Everlasting Light

Light is beautiful.  It illuminates a world of beauty for us to appreciate while giving us a tool to decipher the riddles of the universe.  In astronomy, it’s always about more photons! Because more photons = more data = better results.  But in an increasingly technological world, more photons can be a bad thing.  Especially when the artificial photons overpower the natural. I was lucky to spend most of my youth living away from the bright lights of the city, but with the sprawling metropolis of Toronto to the South, I could always see the orange glow that blocked out...

An Observer’s Dream: Venus and Jupiter Unite

What is the brightest object in the sky? Why the Sun of course.  Second brightest? The Moon.  Most people are able to answer this question quite easily, but what is the third brightest? The fourth?  Many people will confidently say Sirius, the brightest star in the sky, or Polaris the north star.  The answer is that the planet Venus is third and the planet Jupiter is fourth.  It shouldn’t be that surprising that planets hold these positions.  They are much closer than the distant background of stars, and the human species has been observing them since the dawn of recorded...

Sending Astronomers to the Arctic? No more Hawaii for my Colleagues!

As the Canadian Winter approaches and our country goes into collective hibernation, we start to remind the world how cold it gets here, and that the tourist season is in July.  Still, we Canadians are proud of our hardiness and we will welcome you with open arms if you decide to visit in January. Still, if you look at a population map of Canada, we mostly live in the southern 10% of our country’s latitudes.  There are thousands of square kilometres of open wilderness to explore.  We want to be warm, but we also love our home country.  Many Canadians...