Skip to Main Content

Dark Sky Studies

Download as PDF

Program Contact Information

Program Description

Dark Sky Studies is an emerging transdisciplinary field that explores the impacts of artificial light at night and the loss of our night skies through a broad range of disciplines. Light pollution excessive use of artificial light at night poses environmental and safety threats, and it also prevents us from seeing the starry sky at night. Utah is unique, globally, in both its protection of natural dark-sky places and its intense urban light pollution generating urban core; combined, Utah's rural starry skies and urban over-lighting are an ideal living laboratory for place-based exploration. The Dark Sky Studies (DSS) Minor Program includes courses and faculty from multiple disciplines at the University of Utah: anthropology, architecture, astronomy, atmospheric sciences, design, engineering, English, history, philosophy, physics, public health, pulmonary medicine, religion, urban planning and more. The Minor program is housed in the Department of City & Metropolitan Planning (College of Architecture + Planning) but is designed to include undergraduate students from across campus. DSS students will explore issues through scientific, humanist and public policy lenses, particularly the negative impacts of artificial light, as well as endeavor to characterize community needs and innovation opportunities inherent in the effort of protecting natural night.

Program Admissions Requirements

The Dark Sky Studies Minor can be paired with any degree on campus. In order to declare a minor in Dark Sky Studies, students are required to meet with one of the College of Architecture and Planning Student Success Advisors. Dark Sky Studies is an open minor, meaning that you don't have to apply or take any prerequisites to declare.