School of the Environment- Diversity of Backgrounds
Middlebury College will extend its record of innovation and leadership in environmental education when it opens the new School of the Environment next ...
School of the Environment 5: A Diversity of Backgrounds
Middlebury School of the Environment Director Steve Trombulak discusses Middlebury's School of the Environment, a new 9-credit summer intensive program.
The Middlebury Greenhouse Sessions HD
View in 1080p by Sami Hopkins Middlebury College Sight and Sound I - Fall 2014 Live sessions with students of Middlebury College in the Bihall Greenhouse.
Let Freedom Ring? Ethnic Diversity and the Politics of Values in Today's Europe
Erik Bleich, professor of political science, Middlebury College. Sponsors: Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies; Center for European Studies. Feb 29, 2016.
Hubble Space Telescope: Oddball Galaxies
Most galaxies fall into one of three main identifiable types, but not all. Explore the diverse shapes of galaxies. See also "Discovering Galaxies": ...
Most galaxies fall into one of three main identifiable types, but not all.
Explore the diverse shapes of galaxies. See also "Discovering Galaxies": Hubble
Space Telescope: Discovering Galaxies [HD]
To see more videos about Galaxy,
please visit:
//www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8lkL6GZfOwTi4PIXiPyXB4Q
To see more videos about Hubble Space Telescope (HST),
please visit: //www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC5922E7D4563067C
Produced by the Space Telescope Science Institute, Office of Public Outreach
All images, illustrations, and videos courtesy of NASA, ESA, and STScI
except:
NGC 6822 image courtesy of the Local Group Galaxies Survey
Team/NOAO/AURA/NSF
Taurus constellation drawing from Firmamentum Sobiescianum sive
Uranographia by Johannes Hevelius, courtesy of the United States Naval
Observatory
NGC 4565 image courtesy of the European Southern Observatory
Small Magellanic Cloud image courtesy of F. Winkler/Middlebury College, the
MCELS Team, and NOAO/AURA/NSF
Written by Vanessa Thomas
Designed by John Godfrey
I have a question. I am the amateurist of amateurs, so If the question is
silly don't harang me.
Can I see galaxies in any decent detail with a beginners refractor
telescope, or do I need something much more powerful and expensive than the
>$500 telescope arena? (light pollution in my area is not too bad, I live
in the boonies of the northeast)