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The Sky at Night
Season 19
Season 1 Season 2 Season 3 Season 4 Season 5 Season 6 Season 7 Season 8 Season 9 Season 10 Season 11 Season 12 Season 13 Season 14 Season 15 Season 16 Season 17 Season 18 Season 19 Season 20 Season 21 Season 22 Season 23 Season 24 Season 25 Season 26 Season 27 Season 28 Season 29 Season 30 Season 31 Season 32 Season 33 Season 34 Season 35 Season 36 Season 37 Season 38 Season 39 Season 40 Season 41 Season 42 Season 43 Season 44 Season 45 Season 46 Season 47 Season 48 Season 49 Season 50 Season 51 Season 52 Season 53 Season 54 Season 55 Season 56 Season 57 Season 58 Season 59 Season 60 Season 61 Season 62 Season 63 Season 64 Season 65 Season 66 Season 67 Season 68 Season 69 Season 70
Episode 13 - The Search for Life in the Universe
Episode 1 - Orion, the Hunter Episode 2 - The New Northern Hemisphere Laboratory Episode 3 - Algol: The Winking Demon Episode 4 - Astronomy of The Infra-Red Episode 5 - The Outer Planets Episode 6 - The Mysterious X-rays Episode 7 - The Hot Clouds of the Sun Episode 8 - The New Moon Episode 9 - The Galilean Satellites Episode 10 - The Origin of the Universe Episode 11 - New Star in Cygnus Episode 12 - The Rocks on Venus Episode 13 - The Search for Life in the Universe
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S19 • E1
Orion, the Hunter
Patrick Moore talks about this most splendid of constellations.
1975-01-06
S19 • E2
The New Northern Hemisphere Laboratory
Patrick Moore discusses plans for the new Northern Hemisphere laboratory with Dr Graham Smith , director-designate of the Royal Greenwich Observatory.
1975-02-06
S19 • E3
Algol: The Winking Demon
Algol, the Demon Star, is now well on view during the evening. Every two-and-a-half days the star seems to give a long, slow ' wink.' Patrick Moore describes this remarkable eclipsing binary and explains its importance.
1975-03-05
S19 • E4
Astronomy of The Infra-Red
Astronomy of the infra-red is now vitally important in studies of the planets, the stars and the universe as a whole. Patrick Moore talks about infra-red astronomy to Professor Jim Ring, of Imperial College.
1975-04-10
S19 • E5
The Outer Planets
This month the three outermost planets - Uranus, Neptune and Pluto - are all on view, even though they are faint. Each has its own special points of interest; and Patrick Moore talks about these remote members of the Sun's family.
1975-04-30
S19 • E6
The Mysterious X-rays
A strange force of X-rays from the sky has been discovered by instruments on board the British satellite Ariel-5. What is the object sending them out?
1975-05-30
S19 • E7
The Hot Clouds of the Sun
What is the sun made of? To study the nature of the sun, special equipment is needed. At Sevenoaks Commander Henry Hatfield has built one of the very few spectrohelioscopes outside professional observatories, and Patrick Moore joins him there.
1975-07-01
S19 • E8
The New Moon
Six years ago, in July 1969, the first man landed on the moon. At a major international conference held in London last month, experts from all over the world met to discuss the results of their work on the material obtained by the Apollo missions. Patrick Moore , who took part in the conference, talks to the scientists about some of the new and unexpected conclusions which have emerged and discusses their importance with Professor Geoffrcy Eglinton of Bristol University.
1975-07-28
S19 • E9
The Galilean Satellites
Jupiter's four largest moons - the Galilean satellites - are among the most interesting members of the Solar System. They were discovered by Galileo in 1610 - hence their nickname - and they have been studied by the Pioneer probes; one of them, lo, affects Jupiter's radio emission. Patrick Moore talks about these planet-sized satellites with Dr Garry Hunt , who is involved in all the space missions and gives the latest news about the Viking probe to Mars.
1975-08-28
S19 • E10
The Origin of the Universe
How did the Universe come into being? This is one of the most important and most puzzling problems facing mankind. Recently we have some new information from the depths of space, which may shed some light on the whole. question; Patrick Moore discusses it with Dr John Beckman of Queen Mary College, whose studies of remote objects from balloon-borne equipment have produced interesting results.
1975-09-23
S19 • E11
New Star in Cygnus
We have just seen the brightest nova, or exploding star, for many years - Nova Cygni , which blazed out in the constellation of the Swan and became very bright. Patrick Moore talks about this strange and dramatic newcomer and reports on the research now being carried out by astronomers at the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux in Sussex.
1975-10-22
S19 • E12
The Rocks on Venus
On 22 October the Russians landed a space-probe on the planet Venus and sent back pictures of the surface which have taken astronomers completely by surprise. Venus has been called the planet of mystery - and these results make it more mysterious still. Patrick Moore talks to Dr Garry Hunt about the new questions raised by these landings.
1975-11-12
S19 • E13
The Search for Life in the Universe
Is Earth the only inhabited world, or is our civilisation one of many? Patrick Moore looks at some of the stars which could be the centres of planetary systems, and speculates as to which of them could support life.
1975-12-10