Showing posts with label New Year's Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Year's Day. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 01, 2025

Celebrating 25 Years of Online Narcissism!

My main website and Blog for PARMAN'S PAGE turn 25 this year!
Richard T. Par

Happy New Year, everyone! So this year marks a quarter century since I created this Blog and my main website, Parman's Page.

I started working on this iteration of Parman's Page back in January of 2000...using Crosswinds.net as my webhost. I originally used Angelfire for my page, but it got deleted in 1999 because of the many photos I posted of beautiful models who I met at import car shows when I attended them on a regular basis back in college! (Prudes.)

In regards to this Blog, I set it up in October of 2000—with my very first entry being this witty gem.

I was 20 when I created my main webpage, and 21 when I set this Blog up several months later (my birthday is on October 4)...meaning that I've had these two sites for a bit more years than I did without them! Wow.

In case you're wondering, the layout for my website has essentially been the same since 2000. And no, I have no intention of doing a major redesign anytime soon!

Hope y'all have a wonderful 2025.

Monday, January 01, 2024

Another Presidential Election Is Upon Us...

Happy New Year, everyone! In case you're wondering if I'm gonna get as overly political on this Blog and my social media accounts during this election year like I did in 2020, this meme should be your first clue...

Enjoy 2024!

This is a GOOD QUESTION.

Sunday, January 01, 2023

Happy New Year, Everyone!

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 14, 2022.
Richard Par

Just thought I'd commemorate the first day of 2023 by sharing these photos that I took with my Google Pixel 4A phone at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles last month.

I can't divulge why I was at this arena since I was here for work (and the Los Angeles Football Club, who won the Major League Soccer championship on their home field at this venue two months ago, is currently chillin' in the off-season) but I just wanted to point out that it was awesome being at this stadium even though it rained and was cold as hell outside! This was the second professional sports arena (behind SoFi Stadium last June) that I had the opportunity to work at in 2022.

Dodger Stadium and Angel Stadium of Anaheim are the only two arenas in Los Angeles and Orange County that my job has yet to book me at. Those assignments will come soon enough...even though I hate cattle calls.

Have a safe and prosperous New Year!

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 12, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 13, 2022.
Richard Par

A photo I took at the Banc of California Stadium near downtown Los Angeles...on December 14, 2022.
Richard Par

Saturday, January 01, 2022

Happy New Year, Everyone!

Holding a printout of the certificate that I received for THE BROKEN TABLE from the EdiPlay International Film Festival last month.

Just thought I'd commemorate the first day of 2022 with this photo of me holding a printout of the certificate that I received from the EdiPlay International Film Festival last month. Hopefully, there'll be more awards to come for The Broken Table over the course of this year...as I submitted my short film to 37 film festivals in December alone!

We'll see what happens. As the film's poster below indicates, I don't think I'll have space to put laurels for that many festivals on it, anyway! Not to sound cocky, heh.

With that being said, have a nice New Year's Day...and hopefully y'all won't break your New Year's resolutions too soon! That is all.

A poster for THE BROKEN TABLE.

Wednesday, January 02, 2019

HELLO, ULTIMA THULE! 2019 Begins with Humanity Taking Glimpses of a Primordial Celestial World...

A snapshot of the Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule that was taken by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft from 18,000 miles (28,000 kilometers) away...on January 1, 2019 (Eastern Standard Time).
NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute

HAPPY BELATED NEW YEAR, EVERYONE!!! In case you're wondering why I didn't post a Blog entry on January 1st itself, it's because I wanted to start 2019 off with these amazing photos that were just released of 2014 MU69 (a.k.a. Ultima Thule)...which was briefly visited by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft over a half-hour after midnight on New Year's Day. Now 4 billion miles from Earth, New Horizons flew past this 22-mile-long Kuiper Belt object (KBO) at 12:33 AM, Eastern Standard Time on January 1 (9:33 PM, Pacific Standard Time on December 31)—making this the most distant object to ever be explored by a spacecraft.

The reddish hue of Ultima Thule is revealed in these snapshots taken by two cameras aboard NASA's New Horizons spacecraft...on January 1, 2019 (EST).
NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute

Since it takes over 6 hours for New Horizons to transmit its Ultima Thule data at the speed of light back to Earth, a total of 20 months will be required for all of the information gathered at this KBO to be beamed to our home planet. By the time the data transfer is completed next year, the New Horizons team will probably have submitted another proposal to NASA to explore a second KBO sometime in the 2020s. Ultima Thule was barely detected even using the full capabilities of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)—so it would remain to be seen if HST will be powerful enough to find another KBO (even farther from Earth than 2014 MU69 is) for New Horizons to reconnoiter. Let's hope that Hubble is powerful enough...or that the James Webb Space Telescope (which would easily detect KBOs beyond Ultima Thule's orbit) doesn't suffer another friggin' launch delay.

An artist's concept of the New Horizons spacecraft exploring Ultima Thule. Notice how accurate the depiction of the KBO is in this artwork (which was created well before yesterday's flyby) prior to its photographic unveiling by NASA on January 2, 2019.
Adrian Mann / All About Space

I would also like to point out that NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft officially entered orbit around asteroid Bennu on New Year's Eve (the probe arrived at the Near-Earth object on December 3). Congrats to this mission's team for the major milestone! And happy Hump Day, everyone.

The green line marks the path traveled by the New Horizons spacecraft as of 9:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time, on January 2, 2019. It is 4.1 billion miles from Earth.
ABOVE: The green line marks the path traveled by the New Horizons spacecraft as of 9:00 PM,
Pacific Standard Time, on January 2, 2019. It is 4.1 billion miles from Earth. Click
here to view the
official webpage showing where New Horizons is in space. (AU stands for Astronomical Units, in case you're wondering.)

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

New Horizons Update: Only Two Months Till the Ultima Thule Flyby!

An artist's concept of NASA's New Horizons spacecraft flying past the Kuiper Belt Object nicknamed 'Ultima Thule.'
NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute

So I just realized that NASA's New Horizons spacecraft makes its closest approach to Kuiper Belt Object (KBO) 2014 MU69—also nicknamed Ultima Thule—exactly two months from today! New Horizons flies past the KBO at 9:33 PM, Pacific Standard Time, on December 31...or 12:33 AM, Eastern Standard Time, on January 1, 2019.

I hope all of you are having a safe and fun Halloween! No trick-or-treaters stopped by my house for candy tonight, fortunately. Of course, trick-or-treaters haven't been stopping by my house for over half a decade now... Thank you, snooty Los Angeles County neighborhood that I live in! That was a compliment.

The green line marks the path traveled by the New Horizons spacecraft as of 9:00 PM, Pacific Daylight Time, on October 31, 2018. It is 4 billion miles from Earth.
ABOVE: The green line marks the path traveled by the New Horizons spacecraft as of 9:00 PM,
Pacific Daylight Time, on October 31, 2018. It is 4 billion miles from Earth. Click
here to view the
official webpage showing where New Horizons is in space. (AU stands for Astronomical Units, in case you're wondering.)

Monday, January 01, 2018

Photos of the Day: The Wolf Moon of 2018...

An image of the Supermoon that I took with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera on January 1, 2018.

Happy New Year, Everyone! I hope your first day of 2018 was a safe and memorable one. Anyways, just thought I'd share these pics that I took of tonight's Supermoon, also known as the Wolf Moon...which is the second Supermoon to take place in less than a month. And guess what? A third Supermoon will occur on January 31st—complete with a total lunar eclipse that will be visible over much of the world (except parts of Africa, South America and western Europe)! I definitely can't wait to get pics of that one...assuming I'll be able to get out of bed early in the morning to go outside and take photos. The total lunar eclipse itself begins at 4:51 AM and ends at 6:07 AM, Pacific Standard Time. Don't know if the Moon will have set below the horizon during that time, but it's all good. I used my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera to capture these images.

So once again, have a safe and prosperous new year, everyone! And Happy Monday.

Another image of the Supermoon that I took with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera on January 1, 2018.

Another image of the Supermoon that I took with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera on January 1, 2018.

Another image of the Supermoon that I took with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera on January 1, 2018.

Sunday, January 01, 2017

Happy New Year, Everyone!

Using data from the Dawn spacecraft's first science orbit in 2015, this image of Ceres approximates how the dwarf planet's colors would appear to the human eye.
NASA / JPL - Caltech / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA

Just thought I'd commemorate the start of 2017 by mentioning that today marks 216 years since dwarf planet Ceres was discovered by Italian astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi. This September celebrates 10 years since NASA's Dawn spacecraft was launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida to investigate this intriguing world! More details on the Ceres anniversary below...

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Ceres: Keeping Well-Guarded Secrets for 215 216 Years (News Release - January 26, 2016)

New Year's Day, 1801, the dawn of the 19th century, was a historic moment for astronomy, and for a space mission called Dawn more than 200 years later. That night, Giuseppe Piazzi pointed his telescope at the sky and observed a distant object that we now know as Ceres.

Today, NASA's Dawn mission allows us to see Ceres in exquisite detail. From the images Dawn has taken over the past year, we know Ceres is a heavily cratered body with diverse features on its surface that include a tall, cone-shaped mountain and more than 130 reflective patches of material that is likely salt. But on that fateful evening in 1801, Piazzi wasn't sure what he was seeing when he noticed a small, faint light through his telescope.

"When Piazzi discovered Ceres, exploring it was beyond imagination. More than two centuries later, NASA dispatched a machine on a cosmic journey of more than 3 billion miles to reach the distant, mysterious world he glimpsed," said Marc Rayman, mission director and chief engineer for Dawn at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California.

Piazzi was the director of the Palermo Observatory in Sicily, Italy, which has collected documents and instruments from the astronomer's time, and published a booklet on the discovery of Ceres. According to the observatory, Piazzi had been working on a catalog of star positions on January 1, 1801, when he noticed something whose "light was a little faint and colored as Jupiter." He looked for it again on subsequent nights and saw that its position changed slightly.

What was this object? Piazzi wrote to fellow astronomers Johann Elert Bode and Barnaba Oriani to tell them he had discovered a comet.

"I have presented this star as a comet, but owing to its lack of nebulosity, and to its motion being so slow and rather uniform, I feel in the heart that it could be something better than a comet, perhaps. However, I should be very careful in passing this conjecture to the public," Piazzi wrote to Oriani.

A Missing Planet?

Piazzi didn't entirely keep this secret. He told the press that this object was a comet, but did not provide data from his observations, which generated criticism from other astronomers. Piazzi then became sick for a time, and said he could not observe the object any more.

As newspapers spread the word that a comet had been found, astronomer Jerome de Lalande, based in Paris, wrote to Piazzi requesting relevant data in February. The Italian astronomer obliged in April, after recovering from his illness. One of Lalande's students, Johann Karl Burckhardt, performed calculations that revealed Piazzi's discovery did not have an orbit consistent with a comet's orbit. Instead, the data appeared to better fit a circular orbit.

Of course, there was no email in those days, and letters that Piazzi wrote to his friends Bode and Oriani about the so-called comet were delayed due to the Napoleonic Wars. They finally reached the astronomers in March.

The news was especially interesting to Bode because he had championed the Titius-Bode hypothesis: that the positions of planets in our solar system follow a specific pattern, which predicts each planet's distance from the sun. Uranus, discovered in 1781, fit the prediction, too. But the pattern also demanded that there be a planet, yet undiscovered, between Mars and Jupiter.

To find this missing planet, a group of German astronomers had established a society called the "Celestial Police" (Himmelspolizei in German), with Franz Xaver von Zach as its secretary, in 1800. There were 24 astronomers who each scoured a 15-degree piece of zodiacal sky for the missing object. However, Piazzi did not receive his invitation to join this group until after he had spotted Ceres.

Bode calculated an orbit based on Piazzi's data, and he believed that the object Piazzi saw was the missing planet that fit his formula (which was later discredited). Oriani, meanwhile, also calculated an orbit, and on April 7 asked von Zach to publish the news in his well-known astronomy journal, Monatliche Correspondenz, that such a planet may have been discovered.

Almost a 'Lost Comet'

As of spring 1801, besides Piazzi, no one had been able to observe the new celestial object because of cloudy skies and the object's position in its orbit -- it was no longer visible at night, and the sun blocked astronomers' views. Meanwhile, Piazzi still did not publish anything on the object, while he continued to refine his data. Several of his colleagues grew upset with Piazzi for holding back information. Without the data from his observations that concluded on Feb. 11, confirming his discovery would be more difficult -- since February, Ceres had been lost.

Why did Piazzi hesitate to make his data public? One reason might be that, though Piazzi was a skilled observer, he didn't have a solid theoretical knowledge of astronomy, so he couldn't calculate orbits quickly. Secondly, he risked the credibility and reputation of both himself and the observatory. But while he wavered, colleagues in Germany such as Bode firmly believed that there needed to be a planet between Mars and Jupiter. It was their conviction that helped keep the work going on this object, said Ileana Chinnici, who edited the Palermo Observatory's booklet on Ceres.

"Without the determination of the German astronomers, Piazzi would have been just the discoverer of a lost comet, in the best case. They 'believed' in the existence of the planet and were driven by the endeavor to confirm it. This shows how powerful are ideas, models, theories -- yesterday as well as today," Chinnici said.

The Search for Ceres

At last, in July 1801, Piazzi worked on calculating the object's orbit and made public his data about his observations from earlier in the year. And while other astronomers had already come up with their own names -- such as Juno, Hera and Piazzi (to honor the astronomer) -- Piazzi himself announced that the "new star" was called Ceres Ferdinandea. The "Ferdinandea" part honored King Ferdinand of Sicily.

Ceres, the Roman goddess of agriculture, was also the patron deity of Sicily, where Piazzi then lived and worked. Bode, who had wanted to call the object Juno, agreed on Ceres: "You have discovered it in Taurus, and it was re-observed in Virgo, Ceres of the old times. These two constellations are the symbol of agriculture. This occurrence is quite unique."

By the end of July 1801, many astronomers believed Ceres was a planet, but they needed additional confirmation and observations. Piazzi published his complete data set in von Zach's journal in September and, by doing so, got the attention of a young mathematician who would become instrumental in the fate of Ceres.

Twenty-four-year-old Carl Friedrich Gauss had been experimenting with mathematical methods for which he would later become famous. When he applied those methods to Ceres, he came up with different predictions for its position than what others had calculated. Though some were skeptical about Gauss's results, his calculations enabled von Zach to be the first to see Ceres again, on Dec. 7, 1801, followed by other prominent astronomers of the time, and by Piazzi himself on February 23, 1802.

Asteroids: A New Category of Objects

We credit Gauss for calculating the orbit of Ceres. But he did not resolve a fundamental question: What is Ceres?

In March 1802, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers discovered a second, similar object, which later became known as Pallas. William Herschel, one of the most famous astronomers in history, then wrote an essay proposing that both Ceres and Pallas represented an entirely new class of objects: asteroids. Herschel wrote of Ceres: "if we called it planet, it would not fill the space between Mars and Jupiter with the dignity required by that position."

Though Herschel considered it an achievement that Piazzi had encountered the first example of an asteroid, Piazzi was disappointed. He thought that Herschel, who had discovered Uranus, just wanted to downplay Ceres. Piazzi wrote to Oriani: "Be they called planetoides or cometoides then, but never asteroides. [...] If an Asteroid Ceres must be called, so must also be called Uranus."

Nonetheless, the door had opened for many more asteroids to be observed. The discoveries of Juno in 1804 and Vesta in 1807 (which would later become the first target of NASA's Dawn mission) reinforced Herschel's notion that asteroids are a class of their own. Herschel coined the term "asteroid" because of their star-like appearance in telescopes. Today, we know there are hundreds of thousands of asteroids in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Piazzi's Legacy

Piazzi could not have known that NASA's Hubble Space Telescope would one day deliver many intriguing images of Ceres, allowing scientists to confirm that the body is, indeed, round like Earth. He could not imagine that in 2006, long after his death, the International Astronomical Union would upgrade Ceres from asteroid to dwarf planet, receiving the same classification as Pluto, which had not yet been discovered in his lifetime. He did not know that in 2007, NASA's Dawn mission would launch from a place called Cape Canaveral in Florida to embark on an unprecedented journey to orbit Vesta and Ceres.

He likely didn't imagine that a space observatory named after Herschel would find in 2013 that there is water vapor emanating from Ceres, following up on 1992 observations of hydroxide at Ceres from NASA's International Ultraviolet Explorer.

Nor could he have guessed that on March 6, 2015, Dawn would be successfully captured into Ceres' orbit, and would spend the rest of the year sending photos and other valuable data back to Earth. He wouldn't know that scientists would use the Hubble Space Telescope's unique capabilities in November 2015 to observe Ceres in the ultraviolet spectrum, complementing Dawn's observations.

Now, as we commemorate the 215th 216th anniversary of Ceres' discovery this month, Dawn is observing the dwarf planet from its lowest orbit ever: 240 miles (385 kilometers) from the surface. The many craters and other features that Piazzi could not see with his telescope are being named after agricultural deities or festivals, extending the theme that Piazzi began with the name "Ceres."

"Our knowledge, our capabilities, our reach and even our ambition all are far beyond what Piazzi could have imagined, and yet it is because of his discovery that we can apply them to learn more, not only about Ceres itself but also about the dawn of the solar system," Rayman said.

Dawn's mission is managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Dawn is a project of the directorate's Discovery Program, managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. UCLA is responsible for overall Dawn mission science. Orbital ATK Inc., in Dulles, Virginia, designed and built the spacecraft. The German Aerospace Center, Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Italian Space Agency and Italian National Astrophysical Institute are international partners on the mission team.

Source: Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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A composite image of the Dawn spacecraft departing from asteroid Vesta in September of 2012.
NASA / JPL - Caltech

Friday, January 01, 2016

Happy New Year, Everyone!

A false color image of Pluto taken by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft on July 14, 2015.
NASA / JHUAPL / SwRI

Just thought I'd start 2016 off by posting this cool image of Pluto that was taken by the New Horizons spacecraft last July...despite the fact that NASA released this pic to celebrate Christmas instead. It's all good. Hope you folks had a great holiday!

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Christmas Pluto (Press Release - December 23)

Pluto gets into the holiday spirit, decked out in red and green. This image was produced by the New Horizons composition team, using a pair of Ralph/LEISA instrument scans obtained at approximately 9:40 AM on July 14, from a mean range of 67,000 miles (108,000 kilometers). The resolution is about 7 kilometers per LEISA pixel. Three infrared wavelength ranges (2.28-2.23, 1.25-1.30 and 1.64-1.73 microns) were placed into the three color channels (red, green and blue, respectively) to create this false color Christmas portrait.

Source: NASA.Gov

Thursday, January 01, 2015

The Year of New Horizons and Star Wars Has Arrived!

An artist's concept of NASA's New Horizons spacecraft approaching Pluto.
NASA

Happy New Year, Everyone! 2015 promises to be a mega-year in terms of movies and space exploration...with our first close-up glimpse of two dwarf planets about to take place in a few months, and the follow-up to The Avengers and the long-awaited first installment in the Star Wars sequel trilogy set to come out in theaters by this Christmas. In terms of the dwarf planets, NASA's Dawn spacecraft will arrive at asteroid Ceres this March—while the New Horizons spacecraft will make its historic flyby of Pluto this July (the probe will begin Pluto encounter operations on January 15). On the manned side of spaceflight, a NASA astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut will launch to the International Space Station this March to begin a year-long mission aboard the outpost that should provide intriguing data about how humans will someday fare during a years-long journey to and from Mars.

Kylo Ren takes out his 'Crucifix-Saber' to get ready to fight in STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS.

On the movie aspect of 2015, Avengers: Age of Ultron will continue Marvel's winning streak at the theaters on May 1, while Disney (which owns Marvel) will enhance its overall winning streak when Kylo Ren (shown above) unleashes the Dark Side of the Force in Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens on December 18. Other potential blockbusters will storm the cinemas as well...like Furious 7 (April 3), Mad Max: Fury Road (May 15), Jurassic World (June 12), Terminator: Genisys (July 1), the James Bond film Spectre (November 6), Part 2 of The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (November 20) and Mission: Impossible 5 (Christmas Day). In terms of M:I-5, I hope it's as good as 2011's Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol...but I sure as heck hope that it doesn't eat too much into The Force Awakens' box office take during the holidays! We'll see if Tom Cruise's Ethan Hunt proves a match for Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) and Han Solo (Harrison Ford) when they hit the big screen once more.

Ultron (voiced by James Spader) will show that he's a force to be reckoned with in AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON.

On a personal note, two close high school friends of mine are planning to get married (to other folks, that is) by the end of this year. Good for them! For financial reasons, I'm just hoping that their weddings will both be in-state (California, FYI). One of them already is. Cross my fingers that the other one will, too! Heh.

A photo I took of NASA's Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite during a tour at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory near Pasadena, California...on September 8, 2014.

January 2015
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo to the International Space Station (Jan 6)
-Taken 3 (Jan 9)
-72nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (Jan 11)
-College Football Playoff National Championship in Arlington, Texas (Jan 12)
-NASA's New Horizons spacecraft begins Pluto encounter operations (Jan 15)
-Blackhat (Jan 16)
-NASA's SMAP satellite is launched to low-Earth orbit (Jan 29)

The logo for Super Bowl XLIX.

February 2015
-Super Bowl XLIX in Glendale, Arizona (Feb 1)
-Jupiter Ascending (Feb 6)
-57th Annual Grammy Awards (Feb 8)
-Kingsman: The Secret Service (Feb 13)
-Fifty Shades of Grey (Feb 13)
-2015 NBA All-Star Game in New York, New York (Feb 15)
-Hot Tub Time Machine 2 (Feb 20)
-57th annual Daytona 500 in Florida (Feb 22)
-87th Academy Awards (Feb 22)
-Focus (Feb 27)

An artist's concept of NASA's Dawn spacecraft approaching the dwarf planet Ceres.

March 2015
-NASA's Dawn spacecraft arrives at dwarf planet Ceres (Mar 6)
-Chappie (Mar 6)
-The Coup (Mar 6)
-The first qualification motor test-firing is conducted on the 5-segment solid rocket booster for NASA's Space Launch System, in Utah (Mar 11)
-Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension (Mar 13)
-2015 NCAA March Madness basketball tournament begins with Opening Round Game (Mar 17)
-The Divergent Series: Insurgent (Mar 20)
-A total solar eclipse will be visible over Europe (Mar 20)
-Get Hard (Mar 20)
-NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko launch on a one-year mission to the International Space Station (Mar 27)
-Conclusion of the March Madness tournament prior to the 2015 Final Four games in Indianapolis (Mar 29)

A promo pic for FURIOUS 7.

April 2015
-Furious 7 (Apr 3)
-2015 NCAA Final Four basketball tournament in Indianapolis, Indiana (Apr 4)
-A total lunar eclipse will be visible over western North America, the Pacific, east Asia, Australia and New Zealand (Apr 4)
-NCAA Final Four Championship Game in Indianapolis, Indiana (Apr 6)
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo to the International Space Station (Apr 8)
-NFL Draft begins (Apr 30)

The Hulkbuster suit will see action in AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON.

May 2015
-Avengers: Age of Ultron (May 1)
-NFL Draft concludes (May 2)
-Mad Max: Fury Road (May 15)
-Pitch Perfect 2 (May 15)
-Spy (May 15)
-Tomorrowland (May 22)
-Start of the 2015 French Open tennis tournament (May 24)
-99th Indianapolis 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (May 24)
-San Andreas (May 29)

A dinosaur amusement park is successfully (and foolishly) opened in JURASSIC WORLD.

June 2015
-Entourage (Jun 5)
-Conclusion of the 2015 French Open (Jun 7)
-Jurassic World (Jun 12)
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo, including the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, to the International Space Station (Jun 13)
-Inside Out (Jun 19)
-Ted 2 (Jun 26)

An artist's concept of NASA's New Horizons spacecraft venturing past Pluto and its main moon Charon.

July 2015
-Terminator Genisys (Jul 1)
-Start of the 2015 Tour de France (Jul 4)
-Minions (Jul 10)
-NASA's New Horizons spacecraft makes its closest approach to the dwarf planet Pluto (Jul 14)
-2015 Major League Baseball All-Star Game in Cincinnati, Ohio (Jul 14)
-Ant-Man (Jul 17)
-Trainwreck (Jul 17)
-Pan (Jul 24)
-Poltergeist (Jul 24)
-Conclusion of the Tour de France (Jul 26)
-Point Break (Jul 31)

This year's World Rowing Championships will be held in Aiguebelette, France.

August 2015
-The Fantastic Four (Aug 7)
-Masterminds (Aug 14)
-Straight Outta Compton (Aug 14)
-Launch of Japan's fifth H-2 Transfer Vehicle to the International Space Station (Aug 17)
-Sinister 2 (Aug 21)
-Hitman: Agent 47 (Aug 28)
-Start of the 2015 World Rowing Championships in France (Aug 30)

Jason Clarke plays a mountain hiker on the world's tallest peak in EVEREST.

September 2015
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo to the International Space Station (Sep 2)
-Jane Got a Gun (Sep 4)
-Kitchen Sink (Sep 4)
-Conclusion of the World Rowing Championships (Sep 6)
-Triple Nine (Sep 11)
-A partial solar eclipse will occur (Sep 13)
-Black Mass (Sep 18)
-Everest (Sep 18)
-The Intern (Sep 25)

A production still of Tom Hanks in Steven Spielberg's Cold War thriller, ST. JAMES PLACE.

October 2015
-Victor Frankenstein (Oct 2)
-London Has Fallen (Oct 2)
-The Jungle Book (Oct 9)
-Vacation (Oct 9)
-St. James Place (Oct 16)
-Jem and the Holograms (Oct 23)
-The Last Witch Hunter (Oct 23)

Jennifer Lawrence plays Katniss Everdeen in the second and final installment of THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY.

November 2015
-Start of the Asian Archery Championships in Bangkok, Thailand (Nov 1)
-Spectre (Nov 6)
-The Peanuts Movie (Nov 6)
-Conclusion of the Asian Archery Championships (Nov 8)
-The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 (Nov 20)
-The Good Dinosaur (Nov 25)
-The Martian (Nov 25)

Daisy Ridley plays Rey in STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS.

December 2015
-Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens (December 18)
-Alvin and the Chipmunks 4 (Dec 23)
-Mission: Impossible 5 (Dec 25)
-The Revenant (Dec 25)
-The U.S. Marine Corps' F-35B Lightning II fighter jet officially becomes operational and ready for combat (TBD)
-China launches the Barcelona Moon Team's lander and rover to the lunar surface (TBD)
-Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus freighter launches cargo to the International Space Station (TBD)

Wednesday, January 01, 2014

Happy New Year, Everyone!

An artist's concept of the Orion vehicle soaring in Earth orbit atop a Delta IV upper stage motor...during Exploration Flight Test-1.
NASA

2014 looks to be an action-packed year in terms of what's happening in sports, films and space exploration. Sports-wise, you have next month's Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Movie-wise, you have the return of Autobots and Decepticons to the big screen with Transformers: Age of Extinction, Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels once again teaming up as Lloyd Christmas and Harry Dunne in Dumb and Dumber To, Part 1 of The Hunger Games: Mockingjay and the final Hobbit installment, There and Back Again. Oh, and you have the start of principal photography for 2015's Star Wars: Episode VII in the coming weeks! Woohoo.

Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels reprise their roles as Lloyd Christmas and Harry Dunne in DUMB & DUMBER TO.

With space exploration, Japan launches Hayabusa 2 to an asteroid this December (hopefully), MAVEN and India's Mars Orbiter Mission probe reach the Red Planet this September, NASA's Orion capsule makes its much-anticipated test flight into space that month as well, and the New Horizons spacecraft crosses the orbit of Neptune on August 25—exactly 25 years to the day that Voyager 2 flew past the gas giant. After that, the next world on New Horizons' radar is none other than Pluto itself! Oh, and later this month the Opportunity Mars rover will mark her 10-year anniversary since landing on the Red Planet. Lots of cool milestones this year...if you're a space geek.

The logo for the 2014 BCS National Championship Game in Pasadena, California.

January 2014
-Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones (Jan 3)
-BCS National Championship Game in Pasadena, California: Auburn vs. Florida State (Jan 6)
-Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus freighter launches cargo to the International Space Station (Jan 7)
-71st Annual Golden Globe Awards (Jan 12)
-Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (Jan 17)
-I, Frankenstein (Jan 24)
-NASA's Opportunity rover marks its 10th year of operation since landing on Mars (Jan 25)
-56th Annual Grammy Awards (Jan 26)

The logo for the XXII Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.

February 2014
-Super Bowl XLVIII in East Rutherford, New Jersey (Feb 2)
-Opening Ceremony – XXII Olympic Winter Games of Sochi (Feb 7)
-The LEGO Movie (Feb 7)
-The Monuments Men (Feb 7)
-RoboCop (Feb 12)
-2014 NBA All-Star Game in New Orleans, Louisiana (Feb 16)
-Pompeii (Feb 21)
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo to the International Space Station (Feb 22)
-56th annual Daytona 500 in Florida (Feb 23)
-Closing Ceremony – Olympic Winter Games (Feb 23)

Promotional artwork for 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE.

March 2014
-86th Academy Awards (Mar 2)
-300: Rise of an Empire (Mar 7)
-2014 NCAA March Madness basketball tournament begins with Opening Round Game (Mar 18)
-Stretch (Mar 21)
-Conclusion of the March Madness tournament prior to the 2014 Final Four games in Arlington, Texas (Mar 29)

A photo I took of an annular solar eclipse that occurred above Southern California, on May 20, 2012.

April 2014
-Captain America: The Winter Soldier (Apr 4)
-2014 NCAA Final Four basketball tournament in Arlington, Texas (Apr 5)
-NCAA Final Four Championship Game in Arlington, Texas (Apr 7)
-A total lunar eclipse will be visible over east Australia, the Pacific, and North and South America (Apr 15)
-Transcendence (Apr 18)
-An annular solar eclipse will be visible over parts of Antarctica and Australia (Apr 29)

Promotional artwork for GODZILLA.

May 2014
-Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus freighter launches cargo to the International Space Station (May 1)
-The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (May 2)
-NFL Draft (May 8-10)
-Godzilla (May 16)
-Million Dollar Arm (May 16)
-X-Men: Days of Future Past (May 23)
-Start of the 2014 French Open tennis tournament (May 25)
-98th Indianapolis 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (May 25)
-Maleficent (May 30)
-A Million Ways to Die in the West (May 30)

Optimus Prime returns to the big screen in TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION.

June 2014
-Edge of Tomorrow (Jun 6)
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo to the International Space Station (Jun 6)
-Conclusion of the 2014 French Open (Jun 8)
-Start of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil (Jun 12)
-22 Jump Street (Jun 13)
-Launch of Europe's fifth Automated Transfer Vehicle, Georges Lemaitre, to the International Space Station (Jun 17)
-The Purge 2 (Jun 20)
-Transformers: Age of Extinction (Jun 27)

Caesar and his Simian race rise up against the humans in DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES.

July 2014
-Start of the 2014 Tour de France (Jul 5)
-Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (Jul 11)
-Conclusion of the FIFA World Cup (Jul 13)
-2014 Major League Baseball All-Star Game in Minneapolis, Minnesota (Jul 15)
-Jupiter Ascending (Jul 18)
-Conclusion of the Tour de France (Jul 27)

Megan Fox as April O'Neil in TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES.

August 2014
-Guardians of the Galaxy (Aug 1)
-Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Aug 8)
-The Expendables 3 (Aug 15)
-Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (Aug 22)
-Start of the 2014 World Rowing Championships in the Netherlands (Aug 24)
-NASA's New Horizons spacecraft crosses Neptune's orbit on the way to Pluto (Aug 25)
-Conclusion of the World Rowing Championships (Aug 31)

An artist's concept depicting NASA's MAVEN spacecraft studying Mars' atmosphere.

September 2014
-SpaceX's Dragon ship launches cargo to the International Space Station (Sep 12)
-NASA’s Orion vehicle makes first flight into space on Exploration Flight Test-1 (Sep 18)
-NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft arrives at Mars (Sep 22)
-India’s Mars Orbiter Mission probe arrives at the Red Planet (Sep 24)

Ben Affleck as Nick Dunne in GONE GIRL.

October 2014
-Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus freighter launches cargo to the International Space Station (Oct 3)
-A total lunar eclipse will be visible over North America, the Pacific, Australia, and east Asia (Oct 8)
-Gone Girl (Oct 10)
-Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (Oct 10)
-Comet C/2013 A1 to make close flyby of Mars (Oct 19)
-A partial solar eclipse will be visible over far eastern Russia and most of North America (Oct 23)
-Paranormal Activity 5 (Oct 24)

Jennifer Lawrence returns as Katniss Everdeen in Part 1 of THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY.

November 2014
-Interstellar (Nov 7)
-Dumb and Dumber To (Nov 14)
-Fury (Nov 14)
-The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 (Nov 21)
-Horrible Bosses 2 (Nov 26)

An artist's concept of Japan's Hayabusa 2 spacecraft exploring an asteroid.

December 2014
-The Hobbit: There and Back Again (Dec 17)
-Night at the Museum 3 (Dec 25)
-Unbroken (Dec 25)
-Japan’s Hayabusa 2 spacecraft launches to asteroid (162173) 1999 JU3 (TBD)
-The United States and the United Kingdom officially withdraw their troops from Afghanistan, marking the end to 13 years of combat operations in the Central Asian country (Dec 31)