Season 38
1994
Season 38
1994
- Air date:1994-01-09
- User score:0.0
- Number of episodes:13
List of Episodes
Air date: 1994-01-09
Runtime: min
Auriga is one of the most prominent of all the constellations of the northern sky. Patrick Moore explains what can be seen there.
Air date: 1994-03-07
Runtime: min
Patrick Moore and Drjohn Mason report on the American lunar probe Clementine.
Air date: 1994-04-04
Runtime: min
Patrick Moore talks to astronomers carrying out research in Australia.
Air date: 1994-05-02
Runtime: min
There will be a partial eclipse of the sun on 10 May and of the moon on 25 May. Patrick Moore and H.J.P. Arnold explain what should be visible.
Air date: 1994-05-29
Runtime: min
Patrick Moore explains the role of the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh, 100 years after it was established.
Air date: 1994-06-27
Runtime: min
Patrick Moore investigates evidence for the existence of black holes - collapsed stars whose gravitational field is so strong that not even light can escape.
Air date: 1994-07-31
Runtime: min
Earlier this month, the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacted on Jupiter and was destroyed. Patrick Moore reports on the event with Drs Jim Scotti, Steven Miller and John Mason.
Air date: 1994-09-02
Runtime: min
Australia has become a major centre for radio astronomy. The 210-foot dish at Parkes, New South Wales has been in continuous operation since 1961 and has provided work of fundamental importance. The "Australia Telescope", a network of all the main observatories, now covers a wide area of the continent. In this programme, Patrick Moore goes to the Australian radio observatories and talks to the scientists who have made Australia so important in this branch of astronomy.
Air date: 1994-09-19
Runtime: min
What to look for in the autumn evening sky. With Patrick Moore.
Air date: 1994-10-17
Runtime: min
Professor Richard Ellis of Cambridge University joins Patrick Moore in a programme focusing on gravitational lenses.
Air date: 1994-12-12
Runtime: min
Patrick Moore is joined by Professor Alec Boksenberg to review a successful year for the Hubble Space Telescope.
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