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Author: Stephen James O'Meara

Stephen James O’Meara was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and began looking at the sky at the age of 6. He learned the constellations on his own from a star wheel that he cut out from the back of a Corn Flakes box, and he discovered how a telescope focuses by accident. At the age of 14, Steve knew the sky so well that he was given the keys to Harvard College Observatory, where he began to study the stars using the observatory’s 9-inch and 15-inch refractors. He used these scopes to discover the spokes in Saturn’s B ring and to become the first person in history to accurately determine visually the rotation period of Uranus. O’Meara earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Northeastern University in Boston. He spent much of his early career on the editorial staff of Sky & Telescope before joining Astronomy magazine as the “Secret Sky” columnist and as a contributing editor. The Texas Star Party (TSP) gave Steve its highest honor, the Lone Stargazer Award, “for setting the standard of excellence in visual observing.” The TSP also gave him its Omega Centauri Award for “advancing astronomy through observation, writing, and promotion, and for sharing his love of the sky.” The International Astronomical Union named asteroid 3637 O’Meara in his honor. Steve has also been awarded with the Caroline Herschel Award for his greatest observing achievements, which include being to first person to visually recover Halley’s Comet in 1985 when it was at magnitude 19.6. O’Meara is the author of about a dozen books, including the Deep-Sky Companions series of deep-sky observing guides. His latest release in the spring of 2009 will be a children’s book titled, Are You Afraid Yet?: The Science Behind Scary Stuff. In his spare time, Steve travels the world to document volcanic eruptions. National Geographic Explorer produced a movie (“Volcano Hunters”) about the O’Mearas’ research; the film was selected as one of the year’s best National Geographic documentaries and won a CINE Golden Eagle Award in the fall of 2002 for excellence in a documentary. O’Meara is a dynamic lecturer on astronomy and volcano topics. He is also a contract videographer for National Geographic Digital Motion and a contract photographer for the National Geographic Image Collection.  
Planets

How you can observe impacts on Jupiter

The Moon, Upcoming Events

When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’

The Moon, Upcoming Events

Look for these effects during the next lunar eclipse

Deep-Sky Objects

Observe the dark side of the famous Orion Nebula

Planets

The Red Planet lights up a famous star cluster this month

A photo-illustration of the optical illusion known as Mach bands, as seen on Saturn.
Planets

How to see a Saturn ring mirage

NGC 7000 and Morehouse's Black Ring
Deep-Sky Objects

How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A dark nebula hiding in plain sight

The five members of the animal kingdom we observed during the April 2024 solar eclipse from Bee Cave, Texas, are shown clockwise from top left: northern cardinal, American robin, mosquito, cloudless sulphur butterfly, and a Mexican free-tailed bat. Images showing totality and the mosquito were taken on eclipse day.
2024 Solar Eclipse

Studying nature’s eclipse reactions

This 1874 lithograph was created by Étienne Léopold Trouvelot with the 15-inch refractor at the Harvard College Observatory, for the purpose of measuring the nebula’s extent. A glass plate with dark black lines was placed on the focus of the telescope for marking placement. No wonder it shows no central star.
Observing

Looking inside the Ring Nebula

The gegenschein rests at the tip of the dimmer pyramidal-shaped false zodiacal light.
Observing

The mysteries behind the gegenschein

Four “bright” members of the Boötes Void hover around 15th magnitude. Each field measures 5' on one side. Credit: Digital sky survey
Deep-Sky Objects, Observing

The Boötes Void is a ‘holy grail’ of astronomy

An Apollo 15 image of Lambert Crater with Mons Undset to its west (right, where we've added a circle) casting a pyramidal shadow. Mons Undset was named for novelist Sigrid Undset. Credit: NASA
Observing

The mystery of a pyramid-like mountain on the Moon missing its name

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