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Star Party
On 26 Nov, 2021 By jenna.hinds@rasc.ca
Event Date: Sunday, January 23, 2022 - 12:30 to 13:00 EST Sunday Sungazing
RASC Toronto Centre - David Dunlap Observatory
Sunday, January 23, 2022 | 12:30-1:00 PM EST | Online Register Here!
Safely observe the sun with us, from the comfort of your home! During these family-friendly sessions, a DDO Astronomer will answer your questions about our closest star: the sun! Learn how the sun works and how it affects our home planet. Live-streamed views of the sun through small telescopes will be included, weather permitting. Only one registration per household is required. Deadline to register for this program is Wednesday, January 19, 2022 at 3p.m.
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Class
On 24 Jan, 2022 By seo.jewett@gmail.com
Event Date: Wednesday, January 26, 2022 - 21:30 to 22:15 EST Introduction to Stargazing and the Universe
RASC Edmonton
Topics discussed: Satellites; Constellations; Moon Maria; Pleiades; Sky angles; Q&A
Find out what you can see in the night sky and earn RASC's free Explore the Universe certificate and pin! Once a month we have a low intensity 45 minute presentation followed by Q&A. It’s ok if you missed the previous sessions, they’re self-contained (and recorded).
Join via Zoom on Wednesday, January 26th, 2022 @ 7:30 pm MST
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Speaker
On 05 Jan, 2022 By jenna.hinds@rasc.ca
Event Date: Friday, January 28, 2022 - 19:30 to 21:30 EST Here Come the Suns: The statistics and habitability of planets in binary star systems
Speaker: Dr Lea Hirsch, University of Toronto - Mississauga
RASC Missisauga
Most planet searches focus on single stars, like the sun. But half of all sun-like stars actually live in binary or multiple stellar systems, whose planet-hosting capability may be quite different. Although planets in binary systems are common in pop culture (think Tattoine in Stark Wars, or Gallifrey from Doctor Who), we know far less about them empirically than their counterparts in single star systems. In binary systems, planets can occupy either circum-stellar or circum-binary orbits, but many orbital configurations are thought to be unstable due to the effects of the binary companion. Binaries are also thought to affect the proto-planetary disks of their companions, potentially disrupting their ability to form planets at all.
In this talk, I will describe the current state of our theoretical and observational knowledge of the occurrence rates and statistics of planets in binary star systems. I'll also discuss efforts to simulate the habitability of planets in binaries, which may pass in and out of the so-called habitable zone in their trajectories around one or both of the stars in their system.
BIOGRAPHY: Lea Hirsch received her BA degree in Physics in 2012 from Cornell University, and PhD in Astronomy in 2018 at the University of California Berkeley. She completed a three-year postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford University before starting as an assistant professor in the teaching stream at University of Toronto Mississauga this fall. Her PhD Dissertation was on ‘Planets in Binary Systems: Studies with Precise Radial Velocities and High Resolution Imaging’. She is author or co-author on 68 publications. Her research has taken her to telescopes like Lick, Kitt Peak, Keck, and Gemini Observatories, as well as far into the wild blue yonder aboard the SOFIA flying observatory! She is an avid climber, hiker, sewist, and sci-fi fan in her spare time, as well as participating in public outreach.
This talk will take place Friday January 28th, 2022 @ 7:30 pm EST,
Join via Zoom HERE!
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