


Ī huge amount of gratitude to Mrs Ansie Koch who is always a pleasure to work with.


Please find attached pictures from the event. We at UFS School of Financial Planning Law are continually inspired by the dedication and generosity of donors and sponsors like yourself who answer the call to give again and again. There is no way to fully express our gratitude for your loyalty to the School. With your faithful contributions over the years, whether they be your time or financial, you’ve demonstrated your deep commitment to preparing and delivering individuals that are leaders in their respective fields but also that would serve their clients best. Generous sponsorships from sponsors like you provide the financial and moral support needed to continue inspiring students to achieve academic excellence. On behalf of the School of Financial Planning Law, Faculty of Law at the University of the Free State, I would like to extend a sincere thank you to Alpha Centuari for the prize sponsorship of R 5 500.00 for Top Student in the module Financial Planning Environment in the Advanced Postgraduate Diploma in Financial Planning Law (UFS) that was awarded to Mr Mokwana. The author Martin Beech is a Professor of Astronomy at Campion College, The University of Regina, Canada.Reference: Sponsorship for the Advanced Postgraduate Diploma in Financial Planning Law (UFS) On the way we will review the rapidly developing fields of exoplanet formation and detection. In this book we move from the study of individual stars to the study of our Solar System and our nearby galactic neighborhood. Such a mission could reveal the small-scale structure of a new planetary system and also represent the first step in what must surely be humanity’s greatest future adventure - exploration of the Milky Way Galaxy itself.įor all of its closeness, Alpha Centauri continues to tantalize astronomers with many unresolved mysteries, such as how did it form, how many planets does it contain and where are they, and how might we view its extensive panorama directly? Just 4.4 light years away Alpha Centauri is also the most obvious target for humanity’s first directed interstellar space probe. It is also the host of the nearest known exoplanet, an ultra-hot, Earth-like planet recently discovered. Uses some basic math to give a good grounding in the science of stellar evolutionĪs our closest stellar companion and composed of two Sun-like stars and a third small dwarf star, Alpha Centauri is an ideal testing ground of astrophysical models and has played a central role in the history and development of modern astronomy-from the first guesses at stellar distances to understanding how our own star, the Sun, might have evolved.Explains stellar evolution by looking at the Solar System's neighborhood.Examines the latest research on the entire Alpha Centauri system, from its three stars to possible exoplanets.Unveiling the Secrets of Our Nearest Stellar Neighbor
