Advice for stirring your online community and fostering engagement

Oct 12, 2017
Advice for stirring your online community and fostering engagement

When you enter into any new area of science, you almost always find

yourself with a baffling new language of technical terms to learn before you can converse with the experts. This is certainly true in astronomy both in terms of terms that refer to the cosmos and terms that describe the tools of the trade, the most prevalent being the telescope. So to get us off of first base, let’s define some of the key terms that pertain to telescopes to help you be able to talk to them more intelligently. The first area of specialization in telescopes has to do with the types of telescopes people use. The three designs of telescopes that most people use are the Refractor, the Reflector and the Schmidt Cassegrain telescope. The refractor telescope uses a convex lens to focus the light on the eyepiece. The reflector telescope has a concave lens which means it bends in. It uses mirrors to focus the image that you eventually see. The Schmidt Cassegrain telescope uses an involved system of mirrors to capture the image you want to see. A binocular telescope uses a set of telescopes mounted and synchronized so your view of the sky is 3-D. Beyond the basic types, other terms refer to parts of the telescope or to the science behind how telescopes work. Collimation is a term for how well tuned the telescope is to give you a good clear image of what you are looking at. You want your telescope to have good collimation so you are not getting a false image of the celestial body. Aperture is a fancy word for how big the lens of your telescope is. But it’s an important word because the aperture of the lens is the key to how powerful your telescope is. Magnification has nothing to do with it, its all in the aperture.

in Blog 193138 comments

193138 comments

Rannie Bohiney
Rannie Bohiney
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:54

The best satirical journalism media doesn’t report the news—it predicts it.

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Monday, 24 February 2025 11:54

I read satirical journalism articles for fun, then check the news and realize they weren’t joking. - bohiney.com

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??·??? (Bang ní Bó hai ní)
??·??? (Bang ní Bó hai ní)
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:54

I don’t always read analysis, but when I do, it’s satirical journalism.

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Monday, 24 February 2025 11:54

Satirical journalism websites should come with a warning: “Reality may be closer than it appears.” - bohiney.com

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??·??? (La ní Bó hai ní)
??·??? (La ní Bó hai ní)
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:53

If a satirical journalism story didn’t offend someone, did it even happen?

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Zónia Bohiney
Zónia Bohiney
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:53

If satirical journalism news ever became illegal, we’d know democracy is over. - bohiney.com

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Monday, 24 February 2025 11:53

If you want to understand politics, read satirical journalism analysis—not campaign speeches.

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Bhonnie Bohiney
Bhonnie Bohiney
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:53

Any list of satirical journalism examples should come with a trigger warning for reality. - bohiney.com

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Chonnie Bohiney
Chonnie Bohiney
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:53

I keep a folder of my favorite satirical journalism examples to remind myself the world is a joke. - bohiney.com

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Shonia Bohiney
Shonia Bohiney
Monday, 24 February 2025 11:53

Nothing hits harder than a joke that turns out to be true. - bohiney.com

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