Doctor Who comes out of the Cybercloset

Make of that post title what you will, but it’ll make sense once you watch this promo for the Christmas programming on BBC:


Cool. Looks like they’ve made a Christmas special I’ll be happy to see! I was not thrilled with the last one (the Space Titanic? Srsly?) but I do like the Cybermen. More Doctor Who soon! More running! Yay!

Tip o’ the sonic screwdriver to io9.

December 2nd, 2008 6:12 PM by Phil Plait in SciFi, TV/Movies | 14 Comments »

What if a large asteroid were on its way in?

Artist drawing of an asteroid entering Earth’s atmosphere

The California Literary Review asked me to answer some questions pertaining to Chapter 1 of my book, Death from the Skies!, where I talk about asteroid impacts. They’ve posted my replies on their site.

This is such a broad and interesting topic, and it’s really hard to boil down the important stuff to just a few dozen words. I tend to be a bit, um, wordy, so sometimes I have a hard time saying my name in a few dozen words, but I hope that the Q&A gives you a sense of what’s going on.

December 2nd, 2008 3:12 PM Tags: , , , ,
by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, DeathfromtheSkies!, Science, Space | 18 Comments »

Skeptical gifts

The wonderful ladies at Skepchick have posted their holiday gift-giving guide. It’s a podcast, and has lots of good suggestions for you. Of course, books make fine gifts as well.

December 2nd, 2008 2:12 PM by Phil Plait in DeathfromtheSkies!, Skepticism | 12 Comments »

Hubble’s Hotties

For the past few months I’ve been doing a series of short astronomy videos with producer/director Tom Lucas. Unlike my own videos I do in my house, these are professionally made, and I’ve been very happy with the past few.

Yesterday the sixth episode was posted, called "Hubble’s Hotties". It’s a Top Ten List of Hubble images, except it’s only really the Top Six. Sorry, but there’s only so much you can squeeze into five minutes!


It’s also available in high-res (click the link under the video on the YouTube page).

We filmed this at the Denver Museum of Science & Nature, and I’m grateful for the use of their facility. And I’ll be back there on the 11th of December to give a talk about asteroid impacts and my book, Death from the Skies! It’s a great place, and I hope some of you can join me there.

December 2nd, 2008 12:12 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, DeathfromtheSkies!, NASA, Pretty pictures, Science, Video Blog | 13 Comments »

Omega Cen’s millions of stars

I love it when astronomers release beautiful images simply because they are beautiful.



That’s Omega Centauri, a globular cluster. It contains millions of stars, all gravitationally bound to one another. It orbits the Milky Way and is currently about 18,000 light years away. At 150 light years across, it’s a densely packed beehive of stars.

It’s also easily visible to the unaided eye. Centaurus is a southern constellation, so it’s high overhead if you live south of the Equator. But many years ago, while I was doing my Master’s research at the University of Virginia, I saw it with my own eyes. I was out on the telescope catwalk that circled the dome, and was just looking at the stars. Right on the horizon, nestled between two Smoky Mountain peaks, was a fuzzy dot. I watched it for a few minutes, puzzling over what it could be. A cloud? No, it wasn’t moving. Smoke from a chimney? Maybe, but in the summer?

Then it hit me. Omega Cen? No, couldn’t be! But I went inside and checked the cluster’s coordinates. Knowing my latitude, I did the numbers in my head and realized that Omega Cen could just barely be seen, given the conditions: I was up high, looking between two mountains, and atmospheric refraction (the bending of light from stars upward due to the Earth’s air) near the horizon would lend a hand as well. I checked through binoculars, but the thick air only made the fuzzy dot a little bigger.

Still, that was an amazing moment for me; I had no idea you could see Omega Cen that far north. Of course, when you observe it from Chile with a 2.2 meter ’scope, you get a slightly better view, as shown above.

And let me repeat: the European Southern Observatory didn’t release this image to go with any big scientific result. It was just simply a gorgeous image, and they wanted to share. Awesome.

Image courtesy ESO.

December 2nd, 2008 10:12 AM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Pretty pictures | 29 Comments »

Brian Cox on BBC 2 tonight

If you happen to live in the UK (or someplace that gets BBC 2), then you should watch Brian Cox on the show "Horizon" tonight at 9:00 p.m. He’s a gifted speaker, and the topic is the nature of time. I live here in the Colonies, so I’ll miss it, but I’m hoping to catch it on the web somehow (I also have a couple of moles in England who send me stuff sometimes, too).

In the meantime, here’s the trailer for the show.


If the music sounds familiar to some of you, it’s from Doctor Who. That already makes me want to see the program. And, of course, some of you might want to see it because Brian has a certain, um, appeal to a lot of folks. I just like the topic, and Brian himself, so I’m looking forward to watching this when I can.

Tip o’ the bowler hat to Gia.

December 2nd, 2008 8:12 AM by Phil Plait in Cool stuff, Science, TV/Movies | 44 Comments »

Venus, the Moon, and Jupiter

On December 1, Venus, Jupiter, and the Moon made this pretty formation in the sky:



That shot was taken on my little department store digital camera. All I did was mount it on a good tripod and bracket the exposure (that is, take a bunch of shots with different exposure times). I knew my neighbor’s tree would make an interesting sight in a longish (10 second) exposure, and tried to balance the foreground objects. The glowing clouds were a nice bonus.

My point is, taking pretty shots of astronomical events is not terribly hard, and if you have even basic equipment you should take the opportunity to try.

Search Flickr for "Venus Moon Jupiter" to see tons of results from folks who took photos of this remarkable event. Dave Mosher on Discovery’s blog has more, as does Scott Hurst, and pretty much every other astronomy blog out there. It’s nice to see so many folks giving this a shot. If you have a picture online, link to it in the comments and let others see how yours look!

December 1st, 2008 10:12 PM by Phil Plait in Astronomy, Cool stuff, Pretty pictures | 67 Comments »