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Connie Walker

National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO)

Dark Skies Rangers and Globe at Night

Programs

Activities from the

Our Stellar Constellations are becoming

Urban Constellations

How to bring awareness & a desire to slow down the increase in light pollution?

(Cinzano, Falchi, and Elvidge 2001)

Los Angeles in 1908 & 1988, as seen from

Mt. Wilson Observatory

With Light Pollution & Without

With and without outdoor lights on…

http://youtu.be/dd82jaztFlo

Energy, Safety & Cost

Human Health Wildlife

Light Pollution affects…

Astronomical Research

Examples of Good & Bad Lighting

and How Many Stars You Can See

8

Dark Skies Rangers Activities

www.globeatnight.org/dsr/

•  Explorer -  Light Shielding Demo -  Spectra of Lights -  School Outdoor Lighting Audit

•  Protector �  Turtle Hatching Activity

•  Advocate �  Magnitude Reader �  Finding Orion, Cygnus, etc. �  GLOBE at Night campaign

!  Ranger (Students present results.)

Dark Skies Rangers Activities

www.globeatnight.org/dsr/

grade levels overview purpose objectives time involved materials and tools preparation/prerequisites

background information lesson sequence student worksheets extensions questions integrations teacher resources

Activities include:

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Light Shielding Demo

The Light Shielding Demo

!  Simulates a night time scene using �  A small city map �  A portable planetarium to

project stars on the ceiling

�  A simulated streetlight �  Figurines and cars �  A “shield”

The Light Shielding Demo

Unshielded and Shielded Lighting

3 Types of Light Pollution

•  Glare -  Too much background light -  Reduces visibility

•  Light Trespass -  Light spills into an area where it

is unneeded and/or unwanted

•  Sky Glow -  Upward directed light reflects

off of particles in the sky reducing visibility of stars

By Using Shielded Fixtures

You…

•  Shine the light down.

•  See the effect, not the source.

•  Light only where and when needed.

•  Don’t over light.

•  Use energy efficient sources.

And therefore…

•  Minimize glare, light directed upward, energy use & cost

•  Maximize safety and your ability to enjoy the stars.

Sequenced Activities •  Spectra of Lights -  Use the diffraction gratings & spectroscopes

to examine different types of lights. - Discuss the similarities and differences found.

•  School Outdoor Lighting Audit An activity to audit the outdoor lighting around a school building to evaluate the energy efficiency & provide better solutions

Compact Fluorescent Incandescent Halogen

Spectra of Lights

Light Sources

LAMPS and FIXTURES

Types of Lamps •  Incandescent

•  Fluorescent

•  Light Emitting Diode (LED)

• High Intensity Discharge

Compact Fluorescent Lamp

LED Fluorescent

High Intensity Discharge

Incandescent

High Intensity Discharge Lights

•  Including: Mercury Vapor, Metal Halide, High Pressure Sodium and Low Pressure Sodium

Mercury Vapor

Metal Hallide

Low-Pressure Sodium High-Pressure

Sodium

Types of Luminaires

!  Column mounted fittings: used for streets, car parking, cycle tracks and pedestrian areas

!  Wall mounted lanterns: used most commonly for security

!  Lighting bollards: used for pathway & area lighting.

!  Recessed fittings: used for pathways, or where buried in the ground for uplighting structures, trees & other incidents.

EXAMPLES OF GOOD AND BAD LIGHTING

EXAMPLES OF GOOD AND BAD LIGHTING

EXAMPLES OF GOOD AND BAD LIGHTING

EXAMPLE OF BAD LIGHTING

EXAMPLES OF GOOD AND BAD LIGHTING

EXAMPLES OF GOOD AND BAD LIGHTING

Credit: Monrad Engineering, Inc. & Musco Lighting

Credit: Monrad Engineering, Inc. & Musco Lighting

EXAMPLES OF GOOD AND BAD LIGHTING

37

School Outdoor Lighting Audit

School Outdoor Lighting Audit

•  Targeted at secondary school students

•  Encourages students to monitor lights in their schools and neighborhoods

•  Students learn about -  Lighting design -  Energy consumption -  Environmental issues

•  Gives students the tools needed to take action to help improve lighting design

Outdoor Lighting Audit

Data Gathering and Observation •  Students choose an area of campus or a neighborhood •  Inventory the lights •  Identify types of light, shielding (if any) and illumination area

Calculating the Energy Used, etc •  Calculate the energy consumption, cost and CO2 emission

Graphing the Energy Used, etc •  Graph Luxmeter and Sky Quality Meter data with distance •  Include Photos of Spectra (taken with camera & diffraction

grating) Planning a New Lighting Plan

•  Students use findings to design improved lighting plan •  Includes more efficient lighting and reducing light pollution

"The Night You Hatched" and

"Do They See the Light?"

Wildlife Activity

•  “The Night You Hatched” An activity where students role play sea turtles and experience the effect of light pollution as they try to make it to the ocean after hatching

Children explore the impact of light pollution

on sea turtles

and other wildlife.

"Constellation at Your Fingertips" and "Magnitude Readers"

Preparing for Globe at Night

!  “Constellation at Your Fingertips”

An activity with glow-in-the-dark puffy paints on transparencies (& a UV light) to visualize the constellation, Orion (or Cygnus), at night

!  “How Light Pollution Affects the Stars” (Magnitude Reader)

An activity on how many stars are lost due to light pollution, and the concept of stellar magnitudes and limiting magnitudes

Globe at Night

Globe at Night http://www.globeatnight.org

•  Citizen-scientists record the brightness of the night sky by visually matching the appearance of a constellation like Orion with star maps of progressively fainter stars or using meters to obtain more precise measurements.

•  Measurements are reported on-line and resulting maps of all worldwide observations are created.

•  Over the last 8 years of 10-day GLOBE at Night campaigns, close to 100,000 measurements have been contributed from over 115 countries.

Globe at Night http://www.globeatnight.org

Steps to Observe (unaided eye observations)

•  Step #1. Note your latitude, longitude, date & time

• Step #2 Find the constellation Orion; note sky conditions

•  Step #3. Match night sky to a magnitude chart

•  Step #4. Report your obser- vations on-line

•  Step #5. Compare your observation(s) to thousands around the world

http://www.globeatnight.org/observe.html

Match Night Sky to a Magnitude Chart. Estimate cloud coverage. Fill out the observation sheet.

Simple Report Form

Cell Phone

Desktop/ Laptop

Measurements •  are downloadable as datasets in various formats

•  can be examined online via Google Earth or other tools

•  used as the basis of research in a classroom or science fair project or even to inform the development of public policy

Tablet/Pad

GLOBE AT NIGHT Citizen Science Campaign

To Measure Night Sky Brightness

globeatnight.org

2014 campaign dates:

January 20 - 29, 2014 February 19 - 28, 2014 March 21 - 30, 2014 April 20 - 29, 2014 May 19 - 28, 2014

Globe at Night data from Tucson

To collect lots of Globe at Night data more efficiently, Tucson participates in “Adopting a Street”.

Projects Done by Students

High school students with amateur astronomers from Norman, Oklahoma

Elementary & middle school students near South Bend, IN

Tucson

Behavior of light pollution over time in and around Tucson

Research Experiences for Undergraduates

Program

!

Preference of Lesser Long Nosed bats to avoid Tucson city center

Projects

Students can •  Compare data over time (changes,

trends)

•  Compare data on population density

•  Use in a lighting survey

•  Search for dark sky oases

•  Monitor ordinance compliance

•  Study affects of light pollution on animals or plants

•  Study affects on human health

•  Study affects on safety, security, energy consumption, cost

Tucson, Arizona, USA

Connie Walker National Optical Astronomy Observatory cwalker@noao.edu 520-318-8535

CONTACT INFORMATION

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