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Mercury Magazine Contents
Vol. 28 No. 1
January/February 1999
 

Page Article
10 More than Just a Planet, It's a Meal, Eric Sandquist
Can a star swallow a planet? the extrasolar planets discovered over the past two years display an odd range of characteristics - from their moasses to the size and shape of their orbits. Andy they just may offer us clues to stellar diets.
14 What to Do in a Big Lecture Class, Besides Lecture? Douglas Duncan
Sure, students may be able to pass an exam, but do they really get useful knowledge and skills from astronomy classes? Quite often no, but there are ways to challenge them, to teach them, and to show them the beauty of the science.
18 Why and How to Observe Binary Stars Tonight, Claud H. Sandberg Lacy
The Universe is full of them - it seems to prefer them, in fact. Binary stars are of great interest to professional and amateur astronomers alike, and just a little information seems to make them even neater objects for study.
22 Life On The Mountain: An Astronomical Family Scrapbook of Mount Wilson Observatory, Don Nicholson and Scott W. Teare
Working at a mountain-top observatory involves long hours at the telescope. But life goes on outside the dome, too.
  Departments
2 Editorial, James C. White II
2001 is just around the corner
4 Letters to the Editor
5 Echoes of the Past, Katherine Bracher
Volcanism on the Moon?
 
6 Education Newswire, Leo P. Connolly
Astronomy information for educators.
7 Accidental Astrophysics, Eric M. Schlegel
8 Astronomer's Notebook, Christopher J. Conselice, with a sidebar by Jennifer Birriel
NASA's Origins program
C1 SkyChart and SkyTalk, Robert A. Garfinkle
28 World Beat, Dmitri Yu. Klimushkin
Astronomy in Siberia
31 Last Page, Duncan A. Forbes
Tips for good astronomy lectures

 

 
 

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