Light Pollution

General physics and astronomy discussions not directly related to Celestia
Topic author
Colin_hutcheson
Posts: 19
Joined: 01.02.2007
With us: 17 years 9 months
Location: Birmingham, UK

Light Pollution

Post #1by Colin_hutcheson » 19.03.2007, 16:00

Hi guys, i don't normally sign petitions, but this is one which may help we astronomers. It may lead to a reduction of every atronomers' gripes: light pollution. Help us reclaim the night sky as it should be seen. For details follow the link:

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/starry-night

Colin
Colin Hutcheson
Planetarium Presenter
_____________________
Thinktank Trust
Thinktank Trading Limited
Millennium Point Curzon Street
Birmingham
B4 7XG

Registered charity no. 1061898

julesstoop
Posts: 408
Joined: 27.03.2002
With us: 22 years 7 months
Location: Leiden, The Netherlands

Post #2by julesstoop » 19.03.2007, 16:27

Just fyi:

You must be a British citizen or resident to sign the petition.
Lapinism matters!
http://settuno.com/

buggs_moran
Posts: 835
Joined: 27.09.2004
With us: 20 years 1 month
Location: Massachusetts, USA

Post #3by buggs_moran » 19.03.2007, 18:02

Bollocks...

I have British ancestry, I should be able to sign to bring you dark skies.
Homebrew:
WinXP Pro SP2
Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe
AMD Athlon XP 3000/333 2.16 GHz
1 GB Crucial RAM
80 GB WD SATA drive
ATI AIW 9600XT 128M

STARNIGHTER
Posts: 64
Joined: 04.06.2006
With us: 18 years 5 months
Location: Midwest(USA)

Post #4by STARNIGHTER » 20.03.2007, 13:04

Well, I hope your efforts make a difference over there. Air and light pollution have always been a big issues here in the USA, but in my experience absolutely nothing will bring back the clear skies we used to have decades ago. I agree that we should try to avoid further pollution, but I'm afraid that increasing populations, expanding cities with more and more lights, have made those long ago starry nights rare. There are remote places one can still go with fairly good observing skies, but such places are becoming more and more rare!

This is sad, especially for young people who are interested in astronomy. They may never see the kind of star packed skies that we did at their age.

Encouraging, nonetheless, that efforts to at least try to help are happening. Good luck to you!

Sky Guy
Posts: 13
Joined: 14.11.2006
With us: 18 years
Location: Palomar Mountain

Post #5by Sky Guy » 27.03.2007, 20:02

STARNIGHTER wrote:in my experience absolutely nothing will bring back the clear skies we used to have decades ago. I agree that we should try to avoid further pollution, but I'm afraid that increasing populations, expanding cities with more and more lights, have made those long ago starry nights rare. There are remote places one can still go with fairly good observing skies, but such places are becoming more and more rare!

This is sad, especially for young people who are interested in astronomy. They may never see the kind of star packed skies that we did at their age.


Nor did we have the kind of skies that our grand parents had.

I attended an interesting talk at the annual meeting of the International Dark Sky Association earlier this month on "generational environmental amnesia". Studies indicate that people tend to think that the environmental situation that they experienced as a kid was pretty good even if wasn't. They are able to see the changes (usually negative) in their lifetime but don't see the bigger picture of how things were before.
This very much applies to light pollution. As STARNIGHTER points out really dark sites are becoming quite rare. Most people have no idea what they are missing.


:cry:


Return to “Physics and Astronomy”