MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —
In anticipation of the Aug. 21 total
solar eclipse, MTSU’s Department of
Physics and Astronomy is planning two special Friday Star Parties and an on-campus panel discussion with leading
U.S. astronomers one day before the natural phenomenon occurs.
The Star Parties will be held starting at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 4 and Aug. 11 in McWherter Learning Resources Center Room 221. Because of the
heightened interest in the total solar eclipse, both are at a special time and
location.
The 3 p.m. Sunday,
Aug. 20, panel discussion will be held in Science Building Room 1006.
To find the LRC, Science Building and parking, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/documents/parking-map.pdf.
The public is invited to all three events. MTSU Star Parties are a way for the
department to bring the campus, Murfreesboro and surrounding communities together,
with faculty sharing about planets, the sun and moon and other celestial
objects and phenomena.
For more on campus events related to the Great Tennessee Eclipse, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/eclipse/. To learn how to safely view the eclipse from
associate professor Chuck Higgins,
visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZEzgZJIr72Y.
Lecturer Irina
Perevalova will discuss “History and Science of Solar Eclipses” during her
Friday, Aug. 4, Star Party. A Russia native, Perevalova earned her master’s and
doctorate degrees from the University of Alabama. She secured lunar rock
samples that were shown at MTSU in 2013.
Professor John Wallin
will share “Observing and Photographing the Solar Eclipse” in his Friday, Aug.
11, talk.
“Bring your cameras, tripods and binoculars for a hands-on
practice session,” said Wallin, an astrophysicist who studies interacting
galaxies and the gravitational force of objects at the edge of our solar
system. He also is director in MTSU’s Ph.D. in Computational Science program.
“If you can take a good picture of a full moon, you can take
a good picture of the eclipse,” said Wallin, who added he will also discuss what
to expect during the total eclipse.
Weather permitting, Star Party attendees will later move to
the observatory.
Robert “Bob” Nemiroff,
professor of physics at Michigan Technological University, will headline a
virtual “all-star” field participating in the panel discussion. He is one of
the creators and editors of the Astronomy Picture of the Day website, https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/.
Other expected panelists include Jim Thieman, a retired NASA Goddard Space Flight Center scientist
and researcher; and the husband-and-wife tandem of Thomas Beach from the University of New Mexico-Los Alamos and Joyce Guzik, lab fellow at Los Alamos
National Laboratory.
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