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  • George Seabroke – The Gaia Revolution

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Gaia is a European Space Agency satellite that has been mapping individual stars in our Milky Way Galaxy since its launch in 2013. I will explain how its 3 trillion measurements of 2 billion stars is causing a revolution in astronomy. Science highlights will include the most recently discovered black hole (Gaia BH3) and how […]

  • Damian Hardwick – 3 short talks

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Wolvas member Damian Hardwick presents a series of three short talks, titled:● Max Planck meeting the Chancellor.● Sending Humans to Mars● Comet Halley is coming the 40th anniversary.

  • Philip Price – EXPLORING JUPITER (PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE)

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom (Speaker remote via Zoom) Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    With the recent launch of NASA’s Europa Clipper mission, this presentation looks back at the history of spacecraft that have visited the mighty planet, the challenges they faced and the discoveries they made. Note: Philip will be presenting this talk remotely via Zoom

  • Dr Helen Mason OBE – The A-X of Solar Flares

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom (Speaker remote via Zoom) Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Note: Dr Mason will be presenting this talk remotely via zoom The Sun has given us quite a few X class flares recently and even some beautiful displays of the aurora in the UK. During solar flares, explosive releases of energy, the plasma temperature can reach as high as 10MK or even more. Large flares […]

  • Cancelled

    Due to work commitments our planned speaker for this talk is unavailable. We have therefore regrettably cancelled this event.

    Free
  • Dr Andrew Gascoyne – Dark Spots, Bright Stories: A Journey Through the History of Sunspots

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Dr Andrew Gascoyne from the University of Wolverhampton will give a talk on sunspots: Sunspots have long served as a window into the dynamic processes of our nearest star.  This talk delves into the rich history of sunspot observations, from early Chinese and Islamic records to the telescopic breakthroughs of Galileo and Scheiner. We’ll examine […]

  • Damain Hardwick – The Steady State Theory

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    We take a trip down memory lane for a retrospective look at the steady state theory. Starting with its origins and how it compared to the big bang theory. The scientists who gave it their endorsement, and how three key discoveries proved that the theory, which looked convincing on paper, was completely wrong.

  • AGM then Steve Wootton: The Constellations of Canis Major & Minor

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    The society’s 2026 Annual General Meeting, followed with short talks presented by the society’s current Vice President, Steve Wootton, on the constellations of Canis Major and Canis Minor.

  • Linda Manas – Trigonometry in Astronomy: Measuring the Earth and the Moon

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Society member Linda Manas presents a talk on Trigonometry in Astronomy: Measuring the Earth and the Moon. Linda will discuss early trigonometrical methods of finding the Earth’s tilt, latitude and circumference, the use of trigonometry and lunar and solar eclipses by Aristarchus and Hipparchus to find the distance to and size of the moon, and […]

  • Robin Scagell – City Astronomy

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom (Speaker remote via Zoom) Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Most of the UK population live either in a city or town, or near enough to one, that light pollution is a problem for both observers and imagers. Robin Scagell, Vice President of the SPA, has seen the problem escalate over the years. But whether you are a visual observer with a small telescope, or […]

  • Mike Frost – Who’s Who in the Moon

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    I am the ninth director of the British Astronomical Association’s Historical Section. The first director was a solar astronomer called Mary Evershed (nee Orr). She was the editor of the historical section’s first memoir, Who’s Who in the Moon – a series of potted biographies of everyone who had a lunar crater named after them. […]

  • Duncan Willis – The Space Shuttle; Past, Present & Future

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    This talk will explore the Space Shuttle, from its origins, its missions, how it contributed to astronomy and on to current and future Shuttles.

  • Dr Steve Barrett – The ABC of Stellar Evolution

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom (Speaker remote via Zoom) Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    A look at the birth, life and death of stars. What are the three factors (the ABC) that determine why stars are the way they are and why they evolve the way they do? Note: Dr Barrett will be presenting his talk remotely over Zoom

  • Andrew Thornett – Getting Started in Radio Astronomy

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Have you ever looked at the clouds and wanted to throw your expensive equipment in the bin? Here in the UK, much of the time, a cardboard tube would be as effective as a Takahashi – cloud, rain, light pollution: it is enough to make you scream! How about the cost of all that astrophotography […]

  • Gary Poyner – ‘T Corona Borealis – The Jewel in the Crown

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    ‘Nova Corona Borealis 1866 was the first Nova to have its spectrum examined.  Eighty years later in 1946 the Nova erupted again, causing great excitement.  Now, after a further eighty years of observations in all wavelengths, we eagerly await the next eruption.  This is the story of its discovery in 1866 and 1946, and what we might […]

  • Kieron Nixon – Understanding Special Relativity (without the maths). 

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    Special Relativity Without the Maths (or How to Fit a Metre Stick into a Matchbox)You might think it’s a long way down the road to the chemist’s. You might even have noticed the faster you run, the quicker you get there. Have you ever noticed the faster you run, the closer the chemist gets? No? […]

  • Fran Bagenal- NASA’s Juno Mission to Jupiter

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom (Speaker remote via Zoom) Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    NASA’s JUNO mission was launched in August 2011 and has been in orbit over Jupiter’s poles since 4th July 2016, its mission to understand the origin and evolution of the planet. Underneath its dense cloud cover, Jupiter safeguards secrets to the fundamental processes and conditions that governed our solar system during its formation. As our […]

  • Simon Banton – The Astronomy of Stonehenge

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    This talk will investigate the astronomical alignments at Stonehenge – both those that are academically accepted and also some others not generally known about. Do they all exist? Are they accurate? Was there really an eclipse prediction mechanism? The Altar Stone has recently been found to have been sourced from somewhere in NE Scotland and […]

  • Simon Holbeche: The Women who discovered what stars are made of.

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom (Speaker remote via Zoom) Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    101 years ago, a 24-year-old English woman had her astrophysics PhD published based on her work at Harvard College Observatory. It bought together 50 years of effort by Harvard’s computers and shattered the contemporary view of stellar astronomy. The talk guides you through these 5 decades and the trials and tribulations for the women involved. […]

  • Jacco van Loon: Mysterious matter in interstellar space

    Hybrid: University of Wolverhampton & Zoom Room MA030, Wulfruna Building, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, United Kingdom

    The light from stars is intercepted by molecules in deep space but we do not know what the majority of these particles are. They appear as absorption features in the spectra of stars and are therefore called “Diffuse Interstellar Bands”. They were first discovered by  Mary Lea Heger around 1920, a find, I would argue, […]