Presentation on September 6, 8:00pm PST
in the CSM Planetarium
Speaker: Prof. Darryl Stanford, Astronomy Professor
College of San Mateo
Planetarium Show – The Sky Tonight
Plus Fulldome Showing of the movie:
Unveiling the Invisible Universe
Free and open to the public. Free Parking in nearby lots.
Tonight SMCAS will be treated to a special Fall Planetarium show ‘ ‘The Sky Tonight’ by Astronomy Professor Darryl Stanford. This will be followed by the first showing at CSM of the fulldome movie ‘Unveiling the Invisible Universe‘:
For thousands of years humans observed the light coming from the night sky with their eyes. In the beginning of the 17th century, the invention of the telescope by Galileo revolutionized our knowledge of the Universe. Finally, in the 20th century with the advent of rockets, it became possible to go above the earth’s atmosphere and observe X-ray and gamma ray radiation which are the marks of the hot and violent Universe. But it is not only light that can give us information about the cosmos. Neutrinos and cosmic rays also provide vital information. Finally, the detection by the LIGO experiment of gravitational waves from two merging black holes opened a new window in astrophysics. This video presents images of the cosmos as revealed by all these different messengers.
We propose a mission concept for a space observatory with a large-aperture (50-meter) unsegmented primary mirror suitable for a variety of astronomical applications. The mirror would be created in space via a novel approach based on fluidic shaping in microgravity, which has already been successfully demonstrated in a laboratory neutral buoyancy environment, in parabolic microgravity flights, and aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Theoretically scale-invariant, this technique has produced optical components with superb, sub-nanometer (RMS) surface quality.
Darryl has been Astronomy Professor at the College of San Mateo since 1996. He received his B.S., Physics, at the Polytechnic Institute of New York; an M.S., in Solid State Physics at Concordia University, Montreal, Canada; and an M.S, in Astrophysics at the University of Toledo.
His other interests include riding his Harley, playing with his dogs, amateur astronomy, learning new languages, and playing his conga!