Sometimes surprised by the advertisements which are automatically selected to appear next to my videos.
Another surprising ad?
The Messier Objects - First Steps
This week was the proper launch of Deep Sky Videos.
One of our main tasks will be making videos about the famous Messier Catalogue, which we introduced in this video:
There are 110 object in the catalogue, so it should keep us busy.
We won't be doing them in order, but we did start with M1 - the Crab Nebula:
Follow Deep Sky Videos on Twitter or Facebook.
The Brilliant Janet Folkes
Dr Janet Folkes died today after a long battle with cancer.
Janet was an engineering lecturer at the University of Nottingham
Her successful career included work with lasers and a high-powered waterjet.
I first met met Janet through this scientific work, but spent far more time with her making films about hot air balloons.
Flying was Janet's great passion - especially in balloons - and she still holds numerous world records in them.
I was lucky enough to share just a few fragments of these adventures (usually from the ground)... and spent many hours hearing tales about the other ones.
Some films about Janet's adventures can be found below.
Janet was a brilliant woman - generous, genuine and brilliantly understated.
My wife and I joined her in Switzerland for a remarkable ballooning festival and the maiden flight of the University of Nottingham hot air balloon.
The trip remains one of our fondest memories.
Janet also "donated" numerous flights for charity, including one with my brother-in-law which we followed as ground crew.
It was another great day made possible by Janet.
I imagine there are hundreds of other people whose "brilliant days" had Janet working the burner!
It's sad that she's gone, but we've been left with many great memories. It's just a bit hard to smile about them today.
Science-named Pets
This week I posted a video about a viewer in Norway who named her pet rabbit "Buckyball".
Small, round, black - it seems an appropriate name for a chemistry fan.
Buckyball (rabbit)
The 16-year-old owner, named Izabelle, told us that Buckyball was expecting babies and was after more science-themed names.
Since then, viewers of our chemistry videos have been suggesting plenty of options. And feel free to suggest more here on the blog, etc.
However I've since cast my net wider and been asking people to share more pets who have science-inspired names.
Here are a few that have caught my eye:
Neil deGrasse Tyson (boxer dog) 
Jayden from New Zealand told me his family adopted this dog because his owners were fleeing Christchurch after the first big earthquake.
Apparently he was in poor condition and underweight, but he's since back to full fitness.
Jayden's family wanted to call the dog Tyson...
But Jayden only agreed on the condition the dog's official name was Neil deGrasse Tyson, the American astrophysicist and science communicator.
Dubnium-Dysprosium (centipede)
A Swiss physicist named Maja sent me this rather alarming picture of a pet centipede named after two of the lesser-known elements on the periodic table.
Maja said she chose the name because: "I thought it sounded special."
But apparently Maja's mother preferred to call the creature "Alejandro" because it was easier to pronounce and was from a popular Lady Gaga song?!
Dubnium-Dysprosium died of old age last September.
Niels (cockatiel) 
Twitter user paradoxosaurus shared a picture of his cockatiel named Niels.
The bird's named after the late, great Danish scientist Neils Bohr.
We can now add the bird-naming to Bohr's impressive list of honours which also included the Nobel Prize.
This is Steve
Some of you may be aware I'm launching two new projects in 2012 as part of YouTube/Google's "made for web" initiative.
They are Numberphile and Deep Sky Videos.
These are in addition to various ongoing projects (Periodic Videos, Sixty Symbols, et al).
An impossible amount of work for one person.
But help is at hand.
He has edited many of my Foodskey films and, more importantly, is editing many of the Deep Sky Videos (launching next week).
Stephen's an excellent editor with plenty of impressive projects under his belt - perhaps the best-known being his labour of love Destination Titan which was screened on the BBC.
He also works on various projects across the country, ranging from space to sport.
Why introduce him on the blog today?
Because it's his birthday.
Behind Closed Doors at the STFC
Have been putting the finishing touches on a year of work for Backstage Science.
The videos have been going behind the scenes at ghe Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).
The final videos included this one about a machine used to simulate the shaky ride into space.
But I also put together this little montage which - for me at least - encapsulates the curious spirit of Backstage Science.
Not sure if there will be more Backstage Science videos - there's certainly plenty more to see and a growing following for the project!
But regardless, you can find the whole collection of videos at this little website I created for the project.
And thanks to the STFC for letting me behind all those doors.
Special mentions to Tony Buckley, Terry O'Connor and Robin Clegg at the STFC. And to Professor Mike Merrifield from the University of Nottingham who helped out at my end.
Neutrons and Nanoscience
Happy New Year everyone!
(Here's a private video from my holiday in case you're interested)
I'll try to find some time later for bloggy reflection on 2011 - but for now it's back to real work.
To start 2012 here are two videos from the STFC's amazing ISIS facility in Oxfordshire, where beams on neutrons are used to probe the world at the tiniest levels.
The films are all about using the beams to explore things at the comparatively large nano scale!!!
So large that the team doing the work is called the Large Scale Structures Group.
The videos are part of my Backstage Science project for the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).








