Translation from English

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Astronomy Magazine

TONIGHT'S SKY
  
  
Sun
5:20 AM
8:20 PM
 
Sun
 
Moon
1:32 PM
1:44 AM
 
 
Waxing gibbous
63%
May 30: Venus is 4° south of Pollux
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Saturn's time to shine

The ringed world reaches its 2015 peak this week, when it shines brightly all night

Magnetar mystery

A neutron star is exhibiting some unusual X-ray behavior

Uwingu Mars

Name a crater ... make an impact!
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Apollo exclusive 

An in-depth interview, including video footage, with astronaut Jim Lovell on his experiences with Apollo 8 and Apollo 13

Ends July 24, 2015

Heart of darkness

Astronomers discover new kind of "dark" globular star cluster
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Sign Up for Astronomy's five-part Observing Essentials email series!

Asteroid Day

The truth about the impact threat facing Earth

Stellar beginnings

The first known example of a globular cluster about to be born
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Indonesian Islands Eclipse

Explore Bali and witness a total solar eclipse in March 2016 with Astronomymagazine and TravelQuest International

Take the Universe with You!

Huge halo

The Andromeda Galaxy's halo is much bigger than previously thought
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Join Astronomy's Aurora Adventure

Experience a once-in-a-lifetime northern lights tour with Astronomy magazine and TravelQuest International

Hubble at 25

How the space telescope changed the cosmos

New podcast episode!

Avi Loeb: From cosmic origins to our galaxy’s fate

A word on Starmus from Stephen Hawking

From Professor Hawking:I’m touched and honored that the third STARMUS in Tenerife, June 27 to July 2, 2016, is titled “Beyond the Horizon: A Tribute to Stephen Hawking.” — SHFollow David J. Eicher on Twitter: www.twitter.com/d...

Remembering Clyde Tombaugh on Pluto's doorstep

I have a soft spot in my heart for Pluto. When I was a young editor at Astronomy magazine and editor of Deep Sky, in the 1980s, I hung around a set of friends and writers that included comet discoverer David Levy, Lowell Observatory astronomer Brian ...

Gearing up for the World Science Festival

Tomorrow morning I’ll leave for New York (once again!), this time to go to the World Science Festival. Astronomy and Discover magazines will be partnering with Scistarter, the citizen science group headed by Darlene Cavalier (who is also behind...

Lego Ninjas create Dual-head Teaching Telescope

Looking to improve astronomy in the classroom, the Lego Ninjas submitted their prototype for a dual-head teaching telescope to the FLL Global Innovation competition. According to these students, the challenge teachers face with traditional telescopes...

Tomorrowland is a film every future scientist should see 

NASA’s man in Hollywood says the latest rash of sci-fi films show the agency still holds sway with young minds more than half a century after the launch of the space age. “The future can be scary,” Frank Walker (played by George ...

A thought from my latest book ...

This will be published with about another 100,000 words in The New Cosmos: Answering Astronomy’s Big Questions, to be published by Cambridge University Press this coming October.Enjoy!Follow David J. Eicher on Twitter: www.twitter.com/deicher...
MORE ABOUT: BOOKSDAVID J. EICHER

Sir Harold Kroto and David Eicher join Starmus Festival board

Tenerife, Canary Islands, May 20, 2015: Garik Israelian, director of the Starmus Festival, the international celebration of astronomy, allied sciences, music, and the arts, today announces two additions to the Starmus Festival board of directors. Bot...

Get ready for Asteroid Day festivities in London

The first ever Asteroid Day will raise awareness for near-Earth asteroid research, highlighting the danger space rocks pose to us. The commemoration will take place June 30, 2015, on the 107th anniversary of the Tunguska event, when an asteroid or co...

New Eicher book will deliver state of the cosmos message 

Last year, I spent much of my free time cloistered in my room cranking away on a new book about astrophysics, planetary science, and cosmology. You see, more than 30 years ago I was incredibly inspired by Cosmos, the TV series and book, and got to kn...
MORE ABOUT: BOOKSDAVID J. EICHER

Discovery Science joins Asteroid Day project

Great news!Please see the following release . . .DISCOVERY SCIENCE LAUNCHES “COUNTDOWN TO ASTEROID DAY” Do scientists know when an asteroid will strike? How much warning will you get if an asteroid is headed for your city? How frequently...

Tales from a budding night sky photographer

Please welcome guest blogger Josh Thum. I had the pleasure of meeting Josh at a Yerkes Observatory star party a few weeks ago and was hugely impressed by the night sky photos he showed me, especially for someone still in high school. I thought you mi...
MORE ABOUT: KOREY HAYNESPHOTOGRAPHY

Astronomy Night on the National Mall 2015

Don Lubowich of Hofstra University writes about his plans for the 2015 rendition of a popular Washington, D.C. event: Astronomy Night on the National Mall. If you are in the Washington area in mid-June, I urge you to join the large group of instituti...

Galileoscope launches IYL 2015 programs

My good friend Rick Fienberg is a man of many talents. He is press officer and director of communications for the American Astronomical Society. He is former editor-in-chief of Sky & Telescope magazine. He is also involved with the educational ou...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

A short time ago in a state far, far away ...

Happy Star Wars Day! Yes, Astronomy magazine is a brand based in science, not science fiction, but we like to embrace the sci-fi side of things every once in a while in our offices, especially as science fiction has inspired many of us and our contri...

A Starmus video for your weekend enjoyment

This week saw the announcement of the 2016 Starmus Festival slated for June of next year in Tenerife. While you ponder travel plans for this incredible event, a tribute to Stephen Hawking, here’s a video of highlights from the 2014 Starmus to w...

Uwingu announces an out-of-this-world Mother's Day celebration

Posted on behalf of the Uwingu team; Astronomy magazine is a proud partner of this effort to raise funding for space science.Space company Uwingu announced today a special campaign to honor moms for Mother’s Day with place names on its Mars map...
MORE ABOUT: KARRI FERRONUWINGU

Rusty Schweickart's new planetary defense blog posted!

More progress on the Asteroid Day front: Please check out Rusty Schweickart’s new planetary defense blog posted today. Here is a great story about what you can do to help!

PICTURE OF THE DAYsee all »

The Pinwheel Galaxy

The Pinwheel Galaxy (M33) is a spiral galaxy approximately 3 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Triangulum. M33 is the third-largest member of the Local Group of galaxies, which includes the Milky Way, the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and some 40 other smaller galaxies. It is one of the most distant objects you can see with the naked eye, but you need superb vision and an excellent site to do so. (7.2-inch Telescope Engineering Company APO180FL refractor at f/7.36, FLI ML-6303 CCD camera, LRGB image with exposures of 3, 1, 1, and 1 hour, respectively)

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