University of Valencia logo Logo Scientific Culture and Innovation Unit - Chair for Scientific Dissemination Logo del portal

 Request workshop

 

The Astronomy workshop can be done during the day or at night.

Enric Marco, technician of the Astronomy Classroom, starts this activity with a short introductory talk of about twenty minutes in order to detail some topic related to the solar system and space exploration. Then you can do:

  • Daytime workshop: The telescope will be used to observe the Sun. Its main characteristics and how to observe it safely will be explained.
  • Nighttime workshop: With the telescope we will observe the Moon and the visible planets. Their main characteristics and how to observe them will be explained.

In the two cases when atmospheric conditions are adverse for observation, the observational part will be replaced by another activity from the Astronomy Classroom.

Target audience:  It is necessary to communicate the level of the students in order to adapt the workshop
Number of attendees:  25 attendees maximum
Place:  Faculty of Physics, Burjassot Campus of the University of Valencia

 

 

 

 

Brief CV

Enric Marco has a degree and a PhD in Physics from the University of Valencia. He has spent long periods at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias in La Laguna (Tenerife) and at the Kiepenheuer Institut für Sonnenphysik (Kiepenheuer Institute of Solar Physics) in Freiburg (Germany). He has been a professor of Astronomy and Computer Science in the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics of the Faculty of Physics of the University of Valencia. He is currently a senior technician in Astronomy in the Faculty of Physics and is in charge of the Astronomy Classroom at the University of Valencia, a laboratory dedicated to the teaching and dissemination of this science.

His main field of research has been directed to the study of the magnetic activity of the Sun. He currently collaborates with the team at the University of Valencia that has designed instruments for Solar Orbiter, the solar mission of the European Space Agency. His other field of work is the study of light pollution and its effect on astronomical observation and the environment. It is part of Salvem la nit, the Light Pollution working group of the University of Valencia, integrated in the Spanish Network of Studies on Light Pollution. Activist against the excesses in night lighting that have stolen our stars, he is currently president of Cel Fosc, an association against light pollution.

He has two books published, in collaboration with other astronomers, Astronomia Fonamental and A la Lluna de València: 10 biografies d'astrònom a astrònom and numerous dissemination articles in newspapers and magazines.

Convinced that science must not only be produced but also transmitted to society, he has made a significant effort to disseminate it. He has given numerous lectures and carried out astronomical observation sessions at outreach conferences and in teaching centers. Since 2005, he has been writing on his internet blog dedicated to astronomy, Pols d’estels. He is also vice-president of the Safor Astronomical Group.

More information

 

Social networks

  • @EnricMarcoSoler
  • @celfosc
  • @FacFisicaUV
  • @CdCienciaUV
  • @MednightGTS

 

 

Request workshop



These activities have the cofunding of the Spanish Society for Science andTechnology and the Ministry of Science and Innovation