2003 09:31 (UTC)