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The Sky at Night
Season 4
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 5 - Star Clouds of Sagittarius
Episode 1 - The Great Spiral Episode 2 - Uranus Episode 3 - Why Stars Twinkle Episode 4 - Visitor from Space Episode 5 - Star Clouds of Sagittarius Episode 6 - Other Moons Episode 7 - Celestial Fireworks Episode 8 - Measuring the Universe Episode 9 - Moonscape Episode 10 - Make-up of the Stars Episode 11 - Astronomy in Russia Episode 12 - Tektites Episode 14 - Episode 14
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S4 • E1
The Great Spiral
Patrick Moore talks about the Andromeda nebula, the most distant object in the heavens it is possible to see with the naked eye, and compares it with what is known of our own galaxy.
1960-01-20
S4 • E2
Uranus
Patrick Moore talks about the remote and slow-moving planet which was discovered in 1781. Uranus is sixty-four times as large as the earth, and has 65,000 days in its year, which is eighty-four times as long as ours.
1960-02-17
S4 • E3
Why Stars Twinkle
Patrick Moore explains how the atmosphere interferes with the astronomer's work. He discusses with Dr. Hugh Butler of the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh, how a satellite could be an astronomical observatory.
1960-03-16
S4 • E4
Visitor from Space
The new comet, Burnham's, is now moving steadily closer to the earth, and should be clearly seen in late April. It will then be in the Northern part of the sky not far from the Pole Star. Patrick Moore talks about this and other comets-where they come from, what they are, and how they move.
1960-04-11
S4 • E5
Star Clouds of Sagittarius
Patrick Moore talks about the centre of our galaxy, which is so obscured by clouds of dust, gas, and interstellar haze that only radio waves come through with evidence of what lies beyond.
1960-06-08
S4 • E6
Other Moons
Patrick Moore talks about the moons of other planets in the solar system. Some planets have more than one moon and they range in size from tiny globes, twelve miles across, to giants twice as heavy as the Moon.
1960-06-11
S4 • E7
Celestial Fireworks
August is one of the best times of the year to observe shooting stars. Patrick Moore talks about meteors and meteorites, and what we know about these sudden arrivals from outside the Earth's atmosphere.
1960-08-08
S4 • E8
Measuring the Universe
Patrick Moore talks to Sir Harold Spencer Jones F.R.S. The former Astronomer Royal about measuring distances which are literally astronomical. The greatest distance ever measured is that of a recently discovered galaxy whose light takes five thousand million years to reach the earth.
1960-08-30
S4 • E9
Moonscape
Soon the Russians and Americans should be able to land instruments on the surface of the moon. Patrick Moore discusses with Gilbert Fielder, the Director of the Lunar Section of the British Astronomical Association, the conditions to be met with on the moon's surface and some of the problems that may be solved by a successful landing of instruments there.
[Editor's note: The original title of the episode Moonscape. The current iPlayer listing has it as The Moon.]
1960-09-27
S4 • E10
Make-up of the Stars
Patrick Moore describes how the modern spectroscope has enabled astronomers to find out what different stars are made of and how bright they actually are.
1960-10-10
S4 • E11
Astronomy in Russia
Patrick Moore talks about his recent visit to Russia and some of the principal observatories there.
1960-11-07
S4 • E12
Tektites
These are strange glassy objects of unknown origin which are found on the surface of certain parts of the world. Patrick Moore discusses with Dr. M. H. Hey, of the Department of Mineralogy, British Museum (Natural History), the theory, which has recently been in the news, that Tektites may have originated in the moon and travelled through space to the earth.
1960-12-05
S4 • E14
Episode 14