AEA Astronomy Club Newsletter July 2021
Contents
AEA Astronomy Club News & Calendar p.1
Video(s) & Picture(s) of the Month p. 2
Astronomy News p. 11
General Calendar p. 15
Colloquia, lectures, mtgs. p. 15
Observing p. 18
Useful
Links p. 20
About the Club p.
21
Club News &
Calendar.
Club Calendar
Club Meeting Schedule:
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AEA Astronomy Club Meeting |
TBD -- Great Courses video |
Teams
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AEA Astronomy Club Meeting |
TBD -- Great Courses video |
Teams
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AEA
Astronomy Club meetings are now on 1st Thursdays at 11:30 am. For 2020:
Jan. & Feb. in A1/1735, March 5 in A1/2906 and for the rest of 2020 (April
to Dec.) virtual meetings on Teams.
Club
News:
We have made reservations for a night on the Mt. Wilson 60” (Oct.
2) and 100” (Oct. 30). We will need to decide which. Those on the list for last year’s 100-inch
night that was cancelled due to COVID have first priority if they’d like to do
the 100-inch or 60-inch. There may be
new openings, so we can take new names, at least for a wait list.
Contact Jason Fields if interested in joining him for an observing
night with his 20” Dobs.
We need volunteers to help with:
·
Assembling
our new 16-inch Hubble Optics Dobs
·
Installing
our new software on our tablet & laptop
·
Populating
our club Sharepoint site with material & links to the club’s Aerowiki
& Aerolink materials – Kaly Rangarajan has volunteered to help with this
·
Arranging
future club programs
·
Managing
club equipment & library (Kelly Gov volunteered to help with the
library)
Astronomy Video(s)
& Picture(s) of the Month
(generally from
Astronomy Picture of the Day, APOD: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html)
VIDEO:
Simulation: Formation of the First Stars https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap210630.html
Video Credit: Harley
Katz (U.
Oxford) et
al.
Explanation: How did the first stars form? To help find
out, the SPHINX computer simulation of star formation in
the very early universe was created, some results of which are shown in
the featured video.
Time since the Big
Bang is shown in millions of years on the upper left. Even 100
million years after the Big
Bang, matter was spread too
uniformly across the cosmos for stars to be born. Besides background radiation,
the universe was dark. Soon, slight matter clumps rich in hydrogen gas
begin to coalesce into the first
stars. In the time-lapse
video, purple denotes gas, white denotes light, and gold shows
radiation so energetic that it ionizes hydrogen,
breaking it up into charged electrons and protons. The gold-colored regions
also track the most massive stars that die with powerful supernovas. The inset
circle highlights a central region that is becoming
a galaxy. The simulation continues until the universe was about 550
million years old. To assess the accuracy of the SPHINX simulations and
the assumptions that went into them, the results are not only being compared
to current deep observations, but will also be compared with more
direct observations of the early universe planned with NASA's
pending James Webb Space
Telescope.
VIDEO: STARFORGE:
A Star Formation Simulation https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap210623.html
Video & Text Credit: Michael
Y. Grudić (Northwestern
U.) et
al., STARFORGE
Collaboration;
Music: Prelude,
Op. 28, No. 4 in E Minor (Frédéric
Chopin)
Explanation: How do stars form? Most form in giant molecular clouds located in the central disk of a galaxy. The process is started, influenced, and limited by the stellar winds, jets, high energy starlight, and supernova explosions of previously existing stars. The featured video shows these complex interactions as computed by the STARFORGE simulation of a gas cloud 20,000 times the mass of our Sun. In the time-lapse visualization, lighter regions indicate denser gas, color encodes the gas speed (purple is slow, orange is fast), while dots indicate the positions of newly formed stars. As the video begins, a gas cloud spanning about 50 light years begins to condense under its own gravity. Within 2 million years, the first stars form, while newly formed massive stars are seen to expel impressive jets. The simulation is frozen after 4.3 million years, and the volume then rotated to gain a three-dimensional perspective. Much remains unknown about star formation, including the effect of the jets in limiting the masses of subsequently formed stars
Satellites over Orion
Image Credit: Amir
H. Abolfath
Explanation: What are those streaks across Orion? They
are reflections of sunlight from numerous Earth-orbiting satellites. Appearing
by eye as a series of successive
points floating across a twilight sky, the increasing number of
communications satellites, including SpaceX
Starlink satellites, are causing
concern among many astronomers. On the positive side, Starlink and similar
constellations make the post-sunset sky more dynamic,
satellite-based global communications faster, and help provide digital
services to currently underserved rural areas. On the negative side,
though, these low
Earth-orbit satellites make some deep astronomical
imaging programs more difficult, in particular observing programs
that need images taken just after sunset and just before dawn. Planned future
satellite arrays that function in higher orbits may impact
investigations of the deep universe planned for large
ground-based telescopes at any time during the night. The
streaks across Orion are not from Starlink but rather satellites in high geosynchronous
orbit. The featured picture,
taken in 2019 December, is a digital combination of over 65 3-minutes
exposures, with some images taken to highlight the background Orion Nebula,
while others to feature the passing satellites.
Orion Nebula: The Hubble View
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble Legacy Archive; Processing: Francisco Javier Pobes
Serrano
Explanation: Few cosmic vistas excite the imagination
like the
Orion Nebula. Also known as M42, the
nebula's glowing gas surrounds hot young stars at the edge of an immense
interstellar molecular
cloud only 1,500 light-years away. The Orion Nebula offers one
of the best opportunities to study how stars are born partly
because it is the nearest large star-forming
region, but also because the nebula's energetic stars have
blown away obscuring gas and dust clouds that would otherwise block our view -
providing an intimate look at a range of ongoing stages of
starbirth and evolution. The featured image of the Orion Nebula
is among the sharpest ever, constructed using data from the Hubble
Space Telescope. The entire Orion Nebula spans
about 40 light
years and is located in the same spiral arm of
our Galaxy as the
Sun.
HD 163296: Jet from a Star in Formation
Image Credit: Visible: VLT/MUSE (ESO); Radio: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)
Explanation: How are jets created during star
formation? No
one is sure, although recent images of the young star system HD
163296 are quite illuminating. The central star in the featured image is
still forming but seen already surrounded by a rotating disk and
an outward
moving jet. The disk is shown in radio waves taken
by the Atacama
Large Millimeter Array (ALMA)
in Chile, and
show gaps likely created by the gravity of very-young
planets. The jet, shown in visible light taken
by the Very
Large Telescope (VLT,
also in Chile), expels fast-moving gas -- mostly hydrogen --
from the disk center. The system spans hundreds of times the Earth-Sun distance
(au). Details
of these new observations are being
interpreted to bolster conjectures that the jets are generated and
shaped, at least in part, by magnetic fields in
the rotating disk. Future observations of HD
163296 and other similar star-forming systems may help fill in
details.
Sunrise Solstice over Stonehenge
Image Credit & Copyright: Max Alexander, STFC, SPL
Explanation: Today the Sun reaches its northernmost
point in planet Earth's sky. Called a solstice,
many cultures mark this date as a change of seasons -- from spring to summer
in Earth's
Northern Hemisphere and from fall to winter in Earth's Southern Hemisphere.
Precisely, the single time
of solstice occurs today for some parts of the world, but
tomorrow for other regions. The featured image was taken during the week of the
2008 summer solstice at Stonehenge in United
Kingdom, and captures a picturesque sunrise involving fog, trees,
clouds, stones
placed about 4,500 years ago, and a 4.5 billion year old large
glowing orb. Even given the precession
of the Earth's rotational axis over the millennia, the Sun continues to rise over Stonehenge in
an astronomically
significant way.
Zhurong: New Rover on Mars
Image Credit: China
National Space Administration
Explanation: There's a new rover on Mars. In
mid-May, China's Tianwen-1 mission
delivered the Zhurong
rover onto the red
planet. As Mars means Planet of Fire in Chinese, the Zhurong rover's name means,
roughly, God of Fire in Chinese mythology.
Zhurong landed in northern Utopia Planitia,
the largest known impact basin in the Solar System, and an area reported
to have much
underground ice. Among many other scientific
instruments, Zhurong carries ground-penetrating
radar that can detect ice buried even 100-meters deep.
Car-sized Zhurong is pictured here next to its landing base. The
image was snapped by a remote camera deployed by the rolling
rover. Zhurong's
planned 90-day mission includes studying the geology, soil, and atmosphere of
Mars in Utopia
Planitia.
Ganymede from Juno
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS; Processing & License: Kevin M. Gill;
Explanation: What does the largest moon in the Solar
System look like? Jupiter's
moon Ganymede,
larger than even Mercury and Pluto, has
an icy surface speckled with bright young craters overlying a mixture of older,
darker, more cratered terrain laced with grooves and
ridges. The cause of the grooved terrain remains a topic
of research, with a leading hypothesis relating it to shifting ice
plates. Ganymede is
thought to have an ocean
layer that contains more water than Earth -- and might contain life.
Like Earth's
Moon, Ganymede keeps the same face towards its
central planet, in this case Jupiter. The featured
image was captured last week by NASA's robotic Juno spacecraft
as it passed only about 1000 kilometers above the immense moon. The close pass
reduced Juno's orbital period around Jupiter from 53 days to 43 days. Juno
continues to study the giant planet's
high gravity, unusual magnetic
field, and complex cloud structures.
Millions of Stars in Omega Centauri
Image Credit & Copyright: Ignacio Diaz Bobillo
Explanation: Globular star cluster Omega
Centauri, also known as NGC 5139, is some 15,000 light-years away.
The cluster is packed with
about 10 million stars much older than the Sun within a volume about 150
light-years in diameter. It's the largest and brightest of 200 or so
known globular
clusters that roam the halo of our Milky Way galaxy. Though
most star clusters consist of stars with the same age and composition, the
enigmatic Omega Cen exhibits the presence of different stellar
populations with a spread of ages and chemical abundances. In fact, Omega
Cen may be the remnant core of a small galaxy merging with the
Milky Way. Omega Centauri's red giant stars (with a yellowish hue)
are easy to pick out in this sharp,
color telescopic view.
The Galactic Center in Stars, Gas, and
Magnetism
Image Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/UMass/Q.D.
Wang; Radio: NRF/SARAO/MeerKAT
Explanation: What's going on near the center of our
galaxy? To help find out, a newly
detailed panorama has been composed that explores regions just
above and below the galactic
plane in radio and X-ray light. X-ray light taken
by the orbiting Chandra
Observatory is shown in orange (hot), green (hotter), and
purple (hottest) and superposed with a highly detailed image in radio waves,
shown in gray, acquired by the MeerKAT array.
Interactions are numerous and complex. Galactic beasts such
as expanding
supernova remnants, hot
winds from newly formed stars, unusually strong and
colliding magnetic
fields, and a central
supermassive black hole are all battling in a space only
1000 light
years across. Thin bright
stripes appear to result from twisting and newly connecting
magnetic fields in colliding regions, creating an energetic
type of inner galactic space
weather with similarities to that created by our Sun. Continued
observations and study hold promise to not only shed
more light on the history and evolution of our own galaxy --
but all galaxies.
Astronomy
News:
From
ScienceNews.org
An arc of galaxies 3 billion light-years long may
challenge
cosmology
The
discovery is a “big deal” if true, but still needs to be confirmed
A giant arc of galaxies appears to stretch across more than 3
billion light-years in the distant universe. If the arc turns out to be real,
it would challenge a bedrock assumption of cosmology: that on large scales,
matter in the universe is evenly distributed no matter where you look.
“It would overturn cosmology as we know it,” said cosmologist
Alexia Lopez at a June 7 news conference at the virtual American Astronomical
Society meeting. “Our standard model, not to put it too heavily, kind of falls
through.”
Lopez, of the University of Central Lancashire in Preston,
England, and colleagues discovered the purported structure, which they call
simply the
Giant Arc, by studying the light of about 40,000 quasars captured by
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Quasars are the luminous cores of giant galaxies
so distant that they appear as points of light. While en route to Earth, some
of that light gets absorbed by atoms in and around foreground galaxies, leaving specific
signatures in the light that eventually reaches astronomers’
telescopes (SN: 7/12/18).
The Giant Arc’s signature is in magnesium atoms that have lost
one electron, in the halos of galaxies about 9.2 billion light-years away. The
quasar light absorbed by those atoms traces out a nearly symmetrical curve of
dozens of galaxies spanning about one-fifteenth the radius of the observable
universe, Lopez reported. The structure itself is invisible on the sky to human
eyes, but if you could see it, the arc would span about 20 times the width of
the full moon.
“This is a very
fundamental test of the hypothesis that the universe is homogeneous on large
scales,” says astrophysicist Subir Sarkar of the University of Oxford, who
studies large-scale structures in the universe but was not involved in the new
work. If the Giant Arc is real, “this is a very big deal.”
But Sarkar isn’t convinced it is real yet. “Our eye has a
tendency to pick up patterns,” Sarkar says, noting that some people have
claimed to see cosmologist Stephen Hawking’s initials written in fluctuations
in the cosmic microwave background, the oldest light in the universe.
Lopez ran three statistical tests to figure out the odds that
galaxies would line up in a giant arc by chance. All three suggest that the
structure is real, with one test surpassing physicists’ gold standard that the
odds of it being a statistical fluke are less than 0.00003 percent.
That sounds pretty good, but it may not be enough, Sarkar says.
“Right now, I would say the evidence is tantalizing but not yet compelling,” he
says. More observations, from Lopez’s group and others, could confirm or refute
the Giant Arc.
“We can have one large-scale structure that could just be a statistical fluke,” Lopez said. “That’s not the problem. All of them combined is what makes the problem even bigger.”
Questions or comments on this article? E-mail us at feedback@sciencenews.org
Editor's Note:
This
story was updated June 10, 2021, to clarify the description of the statistical
tests, and on June 11, 2021, to correct the description of Sarkar's opinion of
the work.
CITATIONS
A. Lopez. A Giant Arc on the sky.
American Astronomical Society meeting. June 7, 2021.
Souped-up supernovas may produce much of the universe’s heavy
elements
Analysis
of a rare, ancient star suggests a new birthplace for elements like uranium and
silver
Violent explosions of massive, magnetized stars may forge most
of the universe’s heavy elements, such as silver and uranium.
These r-process elements, which include half of all elements
heavier than iron, are also produced when neutron stars merge (SN: 10/16/17).
But collisions of those dead stars alone can’t form all of the r-process
elements seen in the universe. Now, scientists have pinpointed a type of
energetic supernova called a magnetorotational hypernova as another potential
birthplace of these elements.
The results, described July 7 in Nature,
stem from the discovery of an elderly red giant star — possibly 13 billion
years old — in the Milky Way’s halo (SN: 1/9/20). By
analyzing the star’s elemental makeup, which is like a star’s genetic
instruction book, astronomers peered back into the star’s family history.
Forty-four different elements seen in the star suggest that it was formed from
material left over “by a special explosion of one massive star soon after the
Big Bang,” says astronomer David Yong of the Australian National University in
Canberra.
The ancient star’s elements aren’t from the remnants of a neutron star merger, Yong and his colleagues say. Its abundances of certain heavy elements such as thorium and uranium were higher than would be expected from a neutron star merger. Additionally, the star also contains lighter elements such as zinc and nitrogen, which can’t be produced by those mergers. And since the star is extremely deficient in iron — an element that builds up over many stellar births and deaths — the scientists think that the red giant is a second-generation star whose heavy elements all came from one predecessor supernova-type event.
Magnetorotational hypernovas might be similar to collapsars —
massive, spinning stars that collapse into black holes instead of exploding.
Collapsars have previously been proposed as birthplaces of r-process elements,
too (SN: 5/8/19).
The researchers think that magnetorotational hypernovas are
rare, composing only 1 in 1,000 supernovas. Even so, such explosions would be
10 times as common as neutron star mergers today, and would produce similar
amounts of heavy elements per event. Along with their less energetic
counterparts, called
magnetorotational supernovas, these hypernovas could be responsible for creating 90 percent of all
r-process elements, coauthor Chiaki Kobayashi, an astrophysicist at
the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield, England, had previously
calculated. In the early universe, when massive, rapidly rotating stars were
more common, such explosions could have been even more influential.
The observations are impressive, says Stan Woosley, an
astrophysicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not
involved in the new study. But “there is no proof that the [elemental]
abundances in this metal-deficient star were made in a single event. It could
have been one. It could have been 10.” One of those events might even have been
a neutron star merger, he says.
The
scientists hope to find more stars like the elderly red giant, which could
reveal how frequent magnetorotational hypernovas are. For now, the newly
analyzed star remains “incredibly rare and demonstrates the need for …
large surveys to find such objects,” Yong says.
General Calendar:
Colloquia,
Lectures, Seminars, Meetings, Open Houses & Tours:
Colloquia: Carnegie (Tues.
4pm), UCLA, Caltech (Wed. 4pm), IPAC (Wed. 12:15pm) & other Pasadena
(daily
12-4pm): http://obs.carnegiescience.edu/seminars/
Carnegie Zoom Digital Series
Zoom Webinar Platform
A Virtual Conversation with
Materials Physicist Sally Tracy
Friday, July 9, 2021 - 3:30pm to 4:30pm
Timezone:
ET
Join us to learn about materials physics from Carnegie
scientist Sally Tracy. Tracy uses cutting-edge experimental and analytical
techniques to understand the fundamental physical behavior of materials at
extreme conditions.
She uses dynamic compression
techniques with high-flux X-ray sources to probe the structural
changes and phase transitions in materials at conditions that
mimic impacts and the interiors of terrestrial and exoplanets.
She is also an expert in nuclear resonant scattering and
synchrotron X-ray diffraction. She uses these techniques to
understand novel behavior at the electronic level. Tracy received
her Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology in 2016 and was then a
Postdoctoral Scholar at Princeton University prior to arriving at Carnegie's
Geophysical Laboratory.
Zoom Digital Platform
United
States
A Virtual Conversation with
Cell Biologist Brittany Belin
Wednesday, July 21, 2021
- 3:00pm to 4:00pm
Timezone:
ET
Join us to learn about cell biology from Carnegie
scientist Brittany Belin.
Over-reliance on synthetic fertilizers for crop plants can
have disastrous environmental consequences. A natural and sustainable
alternative to this practice is the application of microbes that can help
plants better access the nutrients in their environment. A major category of
plant-fertilizing microbes contains the rhizobia, soil bacteria that can
sustainably provide nitrogen fertilizer to legumes, including major commercial
crops such as soybeans and peanuts, cover crops such as alfalfa and clovers,
and leguminous trees such as acacias. Dr. Belin uses diverse quantitative
microscopy and modeling approaches to understand the cell biology of rhizobia
and other nitrogen-fixing bacteria, and the genetic factors that drive their
productive interactions with plant hosts.
Zoom
Webinar Platform,
July Night Sky Network
Clubs & Events
https://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/clubs-and-events.cfm
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|
AEA Astronomy Club Meeting |
TBD -- Great Courses video |
Teams |
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Cancelled
for now |
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Friday Night 7:30PM SBAS Monthly General Meeting in the Planetarium at El Camino College (16007 Crenshaw
Bl. In Torrance) |
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July
22 The von Kármán Lecture Series: 2021
Time: 7 p.m. PDT (10 p.m.
EDT; 0300 UTC)
A scientist and an artist
walk into a room… In this STEAM inspired chat, we’ll discuss how science
influences art and art, in turn, influences science. We’ll discuss how JPL
artists collaborate with scientists to create artistic renderings of scientific
discoveries and how artists take information and enhance it through data
visualization.
Speaker(s):
Morgan Cable, Ocean World Astrochemist, NASA/JPL
Joby Harris, Visual Strategist, NASA/JPL
Host:
Brian White, Public Services Office, NASA/JPL
Co-Host:
Nikki Wyrick, Public Services Office, NASA/JPL
Webcast:
Click here to watch the
event live on YouTube
Click here to watch the event live on Ustream
Past shows are archived
on YouTube.
12 July |
LAAS General Mtg. 7:30pm Griffith Observatory
(private) |
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June 20 |
UCLA METEORITE SCIENTISTS
No event shown this month, but see their 2021 poetry contest for some
good stuff – I liked the 3rd place “Ballad of Meteorite John” –
reminded me of “The Cremation of Sam McGee.” https://meteorites.ucla.edu/events/
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5 Aug |
AEA Astronomy Club Meeting |
TBD -- Great Courses video |
(Teams) |
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Observing:
The
following data are from the 2021 Observer’s Handbook, and Sky & Telescope’s
2021 Skygazer’s Almanac & monthly Sky at a Glance.
Current
sun & moon rise/set/phase data for L.A.:
http://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/usa/los-angeles
Sun, Moon
& Planets for July:
Moon: July 1 last quarter, July
10 new, July 17 1st quarter, July 24 Full, July 31 last quarter
Planets (June): Venus
is shines brightly at dusk all month. Mars
is visible at dusk and sets in the late evening. Jupiter and Saturn rise in
the evening and are visible through dawn, Mercury is visible at dawn until the 23rd.
Other
Events:
LAAS Event Calendar (incl.
various other virtual events):
https://www.laas.org/laas-bulletin/#calendar
Cancelled |
LAAS
The Garvey Ranch Observatory is open to the public every
Wednesday evening from 7:30 PM to 10 PM. Go into the dome to use the 8 Inch
Refractor or observe through one of our telescopes on the lawn. Visit our
workshop to learn how you can build your own telescope, grind your own
mirror, or sign up for our free seasonal astronomy classes. Time: 7:30
PM - 10:00 PM Location: Garvey
Ranch Obs. , 781 Orange Ave., Monterey Park, CA 91755 |
3 July |
SBAS In-town
observing session – In Town Dark Sky Observing Session at
Ridgecrest Middle School– 28915 NortbBay Rd. RPV, Weather Permitting: Please
contact Ken Munson to confirm that the gate will be opened. http://www.sbastro.net/. Only if we get
permission to use the school grounds again and CDC guidelines are reduced |
4
July Mercury greatest elongation W (22deg)
10 July |
SBAS
out-of-town Dark Sky observing – contact Ken Munson to coordinate a location.
http://www.sbastro.net/. |
10 July |
LAAS Private dark sky
Star Party |
12 July Venus 3deg S of Moon
13 July Venus 0.5deg N of Mars
Cancelled |
LAAS Public
Star Party: Griffith Observatory Grounds 2-10pm See http://www.griffithobservatory.org/programs/publictelescopes.html#starparties for more information. |
29 July Southern
Delta Aquariids Meteor Shower Peak The Southern Delta Aquariids are a
meteor shower visible from mid-July to midAugust each year with peak activity
on 28 or 29 July. The Comet of origin is not known with certainty. Suspected
candidate is Comet 96P Machholz. Earlier, it was thought to have originated
from the Marsden and Kracht Sungrazing comets. Zenithal Hourly Rate is
nominally about 16.
Internet
Links:
Telescope, Binocular & Accessory Buying
Guides
Sky & Telescope Magazine -- Choosing Your Equipment
Orion Telescopes & Binoculars -- Buying
Guides
Telescopes.com -- Telescopes 101
General
Getting Started in Astronomy & Observing
e! Science News Astronomy & Space
Astronomical Society of the Pacific (educational, amateur &
professional)
Amateur Online Tools, Journals, Vendors, Societies, Databases
The Astronomy White Pages (U.S. & International
Amateur Clubs & Societies)
American
Astronomical Society (professional)
Regional
(Southern California, Washington, D.C. & Colorado)
Southern California & Beyond
Amateur Astronomy Organizations, Observatories & Planetaria
Mt. Wilson Observatory description, history, visiting
Los Angeles Astronomical Society (LAAS)
South Bay Astronomical Society
(SBAS)
The Local Group Astronomy Club
(Santa Clarita)