The Delaware Gazette

A place to stand

Of all the sights vis­i­ble in the night­time sky, none is more awe-inspiring than the view of the Milky Way galaxy.

Star birth, star death

The night sky reminds us that we inhabit but a small por­tion of space and time, a tiny frag­ment of our vast galaxy, a brief moment in an even vaster uni­verse. Humans live a cen­tury or so. Stars last 100-million cen­turies. They are born in huge clouds of hydro­gen gas and dust called emis­sion nebulae.

Fredrich Bessel measures the universe

The expe­ri­enced stargazer will rec­og­nize the star num­bered “61” in the con­stel­la­tion Cygnus, the Swan, almost imme­di­ately. The begin­ner seems to have absolutely no rea­son at all to seek it out. This rel­a­tively faint point of light is, after all, not one of the con­stel­la­tions on the imag­i­nary lines that iden­tify the Swan’s shape. Why bother?

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