From Leybl in Israel: CCJune2023-v01
This month’s roundup: • Star Trek vs. Star Trek vs. Star Trek – Part IV • About TR-3B (the advanced plane that does not exist) Our usual tidbits from the Web. – Your editor, Leybl Botwinik
From Leybl in Israel: CCJune2023-v01
This month’s roundup: • Star Trek vs. Star Trek vs. Star Trek – Part IV • About TR-3B (the advanced plane that does not exist) Our usual tidbits from the Web. – Your editor, Leybl Botwinik
Saturday, May 18, 2024, 7:30PM
Re-discover the enchanting world of John Williams on a journey spanning four decades of the composer’s work, from Jaws to Star Wars, Superman, Raiders of the Lost Ark, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Jurassic Park, Harry Potter, and more!
Led by Maestro Francis Choiniere, an army of 81 musicians and 100 choristers will deliver moving performances of Hymn to the Fallen, Double Trouble, and the electrifying Duel of the Fates. Don’t miss out on this unique tribute to the world’s most legendary film music composer, John Williams.
A riveting orchestral experience awaits!
A new discovery of a faraway planet, published today in the journal Nature Astronomy, is bringing more science to what was once the realm of science fiction.
The new exoplanet, TOI-1338/BEBOP-1c, is a gas giant 65 times the size of Earth and more than 1,300 light years away in a binary star system — where two suns revolve around each other.
For some, it might recall a powerful scene from the original Star Wars movie — Luke Skywalker staring at the horizon, pining for a greater destiny than on the dustball of Tatooine, as the aptly named John Williams theme Binary Sunset plays in the background.
While the fictional Tatooine was alone, BEBOP-1c is the second planet discovered in the real TOI-1338 system.
“It’s quite an exciting discovery,” said Matthew Standing, post-doctoral researcher at The Open University in Milton Keynes, England, and first author of the study.
“It’s only the second multi-planetary, circumbinary system and the first-ever circumbinary planet discovered with radial velocity.”
Unpacking those terms is key to why experts think this could lay the groundwork for finding similar hidden exoplanets. But it requires understanding the chaos of such cosmic neighbourhoods and the methods used to detect exoplanets.
READ MORE https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/exoplanet-bebop1c-starwars-tatooine-1.6873158
Added today at https://efanzines.com are:
Perry Middlemiss’s Perryscope #33
Garth Spencer’s The Obdurate Eye #28
Opuntia #550, edited by Dale Speirs
Christopher J. Garcia’s The Drink Tank #448 and Claims Department #40 & #41
Octothorpe #85, a regular fannish podcast by John Coxon, Alison Scott and Liz Batty, is now on line
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Bill
A Calgary entrepreneur invented a machine to sort out trading cards. He perfected the system over two years, testing and sorting through a million cards from two major players in the collectible games market — Pokémon and Magic: The Gathering.
“The success of that prototype allowed me to apply for a grant through the province to build eight more machines,” Gordon said.
His machine, christened the PhyzBatch-9000, made its way to several game stores across Alberta, allowing the entrepreneur to set up shop with his business partner in 2021.
READ MORE https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/card-sorting-machine-trading-cards-collectibles-1.6867781
A ‘MEGA-BUBBLE’ ON THE SUN: NOAA has just released a list of highlights from young Solar Cycle 25. One of them must be seen to be believed: An X-class flare blowing a “mega-bubble” in the sun’s atmosphere. Full story and movie @ Spaceweather.com.
Above: The sun, blowing bubbles. Image credit: NOAA/GOES-16/SUVI
I am a professor at McGill University working in the area of interstellar flight. This July, we will be hosting at McGill the 8th Interstellar Symposium, the premier international forum discussing the science, engineering, and societal implications of interstellar travel.
As part of this event, we will be having a Science Fiction Author Panel that might be of interest to your members. The Science Fiction Author Panel will be free and open to the public on Tuesday, July 11 at 6:00 pm in the Delta Hotels Montreal (475 President-Kennedy Avenue, Montreal).
Please find an infographic here that describes the event, which is free and open to the public. If you feel your members would be interested, I would encourage you to distribute the existence of this event widely. You are welcome to repost this infographic on your website or social media platforms.Create appointment
Registration is required, but is very affordable at the student rate, and includes breakfast and lunch for all the days of the Symposium. The Interstellar Symposia series evolved out of the science fiction community, and we strive to keep all presentations accessible to a non-technical audience. Please feel free to distribute the conference information as well.
Thank you for assisting in promoting the 8th Interstellar Symposium and associated SF Author Panel. Hope to see some of your members at our event in July!
Regards,
Andrew Higgins
Professor, Mechanical Engineering
https://interstellarflight.space/
Chair of Local Organizing Committee
8th Interstellar Symposium
NOCTILUCENT CLOUDS ARE BACK: Last night, bright clouds of frosted meteor smoke drifted over Europe, signalling the start of the summer season for noctilucent clouds. The electric-blue forms were sighted in at least 7 countries, a number that could grow in the nights ahead as the clouds continue to spill across the Arctic Circle. Full story @ Spaceweather.com.
Solar Flare alerts: Sign up for Space Weather Alerts to receive instant text messages when strong flares are underway.
Above: Noctilucent clouds (NLCs) over Denmark on June 5, 2023. Photo credit: Valther Jørgensen