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BECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
COSMIC QUERIES
Introduction. In the gulf between the depths of human curiosity and the limits of human ignorance resides a series of questions, some of which we all have asked and all of which some of us have asked. Not all have answers. For those that do, our answers may be incomplete or inadequate. For the remaining queries, we can look around on Earth and TO FLY - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDEN PLANETARIUM: SPACE To Fly. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. April 1998. Long afflicted with a case of wing envy, human beings eventually flew—and even went ballistic. In ancient days two aviators procured to themselves wings. Daedalus flew safely through the middle air, and was duly honoured in his landing. Icarus soared upwards to the suntill
ABOUT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH About. Tyson is the fifth head since 1935 of the world-renowned Hayden Planetarium in New York City and the first occupant of its Frederick P. Rose Directorship. He is also a research associate of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History.SELECT ESSAYS
Goldilocks and the Three Planets. Water, Water. On Being Round. The Coriolis Force. The Tidal Force. The Five Points of Lagrange. Going Ballistic. On Earth As in the Heavens. The Periodic Table of theCosmos.
ON BEING ROUND
On Being Round. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. March 1997. Thanks to gravity, stars and planets are spherical. So why are there pizza-shaped galaxies and potato-shaped moons? Apart from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes with sharp angles. While many objects have peculiar shapes, the list WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL A statue of the Greek god Hermes stands atop the clock on the main façade of the Grand Central Terminal. His winged hat betrays his vocation as the speedy messenger to the gods—making him a fine icon for a center of transportation. Mercury, Hermes’s Roman counterpart, is now forever associated with the innermost planet of the solarsystem.
MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS grades 4–6 Objectives Thinking and acting like a scientist: By building an accurate three-dimensional model of a constellation, students will practice the kinds of scientific thinking that go into making predictions and creating HOME - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDENPLANETARIUM.ORGCURRICULUM VITAEPUBLICITY PHOTOSCONTACTPROFILE © 2021 Neil deGrasse TysonBECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
COSMIC QUERIES
Introduction. In the gulf between the depths of human curiosity and the limits of human ignorance resides a series of questions, some of which we all have asked and all of which some of us have asked. Not all have answers. For those that do, our answers may be incomplete or inadequate. For the remaining queries, we can look around on Earth and TO FLY - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDEN PLANETARIUM: SPACE To Fly. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. April 1998. Long afflicted with a case of wing envy, human beings eventually flew—and even went ballistic. In ancient days two aviators procured to themselves wings. Daedalus flew safely through the middle air, and was duly honoured in his landing. Icarus soared upwards to the suntill
ABOUT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH About. Tyson is the fifth head since 1935 of the world-renowned Hayden Planetarium in New York City and the first occupant of its Frederick P. Rose Directorship. He is also a research associate of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History.SELECT ESSAYS
Goldilocks and the Three Planets. Water, Water. On Being Round. The Coriolis Force. The Tidal Force. The Five Points of Lagrange. Going Ballistic. On Earth As in the Heavens. The Periodic Table of theCosmos.
ON BEING ROUND
On Being Round. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. March 1997. Thanks to gravity, stars and planets are spherical. So why are there pizza-shaped galaxies and potato-shaped moons? Apart from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes with sharp angles. While many objects have peculiar shapes, the list WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL A statue of the Greek god Hermes stands atop the clock on the main façade of the Grand Central Terminal. His winged hat betrays his vocation as the speedy messenger to the gods—making him a fine icon for a center of transportation. Mercury, Hermes’s Roman counterpart, is now forever associated with the innermost planet of the solarsystem.
MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS grades 4–6 Objectives Thinking and acting like a scientist: By building an accurate three-dimensional model of a constellation, students will practice the kinds of scientific thinking that go into making predictions and creatingBECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
COSMIC QUERIES
Introduction. In the gulf between the depths of human curiosity and the limits of human ignorance resides a series of questions, some of which we all have asked and all of which some of us have asked. Not all have answers. For those that do, our answers may be incomplete or inadequate. For the remaining queries, we can look around on Earth and CONTACT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON Contact. Note: Until further notice, Hayden will no longer be accepting mail (letters and packages) of any kind. And replies to mail sent previously during and before COVID will be delayed indefinitely. Choose a category (required): Request a speaking engagement. Schools, organizations, and corporations only. Request an interview. ABOUT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON About. Tyson is the fifth head since 1935 of the world-renowned Hayden Planetarium in New York City and the first occupant of its Frederick P. Rose Directorship. He is also a research associate of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History.SELECT SPEECHES
Keynote: Presidential Awards for Mathematics and Science Teaching. State Department, Benjamin Franklin Dining Room, Washington, DC. June 10, 1999. Given on behalf of the National Science Foundation for the 1998 Presidential Awardees for Excellence in Mathematics and ScienceTeaching.
FORGED IN THE STARS
Forged in the Stars. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. August 1996. Not all scientific discoveries are made by lone, anti-social researchers. Nor are all discoveries accompanied by media headlines and best-selling books. Some involve many people, span many decades, require complicated mathematics, and are not easilysummarized
IN DEFENSE OF THE BIG BANG By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. December 1996/January 1997. Yes, questions remain. But the big bang is the most successful theory ever put forth for the origin and evolution of the universe. An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way byCITY OF STARS
And I am now an urban astrophysicist, through and through. To this day, when I travel to observatories on high mountains, and I see the sky with a clarity that rivals views from space, I think to myself, “It reminds me of the Hayden Planetarium.”. In spite of the Planetarium’s profound influence on me and on millions more, theday-to-day
THE PERIMETER OF IGNORANCE Earth and other planets rotated on their axes and revolved around the Sun. The stars shone. The nebulae floated freely in space. Not until the nineteenth century was it evident that visible light is just one band of a broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation—the band that human beings just happen to see.LET THERE BE LIGHT
Let There Be Light. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. October 2003. Some 380,000 years after the big bang, the universal fog lifted and the cosmic background radiation was set free. Back at the beginning of everything, when the universe was a fraction of a second old, a ferocious trillion degrees hot, and glowing with anBECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
HOME - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDENPLANETARIUM.ORGCURRICULUM VITAEPUBLICITY PHOTOSCONTACTPROFILE © 2021 Neil deGrasse Tyson CONTACT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH Contact. Note: Until further notice, Hayden will no longer be accepting mail (letters and packages) of any kind. And replies to mail sent previously during and before COVID will be delayed indefinitely. Choose a category (required): Request a speaking engagement. Schools, organizations, and corporations only. Request an interview. WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
ABOUT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH About. Tyson is the fifth head since 1935 of the world-renowned Hayden Planetarium in New York City and the first occupant of its Frederick P. Rose Directorship. He is also a research associate of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History.ON BEING ROUND
On Being Round. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. March 1997. Thanks to gravity, stars and planets are spherical. So why are there pizza-shaped galaxies and potato-shaped moons? Apart from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes with sharp angles. While many objects have peculiar shapes, the list GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL A statue of the Greek god Hermes stands atop the clock on the main façade of the Grand Central Terminal. His winged hat betrays his vocation as the speedy messenger to the gods—making him a fine icon for a center of transportation. Mercury, Hermes’s Roman counterpart, is now forever associated with the innermost planet of the solarsystem.
FORGED IN THE STARS
Forged in the Stars. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. August 1996. Not all scientific discoveries are made by lone, anti-social researchers. Nor are all discoveries accompanied by media headlines and best-selling books. Some involve many people, span many decades, require complicated mathematics, and are not easilysummarized
CITY OF STARS
And I am now an urban astrophysicist, through and through. To this day, when I travel to observatories on high mountains, and I see the sky with a clarity that rivals views from space, I think to myself, “It reminds me of the Hayden Planetarium.”. In spite of the Planetarium’s profound influence on me and on millions more, theday-to-day
MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS grades 4–6 Objectives Thinking and acting like a scientist: By building an accurate three-dimensional model of a constellation, students will practice the kinds of scientific thinking that go into making predictions and creatingBECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
HOME - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDENPLANETARIUM.ORGCURRICULUM VITAEPUBLICITY PHOTOSCONTACTPROFILE © 2021 Neil deGrasse Tyson CONTACT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH Contact. Note: Until further notice, Hayden will no longer be accepting mail (letters and packages) of any kind. And replies to mail sent previously during and before COVID will be delayed indefinitely. Choose a category (required): Request a speaking engagement. Schools, organizations, and corporations only. Request an interview. WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
ABOUT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH About. Tyson is the fifth head since 1935 of the world-renowned Hayden Planetarium in New York City and the first occupant of its Frederick P. Rose Directorship. He is also a research associate of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History.ON BEING ROUND
On Being Round. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. March 1997. Thanks to gravity, stars and planets are spherical. So why are there pizza-shaped galaxies and potato-shaped moons? Apart from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes with sharp angles. While many objects have peculiar shapes, the list GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL A statue of the Greek god Hermes stands atop the clock on the main façade of the Grand Central Terminal. His winged hat betrays his vocation as the speedy messenger to the gods—making him a fine icon for a center of transportation. Mercury, Hermes’s Roman counterpart, is now forever associated with the innermost planet of the solarsystem.
FORGED IN THE STARS
Forged in the Stars. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. August 1996. Not all scientific discoveries are made by lone, anti-social researchers. Nor are all discoveries accompanied by media headlines and best-selling books. Some involve many people, span many decades, require complicated mathematics, and are not easilysummarized
CITY OF STARS
And I am now an urban astrophysicist, through and through. To this day, when I travel to observatories on high mountains, and I see the sky with a clarity that rivals views from space, I think to myself, “It reminds me of the Hayden Planetarium.”. In spite of the Planetarium’s profound influence on me and on millions more, theday-to-day
MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS grades 4–6 Objectives Thinking and acting like a scientist: By building an accurate three-dimensional model of a constellation, students will practice the kinds of scientific thinking that go into making predictions and creating HOME - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDENPLANETARIUM.ORG © 2021 Neil deGrasse TysonCOSMIC QUERIES
Introduction. In the gulf between the depths of human curiosity and the limits of human ignorance resides a series of questions, some of which we all have asked and all of which some of us have asked. Not all have answers. For those that do, our answers may be incomplete or inadequate. For the remaining queries, we can look around on Earth and ABOUT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH About. Tyson is the fifth head since 1935 of the world-renowned Hayden Planetarium in New York City and the first occupant of its Frederick P. Rose Directorship. He is also a research associate of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History.SELECT SPEECHES
Keynote: Presidential Awards for Mathematics and Science Teaching. State Department, Benjamin Franklin Dining Room, Washington, DC. June 10, 1999. Given on behalf of the National Science Foundation for the 1998 Presidential Awardees for Excellence in Mathematics and ScienceTeaching.
FORGED IN THE STARS
Forged in the Stars. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. August 1996. Not all scientific discoveries are made by lone, anti-social researchers. Nor are all discoveries accompanied by media headlines and best-selling books. Some involve many people, span many decades, require complicated mathematics, and are not easilysummarized
PLUTO’S HONOR
Pluto’s Honor. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. February 1999. Hailed as the newest member of the solar system in 1930, the smallest planet now faces expulsion. According to the latest orbital data, on Thursday, February 11, 1999 between 11 A.M. and 12 noon eastern standard time, having been closer than Neptune to the Sunfor
LET THERE BE LIGHT
Let There Be Light. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. October 2003. Some 380,000 years after the big bang, the universal fog lifted and the cosmic background radiation was set free. Back at the beginning of everything, when the universe was a fraction of a second old, a ferocious trillion degrees hot, and glowing with anDEATH BY BLACK HOLE
Anthology of the best essays on the universe from the pages of Natural History Magazine.. Loyal readers of the monthly Universe essays in Natural History magazine have long recognized Neil deGrasse Tyson’s talent for guiding them through the mysteries of the cosmos with stunning clarity and almost childlike enthusiasm. Here, Tyson compiles his favorite essays across a myriad of cosmic topics. THE PERIMETER OF IGNORANCE Earth and other planets rotated on their axes and revolved around the Sun. The stars shone. The nebulae floated freely in space. Not until the nineteenth century was it evident that visible light is just one band of a broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation—the band that human beings just happen to see.SUN TRIANGLE
People eat, sleep, talk, and walk in this plaza, unaware of the triangle’s Stonehengian significance. For many visitors, Sun Triangle, by oceanographer, inventor, and sculptor Athelstan Spilhaus, is just another oversize, odd-looking modern sculpture parked in front of a modern building.At local noon (1:00 p.m. Daylight Time) on June 21, the summer solstice, the Sun reaches and altitude of HOME - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDENPLANETARIUM.ORGCURRICULUM VITAEPUBLICITY PHOTOSCONTACTPROFILE © 2021 Neil deGrasse Tyson CONTACT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH Contact. Note: Until further notice, Hayden will no longer be accepting mail (letters and packages) of any kind. And replies to mail sent previously during and before COVID will be delayed indefinitely. Choose a category (required): Request a speaking engagement. Schools, organizations, and corporations only. Request an interview.BECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
SELECT SPEECHES
Keynote: Presidential Awards for Mathematics and Science Teaching. State Department, Benjamin Franklin Dining Room, Washington, DC. June 10, 1999. Given on behalf of the National Science Foundation for the 1998 Presidential Awardees for Excellence in Mathematics and ScienceTeaching.
SPIRITUALITY QUOTES
I don’t have an issue with what you do in the church, but I’m going to be up in your face if you’re going to knock on my science classroom and tell me they’ve got to teach what you’re teaching in your Sunday school. Because that’s when we’re going to fight. Ifall that you
ON BEING ROUND
On Being Round. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. March 1997. Thanks to gravity, stars and planets are spherical. So why are there pizza-shaped galaxies and potato-shaped moons? Apart from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes with sharp angles. While many objects have peculiar shapes, the list THE PERIMETER OF IGNORANCE Earth and other planets rotated on their axes and revolved around the Sun. The stars shone. The nebulae floated freely in space. Not until the nineteenth century was it evident that visible light is just one band of a broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation—the band that human beings just happen to see. GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL A statue of the Greek god Hermes stands atop the clock on the main façade of the Grand Central Terminal. His winged hat betrays his vocation as the speedy messenger to the gods—making him a fine icon for a center of transportation. Mercury, Hermes’s Roman counterpart, is now forever associated with the innermost planet of the solarsystem.
WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
CITY OF STARS
And I am now an urban astrophysicist, through and through. To this day, when I travel to observatories on high mountains, and I see the sky with a clarity that rivals views from space, I think to myself, “It reminds me of the Hayden Planetarium.”. In spite of the Planetarium’s profound influence on me and on millions more, theday-to-day
HOME - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - HAYDENPLANETARIUM.ORGCURRICULUM VITAEPUBLICITY PHOTOSCONTACTPROFILE © 2021 Neil deGrasse Tyson CONTACT - NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON - AMNH Contact. Note: Until further notice, Hayden will no longer be accepting mail (letters and packages) of any kind. And replies to mail sent previously during and before COVID will be delayed indefinitely. Choose a category (required): Request a speaking engagement. Schools, organizations, and corporations only. Request an interview.BECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
SELECT SPEECHES
Keynote: Presidential Awards for Mathematics and Science Teaching. State Department, Benjamin Franklin Dining Room, Washington, DC. June 10, 1999. Given on behalf of the National Science Foundation for the 1998 Presidential Awardees for Excellence in Mathematics and ScienceTeaching.
SPIRITUALITY QUOTES
I don’t have an issue with what you do in the church, but I’m going to be up in your face if you’re going to knock on my science classroom and tell me they’ve got to teach what you’re teaching in your Sunday school. Because that’s when we’re going to fight. Ifall that you
ON BEING ROUND
On Being Round. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. March 1997. Thanks to gravity, stars and planets are spherical. So why are there pizza-shaped galaxies and potato-shaped moons? Apart from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes with sharp angles. While many objects have peculiar shapes, the list THE PERIMETER OF IGNORANCE Earth and other planets rotated on their axes and revolved around the Sun. The stars shone. The nebulae floated freely in space. Not until the nineteenth century was it evident that visible light is just one band of a broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation—the band that human beings just happen to see. GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL A statue of the Greek god Hermes stands atop the clock on the main façade of the Grand Central Terminal. His winged hat betrays his vocation as the speedy messenger to the gods—making him a fine icon for a center of transportation. Mercury, Hermes’s Roman counterpart, is now forever associated with the innermost planet of the solarsystem.
WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
CITY OF STARS
And I am now an urban astrophysicist, through and through. To this day, when I travel to observatories on high mountains, and I see the sky with a clarity that rivals views from space, I think to myself, “It reminds me of the Hayden Planetarium.”. In spite of the Planetarium’s profound influence on me and on millions more, theday-to-day
BECAUSE OF SCIENCE
Because of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Wall Street Journal. Thursday, March 18, 2021. Adapted from the Wall Street Journal’s series “What I’ve Learned From the Pandemic”. Many people who love their high-tech smartphones refused to trust scientists when it came to Covid. What I learned from the pandemic year is that whenfaced with
COSMIC QUERIES
Introduction. In the gulf between the depths of human curiosity and the limits of human ignorance resides a series of questions, some of which we all have asked and all of which some of us have asked. Not all have answers. For those that do, our answers may be incomplete or inadequate. For the remaining queries, we can look around on Earth andSELECT SPEECHES
Keynote: Presidential Awards for Mathematics and Science Teaching. State Department, Benjamin Franklin Dining Room, Washington, DC. June 10, 1999. Given on behalf of the National Science Foundation for the 1998 Presidential Awardees for Excellence in Mathematics and ScienceTeaching.
WHAT SCIENCE IS, AND HOW AND WHY IT WORKS By Neil deGrasse Tyson. January 23, 2016. If you cherry-pick scientific truths to serve cultural, economic, religious or political objectives, you undermine the foundations of an informed democracy. Science distinguishes itself from all other branches of human pursuit by its power to probe and understand the behavior of nature on a levelthat
THE COSMIC PERSPECTIVE The Cosmic Perspective. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. April 2007. The 100 th essay in the “Universe” series. Embracing cosmic realities can give us a more enlightened view of human life. Of all the sciences cultivated by mankind, Astronomy is acknowledged to be, and undoubtedly is, the most sublime, the mostinteresting
REFLECTIONS ON THE COLOR OF MY SKIN Eleanor Bumpers (age 66), Michael Griffith (age 23), Arthur Miller (age 30), Edmund Perry (age 17), Yvonne Smallwood (age 28), and Michael Stewart (age 25). All are black. One was killed by a white mob. The rest were unarmed and shot by police or otherwise died whilein police custody.
IN DEFENSE OF THE BIG BANG By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. December 1996/January 1997. Yes, questions remain. But the big bang is the most successful theory ever put forth for the origin and evolution of the universe. An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by THE BEGINNING OF SCIENCE The Beginning of Science. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. February 2001. Reports that physicists are nearing the final frontier of knowledge have been greatly exaggerated. The success of known physical laws to explain the world around us has consistently bred some confident and cocky attitudes toward the state of humanLET THERE BE LIGHT
Let There Be Light. By Neil deGrasse Tyson. Natural History Magazine. October 2003. Some 380,000 years after the big bang, the universal fog lifted and the cosmic background radiation was set free. Back at the beginning of everything, when the universe was a fraction of a second old, a ferocious trillion degrees hot, and glowing with an MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS MODELING A CONSTELLATION IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS grades 4–6 Objectives Thinking and acting like a scientist: By building an accurate three-dimensional model of a constellation, students will practice the kinds of scientific thinking that go into making predictions and creating * Skip to Page Content * Skip to Navigation * Skip to Navigation* Skip to Search
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The Office of the Director of the Hayden Planetarium operates out of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of NaturalHistory.
Our mission is to bring the frontier of astrophysics to the public via exhibitry, books, public programs, and online resources. Article About Us The Office of the Director of the Hayden Planetarium operates out of the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural... Blog Post Hayden Planetarium Blog The Hayden Blog covers topics in astrophysics, science visualization, and upcoming sky phenomena. Educator Materials Digital Universe Discover the universe with our downloadable atlas—the Digital Universe—where you can fly from the Sun out the edge of the observable... Article Resources Articles and resources for astronomy and astrophysics. Staff Staff Our staff includes a variety of members in support of the Director, in addition to numerous Hayden associates and volunteers who... GET THE STARSTRUCK NEWSLETTER Sign up for StarStruck for email updates from the HaydenPlanetarium.
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