About Astronomy Day
Astronomy Day is a grass roots movement to share the joy of astronomy with
the general population - "Bringing Astronomy to the People." On Astronomy
Day, thousands of people who have never looked through a telescope will have
an opportunity to see first hand what has so many amateur and professional
astronomers all excited. Astronomy clubs, science museums, observatories,
universities, planetariums, laboratories, libraries, and nature centers host
special events and activities to acquaint their population with local
astronomical resources and facilities. It is an astronomical PR event that
helps highlight ways the general public can get involved with astronomy - or
at least get some of their questions about astronomy answered. Astronomy
Week is the same concept as Astronomy Day except seven times longer.
Where
Astronomy Day events take place at hundreds of sites across the United
States. Internationally England, Canada, New Zealand, Finland, Sweden, the
Philippines, Argentina, Malaysia, New Guinea plus many other countries have
hosted Astronomy Day activities. Each location plans and executes events
that work best for their local area.
What
Activities have included talks by astronauts, astronomers and NASA
personnel, Moon rocks, a Moon gravity simulator, games, prizes, astronomical
food, scale models of the solar system, space hardware, space ballets and
poetry and, of course, actual outdoor observing (daytime and nighttime) with
a telescope. Daytime observations include SAFE ways to observe the Sun. Many
organizations host elaborate exhibits at shopping malls, museums, nature
centers, libraries, etc. Teachers have used Astronomy Day to promote the
study of astronomy with their classes.
History
Astronomy Day was born in California in 1973. Doug Berger, then president of
the Astronomical Association of Northern California, decided that rather
than try to entice people to travel long distances to visit observatory open
houses, they would set up telescopes closer to where the people were - busy
locations - urban locations like street corners, shopping malls, parks, etc.
His strategy paid off. Not only did Astronomy Day go over with a bang, not
only did the public find out about the astronomy club, they found out about
future observatory open houses. Since the public got a chance to look
through a portable telescope, they were hooked. Then wanted to see what went
on at the bigger telescopes, so they turned out in droves at the next
observatory open house.
Reprinted with permission, the Astronomical League.