May 2006
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
What happens when black holes collide?
Gravitational waves slingshot them outside galaxies on a frantic, deep-space journey.
Saturn’s Titan reveals earthlike surprises
The ringed planet’s largest moon has methane rivers and possible volcanoes that spew ammonia-ice lava — could life be next?
Fatal attraction
In 2029, asteroid Apophis will pass dangerously close to Earth. Depending on its exact course, it may return with a vengeance in 2036.
Searching for signs of life
Astronomers seeking life on other worlds first must understand how Earth would appear from far away.
Red Planet Rendezvous
Fly over Mars’ rugged Valles Marineris and witness mammoth landslides, steep cliffs, and whirling dust devils.
All about the Whirlpool Galaxy
For amateurs and professional astronomers alike, this face-on beauty ranks as a celestial show piece.
The little comet that might
Uncertainty about how bright Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 will be makes it a must-watch object this spring.
Astronomer for a night
Kitt Peak National Observatory provides a unique fantasy camp for amateur astronomers.
Ticket to the stars
Whether you’re a beginner or advanced observer, don’t leave home without Astronomy’s new star guide.
Departments
This month in Astronomy
Beautiful universe
Letters
Bob Berman’s strange universe
Glenn Chaple’s observing basics
News
The sky this month
New products
Book reviews
Coming events
Advertiser index
Resources
Reader gallery