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Mercury Magazine Contents
Vol. 27 No. 6
November/December 1998
 

Page Article
7 Amid the Swirl of Interplanetary Dust, Stephen Kortenkamp
The inner solar system is littered with debris from asteroids and comets that are gradually being reduced to dust. The study of this debris has intrigued astronomers for more than 300 years.
12 Armageddon? Sorry ... Just Armakiddin'! Ivan Semeniuk
Asteroid 1997 XF11 won't be colliding with Earth anytime soon, but it's already having an impact on how astronomers talk to the public -- and each other -- about natural hazards.
18 Observation of Meteoroid Impacts by Space-Based Sensors, Edward Tagliaferri
There is a small fleet of satellites in orbit around Earth whose mission is to look down and monitor what happens on the planet. Little did we know that they would tell us so much about a threat from above.
24 Sci-Fi in the Classroom: Making a "Deep Impact" on Young People's Interest in Science, Leroy W. Dubeck and Rose Tatlow
From science fiction, most students are familiar with spaceships whooshing through outer space, but most do not know why this is, in fact, scientifically impossible. Rather than accept this, why not use that same science fiction to teach good science?
  Departments
2 Editorial, James C. White II
Rocky Invaders
4 Echoes of the Past, Katherine Bracher
Stones from the Sky
 
5 Education Newswire, Leo P. Connolly
Astronomy information for educators.
6 Accidental Astrophysics, James C. White II
Recovering Ceres
C1 SkyChart and SkyTalk, Robert A. Garfinkle
29 Book Review, Chris D. Impey
"The Origin and Evolution of the Universe," edited by Ben Zuckerman and Matthew Malkan. "Unsolved Problems in Astrophysics," edited by John Bahcall and Jeremiah Ostriker.
31 Last Page
Index to Volume 27

 

 
 

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