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JRASC 2012 February

February 2012 Issue Contents / table des matières

Feature Articles / Articles de fond

  • An Eclipse of Our Own by Jay Anderson
  • An Early American Zodiac by Robert S. McIvor
  • Science Marches Quietly Forward at Trent University’s Department of Physics and Astronomy by John Crossen

Columns / Rubriques

  • On Another Wavelength: The Galaxies of Pegasus by David Garner
  • Cosmic Contemplations: The Mod Dob Job and the Rat Dob by Jim Chung
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TAS Minutes 1868-69

The Toronto Astronomical Society Minute Book for 1868-69, including some newspaper clippings contained therein.

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London Program 1930

 

THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY OF CANADA

(LONDON CENTRE)

PROGRAM 1930

 

10 Jan - Theories Of Cosmic Evolution  - Prof. H.R. Kingston

14 Feb - Cosmic Rays or the Birth of an Atom - Prof. R.C Dearle

14 Mar - The Interior of the Earth -:Earthquakes - Prof. J.W.Russell

11 Apr - Eclipses (with special reference to the eclipses of this month) - Prof. H.R. Kingston

9 May - Telling Time By The Stars - Dr. John Dearness

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APST Constitution

Astronomical & Physical Society of Toronto (APST) Constitution and By-laws, 1890.

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Auroral Map 19580211

11 February 1958 Synoptic Auroral Map


By early 1958, under the auspices of the International Geophysical Year, the National Research Council had compiled a list of amateur contributors to an auroral research program. The period of maximum solar activity in an 11-year cycle had peaked in late 1957, and Helen Sawyer Hogg reported in her Toronto Star column of June 7th, 1958 that the relative sunspot number for December 24th and 25th was 355. This was the highest value ever observed, exceeding the value of 353 on May 17th 1778.

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Kuiper Lecture 1959

Kuiper Public Lecture at AAS Toronto Meeting 1959


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McMaster Planetarium Opening

On 5 November 1949 the original planetarium at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario was publicly opened for the first time.  Armand Spitz, whose Spitz Laboratories had supplied the Model A-1 projection system, was a guest at the opening and spoke about 'The Value of Astronomy to the Layman.' Members of the Hamilton, Guelph and Toronto RASC centres, as well as the national RASC president Andrew Thomson, were also present. At the time, the dome above the projector was only a parachute hung from the ceiling, but the system was improved many times over the following years.

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RASC-AAVSO Joint Dinner

Spring 1940 was the first occasion the American Association of Variable Star Observers held their meetings outside of the United States. The meetings were held at the University of Toronto, and included a paper session at the David Dunlap Observatory and a garden party (by special invitation) at Don Alda Farm hosted by Mrs. Dunlap. The meetings concluded with a formal dinner in the Great Hall of Hart House jointly hosted by the AAVSO and the RASC.

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Copernicus 400th

400th Anniversary Copernicus Event

On April 26th, 1943 the University of Toronto sponsored a Convocation Hall event to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the death of Nikolas Copernicus, the discoverer of the heliocentric model of the solar system. The event was supportive of Toronto's Polish community in the darkest days of the Second World War. Members of the RASC were encouraged to attend, and Prof. Chant participated in the event.

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