March 2008
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
BONUS PULLOUT POSTER!
Explore the cosmic web out to 1.37 billion light-years in this all-sky panorama.
Quest for the first galaxies
New research gives astronomers a broad-brush view of how galaxies evolve. Now, scientists are filling in the details.
Web extra: Galaxy quest
Caltech astronomers claim the most distant galaxies ever.
What happens when galaxies collide?
Simulations show a cycle of mergers, starbursts, and black holes built the universe’s grandest constructions: giant elliptical galaxies.
Web extra: Galaxies collide in Andromeda
Computer simulations show the Andromeda Galaxy is consuming what was the seventh-largest galaxy in the Local Group.
How the Milky Way devours its neighbors
Our galaxy’s current eminence owes much to a past – and present – spent cannibalizing dwarf galaxies.
Web extra: Simulated galactic crack ups
New computer simulations show the warped reality of spiral-galaxy mergers.
Exploring Iapetus’ dark side
The Cassini spacecraft’s recent flyby of Saturn’s strangest moon may have solved one mystery, but it leaves many more.
Galaxies on fire
Starburst galaxies hold the key to understanding processes that shaped the youngest and most distant corners of the universe.
Web extra: A peculiar jewel of the north
Astronomers have observed M82 for centuries, but this “irregular” galaxy in Ursa Major still commands their attention.
Orion’s new binocular telescope tested
Binoculars allow observers to take in lots of sky. Now,
Orion has improved the classic design.
Orion has improved the classic design.
Web extra: Make the BT70 binoculars “go-to”
Mount Orion’s binocular telescope to a Celestron mount for ultimate two-eyed observing.
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