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March/April 2004Mercury Magazine
Contents and Select Excerpts
Vol. 33 No. 2
March/April 2004
 
Mercury is a bi-monthly membership magazine.
Find out how you can join the ASP today!
Page Article
13 The Transit of Venus: Twice in a Lifetime, Lou Mayo
On the 8th of June Venus will pass across the face of the Sun—a rare event that in the 17th century permitted European scientists to determine the size of the Solar System.
19 ComPADRE: Communities of Physics and Astronomy Digital Resources in Education, Susana E. Deustua
To facilitate better teaching and better learning, a group of professional organizations is creating a digital repository of educational resources and information.
24

Planet-Building on the Grandest Scales, Ken Rice and Phil Armitage
The extrasolar planets discovered to this time are believed to be giant gaseous planets similar to Jupiter and Saturn. Understanding how large planets form will help us construct an overall picture of how entire planetary systems form.

32

Peering into the Dark, Catherine Garland
The evidence for the existence of black holes is overwhelming, and these bizarre objects—likely ranging in size from teeny to titanic—may even lurk inside the debris of particle collisions in an eagerly awaited particle accelerator.

Departments
4 Editorial, James C. White II
Life in a "Science" Town
5

Living Universe, Monika Kress
Rocks on the Ice

6 Planetary Perspectives, Daniel D. Durda
I, Robot? I Wish!
7 Lives of Stars, Jennifer Birriel
Shaping Planetary Nebulae
8 Armchair Astrophysics, Christopher Wanjek
Cosmic Metamorphosis
9 Annals of Astronomy, Clifford Cunningham
The Scientific Gene
10 Echoes of the Past, Katherine Bracher
The Spectrum of Eta Carinae
11 Celestial Wonderings, Lou Mayo
Star-Hopping Through Orion
12 Observer's Page, John Shibley
Spring’s Hidden Flower
40 Sky Events, Richard Talcott
March Sky Map | April Sky Map | May Sky Map
42 Works of Note
43 Society Scope
46 Last Page, Catherine A. Pilachowski
The Future of the Hubble Space Telescope
 
 

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