Annual Meeting of the Four Corners Section of the APS
Volume 55, Number 9
Friday–Saturday, October 15–16, 2010;
Ogden, Utah
Session J1: Plenary Session III
10:30 AM–11:20 AM,
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Room: Ballroom B
Chair: William Fairbank, Colorado State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.4CF.J1.1
Abstract: J1.00001 : Our Light or Starlight? Citizen Science, Public Involvement and You
10:30 AM–11:20 AM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Constance E. Walker
(National Optical Astronomy Observatory)
With half of the world's population now living in cities, many
urban dwellers have never experienced the wonderment of
pristinely dark skies and maybe never will. Light pollution is
obscuring people's long-standing natural heritage to view stars.
The GLOBE at Night program (www.globeatnight.org) is an
international citizen-science campaign to raise public awareness
of the impact of light pollution by encouraging everyone
everywhere to measure local levels of night sky brightness and
contribute observations online to a world map. In the last 5
years, GLOBE at Night has been the most productive public light
pollution monitoring campaign, collecting over 52,000
observations in a two-week period annually. This year, during the
moonless two weeks in March, the campaign set a record high of
over 17,800 measurements from people in 86 countries.
Foundational resources are available to facilitate the public's
participation in promoting dark skies awareness. The GLOBE at
Night website explains clearly the simple-to-participate-in 5
step program and offers background information and interactive
games on key concepts. The program has been expanded to include
trainings of the general public, but especially educators in
schools, museums and science centers, in unique ways. Education
kits for dark skies awareness have been distributed at the
training workshops. The kit includes material for a light
shielding demonstration, a digital Sky Quality Meter and ``Dark
Skies Rangers'' activities. The activities are on how unshielded
light wastes energy, how light pollution affects wildlife and how
you can participate in a citizen-science star-hunt like GLOBE at
Night. In addition, projects are being developed for what to do
with the data once it is taken. The GLOBE at Night data from
different years can be compared to look for trends over time or
with population density maps. The data can also be used to search
for dark sky oases or to monitor lighting ordinance compliance.
Most recently the data has been compared with telemetry of the
Lesser Long-Nose Bat near Tucson, Arizona to examine whether or
not the bats are preferentially staying in darker areas.
The presentation will highlight the education and outreach value
of the program's resources and outcomes in communicating
awareness with the public and attracting young people to study
science.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.4CF.J1.1