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October 2006 | Astronomy.com
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October 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

The new search for distant planets

At 200 exoplanets and counting, astronomers are much closer to discovering worlds that might resemble our own.

Online extra: Everything you need to know about exoplanets

Astronomers have found more than 200 planet candidates circling stars other than the Sun. Here's the scoop on the currently known planets.

How do you make a giant exoplanet?

Scientists endlessly debate theories of how giant planets form, but only observations will settle the question.

Online extra: Growing exoplanets

Computer models help astronomers understand how planets form.

Planets without suns

Isolated giant planets, unbound to any star, may be the Milky Wayò??s most common worlds.

Atlas of extrasolar planets

The worlds beyond our solar system show a rich diversity no one suspected.

Where is life hiding?

Location holds the key to finding extraterrestrial life.

The most important cosmologist youò??ve never heard of

Henry Tye transforms cosmology as inflationò??s unsung hero. His latest pursuit: Where did our universe come from?

The sharpest image

Put away your eyeglasses. Tele Vueò??s DioptRx lenses correct astigmatism.

Shooting through the light

Learn how one astroimager succeeds in a light-polluted sky.

Online extra: Urban astroimaging delights

One astroimager proves you can attain striking astroimages despite living under a light-polluted sky.

Head of the glass

Ease of use and terrific optics place the Stellarvue SV4 high on any observerò??s want list.

Online extra: October 2006 book reviews

One astroimager proves you can attain striking astroimages despite living under a light-polluted sky.

Departments

This month in Astronomy
Beautiful universe
Letters
Bob Berman's strange universe
Glenn Chaple's observing basics
Phil Harrington's binocular universe

Mr. October

News
New products
Book reviews
Coming events
Advertiser index
Resources
Reader gallery
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