Latest news with #celestialbodies


New York Times
10-07-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
‘Little, Big, and Far' Review: Dwelling in the Cosmos
Around halfway through Victor Hugo's novel 'Les Misérables,' the omniscient narrator is musing on the ways that the tiniest and grandest building blocks of life in our cosmos intersect. 'Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins,' he writes. 'Which of the two possesses the larger field of vision?' Good question. In Jem Cohen's uncategorizable film 'Little, Big, and Far,' an astronomer named Karl (Franz Schwartz) remarks that he was surprised as a child to learn that the stars were millions of miles apart, something he tells us while we're seeing images of the night sky. From his point of view perched on Earth, those stars seemed crowded together, keeping one another company, all connected. This leads him to ruminate on how human relationships can contain vast distances, even when our bodies are in relative physical proximity. For instance, there's the distance that's grown between him and his wife of 40 years, Eleanor (Leslie Thornton), who's also an astronomer, and who seems to be drifting away. That sense of echoes between celestial bodies, our bodies and the tiniest parts of the world — the ways things like uncertainty and harmony and connection and memory are embedded in the natural world, as well as the more metaphysical one — is the theme of 'Little, Big, and Far.' But I am not quite sure how to tell you what the film is, other than achingly beautiful. Those who've seen Cohen's previous films, including 'Museum Hours,' will have a sense of what they're in for; I've seen 'Big, Little and Far' described as an 'epistolary essayistic docu-fiction hybrid,' which is accurate but not all that illuminating. Epistolary, because most of the dialogue in the film is in the form of letters between Karl and a younger colleague, Sarah (Jessica Sarah Rinland), who is forming a relationship with Mateo (Mario Silva), also an astronomer. Karl and Sarah share their thoughts about their work, their relationships, their lives and the things that draw them to the stars. Often we're hearing their letters while seeing images of a giant telescope, people on a town square, traffic whizzing by on the highway, the natural world, the lights in the night sky. We hear a little from Eleanor, too, who speaks about watching an eclipse from a mall parking lot and being just as fascinated by the way the other observers, mostly strangers to one another, form a little community for the moment. During this rumination and many others, most images we are seeing are of real people going about their real lives, whether it's riding the light rail in Vienna or sitting on a folding chair and watching a solar eclipse. In one stretch of the film, Sarah's voice reflects on whether museums, as she puts it, must be 'places not only of knowledge, but of mourning' in an era in which species are disappearing from Earth at fearsome rates. As we listen, we watch people milling about a natural-history museum, looking at the displays, seemingly unaware of the presence of a camera. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
23-06-2025
- Science
- Yahoo
Starwatch: the meeting of a star, the planet Mars and our moon
Following last week's conjunction between Regulus and Mars, the moon now gets in on the act. This meeting of a star, a planet and a moon takes place on 29 June. The chart shows the view looking west from London at 22:15 BST that day. Red planet Mars has moved on from its close pass of blue-white star Regulus, giving enough space for a waxing crescent moon to slip in between them. The moon will be 4.7 days old, and heading towards its first quarter (half-moon) phase. Just over 22% of its visible surface will be illuminated. From the moon, our nearest celestial neighbour, it takes the sunlight that bounces from its surface just 1.3 seconds to reach our eyes. For Mars, the fourth planet in our solar system, the light travel time from its surface is 15 minutes and 57 seconds. And for Regulus it takes light 79 years to reach us. So we see the moon as it appeared 1.3 seconds ago, Mars as it appeared 15 minutes and 57 seconds ago, and Regulus as it appeared 79 years ago. The conjunction is easily visible from the southern hemisphere too, where it will appear in the north-north-west.


The Guardian
23-06-2025
- Science
- The Guardian
Starwatch: the meeting of a star, the planet Mars and our moon
Following last week's conjunction between Regulus and Mars, the moon now gets in on the act. This meeting of a star, a planet and a moon takes place on 29 June. The chart shows the view looking west from London at 22:15 BST that day. Red planet Mars has moved on from its close pass of blue-white star Regulus, giving enough space for a waxing crescent moon to slip in between them. The moon will be 4.7 days old, and heading towards its first quarter (half-moon) phase. Just over 22% of its visible surface will be illuminated. From the moon, our nearest celestial neighbour, it takes the sunlight that bounces from its surface just 1.3 seconds to reach our eyes. For Mars, the fourth planet in our solar system, the light travel time from its surface is 15 minutes and 57 seconds. And for Regulus it takes light 79 years to reach us. So we see the moon as it appeared 1.3 seconds ago, Mars as it appeared 15 minutes and 57 seconds ago, and Regulus as it appeared 79 years ago. The conjunction is easily visible from the southern hemisphere too, where it will appear in the north-north-west.