Prescott Public Library Presentation
On Thursday, April 19, 2007 I presented “HiRISE: The People’s Camera” at the Prescott Public Library in Prescott, Arizona. The library and the Prescott Astronomy Club put together a wonderful sequence of talks and star parties as part of International Astronomy Week.

My presentation went well. For some reason I was especially nervous right before the talk, but immediately after I started my nervousness went away, most likely because my hosts and the audience were so receptive. I am not sure how many people attended, but the room was full. At the end of the presentation there were a lot of great questions from the audience, including basic questions about Mars, questions about our current understanding of Mars, questions about HiRISE and its capabilities, and questions about the future of space exploration. I put my foot in my mouth only once, when I referred to the Deep Space Network (DSN) as “antiquated”. A former JPL engineer in the audience politely and informatively corrected my word choice.
A couple weeks before the talk we snail mailed two color printouts of PSP_001336_1560 – “Delta in Eberswalde” – to Prescott for framing. One image is the entire black-and-white image with central color swath, and the other is a zoomed-in color subscene. During setup prior to the presentation, the frame shop delivered the images, and they had done a fantastic framing job! People were naturally drawn to the images before and after the presentation and I answered lots of questions about them.
I promised I would place the PowerPoint presentation online, and here it is. The PowerPoint presentation file is about 22 MB in size. I have notes in the notes section of the slides, including information about the images used as well as their URLs. I want to especially thank Stuart Heggie for allowing me to use his beautiful astrophotography image “Conjunction of Moon, Venus and Mars – Dec 1 2002“. His image helped me to make a point about the history of Mars observation.
Thank you to my hosts, including Meghan and Douglas, and everyone who attend a delicious pre-presentation pizza dinner, including the current and former presidents of the Prescott Astronomy Club and their spouses, the library’s Adult Services Director, and the talented graphic designer of many of their brochures and other materials (including a t-shirt I will take a picture of soon). The audience deserves my thanks because they had such great questions and were incredibly good-natured. Thank you, everyone!


November 28th, 2007 at 4:44 pm
Happy Holidays! Thanks for this blog and for your hirise information. As a former JPL’er, I had led the JPL spacecraft and instruments Materials Science and Technology groups for JPL’s Division 35 (Mechanical and Chemical Systems Division) through the 1980’s; Galileo and Magellan were two of our spacecraft at that time, and I’ve followed subsequent work with keen interest.
I moved to the Prescott area in 2005 and am now President of PMUG, the Prescott Macintosh User Group. I’d be pleased to have you make a presentation to our group, if you would like to. We’re upgrading our website shortly, but you still should be able to find us at: http://www.pmug.us.
Looking forward to hearing back and meeting you soon. Sincerely, Bob.
February 7th, 2009 at 8:31 pm
When and where are the February meeting of the Prescott PMUG?