Touch the Brightest Star Pdf, Epub, Ebook

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Touch the Brightest Star Pdf, Epub, Ebook TOUCH THE BRIGHTEST STAR PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Christie Matheson | 40 pages | 02 Jul 2015 | HarperCollins Publishers Inc | 9780062274472 | English | New York, United States Touch the Brightest Star PDF Book NGC The Monthly Sky Guide 8th ed. Meister and Karie Willyerd, a must-read guide to the innovative strategies that the best companies are using to create a workplace that the best talent chooses—both today and in A Science Odyssey: People and Discoveries. Among the 50 constellations with none of these, Hercules is the largest, covering 2. An explicit identification of Mary as stella maris with the polar star Stella Polaris , as well as the use of Cyonsura as a name of the star, is evident in the title Cynosura seu Mariana Stella Polaris i. In Chinese astronomy , the stars that make up Andromeda were members of four different constellations that had astrological and mythological significance; a constellation related to Andromeda also exists in Hindu mythology. Abell NGC 68 group. You and your child will have a blast with the math in this book! Our privacy policy is here. No trivia or quizzes yet. Download as PDF Printable version. Apr 07, Kathleen rated it really liked it Shelves: library-read-again , kids-read-aloud , wp-read. Get A Copy. Sirius is highly visible in the Northern Hemisphere's winter night sky, because the star has a high luminosity , or intrinsic brightness, relativeto other stars, and because it's relatively close to Earth 8. V Tau mag 4. No two readings of this book will be the same. My son still enjoyed it though Meanwhile, Jupiter a bit dimmer than Mars for much of this month , and mellow, yellow Saturn sitting off to its left, begin to draw noticeably closer to each other, particularly as October winds down. It's short, and it covers the transition from day to night from a nature perspective. Block, Adam 17 October Andromeda is most prominent during autumn evenings in the Northern Hemisphere , along with several other constellations named for characters in the Perseus myth. Although several of the brightest stars are known binary or multiple star systems and are relatively close to Earth, they appear to the naked eye as single stars. Finally, there is Mercury, which is visible with difficulty very low in the west-southwest right after sunset during the first week of October. Bibcode : PASP.. Don't Touch. Refresh and try again. Hardcover , 40 pages. The typography is simple, not too exciting or sharp-looking. Places farther south will see the two planets at a higher altitude. Eccentricity e. Touch the Brightest Star Writer More Details Interestingly, in August of 3 B. Further information: List of stars in Andromeda. Norton's Star Atlas. Retrieved 29 April Challenging our understanding of what it means to be human, Joel Salinas, a Harvard-trained researcher They found that the star has a mass that is 98 percent that of Earth's sun. See all comments 1. Jenniskens, Peter 3 April For other uses, see North Star disambiguation and Polaris disambiguation. I use Christie Matheson 's Tap the Magic Tree frequently in class visits to the library, and only recently decided to switch it up and try out Touch the Brightest Star. Meister and Karie Willyerd, a must-read guide to the innovative strategies that the best companies are using to create a workplace that the best talent chooses—both today and in Bayer So a half hour after sunset, New Yorkers will see Venus and Jupiter only "half a fist" above the horizon. Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! Research Notes of the AAS. Astronomische Nachrichten in German. Very short; if you have access to children or an inner child, give it or one of the companion books a try. Retrieved 30 July Inclination i. Meteor Showers and Their Parent Comets. The illustrations pair perfectly with the words on each page. The Constellation Taurus. Color scheme. You and your child will have a blast with the math in this book! Mars arrives at opposition to the Sun on October 13th, visible from dusk to dawn and shining at a head-turning magnitude of Children are encouraged to tap a deer to say goodnight, trace the dipper, whisper to the moon and more. Lists with This Book. The 92 stars listed above thus omitting the sun are in 38 modern constellations of the 88 possible constellations , in turn covering About the Author. Sep 15, Haley Shaffer rated it really liked it Shelves: read-aloud , picture-book , keeton , callaway , , nerdies , nerdy-book-club-finalist , pb-a-day , gifts. I loved seeing how these interactive books make kids enjoy reading and makes them interact with the story in a clever way. Dictionary Series Second ed. The magic goes on even when you are asleep. NGC Such a cute book that is interactive and perfect for a toddler or preschooler. The Egyptians even went so far as to base their calendar on when Sirius was first visible in the eastern sky, shortly before sunrise. These elements are very soft-looking and, combined with the blue and purple This book is beautiful and blissfully soothing-- perfect for bedtime. In reviewing this I can now see it's a companion book to Tap the Magic Tree, so I will have to look for that one as well. Prior to , the amplitude was over 0. Touch the Brightest Star Reviews Block, Adam 17 October Showing In Inuit astronomy, Polaris is known as Niqirtsuituq. Media related to Andromeda category at Wikimedia Commons. Summary: Tina is not your typical cow. This is another fun, interactive book that will quickly get kids involved! Merope mag 4. Wikimedia list article. It is far fainter than M31 and M32, but larger than M32 with a surface brightness of Andromeda's most celebrated open cluster is NGC Caldwell 28 at an overall magnitude of 5. Summary: Do you need a new bedtime story to read to your kids? Categories : Andromeda constellation Constellations Constellations listed by Ptolemy Northern constellations. These elements are very soft-looking and, combined with the blue and purple hues, it casts a spell of sleepiness over its readers. The kids and I listened to this story at our library's "Story Time on Screen". Polaris has long been important for the cosmic distance ladder because, prior to Gaia, it was the only Cepheid variable for which direct distance data existed, which had a ripple effect on distance measurements that use this "ruler". From Rio de Janeiro, the planets will appear nearly 20 degrees above the western horizon a half hour after sunset. Classical Cepheid [3]. Constellation in the northern celestial hemisphere. Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning. I did a computer check to see just how often Venus and Jupiter come within 6 arc minutes of each other, in a dark or twilight sky as seen from North America. Of the stars brighter than 4th magnitude and those with measured luminosity , Andromeda has a relatively even distribution of evolved and main-sequence stars. Mars will be closest to Earth on the 6th and arrives at opposition to the sun on the 13th when it rises around sunset and moves across the sky all night. I loved Tap the MagicTree. Cambridge University Press. Its brightest star, Alpha Andromedae , is a binary star that has also been counted as a part of Pegasus , while Gamma Andromedae is a colorful binary and a popular target for amateur astronomers. Allen, Richard H. Color scheme Light Night mode. Polaris was referenced in Nathaniel Bowditch 's book, American Practical Navigator , where it is listed as one of the navigational stars. Also great for deaf children. Related Searches. I would suggest this for infants and children up to four or five years old. Sirius B is a white dwarf star , which is the last observable stage of a low- to medium-mass star. The text is simple and quiet, the illustrations lovely. A companion to the popular and acclaimed Tap the Magic Tree. Mar 08, Becky rated it really liked it. Astronomical Journal. Main article: Pole star. Bibcode : bsc.. I don't think it works for toddlers as well as Tap the Magic Tree does, but it's still a great preschool storytime choice. It must be remembered that the Chaldeans who occupied Mesopotamia 2, years ago were assiduous observers of the night sky and were very familiar with the motions of the sun, moon and planets. Views Read Edit View history. In Chinese astronomy , the stars that make up Andromeda were members of four different constellations that had astrological and mythological significance; a constellation related to Andromeda also exists in Hindu mythology. Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! Sort order. O'Reilly Media. Jun 04, Cecilia rated it really liked it Shelves: reading-challenge It has been reported that the amplitude is now increasing again, a reversal not seen in any other Cepheid. Ten months later, Venus and Jupiter got together again for an even more spectacular encore on June 17, 2 B. It tells you about all the magic and where you can find it. Touch the Brightest Star Read Online Polaris B can be seen with a modest telescope. It is one of the largest constellations, with an area of square degrees. No two readings of this book will be the same. Categories : Lists of stars Light sources Lists of superlatives in astronomy. A rhyming, interactive book good for younger readers. Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file.
Recommended publications
  • CONSTELLATION TRIANGULUM, the TRIANGLE Triangulum Is a Small Constellation in the Northern Sky
    CONSTELLATION TRIANGULUM, THE TRIANGLE Triangulum is a small constellation in the northern sky. Its name is Latin for "triangle", derived from its three brightest stars, which form a long and narrow triangle. Known to the ancient Babylonians and Greeks, Triangulum was one of the 48 constellations listed by the 2nd century astronomer Ptolemy. The celestial cartographers Johann Bayer and John Flamsteed catalogued the constellation's stars, giving six of them Bayer designations. The white stars Beta and Gamma Trianguli, of apparent magnitudes 3.00 and 4.00, respectively, form the base of the triangle and the yellow-white Alpha Trianguli, of magnitude 3.41, the apex. Iota Trianguli is a notable double star system, and there are three star systems with planets located in Triangulum. The constellation contains several galaxies, the brightest and nearest of which is the Triangulum Galaxy or Messier 33—a member of the Local Group. The first quasar ever observed, 3C 48, also lies within Triangulum's boundaries. HISTORY AND MYTHOLOGY In the Babylonian star catalogues, Triangulum, together with Gamma Andromedae, formed the constellation known as MULAPIN "The Plough". It is notable as the first constellation presented on (and giving its name to) a pair of tablets containing canonical star lists that were compiled around 1000 BC, the MUL.APIN. The Plough was the first constellation of the "Way of Enlil"—that is, the northernmost quarter of the Sun's path, which corresponds to the 45 days on either side of summer solstice. Its first appearance in the pre-dawn sky (heliacal rising) in February marked the time to begin spring ploughing in Mesopotamia.
    [Show full text]
  • Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory a Autumn Observing Notes
    Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory A Autumn Observing Notes Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory PUBLIC OBSERVING – Autumn Tour of the Sky with the Naked Eye CASSIOPEIA Look for the ‘W’ 4 shape 3 Polaris URSA MINOR Notice how the constellations swing around Polaris during the night Pherkad Kochab Is Kochab orange compared 2 to Polaris? Pointers Is Dubhe Dubhe yellowish compared to Merak? 1 Merak THE PLOUGH Figure 1: Sketch of the northern sky in autumn. © Rob Peeling, CaDAS, 2007 version 1.2 Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory PUBLIC OBSERVING – Autumn North 1. On leaving the planetarium, turn around and look northwards over the roof of the building. Close to the horizon is a group of stars like the outline of a saucepan with the handle stretching to your left. This is the Plough (also called the Big Dipper) and is part of the constellation Ursa Major, the Great Bear. The two right-hand stars are called the Pointers. Can you tell that the higher of the two, Dubhe is slightly yellowish compared to the lower, Merak? Check with binoculars. Not all stars are white. The colour shows that Dubhe is cooler than Merak in the same way that red-hot is cooler than white- hot. 2. Use the Pointers to guide you upwards to the next bright star. This is Polaris, the Pole (or North) Star. Note that it is not the brightest star in the sky, a common misconception. Below and to the left are two prominent but fainter stars. These are Kochab and Pherkad, the Guardians of the Pole. Look carefully and you will notice that Kochab is slightly orange when compared to Polaris.
    [Show full text]
  • Winter Observing Notes
    Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory Winter Observing Notes Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory PUBLIC OBSERVING – Winter Tour of the Sky with the Naked Eye NGC 457 CASSIOPEIA eta Cas Look for Notice how the constellations 5 the ‘W’ swing around Polaris during shape the night Is Dubhe yellowish compared 2 Polaris to Merak? Dubhe 3 Merak URSA MINOR Kochab 1 Is Kochab orange Pherkad compared to Polaris? THE PLOUGH 4 Mizar Alcor Figure 1: Sketch of the northern sky in winter. North 1. On leaving the planetarium, turn around and look northwards over the roof of the building. To your right is a group of stars like the outline of a saucepan standing up on it’s handle. This is the Plough (also called the Big Dipper) and is part of the constellation Ursa Major, the Great Bear. The top two stars are called the Pointers. Check with binoculars. Not all stars are white. The colour shows that Dubhe is cooler than Merak in the same way that red-hot is cooler than white-hot. 2. Use the Pointers to guide you to the left, to the next bright star. This is Polaris, the Pole (or North) Star. Note that it is not the brightest star in the sky, a common misconception. Below and to the right are two prominent but fainter stars. These are Kochab and Pherkad, the Guardians of the Pole. Look carefully and you will notice that Kochab is slightly orange when compared to Polaris. Check with binoculars. © Rob Peeling, CaDAS, 2007 version 2.0 Wynyard Planetarium & Observatory PUBLIC OBSERVING – Winter Polaris, Kochab and Pherkad mark the constellation Ursa Minor, the Little Bear.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Easy Double Stars for Winter and Spring  = Easy  = Not Too Difficult  = Difficult but Possible
    List of Easy Double Stars for Winter and Spring = easy = not too difficult = difficult but possible 1. Sigma Cassiopeiae (STF 3049). 23 hr 59.0 min +55 deg 45 min This system is tight but very beautiful. Use a high magnification (150x or more). Primary: 5.2, yellow or white Seconary: 7.2 (3.0″), blue 2. Eta Cassiopeiae (Achird, STF 60). 00 hr 49.1 min +57 deg 49 min This is a multiple system with many stars, but I will restrict myself to the brightest one here. Primary: 3.5, yellow. Secondary: 7.4 (13.2″), purple or brown 3. 65 Piscium (STF 61). 00 hr 49.9 min +27 deg 43 min Primary: 6.3, yellow Secondary: 6.3 (4.1″), yellow 4. Psi-1 Piscium (STF 88). 01 hr 05.7 min +21 deg 28 min This double forms a T-shaped asterism with Psi-2, Psi-3 and Chi Piscium. Psi-1 is the uppermost of the four. Primary: 5.3, yellow or white Secondary: 5.5 (29.7), yellow or white 5. Zeta Piscium (STF 100). 01 hr 13.7 min +07 deg 35 min Primary: 5.2, white or yellow Secondary: 6.3, white or lilac (or blue) 6. Gamma Arietis (Mesarthim, STF 180). 01 hr 53.5 min +19 deg 18 min “The Ram’s Eyes” Primary: 4.5, white Secondary: 4.6 (7.5″), white 7. Lambda Arietis (H 5 12). 01 hr 57.9 min +23 deg 36 min Primary: 4.8, white or yellow Secondary: 6.7 (37.1″), silver-white or blue 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Three Naked Eye Galaxies? Dave Eagle
    Three Naked Eye Galaxies? Dave Eagle. Eagleseye Observatory. Star hopping to M31, The Great Andromeda Galaxy. In the autumn sky in the northern hemisphere, the constellations of Perseus and Andromeda are very proudly on display, located on the meridian around midnight, and visible from most of the world. The Great Square of Pegasus is a distinct asterism of four stars. Using just your naked eye, find this square of stars. Incidentally, the top left star (all instructions are now as seen from the northern hemisphere) Sirrah, is now actually Alpha Andromedae. From this square of stars take the top edge of the square and carry the line on towards the left (east) and up. Just under half the distance of the top of the square, you should come to another reasonably bright star. Slightly left and up again, taking a slightly longer journey, you will come to another star of similar brightness. This is Mirach or Beta Andromedae. When you have found this star, turn 90 degrees to the right. You will then see two fairly bright stars leading away. Aim for the second star and gaze at this star. If your skies are reasonably dark, just above and to the right of the second star you should be able to see a faint smudge. This marks the location of M31, The Andromeda Galaxy. In five hops we have found our quarry. Figure 1 – Star hopping from Sirrah to The Andromeda Galaxy. This is the most distant object you can see with the naked eye and is almost 2.5 million light years away.
    [Show full text]
  • Abstracts of Extreme Solar Systems 4 (Reykjavik, Iceland)
    Abstracts of Extreme Solar Systems 4 (Reykjavik, Iceland) American Astronomical Society August, 2019 100 — New Discoveries scope (JWST), as well as other large ground-based and space-based telescopes coming online in the next 100.01 — Review of TESS’s First Year Survey and two decades. Future Plans The status of the TESS mission as it completes its first year of survey operations in July 2019 will bere- George Ricker1 viewed. The opportunities enabled by TESS’s unique 1 Kavli Institute, MIT (Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States) lunar-resonant orbit for an extended mission lasting more than a decade will also be presented. Successfully launched in April 2018, NASA’s Tran- siting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is well on its way to discovering thousands of exoplanets in orbit 100.02 — The Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Sur- around the brightest stars in the sky. During its ini- vey: Giant Planet and Brown Dwarf Demographics tial two-year survey mission, TESS will monitor more from 10-100 AU than 200,000 bright stars in the solar neighborhood at Eric Nielsen1; Robert De Rosa1; Bruce Macintosh1; a two minute cadence for drops in brightness caused Jason Wang2; Jean-Baptiste Ruffio1; Eugene Chiang3; by planetary transits. This first-ever spaceborne all- Mark Marley4; Didier Saumon5; Dmitry Savransky6; sky transit survey is identifying planets ranging in Daniel Fabrycky7; Quinn Konopacky8; Jennifer size from Earth-sized to gas giants, orbiting a wide Patience9; Vanessa Bailey10 variety of host stars, from cool M dwarfs to hot O/B 1 KIPAC, Stanford University (Stanford, California, United States) giants. 2 Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology TESS stars are typically 30–100 times brighter than (Pasadena, California, United States) those surveyed by the Kepler satellite; thus, TESS 3 Astronomy, California Institute of Technology (Pasadena, Califor- planets are proving far easier to characterize with nia, United States) follow-up observations than those from prior mis- 4 Astronomy, U.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Astronomy Magazine 2011 Index Subject Index
    Astronomy Magazine 2011 Index Subject Index A AAVSO (American Association of Variable Star Observers), 6:18, 44–47, 7:58, 10:11 Abell 35 (Sharpless 2-313) (planetary nebula), 10:70 Abell 85 (supernova remnant), 8:70 Abell 1656 (Coma galaxy cluster), 11:56 Abell 1689 (galaxy cluster), 3:23 Abell 2218 (galaxy cluster), 11:68 Abell 2744 (Pandora's Cluster) (galaxy cluster), 10:20 Abell catalog planetary nebulae, 6:50–53 Acheron Fossae (feature on Mars), 11:36 Adirondack Astronomy Retreat, 5:16 Adobe Photoshop software, 6:64 AKATSUKI orbiter, 4:19 AL (Astronomical League), 7:17, 8:50–51 albedo, 8:12 Alexhelios (moon of 216 Kleopatra), 6:18 Altair (star), 9:15 amateur astronomy change in construction of portable telescopes, 1:70–73 discovery of asteroids, 12:56–60 ten tips for, 1:68–69 American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO), 6:18, 44–47, 7:58, 10:11 American Astronomical Society decadal survey recommendations, 7:16 Lancelot M. Berkeley-New York Community Trust Prize for Meritorious Work in Astronomy, 3:19 Andromeda Galaxy (M31) image of, 11:26 stellar disks, 6:19 Antarctica, astronomical research in, 10:44–48 Antennae galaxies (NGC 4038 and NGC 4039), 11:32, 56 antimatter, 8:24–29 Antu Telescope, 11:37 APM 08279+5255 (quasar), 11:18 arcminutes, 10:51 arcseconds, 10:51 Arp 147 (galaxy pair), 6:19 Arp 188 (Tadpole Galaxy), 11:30 Arp 273 (galaxy pair), 11:65 Arp 299 (NGC 3690) (galaxy pair), 10:55–57 ARTEMIS spacecraft, 11:17 asteroid belt, origin of, 8:55 asteroids See also names of specific asteroids amateur discovery of, 12:62–63
    [Show full text]
  • The Blue Planet Report from Stellafane Perspective on Apollo How to Gain and Retain New Members
    Published by the Astronomical League Vol. 71, No. 4 September 2019 THE BLUE PLANET REPORT FROM STELLAFANE 7.20.69 5 PERSPECTIVE ON APOLLO YEARS APOLLO 11 HOW TO GAIN AND RETAIN NEW MEMBERS What’s Your Pleasure? From Famous Observatories to Solar Eclipse Take Your Pick From These Tours Travel Down Under to visit top Australian Observatories observatories, including Siding October 1–9, 2019 Spring and “The Dish” at Parkes. Go wine-tasting, hike in nature reserves, and explore eclectic Syd- ney and Australia’s capital, Can- berra. Plus: Stargaze under south- ern skies. Options to Great Barrier Reef and Uluru or Ayers Rock. skyandtelescope.com/australia2019 Uluru & Sydney Opera House: Tourism Australia; observatory: Winton Gibson Astronomy Across Italy May 3–11, 2020 As you travel in comfort from Rome to Florence, Pisa, and Padua, visit the Vatican Observatory, the Galileo Museum, Arcetri Observatory, and more. Enjoy fine food, hotels, and other classic Italian treats. Extensions in Rome and Venice available. skyandtelescope.com/italy2020 S&T’s 2020 solar eclipse cruise offers 2 2020 Eclipse Cruise: Chile, Argentina, minutes, 7 seconds of totality off the and Antarctica coast of Argentina and much more: Nov. 27–Dec. 19, 2020 Chilean fjords and glaciers, the legendary Drake Passage, and four days amid Antarctica’s waters and icebergs. skyandtelescope.com/chile2020 Patagonian Total Solar Eclipse December 9–18, 2020 Come along with Sky & Telescope to view this celestial spectacle in the lakes region of southern Argentina. Experience breathtaking vistas of the lush landscape by day — and the southern sky’s incompa- rable stars by night.
    [Show full text]
  • Astrophysics
    Publications of the Astronomical Institute rais-mf—ii«o of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Publication No. 70 EUROPEAN REGIONAL ASTRONOMY MEETING OF THE IA U Praha, Czechoslovakia August 24-29, 1987 ASTROPHYSICS Edited by PETR HARMANEC Proceedings, Vol. 1987 Publications of the Astronomical Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Publication No. 70 EUROPEAN REGIONAL ASTRONOMY MEETING OF THE I A U 10 Praha, Czechoslovakia August 24-29, 1987 ASTROPHYSICS Edited by PETR HARMANEC Proceedings, Vol. 5 1 987 CHIEF EDITOR OF THE PROCEEDINGS: LUBOS PEREK Astronomical Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences 251 65 Ondrejov, Czechoslovakia TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface HI Invited discourse 3.-C. Pecker: Fran Tycho Brahe to Prague 1987: The Ever Changing Universe 3 lorlishdp on rapid variability of single, binary and Multiple stars A. Baglln: Time Scales and Physical Processes Involved (Review Paper) 13 Part 1 : Early-type stars P. Koubsfty: Evidence of Rapid Variability in Early-Type Stars (Review Paper) 25 NSV. Filtertdn, D.B. Gies, C.T. Bolton: The Incidence cf Absorption Line Profile Variability Among 33 the 0 Stars (Contributed Paper) R.K. Prinja, I.D. Howarth: Variability In the Stellar Wind of 68 Cygni - Not "Shells" or "Puffs", 39 but Streams (Contributed Paper) H. Hubert, B. Dagostlnoz, A.M. Hubert, M. Floquet: Short-Time Scale Variability In Some Be Stars 45 (Contributed Paper) G. talker, S. Yang, C. McDowall, G. Fahlman: Analysis of Nonradial Oscillations of Rapidly Rotating 49 Delta Scuti Stars (Contributed Paper) C. Sterken: The Variability of the Runaway Star S3 Arietis (Contributed Paper) S3 C. Blanco, A.
    [Show full text]
  • Will Alexander, Exobiology As Goddess
    Exobiology As Goddess Will Alexander ri MAnifEST pReSS San 1ose , California Copyright © 2004 Will Alexander Published by Manifest Press, Executive Director: Lisa Kovaleski. Editorial Di­ rector: Barbara Barrigan. Project Editor: Lisa Kovaleski Cover Art The Dawn Goddess by Will Alexander Photography by Sheila Scott-Wilkinson Parts of Exobiology As Goddess have appeared in No: a journal ofthe arts, and The Best American Poetry 2004. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, re­ cording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without writ­ ten pennission from Manifest Press. Trade distribution by Small Press Distribution ISBN: 0-9673885-8-9 This book was printed & bound on recycled paper by Almaden Press, Santa Clara, CA for Sheila Scott-Wilkinson & Roberto Matta Exobiology As Goddess So lea of the Simooms "surprise ... will burst forth like a fluorite ruby in ultraviolet light " -Roberto Matta Not some writhing in a tortuous canine province nor some hallucinated witness starving in a broken endocrine manger but Solea the splendiferous dolorosos of Solea with her blind electrical surges with her transmundane penetration like a rain of green sorrows with their clairvoyant ethers become a cyclone of minerals ghostly eclectic like a moon expelling waves from her dharma or movement from the carving of volcanoes her electric punctuation condensed as neutrino & anti-neutrino with the earth as her dazzled village with its brush fire error with
    [Show full text]
  • Observing List
    day month year Epoch 2000 local clock time: 2.00 Observing List for 17 11 2019 RA DEC alt az Constellation object mag A mag B Separation description hr min deg min 58 286 Andromeda Gamma Andromedae (*266) 2.3 5.5 9.8 yellow & blue green double star 2 3.9 42 19 40 283 Andromeda Pi Andromedae 4.4 8.6 35.9 bright white & faint blue 0 36.9 33 43 48 295 Andromeda STF 79 (Struve) 6 7 7.8 bluish pair 1 0.1 44 42 59 279 Andromeda 59 Andromedae 6.5 7 16.6 neat pair, both greenish blue 2 10.9 39 2 32 301 Andromeda NGC 7662 (The Blue Snowball) planetary nebula, fairly bright & slightly elongated 23 25.9 42 32.1 44 292 Andromeda M31 (Andromeda Galaxy) large sprial arm galaxy like the Milky Way 0 42.7 41 16 44 291 Andromeda M32 satellite galaxy of Andromeda Galaxy 0 42.7 40 52 44 293 Andromeda M110 (NGC205) satellite galaxy of Andromeda Galaxy 0 40.4 41 41 56 279 Andromeda NGC752 large open cluster of 60 stars 1 57.8 37 41 62 285 Andromeda NGC891 edge on galaxy, needle-like in appearance 2 22.6 42 21 30 300 Andromeda NGC7640 elongated galaxy with mottled halo 23 22.1 40 51 35 308 Andromeda NGC7686 open cluster of 20 stars 23 30.2 49 8 47 258 Aries 1 Arietis 6.2 7.2 2.8 fine yellow & pale blue pair 1 50.1 22 17 57 250 Aries 30 Arietis 6.6 7.4 38.6 pleasing yellow pair 2 37 24 39 59 253 Aries 33 Arietis 5.5 8.4 28.6 yellowish-white & blue pair 2 40.7 27 4 59 239 Aries 48, Epsilon Arietis 5.2 5.5 1.5 white pair, splittable @ 150x 2 59.2 21 20 46 254 Aries 5, Gamma Arietis (*262) 4.8 4.8 7.8 nice bluish-white pair 1 53.5 19 18 49 258 Aries 9, Lambda Arietis
    [Show full text]
  • 1455189355674.Pdf
    THE STORYTeller’S THESAURUS FANTASY, HISTORY, AND HORROR JAMES M. WARD AND ANNE K. BROWN Cover by: Peter Bradley LEGAL PAGE: Every effort has been made not to make use of proprietary or copyrighted materi- al. Any mention of actual commercial products in this book does not constitute an endorsement. www.trolllord.com www.chenaultandgraypublishing.com Email:[email protected] Printed in U.S.A © 2013 Chenault & Gray Publishing, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Storyteller’s Thesaurus Trademark of Cheanult & Gray Publishing. All Rights Reserved. Chenault & Gray Publishing, Troll Lord Games logos are Trademark of Chenault & Gray Publishing. All Rights Reserved. TABLE OF CONTENTS THE STORYTeller’S THESAURUS 1 FANTASY, HISTORY, AND HORROR 1 JAMES M. WARD AND ANNE K. BROWN 1 INTRODUCTION 8 WHAT MAKES THIS BOOK DIFFERENT 8 THE STORYTeller’s RESPONSIBILITY: RESEARCH 9 WHAT THIS BOOK DOES NOT CONTAIN 9 A WHISPER OF ENCOURAGEMENT 10 CHAPTER 1: CHARACTER BUILDING 11 GENDER 11 AGE 11 PHYSICAL AttRIBUTES 11 SIZE AND BODY TYPE 11 FACIAL FEATURES 12 HAIR 13 SPECIES 13 PERSONALITY 14 PHOBIAS 15 OCCUPATIONS 17 ADVENTURERS 17 CIVILIANS 18 ORGANIZATIONS 21 CHAPTER 2: CLOTHING 22 STYLES OF DRESS 22 CLOTHING PIECES 22 CLOTHING CONSTRUCTION 24 CHAPTER 3: ARCHITECTURE AND PROPERTY 25 ARCHITECTURAL STYLES AND ELEMENTS 25 BUILDING MATERIALS 26 PROPERTY TYPES 26 SPECIALTY ANATOMY 29 CHAPTER 4: FURNISHINGS 30 CHAPTER 5: EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS 31 ADVENTurer’S GEAR 31 GENERAL EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS 31 2 THE STORYTeller’s Thesaurus KITCHEN EQUIPMENT 35 LINENS 36 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
    [Show full text]