All topics related to atheism, agnosticism and secular living are welcome here. This community is a place to share and discuss new scientific research. December 4, 2019 at 12:43 pm . Here you can ask any question you have about being a scientist, what's new in a field, what's going to happen in a field, or are curious about how we got to this point. Papers from physics journals (free or otherwise) are encouraged. * Astrobiology Don't Panic! 56 Science > Astronomy subreddits on reddit - 10 subreddits on this page (/r/Astronomy - /r/LandscapeAstro) . This community is a place to share and discuss new scientific research.

Love pictures of interstellar objects taken by amateurs? Pretty much exactly what it sounds like. Fantasy stuff like Tolkien and Game of Thrones. SF movies and TV shows. * Cosmology * Post links to interesting sites or videos related to dreams. /r/Astrophotography is the place for you!

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u/Unassorted. Feel free to discuss anything here, from what sort of telescope you should get, to … Posts should be pertinent, meme-free, and generate a discussion about physics. kinda... u/orangelantern.

Passionate about something niche? A subreddit to draw simple physics questions away from /r/physics. The go-to subreddit for anything and everything cannabis.

The amateur hobby of man since the dawn of time and scientific study of celestial objects. * Connect with a community of dream enthusiasts. Thankyou!Recently I came up with a plan to use off-the-shelf hardware for satellite television for some extremely rudimentary and primitive Ku-Band radioastronomy.And I am extremely proud to say that today all the components came together and actually worked!I know it isn't very impressive, entertaining, scientific and overall interesting, but this is my first time doing anything astro-related I'm using a modified satellite finder unit to convert the RF received by a Ku-Band LNB into an analog signal which I then convert to a digital value with an Arduino acting as a 10-bit ADC.To test if everything works, I pointed the dish right under the Sun and let it sample the RF strength.A nice yet not-very-smooth curve appeared in the serial plotter as planet Earth carried the beam of the dish across the Sun!Here's a "diagram" of the whole setup, and yeah, it isn't anything extraordinary:Apologies for a noob question, I'm returning to radio astronomy after years away.

As long as the focus of the image is of the stars or related to space in some way then it is allowed. **/r/cosmology** - a community for questions, discussions, and articles about cosmology. The aim of /r/Physics is to build a subreddit frequented by physicists, scientists, and those with a passion for physics. * Ask questions and learn about dreams.

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Reddit's new look is shit. A place for physics students to talk about whatever!

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Moderators. Asimov, Bradbury, Clarke, Dick, Heinlein and other SF books. Rules: https://www.reddit.com/r/askastronomy/about/rules

Share & discuss informative content on: See /r/telescopes!

im new to radio astronomy and I actually have a few questions. Ask a science question, get a science answer.

* Request interpretation of your dreams. Questions, no matter how basic, will be answered (to the best ability of the online subscribers). ** Direct your astronomy related questions here!

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r/telescopes: The home to all amateur astronomers & telescopes! A subreddit for all questions related to programming in any language. The original subreddit, now archived. No real rules; ask away. u/PixInsightFTW. Alternatively, find out what’s trending across all of Reddit on r/popular. * Space Exploration

ImI'm sorry if these are super simple questions, im thirteen just looking for a summer project tbh. u/AutoModerator. Reddit's Gold Mine

Welcome to the Reddit Dreams community! If your basic physics question isn't answered in a day, you can post it to /r/physics if you mention that you didn't get an answer on /r/AskPhysics (unless it's a homework-related physics question). r/NASA is for anything related to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; the latest news, events, current and future missions, and more. * Planetary Science Have a hobby-level telescope question? space alien. I've been working as a professional audio engineer for the last decade, so I've got a decent background with a lot of the general wave physics & electronics, and while the processes are very different, there's a lot of conceptual overlap between audio engineering and radio astronomy (radio telescopes are just gigantic microphones at a much higher bandwidth, after all).My math skills are pretty rusty, but I can get back up to speed fairly quickly there if I know specifically what to study.I'm also not totally fresh to radio astronomy, it was by no means extensive but I do have brief experience operating Green Bank's 40' telescope when I was in school before I got sidetracked into my music/audio path.fwiw could be useful to put some basic resources/wiki in the sidebar.For radio astronomy in general, astronomical targets, antennas, electronics hardware, digital signal processing, radio observation data, radio data sources, scientific articles, useful software, or anything related at your discretion.Press J to jump to the feed.

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