Come to Dangerous Dan's name your own celestial object super store. We have galaxies for $1000, limited supply here. Globular clusters for $900, only 150 of these left folks Planetary Nebula for $800, were the only ones selling these. Plus buy a set of all three and we'll throw in a free lunar crater and a handsome set of 6 steak knives. Plus every third order over $2000 gets a free samurai sword!!!! Call today, operators standing by. DT
________________________________ From: "Dunn, David" <David.Dunn@supervalu.com> To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:16 AM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Name a STAR?
You should have to pay double to Polaris. Epsilon lyrae should cost 4 times.
Thanks, David Dunn
-----Original Message----- From: utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of Ryan Simpkins Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2014 11:07 AM To: Utah Astronomy Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Name a STAR?
On Tue, May 13, 2014 05:38, Chuck Hards wrote:
This topic seems to pop up here every few years. I've had a personal experience with it that was rather sad. My ex-wife's nephew was killed in an auto-pedestrian accident many years ago, and some of his relatives "named" a star after him with the original company that offered this service. His parents asked me to show them the star in a telescope, which I did, gladly, but were somewhat saddened to learn that it wasn't an official designation. That's the problem with these companies, they mislead the public into thinking that the names they purchase are used by astronomers worldwide and are "official".
For the company in question, the details are right in their FAQ:
"Can I really name a star after a person? Can I buy a star? Will my star name be officially recognized?
Clearly, you cannot buy a star. The stars belong to all of us or none of us, whichever you prefer, and they are not for sale. Naming a star is a symbolic gift idea which obviously does not involve any legal title/ownership. Our register is not used by the scientific community although it is a perfectly valid register. Scientists refer to stars only by their astronomical coordinates, catalog number, or in a few cases by commonly-used names, such as "Polaris," the North Star. In referring to and listing stars by name - the name you choose - we have created a symbolic and personal rather than astronomically significant listing."
http://nameastarlive.com/faq.asp#namingofficial
Though it would be just as simple (and far cheaper) to create your own family "register" and start calling Vega "Aunt Doris" at your family star parties. I call dibs on Polaris. ;-)
-Ryan
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