Speakers 2024

Forthcoming meetings

Thursday 6 February at Egerton Park Indoor Bowls Club

Speaker: Dr Robert Massey

A Cluttered and Noisy SkyESAS is holding Its 25th Anniversary Meeting this Month, Doors open 7:30 This Event is completely Free and suitable for all ages and abilities! We have a Grand Prize Draw, with a small telescope, meteorite, Super Astronomical Binoculars, astronomy books and much more!

Our replacement speaker Dr Robert Massey is Deputy Executive Director of the Royal Astronomical Society. Before joining the RAS, his career took him from PhD research in Manchester to teaching in Brighton, as Public Astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich. With a lifelong private and public passion for astronomy, he very much wants to avoid a world where satellites ruin our shared heritage of an unsullied night sky. So his talk is entitled ' The threat from Constellation satellites'

Our Patron Prof @Chris Lintott from BBC Sky at Night is not now able to appear due to filming for the BBC. If we are unable to get another speaker Andy Lawes FRAS will give one of his Astro talks! We have a video message from him, and another famous Astrophysicist. We will also have a Art Display by David Hardy who has produced an amazing amount of Space Art since the 50's.

 

Thursday 6 March at Egerton Park Indoor Bowls Club

Speaker: William Joyce

Weird and Wonderful Worlds : A Whistlestop Tour of the Outer Planets

A guided tour around the strange, alien worlds of the outer Solar System with stunning imagery of places and processes which challenge and expand our current understanding.

Many unfamiliar and totally alien worlds have now been explored by robotic spacecraft. This talk will present amazing images and discuss unusual and fascinating facts about each Giant Planet and some bizarre moons, a few of which could even harbour life.

 

Previous meetings

ESAS

Thursday January 2nd 2025 at Egerton Park Indoor Bowls Club

Speaker: Tony Roberts (Chair Croydon AS)

Astronomical Oddities

A look at the weird, wonderful and just plain wrong in the history of astronomy. We see new discoveries on our news feeds nearly weekly, but are they right? We don't know, yet, and accept that the science says they are right based on our current knowledge. But there are examples from history where the science of the day explained the facts, but we now know that the science was wrong. Tonight we will look at some examples, all done in good faith except one which deliberately set out to deceive.

 

 

Find us

Meetings:
Egerton Park Indoor Bowls Club,
Egerton Road,
Bexhill, East Sussex,
TN39 3HL

 

May Meeting:
Venue to be announced

 

Meetings are held on the first Thursday of each month from 8pm to 10pm

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