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Sheryl's Space & Science Links Site

http://sherylfranklin.com/space.html

by day and intrepid astronomy photog by night. His quest for the best images possible takes him to the depths of the Black Forest where ambient light isn't a factor. From his lone
Sheryl's Space & Science Links Site

European Virtual Museum - Links

http://www.europeanvirtualmuseum.it/Links5.htm

Bank Observatory , the astronomy research centre of the University of Manchester. Has exhibition galleries, a 150-seater Planetarium and the extensive grounds and collections of t

Jerry Oltion

https://www.jerryoltion.com/

featuring homemade astronomy equipment of all types, from simple accessories to complete telescopes. He also writes a regular science column for The Magazine of Fantasy & Scie

Jeff Duntemann's ContraPositive Diary

http://www.duntemann.com/october2008.htm

interesting in solar astronomy. I ran across a fascinating couple of homebrew radio projects , and the tube design is especially intriguing. If you understand tubes even a little

Red Rock Energy Heliostats

http://www.redrok.com/main.htm

from amateur radio and astronomy to auto racing and mechanics. One general thread is the use of electronics and computers to devise low cost smart solutions to many of the problem
High Powered Heliostat Array Concentrating Solar Collectors.

https://www.qsl.net/kd4cga/satintro.htm

https://www.qsl.net/kd4cga/satintro.htm

such as communications, astronomy, military applications, remote sensing, meteorology, geology, geography, climatology, and so on. Furthermore, the orbits they trace can indicate

Michael Covington's Daily Notebook

https://www.covingtoninnovations.com/michael/blog/0810/

Professor of Computer Science Associate Director Institute for Artificial Intelligence The University of Georgia This is a private web page, not hosted or sponsored by the Univers
This is Michael Covington's blog. Topics include computers, electronics, amateur astronomy, astrophotography, current events, and philosophical issues.

The Photosphere: Is It the Top or the Bottom of the Phenomenon We Call the Sun?

https://www.kronos-press.com/juergens/k0404-photosphere.htm

An Introduction to Astronomy , Macmillan (1906), p. 413. 9. L. Goldberg and E. Dyer, Jr., "The Sun," in Science in Space , L. Berkner and H. Odishaw, eds., McGraw-Hill (1963), p.
Article by Ralph Juergens on The Electric Sun


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