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Mercury Magazine Contents
Vol. 25 No. 3
May/June 1996
 

Page Article
12 When Planetaries Meet Planets, by Arsen R. Hajian
Bloating to hundreds of times their original size, doubling their body temperatures, flinging pieces of their bodies around, squirting out their guts, pulverizing their dependents. The death of mid-size stars is such a pretty sight.
16 Have Observatory, Will Travel, by James C. White II
College astronomy labs, for want of other fun, typically turn into a game: get the instructor to tell us the answers so that we can get out of here. And then the poor teacher has to go home and grade the scribbles and scrawls of two dozen disaffected students. Project CLEA offers a better way.
23 Relativity in the Palm of Your Hand, by Neil Ashby
Relativity. The word strikes horror into mortal minds. But as esoteric as Einstein's theories seem, we all use them whenever we fly a plane, make a phone call, survey a plot of land -- or do anything else that depends on the Global Positioning System.
28 The Shapes of Things to Come, by Peter C. Thomas
Take some Dramamine the next time you visit Vesta or Ida. Asteroids are giant Mystery Spots where you have to climb uphill to go down. The bizarre gravity of oblong objects can also yank satellites out of orbit, as controllers of the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous are bracing for.
32 The World of Radio Astronomy, Part 2, by Michael Dahlem and Elias Brinks
Communications engineers gasp when they hear how weak cosmic radio signals are. Picking those faint signals out of the cacophony of the airwaves, and discerning the fine details they contain, has pushed radio technology to its limits.
  Departments
2 Editorial, by George Musser
4 Letters to the Editor
5 Society News
6 World Beat: China, by John R. Percy
Chinese astronomers are still picking up the pieces from the Cultural Revolution, not to mention Tiananmen Square. Can they maintain their enthusiasm during the upheavals the next decade is likely to bring?
8 Black Holes to Blackboards, by Jeffrey F. Lockwood
When your students speak of "the stars," wouldn't it be nice if, for once, they meant Arcturus rather than Aniston? After all, stars (the shining type) have lives that would keep "Entertainment Tonight" abuzz.
9 Echoes of the Past, by Katherine Bracher
In our bodies, dead stars live on. It is a story of resurrection that astronomers read in the colors of starlight.
10 Guest Observer, by James C. White II
(Re)discovering the asteroid Vesta. This month's column also features some spiffy photos of Comet Hyakutake.
19 SkyChart and SkyTalk, by Robert A. Garfinkle
37 Book Review, by John Isles
Sky Phenomena by Norman Davidson. The Binocular Stargazer by Leslie C. Peltier. Turn Left at Orion by Guy Consolmagno and Dan M. Davis.
39 Last Page, by Yervant Terzian
"The most outstanding thing I have learned is that quantum mechanics has proved that no matter how accurate you are, you can never completely focus a slide."

 

 
 

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