Whether it鈥檚 a solar eclipse or the controversy over Pluto鈥檚 classification as a planet, when the public gets intrigued by astronomical news, scientists relish the chance to educate.
The outreach is an important part of an astronomer鈥檚 work, according to Benne Holwerda, a new UofL associate professor who has been speaking to area school groups about the eclipse. 鈥淵our job is not complete until you go out in the community and share.鈥
Gerard Williger spoke about the eclipse in Louisville during the May 鈥淏eer with a Scientist鈥 series about diverse scientific topics and also during a campus talk earlier.
When the news is full of examples and potential discoveries, it makes teaching interesting and rewarding. 鈥淚 actually look for a lot of teachable moments in class,鈥 Williger said. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important to become science literate.鈥
Developments in space also can illuminate a professor鈥檚 career-long research interests. Timothy Dowling, who studies atmospheric physics, spent the spring anticipating insight from the final laps of the Cassini spacecraft mission and the first round of peer-reviewed papers from the Juno mission. He admits he has 鈥渟kin in the game鈥 鈥 hoping for validation of research and methods he published in 1994 and in 2009.
鈥淚鈥檓 on pins and needles to get the results of the 鈥楳RI鈥 on Saturn and Jupiter,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e got pretty big predictions on both of them.鈥
鈥淭his is a really neat time in astronomy and astrophysics,鈥 Dowling said. 鈥淭here鈥檚
a little bit of a renaissance right now.鈥





















