Sky & Telescope Year 2015 Magazine Back Issues
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- Big Hurdles For Big Scopes
- Backyard Winter Beauties
- Hubble's New Gravity Glasses
- See Mercury & Venus Pair Up
- Hunt The Minor Moons
- Asteroid Fly-By For Backyard Scopes
- How To Align Your Go To Mount
- Cosmic Voids: Much Ado About Nothing
- Why So Many Water Constellations?
- Test Report: iOptron's SkyGuider Camera Mount
- Galaxies On Edge Scavenger Hunt For Amateurs
- Choosing Your Magnification For Observering Planets
- Dawn At Ceres The Exploration Begins
- Seeing Uranus In Antiquity?
- Deep-Sky Wonders: Spring Hit Parade
- Will You See April's Lunar Eclipse
- Night Watch Help Measure Light Pollution
- Atik One CCD Camera
- Tiniest Lunar Feature You Can See
- HowThe Moon's Craters Got Their Names
- 7 Ways Hubble Changed Astronomy
- The Lunar Science Of Jules Verne
- Splitting The Stars Of The Serpent's Head
- Saturn In Your Scope
- Pluto At Last New Horizons Historic Flyby
- How To Find Pluto & Ceres
- One-Shot Color Processing
- Test Report: Deep-Sky Planner 6
- The Times Square Kiss: A Tale Of Sun And Shadow
- Test Report: A Budget Lens For Nightcaspes
- Saving America's Telescopes
- Iconic Observatories Under Siege
- Total Eclipse Of The Harvest Moon
- How Galaxies Grow
- Messier Mystery Revisited
- Find Uranus & Neptune
- Making Massive Stars
- Shooting Nightscapes
- A Triad Of Sky Myths
- The Moon's Southern Imbrium
- Could The Sun Superflare?
- Jupiter: Dawes Historic Observations
- In Praise Of Pisces
- Test Report: MyT Portable Imaging Rig
- 100 Years General Of Relativity
- How Einstein Changed Astronomy
- The Search For Gravitational Waves
- Explore The Moon's Mare Humorum
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Sky & Telescope (S&T) is a monthly magazine covering all aspects of amateur and professional astronomy, including what to see in the sky tonight and new findings in astronomy. Other topics covered include:
A) observing guides for planets, galaxies, star clusters, and other objects visible in the night sky
B) reviews of telescopes and other astronomical equipment, books, and software
events in the amateur astronomy community
C) amateur telescope making
D) astrophotography
The articles are intended for the informed lay reader and include detailed discussions of current discoveries, frequently by participating scientists. The magazine is illustrated in full color, with both amateur and professional photography of celestial sights, as well as tables and charts of upcoming celestial events.