Translation from English

Friday, September 18, 2015

Astronomy Magazine

TONIGHT'S SKY
  
  
Sun
6:36 AM
6:58 PM
 
Sun
 
Moon
11:34 AM
9:55 PM
 
 
Waxing crescent
20%
Sept. 21: Venus is at greatest brilliancy
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Pluto's stunning glaciers

Pluto’s flowing ice looks downright Earth-like in these freshly downloaded images from New Horizons.

On set with The Martian

Can a Hollywood hit boost support for NASA's Journey To Mars?

Dusty disk

Large nearby dust disks show telltale signs of planet formation.
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Global coverage

A global ocean, not just a sea, lies beneath Enceladus' crust.
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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!

It's complicated

New Pluto images from NASA’s New Horizons show complex terrain
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Exclusive podcast series

Editor David J. Eicher conducts extensive interviews with the world's top astrophysicists, planetary scientists, and cosmologists

Fun fall sky events

Planetary lineups, a total lunar eclipse, meteor showers, and more

Uwingu Mars

Name a crater ... make an impact!

Catching up with Kevin Ritschel

An old friend stopped by yesterday. Some 35 years ago, when he was a young vice president at Celestron, Kevin Ritschel became a contributing writer for Deep Sky Monthly, the magazine I had started in high school. He has since been in the thick of t...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Pluto's glaciers look stunning in latest backlit shots from New Horizons

The latest images from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft have scientists stunned — not only for their breathtaking views of Pluto’s majestic icy mountains, streams of frozen nitrogen and haunting low-lying hazes, but also for their str...

Watch Martin Rees' outstanding lecture

One of the greatest astronomers we have on Earth is the English Astronomer Royal, Martin Rees, Lord Rees of Ludlow. A Fellow of Trinity College at Cambridge University and Emeritus Professor of Cosmology and Astrophysics at the University of Cambridg...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Change Your View: Fly in July

Show us just how FLY you can be this July! Whether flying out of town for vacation, or making the work day fly by in the office, Celestron wants you to capture the moment and Change Your View on Summer Vacation. Catch all the details and see who's en...

A September Galaxy Ride

On September 18, a group of astronomers and educators will set off on bikes from their home base at Chicago’s Adler Planetarium, scant feet from the shore of Lake Michigan, and travel south for 300 miles (500 kilometers) on the historic Route 6...
MORE ABOUT: EVENTSSTAR PARTIES

Telescopes and talks from Stellafane 2015

Recently, Contributing Editor Phil Harrington attended the 2015 Stellafane conference. Here is his account, arranged as a brief introduction and a series of captioned images. More than 1,000 people attended the 80th Stellafane convention in Springfi...
MORE ABOUT: STAR PARTIES

Steve Cullen joins Astronomy Foundation board

I’m delighted to announce that Steve Cullen, who has served for the last several months as the Astronomy Foundation’s executive director, has joined the foundation’s board of directors. The Astronomy Foundation is the telescope indu...

To the stars through Doctor Who

Guest blog by Lindsay Henderson, a senior medical student and M.D. candidate from All Saints University, Dominica, specializing in neurology. Having been inspired into the sciences by her geology professor grandfather Bob, she now spends her free tim...

Follow "The Journal of Irreproducible Results!"

When I was a teenager, I had the great fortune to meet one of the go-getters in the astronomy hobby, Norm Sperling. In the late 1970s, Norm was an assistant editor at Sky & Telescope, and he provided the first national exposure for my handmade jo...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Steve Cullen announces Hawaiian Starscape Gallery

A good friend and one of the driving forces behind the Astronomy Foundation is Steve Cullen, a former Silicon Valley executive and founder of LightBuckets. Steve has just announced, along with renowned astroimager Rogelio Bernal Andreo, the creation ...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Milwaukee meteor fest

Yes, you can see meteors from Milwaukee. Well, at least from a site slightly north of Brew City. Last night (August 12 — the only night near the maximum of the Perseid meteor shower that promised clear skies), my wife, Holley, and I decided to...

IAU day 5: Viewing the Sun with radar

Following my post from yesterday about radar, Monday at the International Astronomical Union (IAU) meeting revealed yet more radar tales. Miller Goss from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) shared the story of how the first original reco...
MORE ABOUT: IAUKOREY HAYNESRADARSUN

IAU day 4: Radar from WWII to the outer solar system

I'm still nominally at the International Astronomical Union meeting here in Honolulu. But most of the astronomers have taken a break for the weekend, leaving me to amuse myself for some of the time. This morning, I hopped a bus over to Pearl Harbor ...
MORE ABOUT: HISTORYIAUKOREY HAYNESRADARWWII

IAU day 2: What makes a brown dwarf?

[Updated August 10] My second day at the International Astronomical Union's (IAU) general assembly meeting featured one of my favorite parts about attending science conferences: watching scientists fight! OK, astronomers are a pretty friendly bunch,...
MORE ABOUT: BROWN DWARFSIAUKOREY HAYNES

Aloha from the IAU

The International Astronomical Union (IAU) holds its general assembly meeting only once every three years, for two full weeks. This is the meeting that infamously stripped Pluto of its planethood in 2006. This year, the resolutions up for vote cover ...
MORE ABOUT: IAUKOREY HAYNES

Visit from an old friend, Norm Sperling

This Monday morning, I had a delightful email from an old friend I hadn’t talked to in ages. Norm Sperling, well known astronomy enthusiast, editor, writer, and intellectual, was in the area, and he ended up having lunch with the Astronomy staf...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Only 750 days until the eclipse

Saturday, August 1, marks another milestone in the countdown toward the biggest public science event in history — 750 days until the total solar eclipse August 21, 2017. Rather than write a long blog about the importance of it, I’ll direc...
MORE ABOUT: ECLIPSEMICHAEL BAKICH

PICTURE OF THE DAYsee all »

Milky Way despite lights

The brightest part of the Milky Way, with the constellations Scorpius and Sagittarius at bottom right, rises over the southern horizon from the Hoya Redonda homestead in Valencia, Spain. Toward the southeast, the orange brightness of the sky glow comes from the light pollution of the Ontinyent city zone. (Canon EOS 350D, Canon 18-135mm lens set at 18mm and f/3.5, ISO 1600)

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