Sky at Night magazine is your practical guide to astronomy. Each issue features the world’s biggest and best night sky guide complete with star charts, observing tutorials and in-depth equipment reviews to ensure that amateur astronomers never miss those must-see events.
Welcome • Goodbye to long-serving Paul – and hello to darker skies!
Sky at Night – lots of ways to enjoy the night sky…
This month's contributors
FREE BONUS CONTENT • Find it at www.skyatnightmagazine.com/bonus-content
BIG BIRD • It's a case of poultry perfection as the Running Chicken Nebula is revealed in high resolution
Japan's Moon mission a success in the end • SLIM Lander's power system failed after touchdown but then recovered
Carbon-light atmospheres may mean habitability • Water oceans suck carbon dioxide from planets’ atmospheres
Mapping star formation in the Whirlpool Galaxy
NEWS IN BRIEF
Dark energy could change with time • The find comes from the Largest sample of supernovae ever detected by a single telescope
Titan's magic floating islands • Transient isles form then dissolve on Saturn moon's seas
Hubble shows storm-ravaged exoplanet
NEWS IN BRIEF
Life in Venus's acid clouds • Complex organic molecules may exist in the hellish atmosphere above Venus
Are roving gas clouds behind dark matter? • The blink of distant quasars may hint at one of the cosmos's big mysteries
INSIDE THE SKY AT NIGHT • Production coordinator Rachael Scott looks back on the last season of The Sky at Night and tells us what it takes for the TV show to run smoothly
Looking back: The Sky at Night • 15 March 1980
INTERACTIVE
Meet the stars
ON FACEBOOK
SCOPE DOCTOR • Our equipment specialist cures your optical ailments and technical maladies
BBC Sky at Night
WHAT'S ON
PICK OF THE MONTH
The expanding Universe of the mind • Jonathan Powell reflects on where our finite understanding meets infinite space
Cosmic factories • It's said that we're all made of star stuff, but how is that star stuff itself made? Harry Cliff explains
It began with a bang • The amount of hydrogen and helium in the Universe was set after the Big Bang
Small stars, big elements • Under certain conditions, stars Like the Sun can create heavy elements as well
Aurorae and solar maximum • We could be in for some incredible aurora displays as the Sun's magnetic activity is due to peak this year
The shape of the aurora • The lights take on many forms across the night sky
How to catch an aurora display • Finding the right time and place is the key when tracking down the Northern Lights
Lighting for the dark • Lighting designer Kerem Asfuroglu explains how considerate lighting has helped three communities to protect their dark skies
The Sky Guide • MARCH 2024
MARCH HIGHLIGHTS • Your guide to the night sky this month
NEED TO KNOW • The terms and symbols used in The Sky Guide
DONT'S MISS Comet C/2021 S3 PanSTARRS and the Coathanger • THE BIG THREE The top sights to observe or image this month
Comet 12P/ Pons-Brooks • BEST TIME TO SEE: 1–17 March and 26–31 March
Crescent Moon, Jupiter and the Pleiades • BEST TIME TO SEE: Evenings of 13 and 14 March
PICK OF THE MONTH
THE NIGHT SKY – MARCH • Explore the celestial sphere with our Northern Hemisphere all-sky chart
MOONWATCH • March's top lunar feature to observe
COMETS AND ASTEROIDS • A potential binocular catch, 11th-Largest asteroid 3 Juno is at its brightest in March
STAR OF THE MONTH • 55 Cancri, a star...