| IN THE MARCH 2010 ISSUE > |
| Featured Articles | |
S&T: Casey Reed
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Shedding Light on Dark Stars Bizarre stars powered by dark matter may have been the first to appear after the Big Bang. By Ker Than What Else Is Out There? Planets and other large objects could be lurking far beyond Neptune. By David Jewitt Digitizing History Amateurs help scan a century of photographic plates. By Stephen Lieber |
| Beyond the Printed Page | |
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Occultation Web Resources Occultations of stars and planets by the Moon and asteroids are exciting to watch, and amateur occultation timings can have real scientific value. But first you need to know what occultations will be happening in your area. read more > By David W. Dunham |
S&T: Dennis di Cicco
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| Also in This Issue | |
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Observatories on the Web You can rent time to observe from home with top-notch telescopes and CCD cameras around the world. By Andy Macica Double Stars in Leo The Lion is a treasurehouse of bright, rewarding visual binaries By Richard Jaworksi Keeper of Secrets Little-known Lynx hosts some exotic deep-sky objects. By Sue French Table of Contents See what else March's issue has to offer. read more > |
LightBuckets
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