Phil Plait
Found 3 people in Virginia, Wisconsin, California and other states
Phil Plait - @BANews
blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy
Breaking astro and space news, from @BadAstronomer
Phil Plait Memes - @PhilPlaitMemes
Meme account for God himself. We will keep posting until Phil Plait notices us.
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Phil C Plait
B*****@badastronomy.com — (303) 927-****
***** Totier Creek Rd, Scottsville, VA
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Phil Plait
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Phil Plait - @thebadastronomer
astronomer, science enthusiast, bon vivant
1,767 followers
Phil - @philip_silvousplait
4 followers
Philip83 - @philiplat4
59 followers
Philipa - @plaitvw
5 followers
Philait - @philait
13 followers
Lisa Swaboda
Elementary School Teacher/ Summer Camp Leader
Raymond Ou
KTSF
Laleh Coté, Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley
Melanie English
Content Marketing Manager - QLess, Inc.
Joe Armstrong
Adjunct Professor - Pasadena City College
Gary Pollak, ACE
Jessica Vliet
Alisa Scott
Marketing & Operations Specialist - Latigic LLC
Kate Oliver
Innovation Consultant - Innovia Technology
Tom Fakes
David Scott Jones
Development Producer - Marleigh Entertainment
Owner
Jared Cowan Photography
Phil Plait
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Search address historyPhil Plait
Born: Phillip Cary Plait
(1964-09-30) September 30, 1964 (age 60)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Nationality: American
Hypervelocity Stars Hint at a Supermassive Black Hole Just outside the Milky Way
Scientific American - Thu, 22 May 2025
Under Alien Skies: A Recap of Dr. Phil Plait’s Neighborhood Lecture
Carnegie Science - Mon, 14 Oct 2024
Under Alien Skies: A Sightseer's Guide to the Universe
Living on Earth - Fri, 29 Nov 2024
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star—How Do Astronomers Know What You Are?
Scientific American - Fri, 11 Apr 2025
Under Alien Skies: A Sightseer's Guide to Saturn
Carnegie Science - Mon, 30 Sep 2024
How Can We Know If an Asteroid Will Hit Earth?
Scientific American - Fri, 07 Feb 2025
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope Was Never Meant to Look at the Sun. Astronomers Tried It Anyway
Scientific American - Thu, 16 Jan 2025
Why Do We Launch Space Telescopes?
Scientific American - Fri, 30 May 2025
Here’s How Interplanetary Missions Slingshot around the Solar System
Scientific American - Fri, 20 Jun 2025
When Was the First Exoplanet Discovered?
Scientific American - Fri, 28 Mar 2025
Space Isn’t as Silent as You Might Think
Scientific American - Fri, 25 Apr 2025
Mark Your Calendars for 2025’s Best Night-Sky Sights
Scientific American - Fri, 10 Jan 2025
What Is a Galaxy?
Scientific American - Thu, 08 May 2025
What’s on the Milky Way’s Far Side?
Scientific American - Fri, 21 Feb 2025
Most Planets in the Cosmos Probably Don’t Orbit Stars
Scientific American - Thu, 03 Apr 2025
What’s Inside Our Galaxy’s Darkest Place?
Scientific American - Fri, 06 Dec 2024
Naming the Stars Is Surprisingly Difficult
Scientific American - Thu, 19 Dec 2024
Are the Colors in Astronomical Images ‘Real’?
Scientific American - Fri, 14 Mar 2025
Do Aliens Know We’re Here?
Scientific American - Fri, 28 Feb 2025
Stories by Phil Plait
Scientific American - Fri, 21 Oct 2022
The Eta Aquariid Meteor Shower Will Light Up the Night Sky This Week
Condé Nast Traveler - Mon, 28 Apr 2025
Why Is the Sky Dark at Night? You Can Thank the Big Bang
Scientific American - Thu, 21 Nov 2024
How Do Astronomers Navigate the Sky?
Scientific American - Thu, 12 Dec 2024
What’s the Roundest Object in the Universe?
Scientific American - Fri, 15 Nov 2024
What Makes a Moon?
Scientific American - Fri, 21 Mar 2025
Will Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS Be the Brightest of the Year?
Scientific American - Fri, 27 Sep 2024
North America’s Only Total Lunar Eclipse of 2025 Is Coming. Here’s How to Watch It
Scientific American - Fri, 07 Mar 2025
Nope—It’s Never Aliens
Scientific American - Mon, 22 Jul 2024
How Many Planets Are in the Solar System?
Scientific American - Thu, 30 Jan 2025
How Dark Is the Night Sky?
Scientific American - Thu, 03 Oct 2024
Shields Up! Lunar Swirls Arise from Ancient Underground Force Fields on the Moon
Scientific American - Fri, 06 Sep 2024
How to See the Partial Solar Eclipse of March 29, 2025
Condé Nast Traveler - Tue, 25 Mar 2025
We’re Overdue for a Once-in-a-Lifetime Naked-Eye Nova
Scientific American - Fri, 11 Oct 2024
LIVE on Monday: What’s Phil thinking of NOW? GAIA
EarthSky - Mon, 12 Aug 2024
When the Moon Hits Your Eye like a Big Pizza Pie, That’s Illusion
Scientific American - Thu, 17 Oct 2024
All Good Things…
SYFY - Fri, 30 Sep 2022
Between Day and Night: The Time of Twilight
Scientific American - Thu, 31 Oct 2024
Phil Plait: Bad Astronomer and Champion for Science
WIRED - Mon, 14 Jan 2013
Book Review: Under Alien Skies by Dr. Phil Plait
Astrobites - Sun, 16 Apr 2023
"Bad Astronomer" Phil Plait speaks at Rochester's eclipse festival
WXXI News - Sun, 07 Apr 2024
Could the Milky Way Dodge a Collision with the Andromeda Galaxy?
Scientific American - Thu, 22 Aug 2024
Astronomer Phil Plait speaking April 24 at Merryman Center
UNK News - Tue, 11 Apr 2023
“Bad Astronomer” Phil Plait to Speak at Convocation about Death From the Skies – News
Carleton College - Tue, 28 Jul 2020
A Holiday Telescope Buying Guide
SYFY - Wed, 16 Dec 2015
So, astronomers *may* have found evidence of life on Venus
SYFY - Sun, 13 Sep 2020
Why Is the Moon So Two-Faced? Fresh Samples from the Lunar Far Side May Offer Answers
Scientific American - Fri, 19 Jul 2024
Love what you love. Let others love what they love.
SYFY - Thu, 24 Jan 2019
What would it be like to tour the cosmos? Interview with 'Bad Astronomer' Phil Plait
BBC Sky at Night Magazine - Tue, 11 Jul 2023
This is the best time all year to see the ringed magnificence of Saturn
SYFY - Mon, 26 Jul 2021
Failing Upwards: Science Learns by Making Mistakes by Phil Plait (Transcript)
The Singju Post - Tue, 26 Mar 2019
‘Bad Astronomer’ Phil Plait headlines April 17 Solar Eclipse panel
UNK News - Mon, 13 Mar 2017
Spectacular Hubble Photos to Celebrate 25 Years in Space for Humanity’s Telescope
Slate Magazine - Wed, 22 Apr 2015
Follow-Up: Interstellar Mea Culpa
SYFY - Sun, 09 Nov 2014
How Do Stars Really Die?
Scientific American - Thu, 01 Aug 2024
Listening for techno-savvy aliens: a search of 31 nearby Sun-like stars
SYFY - Tue, 23 Feb 2021
Is 'Oumuamua an interstellar spaceship? I'm still going with 'no.'
SYFY - Tue, 06 Nov 2018
Phil Plait: How Can Mistakes Lead To Scientific Advancement?
KUOW - Fri, 24 May 2019
President Obama Reaffirms NASA’s Goal: Put Humans on Mars. But Can NASA Do It His Way?
Slate Magazine - Mon, 17 Oct 2016
Behold, the Pillars of Creation
Slate Magazine - Tue, 06 Jan 2015
Scaling the solar system
SYFY - Tue, 28 Nov 2017
You Get One Chance to See This Comet. Then It Leaves the Solar System Forever.
Slate Magazine - Tue, 15 Dec 2015
The Science of Jurassic Park
Slate Magazine - Thu, 11 Jun 2015
No, Chemtrails Are Not an Actual Thing
Slate Magazine - Mon, 15 Aug 2016
This Isn’t Your Great-Great-Great-Grandparents’ Great Red Spot
Scientific American - Thu, 11 Jul 2024
Putting the spin on a rogue planet
SYFY - Fri, 29 Dec 2017
Arrival A not really Bad Astronomy review
SYFY - Wed, 15 Feb 2017
Phil Plait: How Can We Defend Earth From Asteroids?
NPR - Fri, 15 Feb 2013
Phil Plait
FFRF - Fri, 10 May 2024
Killer View: What If the Moon Orbited the Earth a LOT Closer?
Slate Magazine - Mon, 19 May 2014
This Month’s Full Moon Will Be Cool, But Not Super
Slate Magazine - Thu, 20 Jun 2013
Astronomer Phil Plait to speak at the Champaign Public Library
- Smile Politely - Sun, 21 Feb 2021
Carina’s star-spangled chaos
SYFY - Wed, 29 Aug 2018
Wait. How Big Is Space Again? (Video.)
Slate Magazine - Wed, 04 Feb 2015
What the Heck Is Going on at the North Pole?
Slate Magazine - Mon, 21 Nov 2016
Crash Course Astronomy: Black Holes
SYFY - Sat, 26 Sep 2015
A Galaxy Rises out of the Ocean
Slate Magazine - Sun, 19 Jan 2014
If you liked the science in the movie Arrival, I want to have a (single) word with you
SYFY - Fri, 03 Mar 2017
Forecast for Jupiter's moon Ganymede: Extremely cold and… humid?
SYFY - Tue, 27 Jul 2021
Walking the Vaccinated Walk
SYFY - Tue, 17 Jun 2014
Oops: How Fast Will Comet ISON Really Be Moving?
Slate Magazine - Fri, 22 Nov 2013
No, a Planetary Alignment on May 28 Won’t Cause an Earthquake
Slate Magazine - Mon, 18 May 2015
Climate Change: It’s Real, and It’s Us
Slate Magazine - Mon, 30 Sep 2013
Claims of Life in a Meteorite are Meteorwrong
Slate Magazine - Tue, 15 Jan 2013
Digital Cameras Revolutionized Astronomy. Then They Found Their Way into Your Pocket
Scientific American - Fri, 07 Jun 2024
Protons are 5% smaller than previously thought
SYFY - Fri, 24 Jun 2022
Astronomers Should Take a Deeper Look at Naming
Scientific American - Tue, 11 Jun 2024
Asteroid 165347 Philplait, in Living Color
Slate Magazine - Sun, 26 Jan 2014
When Was Earth Last Struck by a Supernova?
Scientific American - Fri, 24 May 2024
Hyperexpansion, Gravitational Waves, and Polarized Light: Oh My
Slate Magazine - Mon, 17 Mar 2014
The supermassive black hole in our galaxy recently erupted… and we don't know why
SYFY - Mon, 12 Aug 2019
Five Years of Staring Into the Sun
Slate Magazine - Fri, 13 Feb 2015
The Sun, Moon, and Two Planets in a Remarkable Photo from Space
Slate Magazine - Sun, 04 Aug 2013
A Crash Course in Transgender Sensitivity
Slate Magazine - Sat, 25 Apr 2015
Photo: Anvil-Topped Thunderhead Storm Cloud Over Colorado
Slate Magazine - Sat, 09 Jul 2016
The Sky Is Filled With Galaxies. Like, Literally Filled With Them.
Slate Magazine - Fri, 14 Oct 2016
Slate Blogger Phil Plait Hosts Discovery Channel’s “Curiosity: Solar Storms” Sunday Night
Slate Magazine - Sun, 30 Dec 2012
Patrick Moore, Controversial Astronomy and Science Promoter, Has Died
Slate Magazine - Sun, 09 Dec 2012
Global cooling: No, were not headed for a mini–ice age.
Slate Magazine - Tue, 14 Jul 2015
We Need to Get Back to the Moon
Inverse - Fri, 17 Mar 2023
Scientists Have Finally Detected Gravitational Waves, and They Reveal the Death Spiral of Two Monster Black Holes
Slate Magazine - Thu, 11 Feb 2016
Phil Plait - @philplait
2,645 followers
Phil Plait - @suzystoys2007
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Phil Plait - Wikipedia
Phil Plait ; Born. Phillip Cary Plait. (1964-09-30) September 30, 1964 (age 60). Washington, D.C., U.S. ; Nationality, American ; Other names, Bad Astronomer ; Alma ...
Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy: Home Page
Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy. ... One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact." ©2008 Phil Plait.
Who is the Bad Astronomer? - Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy: Info
But on these web pages, I'm discussing astronomy that is bad. Hence the name. ©2008 Phil Plait. All Rights Reserved. This page last modified. Site Meter.
Stories by Phil Plait | Scientific American
Phil Plait is a professional astronomer and science communicator in Virginia. His column for Scientific American, The Universe, covers all things space.
Phil Plait | Speaker - TED Talks
Phil Plait has spent his life evangelizing science, getting the word out about the real world and how we know what we know about it.
Ep. 112: Death From the Skies, Interview with Phil Plait
This week, Pamela is joined by Dr. Phil Plait to discuss his new book, Death from the Skies. Phil and Pamela talk about asteroid strikes, solar flares and gamma ...
Bad Astronomy Newsletter
Bad Astronomy Newsletter. Everything, the Universe, and Life. Written ByPhil Plait's Bad Astronomy Newsletter. Connect. Archive.
Phil Plait
Phil Plait writes Slate's Bad Astronomy blog and is an astronomer, public speaker, science evangelizer, and author of Death From the Skies!
Eclipse Demystified: An Evening with Dr. Phil Plait
Join renowned science communicator Dr. Phil Plait for a memorable evening of astronomy and humor as he presents everything you need to know.
Bad Astronomy Newsletter | Phil Plait | Substack
I have opinions, too: politics, life, climate science, and such as well. I'll write about 'em. By Phil Plait. · Launched 7 years ago.
Phil Plait | SYFY WIRE
NASA InSight 'hears' an asteroid impact on Mars. Four separate impacts detected by the NASA lander. By Phil Plait 2 years ago.
Bad Astronomy - Wikipedia
"Hoax" is a non-fiction book by the American astronomer Phil Plait, who is also known as "the Bad Astronomer".
Articles by Phil Plait's Profile | Scientific American, Bad Astronomy ...
Phil Plait. Verified. Columnist, Scientific American; Freelance Science Writer, Bad Astronomy Newsletter. Boulder.
Phil Plait - Freedom From Religion Foundation
On this date in 1964, astronomer, blogger, and skeptic Phil Plait was born in Washington, D.C. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of ...
Events - Cincinnati Observatory
Dr. Phil Plait, known as the 'Bad Astronomer' online because of his penchant for calling out misinformation, will be visiting Cincinnati on February 25 to give ...
Dr. Phil Plait, The Bad Astronomer - Celestron
Phil Plait knew he wanted to be an astronomer at the ripe old age of 5, when he first saw Saturn through a flimsy department store telescope.
Astronomer Phil Plait speaking April 24 at Merryman Center
Astronomer and renowned science communicator Phil Plait will take you to these distant worlds during an upcoming appearance in Kearney.
Phil Plait (@philplait.bsky.social) - Bluesky
Phil Plait. @philplait.bsky.social. 67.5K followers289 following. 10.6K posts. Bad Astronomer (formerly @BadAstronomer), SciCommer, Dork. Crash Course Astronomy ...
"Bad Astronomer" Phil Plait speaks at Rochester's eclipse festival
Phil Plait is one of the best-known names in the online astronomy community. A contributor to Scientific American, Plait writes the "Bad ...
Phil Plait - RationalWiki
Phil Plait. From RationalWiki. Jump to navigation Jump to search. A pasty geek, as he likes to describe himself. This might be. Skepticism.
takes audiences to Saturn for Space Talk presentation at LSC
On Oct. 19, 2023, we were joined by renowned author and science communicator Dr. Phil Plait for our latest Space Talk presentation: “Sightseeing in Space.”
Under Alien Skies: A Recap of Dr. Phil Plait's Neighborhood Lecture
In the latest Carnegie Science Neighborhood Lecture, Dr. Phil Plait took attendees on a captivating journey through Saturn's rings and moons—and ...
Phil Plait - Home - BBC Future
Phil Plait is the Bad Astronomer. Not a bad astronomer, but a blogger for Discover Magazine who debunks myths and misconceptions about astronomy - and also ...