“The Ugly, the Bad, and the Good:”
Community College of Aurora’s Oct. 30 Sherlin Lecture
Liz.Vanlandingham@CCAurora.edu OR
Sarah Grace Pretzer, 303-360-4728
Sarah.Pretzer@CCAurora.edu
Southwest Research Institute’s Daniel Durda to deliver presentation
AURORA, COLO.—Is planet earth at risk of a minor asteroid strike, or
complete obliteration? What are asteroids, anyway? Community College of
Aurora’s Sherlin Lecture in Astronomy and Space Science will present
“Near-Earth Asteroids: The Ugly, the Bad, and the Good” by Dr. Daniel Durda
of the Southwest Research Institute of Boulder.
Free and open to the public, the event will be held Friday, Oct. 30, from
7:30-9 p.m. in the college’s Fine Arts Building Forum, 16000 E. CentreTech
Parkway in Aurora.
Durda is a research scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder
and an adjunct professor in the Department of Sciences at Front Range
Community College. His research interests include the collisional and
dynamical evolution of main-belt and near-Earth asteroids, Kuiper belt
comets, and interplanetary dust; airborne observations of planetary
occultations; the formation and observational detection of asteroidal
satellites; and the size distribution of dust from the catastrophic
disruption of meteoritic samples.
In addition to his career as a scientist and author of numerous scientific
publications, Durda is a certified scuba diver, cave diver, instrument rated
pilot, and an accomplished creator of space art.
Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) is one of the oldest and largest
independent, nonprofit, applied research and development organizations in
the United States. Its mission is to benefit government, industry, and the
public through innovative science and technology.
Following the lecture, CCA’s observatory will be open for free public
viewing. Members of the community are invited to come out and see various
deep sky objects from the only public observatory in Aurora.
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