Astronomy magazine editors share their unique insight from behind the scenes of the science, hobby, and magazine.
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The Moon clips Venus

Posted 14 years ago by Michael Bakich
This image, along with the three below, shows the immersion (disappearance) and emersion (reappearance) of Venus as the Moon moved in front of it during the May 16, 2010 occultation. The imager took this shot at 8h48m30s UT.Longtime Astronomy magazine contributor and astroimager Anthony Ayiomamitis just sent me a report — complete with images — of the lunar occultation of Venus. An occultation occurs when one (usually large) celestial object passes in front of another (usually small) one. Withou...
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Sketching at the telescope: Larry McHenry’s Orion Nebula

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
The Orion Nebula (M42) sketched by Larry McHenry with a 13.1-inch f/4.5 reflector at 143x, March 21, 1988. David J. Eicher libraryNext from my basement cache of astronomical drawings comes a sketch of the Orion Nebula (M42) from Kentucky observer Larry McHenry. To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Glenn Chaple's Observing Basics column "Sketching 101." See the...
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Sketching at the telescope: Patrick Moore’s Jupiter

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Jupiter sketched by Patrick Moore with a 10-inch scope at 360x, February 13, 1967. David J. Eicher libraryWith all the excitement over Jupiter's missing South Equatorial Belt, I picked a sketch of Jupiter by the famous English observer and television presenter Patrick Moore. His drawing  displays fine pastel coloring and a nice rendering of the Great Red Spot. To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "S...
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National Geographic Channel’s Storm Worlds premieres Sunday

Posted 14 years ago by Karri Ferron
This week, I had the opportunity to preview a new three-part series from the National Geographic Channel, Storm Worlds. It premieres Sunday, May 16, at 8 p.m. EDT. If you’re interested in all the craziness that exists in our solar system and what would happen if, hypothetically, Earth had some of the storm systems other planets have, this series will be right up your alley. The first episode, Cosmic Fire, focuses on the power of our Sun and trying to understand the dangers it poses. Most of the...
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Sketching at the telescope: Stephen James O’Meara’s Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock (1983d) sketched by Stephen James O’Meara using a 10-inch reflector at Prospect Hill Observatory in Somerville, Massachusetts, May 7, 1983. The top sketch shows the comet at 3:50 UT, and the bottom one shows 5:30 UT. David J. Eicher libraryToday’s installment from a newly found cache of astronomical drawings (which had resided in a box in my basement for the past 20 years) features a sketch by Astronomy Contributing Editor Steve O’Meara. Everyone who observed the sky in 1...
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Sketching at the telescope: Dave Eicher’s Omega Centauri

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Omega Centauri (NGC 5139) sketched by David J. Eicher with a 17.5-inch f/4.5 reflector at 63x. David J. Eicher libraryThis “sketching at the telescope” edition features a sketch of mine from the 1980s of the great globular cluster Omega Centauri (NGC 5139). To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Glenn Chaple's Observing Basics column "Sketching 101." See the res...
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Sketching at the telescope: Jean Dragesco’s Saturn

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Saturn sketched by Jean Dragesco with a 4.1-inch refractor at 800x from Pic du Midi Observatory, December 22, 1976, at 1h00m UT. David J. Eicher libraryToday’s installment from a newly found cache of astronomical drawings (it had resided in a box in my basement for the past 20 years) features a fabulous sketch from a noted French observer and astroimager. Jean Dragesco made this illustration of Saturn from Pic du Midi Observatory in the French Pyrenees. To learn more about astronomical sketchi...
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Follow Steve and Donna O’Meara’s volcano travels

Posted 14 years ago by Bill Andrews
A waterspout forms offshore from an erupting Kilauea volcano vent July 17, 2008. See more great volcano images from Steve and Donna O’Meara at their new website, http://volcanoheaven.tumblr.com. ©Steve & Donna O’Meara/someara@interpac.netLife just got a little sweeter for fans of Astronomy contributing editor and regular columnist Stephen James O’Meara, along with fans of geology and volcanoes. In addition to doing great work with us in the magazine, Steve and his wife, Donna, have their own...
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Sketching at the telescope: Jeff Medkeff’s Orion Nebula

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
The Orion Nebula (M42) sketched by Jeff Medkeff with a 4.5-inch f/7 reflector, December 29, 1981. David J. Eicher libraryToday’s sketch is one made by a good friend of the magazine whom we unfortunately lost way too early, in 2008. Jeff Medkeff was an enthusiastic astronomy writer, photographer, computer programmer, educator, and asteroid hunter who made some drawings of astronomical objects and sent them to me some years ago. Jeff’s drawing of the Orion Nebula (M42) shows the intricate detail i...
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Sketching at the telescope: Stephen J. O'Meara's lunar Straight Wall

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
The lunar Straight Wall sketched by Stephen James O’Meara on February 19, 1987, from 6:20 to 7 p.m. EST. David J. Eicher libraryOur basement sketches series continues with a sketch made by Astronomy magazine Contributing Editor Stephen James O’Meara of the lunar Straight Wall. The Straight Wall is the Moon’s best-known scarp. Unfortunately, I do not know the telescope and magnification used, but it is a beautiful drawing. To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribe...
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Sketching at the telescope: Phil Harrington’s Hercules Cluster

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
The Hercules Cluster (M13) sketched by Phil Harrington on April 22, 1988, with a 13.1-inch f/4.45 reflector at 87x. David J. Eicher libraryOut of my newly found cache of astronomical drawings (which had resided in a box in my basement for the past 20 years) today comes a sketch made by Astronomy magazine Contributing Editor Phil Harrington. Phil drew the Hercules Cluster (M13) with his 13.1-inch reflector in 1988 and noted it as a “beautiful globular cluster with stars resolved across the disk. ...
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Sketching at the telescope: Tom Sarna’s Saturn

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Saturn sketched by Tom Sarna of Downers Grove, Illinois, with a 10-inch f/4.5 reflector at 143x, August 6, 1988. David J. Eicher libraryToday’s installment from my cache of astronomical drawings is a sketch of Saturn made by Tom Sarna of Downers Grove, Illinois. What nice technique with pencil to capture the look of the ringed planet! To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Gl...
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Sketching at the telescope: David H. Levy's Comet Halley

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Comet Halley sketched by David H. Levy with a 16-inch reflector at high magnification, March 26, 1986, 12:50 UT. David J. Eicher libraryToday’s basement-cleaning sketch is a drawing of Comet Halley made by Astronomy Contributing Editor David H. Levy. Enjoy! To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Glenn Chaple's Observing Basics column "Sketching 101." See the res...
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Welcome Chris Raymond, Astronomy's new managing editor

Posted 14 years ago by Karri Ferron
As Editor David J. Eicher explained in May’s “This Month in Astronomy,” the magazine’s executive editor, Dick McNally, retired in April. But chaos has not taken over the magazine offices with no one to keep us on deadline because we’ve had the fortune to bring on a new managing editor, Chris Raymond. Chris actually started his career some 22 years ago at Kalmbach Publishing Co. and Astronomy. And now he’s come full circle, returning to our offices after his r...
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Sketching at the telescope: Mike Mattei's Mars

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Mars sketched by Mike Mattei with a 6-inch Schupmann telescope at 381x, June 30, 1988, from 9:27 to 9:37 UT. David J. Eicher libraryOnce again, here’s another blog from the cache of sketches I stowed away in my basement and that then remained untouched for 20 years. I will continue dribbling these out in hope that they will inspire you to record what you see on paper. Massachusetts observer Mike Mattei made this drawing of Mars in 1988. Mike’s notes included “surface contrast very low” and “dark...
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Grab the popcorn for our NEAF 2010 videos

Posted 14 years ago by Bill Andrews
During his time at the 2010 Northeast Astronomy Forum, Astronomy magazine Assistant Editor Bill Andrews spoke with dozens of manufacturers about their products. Fortunately for us, he brought along a handheld high-definition video camera and recorded his conversations.Not even two weeks back from the Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) in Suffern, New York, and the videos I shot are online.Normally on a trip, I don’t take many pictures or videos for fear that I might focus too much on the media-mak...
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Sketching at the telescope: the Trifid Nebula (M20)

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
The Trifid Nebula (M20) sketched by Michael Sweetman with a 6-inch f/5 reflector at 130x. David J. Eicher libraryContinuing with the basement sketches series, today I have a sketch Tucson, Arizona, observer Michael Sweetman made of the Trifid Nebula (M20). To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Glenn Chaple's Observing Basics column "Sketching 101." See the rest...
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Northeast Astronomy Forum recap from Youth Essay Contest winner

Posted 14 years ago by Karri Ferron
Adam Atanas, our 11-year-old winner of Astronomy’s Youth Essay Contest, recently sent the staff a thank-you note for the trip to this year’s Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF). We’re glad he had an excellent time, and we feel his note is a testament to the emphasis NEAF puts on encouraging children’s interest in astronomy. We hope his words inspire some parents and grandparents out there to take their budding amateur astronomers to future conferences like NEAF and other out...
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Sketching at the telescope: The Owl Nebula (M97)

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
The Owl Nebula (M97) sketched by David J. Eicher with an 8-inch f/10 SCT at 100x. David J. Eicher libraryHere’s another blog from the cache of sketches I stowed away in my basement and that remained untouched for 20 years. This drawing is one I made of the Owl Nebula (M97) back in the 1980s. Enjoy! To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Glenn Chaple's Observing Basics col...
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Sketching at the telescope: Venus in color

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Venus sketched by Richard Baum with a 7.62cm scope at 120x, April 3, 1953, 18:30 UT, from Chester, England. David J. Eicher libraryI wrote the first of a big series of blogs the other day following my discovery of a cache of sketches I had stowed away in my basement and that remained untouched for 20 years. I am going to keep dribbling these out because there are lots of interesting drawings of the cosmos in the collection, and they should remind you that you, too, can easily record what you see...
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Sketching at the telescope: Stephen James O'Meara's Halley's Comet

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Comet Halley sketched by Stephen James O’Meara, 10x50 binoculars, November 21, 1985, 23:20 UT. David J. Eicher libraryThis beautiful astronomical drawing by Astronomy Contributing Editor Stephen James O’Meara captures Halley’s Comet as it appeared in a binocular field November 21, 1985. Enjoy! To learn more about astronomical sketching, Astronomy magazine subscribers can access my Astronomy.com video "Sketching from the telescope" and read Glenn Chaple's Observing Basics column &q...
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Falling stars: Northeast Astronomy Forum 2010 recap

Posted 14 years ago by Mike Reynolds
Steve Arnold (left) and Geoffrey Notkin, from the Science Channel’s program Meteorite Men, presented a talk at NEAF and later signed autographs. Mike Reynolds photoThe 2010 Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) is now history. Organizer Alan Traino and all of his volunteers, from New York’s Rockland Astronomy Club and elsewhere, did their usual extraordinary job. The number of vendors in the Rockland Community College gymnasium was at an all-time high. And this year, Alan placed an emphasis on gettin...
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A basement-cleaning adventure, chapter 1

Posted 14 years ago by David Eicher
Saturn sketched by Patrick Moore, 24-inch telescope at 815x, made on February 24, 1980, at 7:45 UT. David J. Eicher libraryA few weeks ago, I began one of the bravest tasks I’ve ever taken on: cleaning my basement thoroughly, down to a level of going through each of thousands of papers, for the first time in 20 years. In the process, I unearthed a forgotten surprise, a box of carefully preserved and packaged astronomical drawings from 45 amateur astronomers scattered across the globe. The amateu...
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Happy Anniversary Hubble!

Posted 14 years ago by Bill Andrews
This brand new Hubble image, celebrating the legendary space telescope's 20th anniversary, shows off the top of a pillar of gas and dust in one of the biggest known regions of star birth in the Milky Way, the Carina Nebula. NASA/ESA/M. Livio and the Hubble 20th Anniversary Team (STScI)These are great times for fans of space and its prettiness. The Solar Dynamics Observatory, our super hi-def camera aimed at the Sun, began beaming us beautiful, fantastically detailed images this week. Close...
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Get ready for Astronomy Day

Posted 14 years ago by Liz Kruesi
Get ready for the year’s biggest star party. Saturday, April 24 is national Astronomy Day, which occurs in April or May each year. This year, Astronomy magazine has teamed up with Celestron at 25 planetaria and science museums across the country. We’ll be giving away magazine materials, and you can enter to win one of two telescopes at these specific locations, which you can find at our Astronomy Day web page. Lots more Astronomy Day activities also will be happening throughout the country. Chec...
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Falling Stars: Stellar opportunities, Louisiana-style

Posted 14 years ago by Mike Reynolds
Ken Stage of the St. George Observatory recently invited me to travel to Louisiana to speak on my activities in astronomy, from meteorites to eclipses. I was amazed at the program’s organization, the various equipment and demonstration materials Ken and his group brought, the attention to detail, and, in particular, Ken and his group’s enthusiasm to share astronomy, space exploration, and science in general.I spent the day at Avoyelles High School in Moreauville with 8th- and 11th-grade students...
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A detailed firsthand report of the Wisconsin fireball

Posted 14 years ago by Michael Bakich
John Vieth of Darlington, Wisconsin, e-mailed me this incredibly detailed account of the fireball that blazed over the Midwest April 14:Michael, I’m writing to you because I saw you discussing the recent meteor in Wisconsin on a Milwaukee news channel. I was very lucky to witness the entire spectacle, and I haven’t been able to find anyone else who saw the event in as much detail as I did, so I thought my story might provide you with valuable information.On the night of Wednesday, April 14, 2010...
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NEAF 2010 pictures uploaded

Posted 14 years ago by Bill Andrews
The opening view of an attendee walking into NEAF’s exhibit hall shows dozens of astronomy-related companies (and industries) at a glance. Bill Andrews photoAfter a fun weekend at the Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) in Suffern, New York, I'm back at the Astronomy offices and have uploaded some pictures from the conference to our Online Reader Gallery. I had a great time and met many interesting people. I also had the chance to go around the exhibit hall to catch up with some of the vendors....
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On the Road Day 4: Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF)

Posted 14 years ago by Rich Talcott
The 19th annual Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) in Suffern, New York, wrapped up Sunday with a bang. All day long, attendees browsed the vendor displays, purchasing some of the latest and greatest products offered by more than 130 equipment manufacturers and dealers. Three talks highlighted the afternoon session. First up was Attila Danko, who created the Clear Sky Chart. Attila related the trials and tribulations he’s endured this past decade in creating this indispensable tool for backyard o...
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On the Road Day 3: Northeast Astonomy Forum (NEAF)

Posted 14 years ago by Rich Talcott
Saturday of this year’s Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) in Suffern, New York, got off to a rousing start. At 8 a.m., before the doors officially opened, Tele Vue Optics announced their 3.7mm Ethos-SX eyepiece — the world’s first astronomical eyepiece with a 110° apparent field of view. I was impressed with my first views through it and look forward to testing under the night sky.Soon after, conference attendees started to pour through the doors. More than 130 vendors vied for the attention of a...
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