Page |
Article |
14 |
Why
SETI Will Fail, Ben Zuckerman
The union of space telescopes and interstellar spaceships
guarantees that if extraterrestrial civilizations were common,
someone would have come here long ago. |
24 |
SETI’s
Prospects Are Bright, Seth Shostak
Thousands of communicating civilizations could populate our
galaxy. And there are plenty of reasons why none of them have
visited Earth. |
30 |
2002:
A Martian Odyssey, Stephane Barile
NASA’s
Mars Odyssey spacecraft has both good news and bad news for
would-be martian explorers. |
34 |
Flattening
the Earth, Jeffrey Burton Russell
Contrary
to popular folklore, medieval Europeans knew Earth was a sphere,
and, with the notable exception of Christopher Columbus, most
had a pretty good idea of its true size. |
|
Departments
|
4 |
Editorial, Robert Naeye
Astronomical Wagers |
5 |
Society
Scope
News and information for Society members |
8 |
Research
Notebook, Christopher Conselice
Brown Dwarfs: The Missing Link |
9 |
Armchair
Astrophysics, Christopher Wanjek
Ring Around the Black Hole |
10 |
Annals
of Astronomy, Clifford J. Cunningham
The Lunar Challenge |
11 |
Echoes
of the Past, Katherine Bracher
Search
for an Intra-Mercurial Planet |
12 |
Focus
on Education, Marni Berendsen
Living Inside the Milky Way |
13 |
Observers
Page, John Shibley
Monsters
of Autumn |
C1 |
Sky Map and Sky Talk,
Richard Talcott
September Sky Map | October
Sky Map | November Sky Map |
39 |
Book
Review, Philip Plait
Flash!
The Hunt for the Biggest Explosions in the Universe (by Govert
Schilling) |
40 |
Works
of Note |