Tag - David Levy

Meteors Scratch the Sky

Despite what you read online, it is possible to think of meteor watching as one of the most boring things you can do with the night sky.   No cosmic connection, no postulating about the origins of the Universe, no understanding of what dark matter might entail.  When we look for meteors, we are in our own celestial backyard.  We usually do not...

Skyward

NGC 663         One of the first astronomy books I ever read was John Benson Sidgwick’s Introducing Astronomy.  Thew book was published in 1959, a year after his death.  In it was a large section in which each constellation was introduced, along with interesting things to see in each one.  I particularly recall Cassiopeia, in which, between the...

A little religion, but not too much.

As an undergraduate student at Acadia University, in the Canadian maritime province of Nova Scotia, my geology professor was trying to teach us about the water cycle.  Despite reams of published evidence, the best document he could come up with was this beautiful line from Ecclesiastes: “All the rivers run into the sea, Yet the sea is not full...

A Magic Beagle and the Stars

It is my honor to introduce you, dear readers, this month to my latest book, “Clipper, Cosmos, and Children: Finding the Eureka moment.”  It is a book specially designed to inspire young people to enjoy the night sky.  Whether you are physically young, or even just young at heart, this new book is meant to inspire you to reach for the stars. This...