Year of the Comet
Comet C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS)

PANSTARRS information

Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON)

ISON information

Issues

August 2006

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The world's best-selling astronomy magazine offers you the most exciting, visually stunning, and timely coverage of the heavens above. Each monthly issue includes expert science reporting, vivid color photography, complete sky coverage, spot-on observing tips, informative telescope reviews, and much more! All this in an easy-to-understand, user-friendly style that's perfect for astronomers at any level. 
Features
Unlocking the solar system’s past
By David A. Kring
There’s a treasure trove locked inside meteorites, rare particles older than Earth.
pg. 32
By Francis Reddy
NASA's mission to retrieve comet dust found material from the wrong side of the solar system.
Between a rock and a gas giant
By Richard Talcott
Mars and Jupiter bracket a belt of mini-planets where action is the name of the game.
pg. 38
Earth under fire
By Mike D. Reynolds
Our planet’s surface is riddled with craters formed by high-speed cosmic impacts.
pg. 40
Blast from the past
By David A. Kring
Fifty thousand years ago, a multimegaton impact gouged out Arizona’s Meteor Crater.
pg. 46
By Liz Kruesi
The Meteor Crater impact event killed off most plant and animal life in the near vicinity, but it was nothing compared to our planet's mass extinctions.
Classic rock
By Michael E. Bakich
Stone meteorites are the most common in space, but they’re tough to find on Earth.
pg. 62
The great interplanetary rock swap
By Bill Cooke
Some meteorites come from the Moon, others from Mars. Here’s how they arrive.
pg. 64
By Bill Cooke
The 2003 shower of meteorites near Chicago was a replay of the event that gave birth to meteorite science.
Heavy metal
By Michael E. Bakich
Iron meteorites make up less than 10 percent of space rocks but are easy to identify on Earth.
pg. 68
How to start your meteorite collection
By O. Richard Norton
Here’s everything you need to start acquiring space rocks.
pg. 70
By Thomas H. Burbine, Jr.
A meteorite specialist finds eBay to be a useful space-rock resource.
Rock-metal fusion
By Michael E. Bakich
The rarest class of meteorites, stony-irons, also is the most beautiful.
pg. 74
Party with the Perseids!
By Michael E. Bakich
The Perseid meteor shower is one of amateur astronomy’s great yearly social events.
pg. 76
Name that rock
By Michael E. Bakich
Scientists classify meteorites by what they’re made of and where they come from.
pg. 82
Rock star
By Raymond Shubinski
Meteorite dealer Robert Haag travels the world in search of space rocks.
pg. 84
Discover this month's offerings of astronomy titles.
Departments
This month in Astronomy
The meteorites special issue
Beautiful universe
Letters
Bob Berman's strange universe
Glenn Chaple's observing basics
Bust out the big boy
Phil Harrington’s binocular universe
My favorite month
News
“Exploding cigar” marks Hubble’s 16th year, and more
The sky this month
Ask Astro
New products
Book reviews
Online extra
Coming events
Advertiser index
Resources
Reader gallery
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