Lucianne Walkowicz: Look up for a change
Lucianne Walkowicz works on NASA's Kepler mission, studying starspots and "the tempestuous tantrums of stellar flares." Full bio
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by anyone, everywhere,
beautiful things around us,
and we haven't even noticed,
we look at our computers,
even take the trouble
to looking up at the actual sky.
that the loss of our dark night skies
of progress, change, technology.
about my experience of the dark night sky.
sky until I was 15.
I pulled over somewhere.
except I know what state.
with an impossible number of stars.
you can see a couple of stars.
to be airplanes when they land.
who are astronomers
looking up at the sky in their backyard.
disappointing on camping trips.
you probably know them, too.
the dark night sky.
at how many stars there were.
"Where's this been hiding this whole time?
if you think about it
taken during a blackout
if you drown them out with light.
invisible light so we can see them,
speaking, pretty cold.
like a blue-green marble
is reflecting off of it,
the oceans, the clouds, the land.
to see the earth, right?
striking examples
our planet on a global scale.
across the globe everywhere.
of ocean that are still dark,
there's still darkness.
that this is a pretty global effect.
of places being lit up,
Times Square, the Vegas Strip.
these extreme examples,
dramatic effect on the ground.
is think about the shape of a lightbulb.
purpose of lighting up the indoors.
your whole room, more or less.
if you're lighting the indoors,
in outdoor lighting,
light everywhere,
mostly what you care about
and your immediate surroundings.
outwards and upwards
light the area around you.
"light pollution."
about stargazing, this should worry you,
we use to light the outdoors
I'm a big fan of technology.
every day; I'm a scientist.
to say that it's progress that --
we're going to all go live by candlelight.
to access the sky
of course, the Hubble Space Telescope.
it returns pictures daily,
with our naked eye,
to do before in all of human history.
would be planetarium shows.
shows have become more high-tech
directly to the sky,
to our knowledge about the sky.
the sky in a planetarium
Space Telescope and of planetariums.
for technology to enable participation
"citizen science projects."
research projects put their data online,
to go and interact with that data
characterizations about it.
I'm showing here, called "Galaxy Zoo."
even less than that, actually -- tutorial
with these images of galaxies.
they're up and running,
useful categorizations
for people to be involved with:
speaking, pretty attractive.
of citizen science projects
people would jump at.
is the citizen science project
that I'm part of,
for planets around other stars
from those stars very precisely.
some of that light.
project called "Planet Hunters."
like Galaxy Zoo, a short tutorial,
you're up and running;
from the Kepler Mission
is an easy sell, right?
involves a lot of looking at graphs,
and annotating them.
sound that interesting to me.
interested in doing this,
that work with Planet Hunters
undiscovered otherwise.
from the paper that they published
who contributed are listed below,
of people's real names
this is the first academic acknowledgment
in the discovery process.
that these are some out-of-work scientists
that are really into this.
who participate in these projects,
technical backgrounds.
is people's curiosity
of the scientific discovery process.
of experiencing the sky
like looking at an animal in a zoo.
of experiencing that thing --
is still real,
than you can in the wild.
in the wild for yourself,
surrounds every known living thing
that has life on it.
by every other living thing
that I really like about my work
from my every day
and try to find planets in the universe
of how precious what we have here is.
that you can visit
if we don't preserve it and treasure it,
you want to learn more about,
to visit darksky.org
about the choices you can make
it belongs to all of us,
to experience as we wish.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lucianne Walkowicz - Stellar astronomerLucianne Walkowicz works on NASA's Kepler mission, studying starspots and "the tempestuous tantrums of stellar flares."
Why you should listen
Lucianne Walkowicz is an Astronomer at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago. She studies stellar magnetic activity and how stars influence a planet's suitability as a host for alien life. She is also an artist and works in a variety of media, from oil paint to sound. She got her taste for astronomy as an undergrad at Johns Hopkins, testing detectors for the Hubble Space Telescope’s new camera (installed in 2002). She also learned to love the dark stellar denizens of our galaxy, the red dwarfs, which became the topic of her PhD dissertation at University of Washington. Nowadays, she works on NASA’s Kepler mission, studying starspots and the tempestuous tantrums of stellar flares to understand stellar magnetic fields. She is particularly interested in how the high energy radiation from stars influences the habitability of planets around alien suns. Lucianne is also a leader in the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, a new project that will scan the sky every night for 10 years to create a huge cosmic movie of our Universe.
Lucianne Walkowicz | Speaker | TED.com