Online Programs at Jenny Jump
UACNJ provides free public programs on-site at our Observatory in Jenny Jump State Forest from April through October on Saturday evenings.
During the off-season (November through March) UACNJ is now presenting an on-line astronomy related presentation that begins at 8 PM.
You can tune in by visiting us at our YouTube channel , or by clicking the name of the program below.
You can also subscribe to our
YouTube channel to get notifications when our presentations go live.
Date Topic Speaker 11/1/2025 What's Up in the November Sky? Paul Fischer, NWJAA 11/8/2025 [RERUN] Solar-Terrestrial Research in the Polar Regions Hyomin Kim, NJIT 11/15/2025 11/22/2025 [RERUN] Glass Giants: Extremely Large Telescopes Kevin Conod, NJAG 11/29/2025 [RERUN] George E Hale: Contributions to Astronomy in the 20th Century Mark Sproul, NWJAA 12/6/2025 What's Up in the December Sky? Lonny Buinis, RVCC 12/13/2025 [RERUN] HamSCI: Space Weather We Can Do Together! Nathaniel A. Frissell, University of Scranton 12/20/2025 12/27/2025 [RERUN] Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Astronomy but Were Too Afraid to Ask Daniel Kirby, AAA 1/3/2026 What's Up in the January Sky? Lonny Buinis, RVCC 1/10/2026 [RERUN] James Webb Space Telescope Update: 3 Years of Images Walt Windish, NJAG, RAC 1/17/2026 A Visit to the Sun and the Ionosphere Ron Wilcox, KF7ZN on Ham Radio 1/24/2026 [RERUN] Capturing the Universe: A Look at the Absurd Constraints of Measuring and Imaging Cosmic Features Matt Cooper 1/31/2026 [RERUN] 3D Printed Astronomy Mark Sproul, NWJAA 2/7/2026 What's Up in the February Sky? Lonny Buinis, RVCC 2/14/2026 [RERUN] Waste of Space: The Problem of Space Trash Chirag Skolar, NJIT 2/21/2026 TBA Tom Harbin, @AstroCanuck on Twitch 2/28/2026 [RERUN] An Unstable Fluid Universe: How Your Coffee Is Like a Supernova Chirag Skolar, NJIT 3/7/2026 What's Up in the March Sky? Lonny Buinis, RVCC 3/14/2026 [RERUN] Echoes from the Sky: Understanding Plasma One Blip at a Time Lindsay Goodwin, NJIT 3/21/2026 3/28/2026 [RERUN] Visual Astronomy: What's Up There and How Do I Find It Michael Spoleti