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Episode: 1392
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Title: HPR1392: Beginner's guide to the night sky
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1392/hpr1392.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:43:13
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---
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We'll be back soon in a year
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Hello and welcome to the first episode in a brand new podcast called A Beginner's Guide
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to the Night Sky, with me McNalloo, also known as Andrew. It's been well or good number
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of decades that I've been interested in astronomy and it's been at least two decades that
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I've been giving lectures in astronomy in a professional capacity and given that I've
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done a few other podcasts I thought it was high time that I did one in my home ground
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which is astronomy. So these aren't going to be lectures as such, you don't mean them
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like that but a personal view on how I see the night sky, the stars, the planets, the
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galaxies, the universe, the whole lot of it, informed and possibly misinformed by all the
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scientific information that we've gleaned about it in the last 100 years. So let me start
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as a personal journey with my own recollection of first looking at the night sky. It's a rather
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strange memory. It involves looking up at the stars and also looking up at the same time
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at snowflakes that were falling down. Now this is a childhood memory, I can date it to about the
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years where I was five, six or seven, I can't be precisely sure when it was and like all memories
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it's probably unreliable especially in that it's impossible that it was snowing and that I was
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seeing the stars at the same time. Well it's nearly impossible because if it's snowing it'll be
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cloudy and you can't see the stars. Now it is just about possible that there's a gap in the clouds
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or something like that but that's not in fact what I think happened. I think that associated with
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this memory I have a memory of it being a snowy evening, snow had fallen and I was in the back
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garden of my parents' second house which is how I know roughly when this occurred and I was looking
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up at the sky because I discovered that if I reached up and grabbed this washing line that was
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strong between two posts and if I grabbed it and released it and it pinged up into the air then I
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would get a shower of little snowflakes and therefore I could watch. It's snow lit by the moonlight
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whilst the stars were in the background. This is quite a vivid memory that I have. Now there's
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more than just a childhood memory there. I think it's the first valuable point that you can make
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about the night sky is that we don't really look up. Most of us don't look up or the best we look
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up very rarely and in fact our brains are not really geared to look at the night sky and it's
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confusing for us in a number of ways and we can illustrate that with a simple illusion. If you look
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at the rising moon and I'm looking at the window right now and the sun has just set
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20th of November when I am in the Northern Hemisphere Glasgow in Scotland, United Kingdom,
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sun has just set, it's what, I don't know, 25 to 5 Greenwich mean time, universal time. The moon is
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just rising and while it's sitting there on the horizon it appears larger than it normally does.
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Specifically it appears larger than it does when the moon is higher above the horizon so if I come
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back in a few hours time I'll be quite satisfied that the moon is now at pretty much normal size
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again but for some reason the moon appears to be larger when it's near the horizon. Now you might
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be tempted to conclude this is an atmospheric effect and you could test this by taking a series of
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photographs of the moon and then superimposing them which is a trivial task using modern software
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and what you would find is that you could draw two neat lines on either side of the moon as it
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rose up through the sky and those two lines would not get any closer together or further apart
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as the night wore on. In other words the moon isn't any larger or smaller at different heights
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in the sky. So that would rule out an atmospheric effect. In fact it's actually a sensory effect,
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it's the brain plus eyes processing the information that makes us think the moon looks larger when
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it's low and that's a symptom of the fact that our brain is really geared up for terrestrial viewing
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and not for staining up into the sky. So when with our eyes we look up into the sky we see the night
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sky but we have no intuitive idea what distances things are at. So for example if I would have
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hold my fist up next to a street light and next to the street light was the moon and next to the
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moon was Jupiter and next to Jupiter was a bright star like Aldebaran then all of these things could
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be in some senses close to each other as my eye saw them as I viewed it maybe within a few degrees
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of each other in fact but the objects involved are at quite different distances and indeed that is
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the case in astronomy and we really have no intuitive way of telling when we're just looking at
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the sky what distance an object is all our usual cues that we do in everyday life the size of
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a known object the graying out effect of the atmosphere the fact that we have binocular vision
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two eyes that's of no use to us at all when we're looking at astronomical objects and in fact when
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we look up at the sky we see groups of stars there the constellations and the constellations are
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groups of stars that just happen to be near each other in the sky and form some kind of shape the
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stars in the constellations are in fact nowhere near each other and it's interesting that throughout
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history that different peoples in the earth different civilizations different tribes
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did him back thousands of years have looked up at some parts of the skies and they've interpreted
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the same pattern of stars in much the same way and the most striking example is of Orion now Orion
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is a constellation that many people will be familiar with if not just type Orion and you've
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into a search engine and you'll soon find find it um but Orion is very noticeably like the figure
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of a man uh there's shoulders there's feet and there's a belt okay you have to use a little bit
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of imagination but civilizations at different parts different parts of the earth looked up and
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identified Orion with a human figure even though those civilizations couldn't have been in cultural
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contact let alone any kind of direct contact uh up to thousands of years ago
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and it's worth casting our minds over those stretches of time to try and imagine what the very first
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humans as we would know them on the earth might have thought of the night sky so these humans haven't
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yet got cave painting perhaps they haven't even got to scratching out shapes with a stick in the
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sand if so then the sky is their only picture book is their only source of shared art and so it's
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not too surprising that the night sky still has quite a resonant mythological relevance to our
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modern society it has probably since the first humans looked up at it but uh extends just beyond
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the constellations of course because the sky changes as the earth turns giving us day and night
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sun rising and setting all stars were rising set too so the whole sky it looks like it's moving
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because we're on this revolving globe called the earth and if you look at particular star you'll
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notice that it rises earlier from night to night so if you take a particular star you'll find
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that it rises four minutes earlier tomorrow night than it does tonight and that incidentally is
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because that the earth has moved a little bit further around in its orbit anyway that was not
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known to the first people to look up at the sky but they were aware that the sky was changing
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and so the picture book the pictures of joining the dots in the sky that they could talk about
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and share whatever way they could in these early days it was it was book it had pages that turned
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from night to night but more obviously from month to month or season to season however you divided
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up the year but not only that you had objects that moved through the sky the moon most obviously
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possessed the brightest would appear in a different patch of the sky night after night
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and the planets would also move through those same patches of the sky this band of stars or
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constellations that encircle the earth through which the moon the planets and the sun move
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we call zodiac and there's 12 such constellations and you'd be familiar with most of their names
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Taurus, Pisces, Ares, Capricornus, Sagittarius, Aquicoon but they should be
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fairly familiar to you when I say them and they're all important because objects of our solar system
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pass through these but to the early people on the earth these were far more significance than
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just objects in our solar system we didn't know about them as being that of course
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they interpret them as being gods or dieties that could walk amongst the stars that had the freedom
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to walk amongst the stars so you have for example Mars being tinged red quite obviously in the sky
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Mars is identified as a god of war 80s and other mythologies Venus a bright and beautiful object
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never far from the sun in the evening or the morning sky the goddess of beauty Venus aphrodite
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closest to the sun fleeting and hard to see but fast moving the planet Mercury also known as Hermes
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and the slow moving majestic but very bright object that can be at any position in the sky with
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respect to the sun not constrained by the bright sun Jupiter the king of the gods also known as Zeus
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and so these planets animate the sky and have populate the story but with characters for the
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the ancient people upon this earth now these days we don't believe in mythology well most of us
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don't believe in that mythology we might believe in other mythology and I personally don't believe in
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any particular mythology and some of these myths that are associated with the stars seem somewhat
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ridiculous now did the Egyptians really identify the the Great Bear or Sir Major known as the Big
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Dipper once I did the Atlantic but where I am most commonly known as the Plow did the Egyptians
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really look at that and see an elephant with a crocodile's head and a man standing in its back
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what were they on so the pictures in the sky are certainly subjective to us but as I'm tempted
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to laugh at some of these old mythologies and it seems incredible to me that astrology is
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applied in popular culture just now could have any credence I can't dismiss their importance
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and significance to science in history because they are artifacts from the early stages of the
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scientific process and the scientific process in some senses being a refined version of the way
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humans think anyway and the first part of the scientific process is just noticing that there's
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something interesting there and then you collect observations you notice which constellations say
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the moon passes through and then you start to classify them you start to give the constellations
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names and you start to record how many days it takes for Jupiter to move from one point in the sky
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to another and so forth and slowly you build up theories which you then go back and test against
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your observations and of course it took us from the first humans look here at the stars and
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see those pictures took us millennia to figure out there was a pattern to these motions and then
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it's only in the last few hundred years that we developed any kind of mathematical scientific
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theory to describe them but nevertheless astrology and just being interested in the
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stars whatever reason does sit at the base of modern science and although I wouldn't like to think
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of modern science being anything like astrology perhaps one day the cornerstones of
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our modern scientific understanding such as relativity quantum mechanics both very important
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in the subject of astronomy now or should I say astrophysics now perhaps in thousands of years
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time maybe millions of years time humans will look back at on those as quaint
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rather well pseudo scientific ideas that work quite far away from the reality of the universe
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as we may view astrology today
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well there's a lot more I could say about the various things I've touched on in particular
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at distance there's a lot more discussion I could talk about parallax and I will talk about parallax
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but not in this episode I want to keep these episodes nice and short so next time in episode two
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of beginner's guide to the night sky I'm going to start exploring the constellations and
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discussing the free and open source software still area and also some apps that you can use on
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your phone so that you can begin to find your way around the night sky well that's it for this time
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and please visit the website astro.micnellu.net and you'll find other episodes of this podcast show
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notes links to other interesting things and also the license under which this podcast is released
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which will be some kind of creative comments license having quite the side of which one yet
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but that will appear in the website so thank you very much for listening and I hope to
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talk to you again in episode two
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our
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we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday
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today's show like all our shows was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself
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if you ever consider recording a podcast then visit our website to find out how easy it really is
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club
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