Globe at Night

Light pollution map. I snarfed it from Urban Ecoist

It’s almost time for the 5th Annual Globe at Night project.  Five years already!!  If you have not participated in this past oh, you just have to give it a go.  Super simple, you need only to follow some easy steps and you too can contribute to map light pollution.  Basically you go out and look up at the sky.  There is two week window so you have a good chance at clear skies.

I am really looking forward to this, last year I could see a difference from the year before.  The Globe at Night folks do such a great job at this too.  You can go the GAN site and get all the information you need including star charts (don’t worry it’s EASY) and they even have a Family Activity Packet.  If you are a teacher at ANY LEVEL you can make a great class project out of this and yes instructions for doing so are on the site too.

I am giving you plenty of heads up and I hope to put a banner for the side bar to remind you.  Last year there were over 15,000 observations, so let’s try and get that number up if we can.

PLEASE TRY AND PARTICIPATE IN THIS GREAT PROJECT!!!

Here’s the scoop:

The 5th Annual Globe at Night Campaign: 3-16 March 2010

What: The Globe at Night Campaign
When: 8pm to 10pm local time, March 3-16, 2010
Where: Everywhere
Who: You! (Everyone!)
How: See http://www.globeatnight.org

Why:
With half of the world’s population now living in cities, many urban dwellers have never experienced the wonderment of pristinely dark skies and maybe never will. This loss, caused by light pollution, is a concern on many fronts: safety, energy conservation, cost, health and effects on wildlife, as well as our ability to view the stars. Even though light pollution is a serious and growing global concern, it is one of the easiest environmental problems you can address on local levels.

Globe at Night is an annual 2-week campaign in March that helps to address the light pollution issue locally as well as globally. This year the campaign is March 3-16, 2010. You are invited along with everyone all over the world to record the brightness of your night sky by matching its appearance toward the constellation Orion with star maps of progressively fainter stars found at http://www.globeatnight.org/observe_magnitude.html. You then submit your measurements on-line at http://www.globeatnight.org/report.html with your date, time and location. A few weeks later, organizers release a map of light-pollution levels worldwide. Over the last four 2-week Globe at Night campaigns, volunteers from over 100 nations have contributed 35,000 measurements.

To learn the five easy steps to participate in the Globe at Night program, see the Globe at Night website at http://www.globeatnight.org. You can listen to our 10-minute audio podcast on light pollution and Globe at Night at http://365daysofastronomy.org/2010/02/03/february-3rd-the-globe-at-night-campaign-our-light-or-starlight/

For activities that have children explore what light pollution is, what its effects are on wildlife and how to prepare for participating in the Globe at Night campaign, see the new activities at http://www.darkskiesawareness.org/DarkSkiesRangers.

Monitoring our environment will allow us as citizen-scientists to identify and preserve the dark sky oases in cities and locate areas where light pollution is increasing. All it takes is a few minutes during the March 2010 campaign to measure sky brightness and contribute those observations on-line. Help us exceed the 15,000 observations contributed last year. Your measurements will make a world of difference.

Related Posts

Comments are closed.