It’s beautiful
If you go out on a dark moonless night, 
you will immediately know what I mean. The Milky Way, stretching its 
jagged course across the heavens, is quite a sight to behold. The 
constellations, particularly the winter constellations, have an elegance
 and familiarity to them. The Moon is also an appealing object, with its
 ever changing phases and frequent conjunctions with other planets in 
the sky. Through a small telescope, planetary disks, galaxies, nebulae 
and open clusters come into view, often startling in their majesty.
Of course, the beauty of the universe is 
not limited to what is immediately visible to our eyes. Deep space 
objects, seen through the largest of telescopes, are candidates for some
 of the most beautiful things ever seen by human eyes. Who could not 
fail to be impressed by the wonderful Hubble photos of the Crab and 
Eagle nebulas, or the views of the outer planets and moons from space 
probes such as Voyager and Cassini? To see for yourself, each day NASA 
publishes it’s Astronomy Picture of the Day. Few images ever fail to impress.
It’s extreme.
Nothing can be taken for granted about 
space. Most of it is unimaginably cold, interspersed occasionally by 
blisteringly hot stars with coronal temperatures of millions of degrees.
 Almost everything is racing around at breakneck speed: barreling 
through space at velocities of hundreds or thousands of kilometers a 
second relative to us. That’s enough to cause quite an impact if we were
 to get in their way. All around us catastrophic convulsions are taking 
place, with vast explosions and unconscionably high energies. This is a 
Universe of supernovas, neutron stars, magnetars, pulsars and Gamma Ray 
Bursts – beams of high energy radiation that would eliminate all life on
 our planet in an instant were our Earth unfortunate enough to stray too
 close. Black holes exist that can compress the mass of whole stars into
 volumes a few kilometers wide, creating gravitational fields that 
nothing, not even light itself, can escape from.
This is the stuff of childhood fantasies. 
Superpowers. Forcefields. Instantaneous death. The destruction of 
worlds. It is no wonder that space features so prominently in the minds 
of the young.
It ignites our curiosity.
Astronomy confronts us with some of the 
biggest and most challenging problems about the nature of ourselves and 
the fabric of reality. As a science, it has lead the way in overturning 
ancient notions of how nature should behave. At one time we believed 
ourselves to be at the centre of the Universe, with all objects, 
including the Sun, revolving around the Earth. Astronomers through the 
ages slowly revealed a different truth. Our star and our home planet are
 among countless billions in a very ancient Universe. Everything we do 
ultimately only affects an infinitesimally small piece of real-estate in
 the cosmos. This discovery, while deeply humbling, is enlightening. It 
tells us that we will never know everything. Our quest for knowledge is 
unlimited. We are ants in a cathedral, and what a cathedral it is.
The study of the stars and planets has 
pushed out the frontiers of knowledge in every direction. It’s 
contribution to science and mathematics cannot be underestimated. 
Without astronomy, the modern world as we know it would not exist. 
Astronomy continues to confound us and guide us right to this day. 
Gigantic accelerators are busy smashing sub-atomic particles into 
smithereens to gain greater insights into the nature of matter because 
objects in space do not always behave the way our current scientific 
models expect them to. Astronomy has revolutionised our understanding of
 nature and it will continue to do so.
It tells us about our past.
When you look into space, at any star you 
care to mention, you are looking into history. You are not seeing the 
star as it is now, but as it was when the photons of light left its 
photosphere many years ago. If you can find the Andromeda Galaxy in the 
sky, you are getting a picture of how it looked two million 
years ago, long before humans ever roamed our planet. The largest 
telescopes can see back billions of years ago, to galaxies in their 
infancy, still in the process of being formed.
History is about ourselves, how we got 
here, why things are how they are. Astronomy opens history even further 
by explaining the origins of our planet, our sun, our galaxy – even 
providing insights into our Universe and how it all started some 13 odd 
billion years ago.
Astronomy is fascinating even when applied
 to our own modest human story. We have had an intense relationship with
 the stars and planets for thousands of years. It guided the ancient 
cycles of sowing and harvesting. It provided the raw material for belief
 systems, rituals and religions. It contributed to our language. It 
assisted with navigation and discovery. In living memory, we have 
witnessed men walking on the Moon and robot probes being flung out of 
the solar system – events likely to be celebrated for millennia to come.
 Our relationship with the stars has shaped the culture of today.
It’s our future.
Astronomy is important to our future, from
 the short term to the distant long term. Over the coming decades, 
private companies will take over much of the heavy lifting formerly 
associated with government agencies such as NASA and ESA. This will 
create new jobs and new wealth. Bigger telescopes and better equipment 
will provide insights into reality that will stretch our technological 
capabilities. Over the coming centuries perhaps we will explore and 
colonise deep space for ourselves, using technologies yet undreamt of. 
In the end, billions of years from now, our sun will expand, frying 
everything on this planet before diminishing in size itself, its fuel 
spent, its job done.
Perhaps there is a large asteroid or comet
 out there in space with our name on it. Perhaps our planet will 
eventually turn against us, forcing us to find a new home. Perhaps we 
will find a way to cross the enormous gulfs separating us from other 
stars in our galaxy. All of these possibilities lead us to the 
conclusion that the stars will feature prominently in the future of the 
human race.
Astronomy is available to all, from the 
small child with his toy rocketship, to the octogenarian peering through
 her telescope at a crater on the Moon. Few endeavours are so wide in 
scope, so rich in detail, or so marvelous in implication. I invite you 
to join in.
Posted by Yudhi Ferraro
Posted by Yudhi Ferraro