<<< Return to Newsletter Archives list June eNewsletter from the MN Planetarium Society SCHEDULE THE EXPLORADOME FOR FALL 2008! The stars are aligning now more than ever. After a sold-out spring tour, the Minnesota Planetarium Society's ExploraDome is taking reservations for fall 2008. And now, schools can save 20 percent by booking an ExploraDome experience for this September or October! In this issue from the Minnesota Planetarium Society: President's Update Special thanks go to all who came to the Hennepin County Commissioner’s meeting on May 15 and to those of you who wrote to support the Minnesota Planetarium and Space Discovery Center. Several Commissioners remarked that numbers do count. We made a strong case for proceeding with the project, including an impassioned plea by our newest Board member Paul Douglas that science education is critical, and we need to invest in it now. Commissioner Gail Dorfman suggested forming a task force to explore and analyze alternatives and make recommendations to the Commissioners. We support that approach and we will work with County staff to map out our next steps. This is progress, and we are hopeful that it will lead to full County support of the Planetarium. Most stargazers star hop by using one constellation to find another. In June, use the Big Dipper which lies almost directly overhead around 10 pm. First find the “pointer stars”, the two stars in the scoop farthest from the handle. Follow them away from the scoop to the first relatively bright star to locate Polaris, the North Star, in Ursa Minor. Follow the pointer stars in the opposite direction to find Leo the Lion low in the west. Trace along the handle of the Big Dipper as you “arc to Arcturus”, a red giant star in Bootes. Then speed on to Spica, the bright star in Virgo toward the southwest. For sky maps, try http://www.skymaps.com or http://www.heavens-above.com. Saturn lies about two degrees left of Regulus in Leo. Mars begins the month about 15 degrees right of Regulus but by month’s end the two are less than one degree apart! Watch for mighty Jupiter rising around 11pm at the start of June. Conjunctions The Biggest Blasts Finding Swift and Gamma Ray Bursts Swift is located 375 miles above the surface of the Earth and orbits approximately once every 90 minutes. See where over the world the Swift satellite is right now. See where the most recent gamma-ray bursts were seen in the sky.
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