Astronomy - for iPod/iPhone
Thanks to cutting-edge radio and infra-red astronomy, our understanding of the universe is moving very fast. Ideas about black holes and cosmic jets are constantly being refined as new discoveries are made using new, more powerful telescopes. This album explores the incredible discoveries and theories developed in recent years and introduces the astronomical observatories, space missions and satellites that have made it possible. The 12 video tracks reveal that our sun, though essential for our existence, is an unremarkable member of the stellar menagerie. They describe how astronomers study the structure and dynamics of our galaxy, the Milky Way and they introduce the challenges inherent in mapping the geometry and expansion of the universe. This material forms part of the course S282 Astronomy.
Episodes freeze iTunes and cannot be dowloaded!
07/29/2012
Every time I try downloading the episode "Geometry of the Universe", it freezes iTunes and I have to do a Force Quit. Several others episodes do this, too. In fact, the only things I can download of this iTunes course are the transcripts! Which is hardly sufficient! Hope you all can fix this! ------------- OK, further trouble-shooting... and advice to future travelers... it may not be the Open University's fault; it looks as if there's a glitch in the iTunes Store! If you try downloading this from the search screen, the one with a white background, it fails. Here's how to replicate it. Do a search for "Astronomy for iPod" from the main iTunes Stores window and two courses appear (this one and another). It gives a list of episodes for this course. Those fail! So, you need to click the title of the episode and go to its main screen to do the downloading. Oddly that's the only way this works. I hope this helps someone. I'm leaving the rating at a 4 until Apple or the Open University can fix this! That way others may spot it and understand what's happening! The course sounds great from what I've read.
Russel Stannard
07/04/2012
This is a great series. I especially like the two with Russel Stannard; he does a great job of explaining these things in a simple, fun, easy to understand manner. Check out the collection from Open University featuring him discussing "the boundaries of the knowable" (or the limitations of science), I highly recommend it.
sir andrei
01/07/2011
We need more kowledge and interest in knowledge like this to stimulate what brain cells are already left in the average American mind.
About
Information
- CreatorThe Open University
- Episodes26
- Copyright© The Open University 2008
- Show Website