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Saturday, April 25, 2015

Astronomy Magazine

TONIGHT'S SKY
  
  
Sun
5:56 AM
7:47 PM
 
Sun
 
Moon
11:54 AM
1:33 AM
 
 
First quarter
50%
April 26: Jupiter is 5° north of the Moon
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Happy Anniversary Hubble!

25 years ago, the space shuttle Discovery launched with a payload that would change how we see the universe

Anniversary image

NASA celebrates 25 years of Hubble with Westerlund 2

Stirring signal

Pulsing light may indicate supermassive black hole merger
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The Asteroid Threat

A detailed story about the realities of asteroid impacts, past and future, featuring the latest statistics and stunning imagery

Getting closer!

New Horizons has captured its first color image of the Pluto system

Uwingu Mars

Name a crater ... make an impact!
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Sign Up for Astronomy's five-part Observing Essentials email series!

Ends July 24, 2015

Not-so-dark matter?

Dark matter interactions of an unknown nature could be occurring
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Indonesian Islands Eclipse

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

Exclusive Interviews

Podcasts featuring the biggest names in astronomy 

Infant organics

Complex organic molecules discovered in infant star system
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Join Astronomy's Aurora Adventure

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

Take the Universe with You!

Superstars of Astronomy

New podcast episode! Debra Fischer: All About Exoplanets

Odyssey of Knowledge set for tomorrow in Athens 

THE ODYSSEY OF KNOWLEDGE 1st International Conference of Science and ArtsCommemorative Tribute:Hypatia from Alexandria (A.D. 370-415) SATURDAY, APRIL 25th AUDITORIUM "ATHINA 9.84" TECHNOPOLIS OF MUNICIPALITY OF ATHENSConference Theme"H...

Director Grigorij Richters launches 51 Degrees North feature film Kickstarter campaign

51 Degrees North is a new feature film project supported by the Asteroid Day Foundation and Films United. A 30-day Kickstarter campaign will launch today, Earth Day, Wednesday, April 22, to support the film’s official release on June 30, 2015. ...

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...

Northeast Astronomy Forum, part two

I spent April 9–20 in the New York City area. I spoke at the New York/New Jersey Mineral Show, spent a few days vacationing in the city, and then closed out the trip with covering the annual Northeast Astro-Imaging Conference and Northeast Astr...

Celebrate Earth Day with NASA

At the congressional budget hearing on April 16, NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden had to repeatedly defend his organization’s mission to perform cutting-edge science not just in aeronautics and space exploration, as the agency’s name mak...

I am headed back to C2E2

The fifth annual Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo (C2E2) starts Friday, April 24 and runs through Sunday, April 26. I’ll be there as a member of the media for the fourth straight year. The convention, which, in addition to comics, spans ...
MORE ABOUT: MICHAEL BAKICHC2E2

Northeast Astronomy Forum, part one

Wow. I am utterly exhausted after spending April 9–20 in the New York City area. I spoke at the New York/New Jersey Mineral Show, spent a few days vacationing in the city, and then closed out the trip with covering the annual Northeast Astro-Im...

MESSENGER's about to crash into Mercury, and the last views from its death spiral are amazing

The first spacecraft to orbit the innermost planet is running out of fuel and days away from plunging to its demise at an incredible 8,750 mph (14,080 km/h). Over the past several months, NASA has orchestrated a series of carefully planned maneuvers ...
MORE ABOUT: SPACECRAFTSUNERIC BETZCRASHMERCURYMESSENGER

New project explores humanity's severed link with the night sky

A few weeks ago, I sat on a park bench overlooking the Port of Milwaukee hoping to glimpse the aurorae borealis lighting up much of the Northern Hemisphere. The horizon was fuzzy, but a 30-second exposure image revealed a distinct green band arcing o...

Celebrate the telescope's 25th anniversary with "Saving Hubble"

Back in January 2012, a documentary was presented at the American Astronomical Society meeting that created widespread buzz. Saving Hubble, directed by David Gaynes, focuses on the fight to save the ailing space telescope after NASA cancelled a servi...
MORE ABOUT: KARRI FERRONHUBBLE

RIP Walter H. Haas, lunar and planetary champion

Very sad news this morning on the death of Walter H. Haas (1917–2015), founder and director emeritus of the Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers (ALPO), at the age of 97. Few astronomy enthusiasts did more over the past decades for amat...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Speaking next weekend at the New York/New Jersey Mineral, Fossil, Gem & Jewelry Show

I have a two-part trip to New York City looming, after a few days of finishing our magazine’s annual budget. Next weekend I’ll be speaking at the New York/New Jersey Mineral Show, having been graciously invited by my friend, mineral exper...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Exclusive online story, "Why the asteroid threat should be taken seriously," now live!

In the wake of the announcement of Asteroid Day, I found myself seeing all manner of debates online, between astronomy enthusiasts, about the realities of danger from asteroids impacting Earth. The opinions were all over the map. And so I began a sev...

Join Astronomy, Discover, Celestron, and SciStarter at the World Science Festival

There’s an exciting event coming to New York City on May 27–31, 2015: The five-day celebration of science known as the World Science Festival will host hundreds of thousands flocking to the Big Apple. Astronomy magazine, our sister public...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

Watch Eric Chaisson's important cosmic evolution interview

I’m having a delightful time discussing lots of topics with a stellar array of astronomers for my new Superstars of Astronomy audio podcast series. You can listen to the interviews here.But I want to highlight one existing video interview I stu...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

UPDATED: "The Odyssey of Knowledge" set for April 25 in Athens

One of the most amazing people I met at last year’s Starmus Festival was Alexandros Hahalis, a Greek composer, musician, and science enthusiast. Along with Rick Wakeman and Katerina Mina, Alexandros put on the special musical program that serve...
MORE ABOUT: DAVID J. EICHER

PICTURE OF THE DAYsee all »

The Surfboard and the Owl

The Surfboard Galaxy (M108, left) and the Owl Nebula (M97) float through space in the constellation Ursa Major the Great Bear. While the Owl lies only 2,600 light-years from Earth, the Surfboard floats through space 45,000 light-years away. (4.7-inch Takahashi TSA-120 refractor, TOA-35 reducer for f/5.3, Starlight Xpress SX025C CCD camera, RGB image with thirty 10-minute exposures, stacked)
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