From koopm at koopm.best.vwh.net Fri Oct 8 13:32:40 2004 From: koopm at koopm.best.vwh.net (Michael Koop) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] Astro Class and Star Party 2nite at Houge! Message-ID: <20041008142817.W2351@koopm.best.vwh.net> A) Beginning Astro Class Tonight! Observing the Milky Way with Bob Havner B) Houge Park Star Party Tonight! (Friday, Oct 8th, 2004) C) Sign Up for Calstar 2004! Oct. 14-17 at Lake San Antonio ************************************************** A) Beginning Astro Class Tonight! Observing the Milky Way with Bob Havner What is that band of light high in the sky? What is the difference between Globular and Open Clusters? Where am I? (Often asked by Extraterrestrial visitors) The San Jose Astronomical Association Observational Astronomy Class is here to help you! This informal monthly series will teach basic astronomy, the constellations, the movement of the sky, and the use of the telescope. The class occurs every third quarter moon Houge Park Star Party Night until November. No Reservations needed and you can join the class at any time. The class is a free public service provided by the SJAA. Tonight's class (Friday, October 8th) starts at 7:30 PM in the hall at Houge Park. Bob Havner is the Vice President of the SJAA and is a frequent volunteer at Lick Observatory. He also volunteers his time over at Toyon Elementary School with the Project Astro program. In this class you will learn about the Milky Way, the constellations along the Milky Way, deep sky in the Milky Way, and how to how to observe the Milky Way. Bob has some fantastic visual aids from the Night Sky Network which he will use to help explain our location in the Milky Way. The class finishes with a "Sky Tour" by SJAA President Mike Koop, pointing out how to find the constellations and planets. Weather permitting, after the class we will be viewing the constellations, planets, and other deep sky wonders through telescopes at the Star Party. (Note: I have the Key in my hand. Sorry about the mix up last month) Website of interest: Our place in the Milky Way: (a great site showing via powers of 10, local stars, the arms of the milky way, the structure of the milky way, our local galactic group, and beyond) http://www.anzwers.org/free/universe/index.html ************************************** B) Houge Park Star Party Tonight, Fri October 8th, 7:30 PM to 10:30 PM Tonight, the SJAA hosts public observing session on the grounds at Houge Park. Families are welcome to attend. Feel free to bring your scope and share views with others. We are in the usual summer pattern and expect good weather. Clear Sky Clock for San Jose: http://cleardarksky.com/c/SanJoseCAkey.html?1 NRL Monterey East Pacific & US West Coast Images http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/sat-bin/epac_westcoast.cgi Sunset: 6:39 PM PDT Civil Twilight: 7:05 PM PDT Nautical Twilight: 7:36 PM PDT Astronomical Twilight: 8:06 PM PDT Moonrise: 02:25 AM on 10/9/2004 10 Cool Things to Observe Tonight! 1) Uranus: The 7th planet from the sun, 1.76 billion miles away. Green in color. Discovered in 1781. 2) M 17: Swan Nebula. 5000 LY away, brightest part is 12 LY (72 trillion miles) long. 3) Gamma Delphni: the nose of the Dolphin, a double star. Appears Yellow and White at Mags 4.3 & 5.2, 100 ly Away 4) M 2: Globular Cluster, 37,500 LY away, contains about 150,000 stars 5) M 11: Wild Duck Cluster. 6,000 LY away and 21 LY across. At least 600 stars 6) M 15: Globular cluster. About 33,600 LY away. Densest of all GC. Black hole in the center? 7) Blue Snowball: NGC7662 Planetary nebula in Andromeda. 1790 LY away 8) Gamma Andromeda: Double Star Almach. Appears Yellow and Blue at Mags 2.3 and 5.5. 250 LY away 9) Andromeda Galaxy: About 2.3 million LY away, 130,000 LY across. Contains 300 billion stars. 10) Double Cluster: 7200 LY away, 200 stars each. ************************************** C) Sign Up for Calstar 2004! Oct. 14-17 at Lake San Antonio CalStar (The California Star Party) will take place this year at Lake San Antonio from October 14 through 16, 2004. This is the fifth year for CalStar, and it has grown in popularity each year. The San Jose Astronomical Association (SJAA) is the host. CalStar is a casual star party, geared entirely at observing and imaging. It is a relaxed atmosphere, where the only real activities take place under starry skies. It is a great "end of season" way to get together with other amateur astronomers from around the state. Lake San Antonio is located approximately midpoint between Los Angeles and San Francisco, just west of highway 101, 30 miles north of Paso Robles. We expect a hundred or so telescopes to be set up, ranging from small Dobs to some seriously large aperture, to high end imaging equipment and state of the art solar scopes. There is always something interesting. Lake San Antonio is part of the Monterey County Park system, and charges an overnight camping fee of $20 per day per vehicle. We are getting a special discount of three nights for the price of two, so if you stay all three nights, the fee is $40. There are free showers available at a nearby campsite. This year we are once again arranging for catered BBQ dinners on Friday and Saturday nights. For $16 you can get a Tri tip or chicken BBQ dinner or $12 a veggietarian offer will be provided. It is a great meal to start an evening of observing with no food to haul in, cook, or clean up afterwards. Go to the CalStar web-page for more information and sign up as an attendee. http://www201.pair.com/resource/calstar/ If you have any questions, email Mark Wagner at mgw resource-intl com. See you there! ***************************** Directions to Houge Park: Houge Park is in San Jose, near Campbell and Los Gatos. >From Hwy.17, take the Camden Avenue exit. Go east 4/10 mile, and turn right at the light, onto Bascom Avenue. At the next light, turn left onto Woodard Road. At the first stop sign, turn right onto Twilight Drive. Go three blocks, cross Sunrise Drive, then turn left into the park. >From Hwy.85, take the Bascom Avenue exit. Go north 0.2 miles, and turn right at the first traffic light, onto White Oaks Road. Run another 0.2 miles to the first stop sign, then turn left onto Twilight Drive. You will now be passing the park. Turn right at the first driveway, into the parking lot. See Map at http://www.sjaa.net/img/houge.jpg *********************************** Clear Skies, Mike Koop President, SJAA Email any comments, questions, or flames to Koopm at best.com From koopm at koopm.best.vwh.net Mon Oct 11 11:01:27 2004 From: koopm at koopm.best.vwh.net (Michael Koop) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] OT: Dr. Wells Journey of Man Lecture at KTEH tonight! Message-ID: <20041011115743.S63594@koopm.best.vwh.net> The SJAA has been invited to attend the following lecture today (sorry for the late notice): Dr. Spencer Wells- Journey of Man Lecture Date: Monday, October 11th, 2004 Time: 7PM to 8PM Location: KTEH Studios Please email Pat Adams ( padams kteh org ), the volunteer coordinator before 3 PM today if you plan on attending (required). Description: A 1-hour lecture based on Dr. Spencer Wells book "A Genetic Odyssey". Showing how the secrets about our ancestors are hidden in our genetic code, Spencer Wells reveals how developments in the cutting-edge science of population genetics have made it possible to create a family tree for the whole of humanity. *************************** Websites: The book and reviews on the Amazon Site: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0812971469/102-6634209-9580948?v=glance A Bio of Dr. Wells on National Geographics Emerging Explorers: http://www.nationalgeographic.com/emerging/profiles/wells.html Interview with Dr. Wells: http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/nov/27inter.htm ****************************** Directions to KTEH: Directions: KTEH is located at 1585 Schallenberger Road, San Jose of Hwy 880 and Brokaw Road. To obtain detailed directions from your starting point you can go to www.mapquest.com FROM FREMONT AND NORTH VIA HWY 880 Drive south on 880 to the Brokaw exit in San Jose. Follow through to the light and make a left onto Brokaw. Go under 880 to the 2nd light. Turn right on to Ridder Park and left on to Schallenberger Road. KTEH will be on your right. FROM CUPERTINO AND NORTH VIA HWY 280 Drive south on 280 to the Hwy 880/17 interchange. Go north on 880 and take the Brokaw Road exit. Turn right at the exit and proceed to Ridder Park. Turn right and then left on to Schallenberger Road. KTEH will be on your right. FROM FREMONT AND NORTH VIA HWY 680 Drive south on 680 to the first Mission San Jose exit to Hwy. 880. Head south on 880 and take the Brokaw exit. Drive through the light and take a left onto Brokaw. Go under 880 to the second signal light. Make a right onto Ridder Park and then a left onto Schallenberger Road. KTEH is on the right hand side. FROM SAN JOSE SOUTH VIA HWY 101 Drive south on Hwy 101. Merge onto Hwy 880 N toward Oakland. Take the Brokaw Road exit. Turn right onto Brokaw Road. Turn right onto Ridder Park Drive and left on to Schallenberger Road. KTEH will be on your right. FROM SAN JOSE NORTH VIA HWY 101 Drive north on Hwy 101. Merge onto Hwy 880 N toward Oakland. Take the Brokaw Road exit. Turn right onto Brokaw Road. Turn right onto Ridder Park Drive and left on to Schallenberger Road. KTEH will be on your right. ********************************* Map to KTEH: http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?city=san+jose&state=CA&address=1585+schallenberger+rd&zip=95131&country=us&zoom=8 From koopm at koopm.best.vwh.net Fri Oct 22 17:02:25 2004 From: koopm at koopm.best.vwh.net (Michael Koop) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] Astro Events This Weekend! Message-ID: <20041022175454.H30901@koopm.best.vwh.net> A) Houge Park Star Party Tonight! Friday October 22th 7 PM-10 PM B) General Meeting Tomorrow! Denni Medlock on Dragon Skies C) Impromptu Field Trip to Chabot Sunday Afternoon, Sunday Oct. 24th D) Lunar Eclipse Party at Houge, Wednesday Night, Oct 27 E) RASC Handbooks and Calendars for 2005 on Sale Now! ****************************************** A) Houge Park Star Party Tonight! Friday Oct 22th 7 PM-10 PM It may not be too clear tonight, but I expect we will have high cirrus with many sucker holes. The public will be there, so come on out and join the fun! Clear Sky Clock for San Jose: http://cleardarksky.com/c/SanJoseCAkey.html?1 NRL Monterey East Pacific & US West Coast Images http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/sat-bin/epac_westcoast.cgi Astro Info for Houge Park Star Party, Friday Oct 22, 2004 Sunset: 18:20 Civil twilight ends: 18:47 Nautical twilight ends: 19:17 Astronomical twilight ends: 19:48 10 Cool Things to Observe Tonight! 1) 1st Quarter Moon 2) Cr399: The Coathanger. Not a true star cluster since its stars are 218 to 1140 ly away. 3) Gamma Arietis: The star Mesarthim, which consists of two Blue-White Stars at Mag 4.7, 7.8 separation 4) Albireo: Double star, mag. 3.1 and 5.1, 34" apart. 385 LY away, stars are 400 AU apart. 5) Gamma Delphni: the nose of the Dolphin, a double star. Appears Yellow and White at Mags 4.3 & 5.2, 100 ly Away 6) M 11: Wild Duck Cluster. 6,000 LY away and 21 LY across. At least 600 stars 7) M 15: Globular cluster. About 33,600 LY away. Densest of all GC. Black hole in the center? 8) Uranus: The 7th planet from the sun, 1.76 billion miles away. Green in color. Discovered in 1781. 9) Andromeda Galaxy: About 2.3 million LY away, 130,000 LY across. Contains 300 billion stars. 10) Double Cluster: 7200 LY away, 200 stars each. ****************************************** B) General Meeting Tomorrow! Denni Medlock on Dragon Skies SJAA General Meeting this Saturday, October 23rd starting at 8 PM. At the Hall in Houge Park The SJAA presents Denni Medlock from the Chabot Space and Science Center Speaking on "Dragon Skies: Astronomy of Imperial China" Dragon Skies: Astronomy of Imperial China, is a new exhibit plus planetarium show that is now on display at Chabot Space & Science Center. Dragon Skies takes the visitor through the secret world of Imperial Chinese Astronomy and tells the 5,000 year-old story of ancient China's astronomical achievements. It features the tools Chinese astronomers used and describes the early recordings of comets, meteor showers, eclipses, novas and sunspots done thru the ages. This includes several Bronze Armillary Spheres, Stone Sundials, Oracle Bones, Water Clocks and various other scientific instruments from Beijing Observatory and Purple Mountain Observatory in China. Accompanying the exhibit, which was developed by Chabot Space & Science Center and the National Science Foundation, is a new planetarium program: "Dragon Skies". This show illustrates the differences between Western and Chinese constellations, takes us back to the court of the Imperial Astronomer and emphasizes the influence of early Chinese observations on modern astronomy. Dragon Skies will run thru January 2, 2005 at Chabot and is filled with activities for family members of all ages. Come hear the story of the exhibit and how it was created! About our Speaker: Denni Medlock is a long time member of the SJAA. She has served as President, Editor of the Ephemeris, and as a board member various times through her life. She is the second recipient of The Dr. A. B. Gregory Award, just after her husband, Kevin recieved it the year before. Kevin and Denni have been involved in many large astronomy projects in the bay area. With their inspiration and leadership, the Fremont Peak Observatory got built and the Mirror from Group 70 was started. They also were a major force behind the implementation and construction of the new Chabot Space and Science Center, where Denni serves today as the Astronomy Programs Coordinator. Websites of Interest: http://www.dragonskies.org/ A review of the Exhibit: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/07/07/BAGHM7HDVL1.DTL ******************************************** C) Impromptu Field Trip to Chabot Sunday Afternoon, Sunday Oct. 24th Inspired by Dennis visit, we will be organizing a tour up to Chabot this Sunday, October 24th. Meet over in the parking lot at Houge Park at 12 PM on Sunday, where we will arrange carpools up to Oakland. We will arrive in time for the 1:30 PM showing of the Planetarium show Dragon Skies. After the Planetarium show, we will tour the Dragon Skies exhibit with a volunteer docent. After the tour, we will then be free to tour other exhibits or shop in the gift shop until the center closes at 5 PM. Afterwards, well go out for a Chinese Dinner at a local restaurant before heading home. Email me if you are interested in going, or just join us at Chabot for the 1:30 show! Costs: $13 per person for Chabot Entry Fee Note: Chabot is a member of various Museum alliances so if you are a member of another museum (such as The Tech), bring your member card and you might be able to enter with a discount. $10-$15 for Dinner Update: Denni has promised to bring half off coupons for our tour! Pick them up at the general meeting tomorrow! Website: http://www.chabotspace.org ********************************************** D) Lunar Eclipse Party at Houge, Wednesday Night, Oct 27 By popular demand, the SJAA will be hosting a lunar eclipse party at Houge Park on Wednesday, October 27 beginning at 6 p.m. This Lunar Eclipse is similar to the last two we have had, with the moon rising during the eclipse. However, we will get to see the main part of the show, since the moon will enter the Earth's Umbra when we can see it! This makes it almost a perfect public event since it happens during hours when most people are awake! We will again set up like usual along the sidewalk at Houge. Remember, the horizons at are 4 degrees at best to the east in select sections of the sidewalk. Using a compass, set up your scope in a spot so that a tall tree does not block your view as the moon climbs up. Bring binoculars and move around the park to find a view with a lower horizon to see the moon as it first rises above the Diablo range. Who will win the challenge to see the Moon first? It is difficult to see because the Moon rises in twilight, attenuated in the penumbra. In May 2003, eagle-eyed Gary Mitchell picked up the Moon first when it was 4 degrees above the horizon in the hazy skies that day using binoculars. Check out the lunar eclipse website at sjaa.net for local ephemeris and simulations of the eclipse. Ephemeris from USNO Website: Event Time Azimuth Altitude Moonrise 6:07 p.m. 73.7 -- Moon enters umbra 6:14 74.6 0.9 Moon enters totality 7:23 84.3 13.8 Middle of eclipse 8:04 90.0 21.7 Moon leaves totality 8:44 96.0 29.7 Moon leaves umbra 9:53 108.1 43.0 Moon leaves penumbra 11:02 125.0 55.2 Animation of the Eclipse from Houge Park: http://koopm.best.vwh.net/le102704.mov ********************************************** E) RASC Handbooks and Calendars for 2005 on Sale Now! The club is selling The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada Observer's Handbook 2005. The Observers Handbook is a 304-page guide published annually since 1907. Through its long tradition and the expertise of more than 40 contributors, the Observers Handbook has come to be regarded as the standard North American reference for data on the sky. The material in the Handbook is of interest to professional and amateur astronomers, scientists, teachers at all levels, students, science writers, campers, scout and guide leaders, as well as interested general readers. The Observers Handbook is an integral part of many astronomy courses at the secondary and university levels, and it should be on the reference shelf of every library. The various sections in the Observers Handbook are of two kinds: Sections dealing with astronomical events which occur during the current year, e.g. times of sunrise and sunset, moonrise and moonset (for latitudes 20 to 62 degrees N), eclipses, location of the planets and bright asteroids, returns of periodic comets, times of meteor showers, predictions of occultations by the Moon and by asteroids, the orbital positions of the brighter satellites of both Jupiter and Saturn, and predictions of the cycles of many variable stars. There is a 24-page section called The Sky Month By Month which gives an extensive listing of events. Sections dealing with astronomical data and other information which do not vary from year to year (although revisions are made annually to ensure that the information is the best available), e.g. orbital and physical data on the planets and their satellites, astronomical and physical constants, some optical properties of telescopes and binoculars, information on filters for astronomical observing, light pollution and sky transparency, a description of the various systems of specifying time, information on the Sun including sunspots and aurorae, a list of meteorite craters in Canada and the United States, advice on using the Observers Handbook for teaching astronomy, information on the Gegenschein and zodiacal light, 40 pages of authoritative tables dealing with stars, star clusters, nebulae and galaxies, maps of the Moon and the entire stellar The Handbook normally sells for $23, but you can purchase it at a discounted club price of $17 at the Houge Park Star Partys, the General Meeting, or the Fall Swap. We only bought 50 of them, so get yours today before they run out! We also have copies of the RASC Wall Calendar available for $11 (Discounted from $15) RASC 2005 Calendar Information: < http://www.rasc.ca/pubs/calendarflyer2005.pdf> PLEASE BRING EXACT CHANGE! ************************************************************* Directions to Houge Park: Houge Park is in San Jose, near Campbell and Los Gatos. >From Hwy.17, take the Camden Avenue exit. Go east 4/10 mile, and turn right at the light, onto Bascom Avenue. At the next light, turn left onto Woodard Road. At the first stop sign, turn right onto Twilight Drive. Go three blocks, cross Sunrise Drive, then turn left into the park. >From Hwy.85, take the Bascom Avenue exit. Go north 0.2 miles, and turn right at the first traffic light, onto White Oaks Road. Run another 0.2 miles to the first stop sign, then turn left onto Twilight Drive. You will now be passing the park. Turn right at the first driveway, into the parking lot. See Map at http://www.sjaa.net/img/houge.jpg *********************************** Clear Skies, Mike Koop President, SJAA Questions? Comments? Flames? Email: koopm best com From bhavner at sbcglobal.net Mon Oct 25 16:55:23 2004 From: bhavner at sbcglobal.net (Bob & Brenda Havner) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] Fw: [AANC Contacts] Steve Gottlieb to speak on NGC/IC project at SFAA General Meeting Message-ID: <001a01c4baee$17e23520$60d9fea9@Turtlerock> San Francisco Amateur Astronomers General Meeting Wednesday, November 17, 2004 7:30 pm Randall Museum, San Francisco (www.randallmuseum.org) The NGC and IC project ? an amateur/professional collaboration For the past two decades, I?ve been involved with a group of amateur and professional astronomers (The NGC/IC Project at http://www.ngcic.com/) whose goal is to re-examine the 100 to 200-year old source material used by J.J. Dreyer to compile the NGC and IC. A staggering 15 to 20 percent of all NGC entries have known or potential identification problems ? poor positions, misidentifications, duplicate entries, incorrect classifications, and confusion with single or multiple stars. Our catalogue sleuthing has resulted in recovering literally hundreds of mistaken identities, lost objects, and other mysteries that have created a maze of confusion in today?s professional astronomical databases and amateur software. In this talk I?ll discuss some examples of our catalogue sleuthing (and background on the early visual astronomers) as well as the current status of our detective work. Steve Gottlieb has been an active observer and catalogue junkie for over 25 years and member of SFAA since 1981. He?s written a number of deep-sky observing articles for Sky & Telescope, Astronomy, Deep Sky Magazine as well as the SFAA bulletin. Some of his observing challenges can be found at Adventures in Deep Space at http://www.angelfire.com/id/jsredshift/. His 600 favorite deep-sky objects are featured in the Orion ?Deep Map 600? and the results of his catalogue sleuthing can be found in a number of popular digital setting circles which use his corrected databases. -- Michael Portuesi San Francisco, CA mailto:portuesi@jotabout.com From robhawley at earthlink.net Thu Oct 28 14:50:46 2004 From: robhawley at earthlink.net (Rob Hawley) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] SJAA Weather Pages are updated Message-ID: A recent reorganization of the National Weather Service web pages broke many of the links in the weather pages I published in July. I am pleased to announce that the weather pages have been updated. www.sjaa.net/weather I also took the opportunity to add some new content. A) A Visual Satellite loop B) A Java UTC clock (so you don't have to remember the time conversion) C) Links to Aviation Sites with better decoding. My weather emails of the last couple of days were from these sources D) An improved sites page that has more sites and more information E) An improved winds aloft animation. This one is from the Navy and covers more of the area F) A new organization that puts the most used tools higher on the page G) Improved advanced tools These improved tools will give us the best information available for the coming winter season and for predicting fog next summer. I would be interested in any input. Rob Hawley From robhawley at earthlink.net Thu Oct 28 15:13:40 2004 From: robhawley at earthlink.net (Rob Hawley) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] SJAA Weather Pages are updated Message-ID: A recent reorganization of the National Weather Service web pages broke many of the links in the weather pages I published in July. I am pleased to announce that the weather pages have been updated. www.sjaa.net/weather I also took the opportunity to add some new content. A) A Visual Satellite loop B) A Java UTC clock (so you don't have to remember the time conversion) C) Links to Aviation Sites with better decoding. My weather emails of the last couple of days were from these sources D) An improved sites page that has more sites and more information E) An improved winds aloft animation. This one is from the Navy and covers more of the area F) A new organization that puts the most used tools higher on the page G) Improved advanced tools These improved tools will give us the best information available for the coming winter season and for predicting fog next summer. I would be interested in any input. Rob Hawley From bhavner at sbcglobal.net Thu Oct 28 18:55:10 2004 From: bhavner at sbcglobal.net (Bob & Brenda Havner) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] Fw: Hubble conference call Message-ID: <001201c4bd5a$52efcc90$60d9fea9@Turtlerock> Another conference call opportunity! If you don't already have a user name to access the download page contact me so I can set it up. I will need your name and contact phone #. Bob If a picture is worth a thousand words, a picture with 10,000 galaxies is worth a conference call. Join us on the evening of November 9, 2004 (6:00 pm PST, 9:00 EST) for a conference call with Dr. Massimo Stiavelli. The process to participate is simple. Step 1: Download the Presentation Dr. Stiavelli's presentation slides will be posted on this site a week prior to the conference call so check back. There are two ways to view Dr. Stiavelli's presentation: 1. Download a copy of the presentation go to the "Toolkit Downloads" "Tele-Conference" section at http://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/club/kit-downloads.cfm?Category=Tele%2DConference Instructions for joining the conference call are on the first slide. If you cannot access the online presentation, you can still listen to the call. Dialing instructions are provided below. Dialing Instructions: Dial toll-free: 1-888-730-9134 anytime after 5:45 p.m. Pacific Time on Tuesday, November 9th . You will be asked for the passcode: NIGHT SKY NETWORK . You will be asked for the call leader: MICHAEL GREENE . You will be asked to give your NAME and the CLUB you belong to. Be sure to forward this information to your other club members. Your club members do not need to be registered on the Night Sky Network to participate in the Teleconference. If you have any questions or are having any difficulties logging into the Night Sky Network, send an email to nightskyinfo@astrosociety. See you at the teleconference! Mike Hart Night Sky Network http://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/ From pkohlmil at best.com Sun Oct 31 00:06:14 2004 From: pkohlmil at best.com (Paul Kohlmiller) Date: Fri Jul 29 03:57:07 2005 Subject: [SJAA-announce] November Issue of Ephemeris Now Online Message-ID: <002301c4bf18$1cab1170$0500a8c0@eclipsys.lan> The November 2004 issue of the Ephemeris is now available online at http://ephemeris.sjaa.net. Articles for each issue are due by the 10th of the previous month. Paul and Mary Kohlmiller -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.sjaa.net/pipermail/sjaa-announce/attachments/20041031/451b7277/attachment.html