index to volume 110 july–december 2005

■ authors hobby Q&A, 4:112, 5:112, 6:116 Great Expectations, 1:48 Hubble’s Prospects Brighten, 2:25 Hole in One, 2:46 Abed, Abdulkader M., Science in Iraq, 1:13 Paradigm Shift, 2:8 On the Air, 4:46 Adler, Alan, Digicam Astrophotography, 5:114 Parallel Universes, 6:8 Skin Deep, 5:46 Aguirre, Edwin L., Amateur Team Finds 100 Planetary Plasticity, 5:8 Kwitter, Karen B., Swan Song in Aquarius, A, 5:30 Supernovae, 5:101 Vision Quest: Optimizing Your Eyes for Lederman, Russ, The Right Tools for the Job, 1:12 April’s Unique Solar Eclipse, 3:87 Astronomy, 3:28 Levy, David H., Crimson Ring, A, 2:107 Canadian Amateurs Access Big Hawaiian Scopes, Filippenko, Alexei V., Why Are Supernovae Important? Earth Strikes Back, 5:104 4:98 5:102 In Praise of Penumbral Eclipses, 3:113 Community News: America’s Young Astronomers Flanders, Tony, book review: Deep Sky Observer’s Introducing the Levy List, 6:80 Recognized, 2:102 Guide, Neil Bone, 4:90 Master Storyteller, A, 4:104 Comet Discoverers Recognized, 4:100 book review: Night Sky Atlas, Robin Scagell, 4:90 Seeing Einstein’s Gravity Lens, 1:108 Constellation Stamps to Be Issued, 4:100 book review: Stargazing with a Telescope, Robin Voyage to Remember, A, 6:114 S&T Executive Editor Honored, 4:100 Scagell, 4:90 Livingston, Andrew, Observing by Ear, 3:134 Universo Celebrates Its 10th Anniversary, 2:102 German Amateur’s Supernova in M51, 5:103 hobby Q&A, 2:110 L. R. J., see Johnston, Lisa R. Greenwich: Center of Space and Time, 2:99 French, Sue, Cygnus Sampler, A, 4:71 Lockhart, Forrest, Conversation with a Wizard, 4:134 hobby Q&A, 2:110 Cygnus Sampler — Part II, 5:75 Macrae, Bill, Brush with Success, A, 5:12 see also Naeye, Robert Island Universe, 6:77 MacRobert, Alan M., Amateur Sightings: Watching Allen, Bruce, Test Einstein at Home, 1:39 More Summer Planetaries, 2:77 History Happen, 4:38 Alsip, Mark, Science Lost, 4:12 Scuttling Around the Scorpion, 1:75 Auroras Aren’t Mirror Images, 1:19 Alves, Filipe, Capturing the Colors of the Moon, 1:120 Towering Eagle, The, 3:81 Christmas-Morning Spica Occultation, The, 6:67 A. M., see MacRobert, Alan M. Gefter, Amanda, Putting Einstein to the Test, 1:32 Fine Antares Occultation, A, 1:66 Ayiomamitis, Anthony, Celestial Growing Pains, 5:12 Gingerich, Owen, book review: Exploring Ancient Fine Year for a Perseid Watch, 2:65 Beatty, J. Kelly, book review: Infinite Worlds, Ray Skies, David H. Kelley and Eugene F. Milone, Gamma-Ray Re-Bursts, 3:20 Villard and Lynette R. Cook, 5:98 2:91 hobby Q&A, 1:118, 5:112, 6:116 Hayabusa Arrives at Asteroid Itokawa, 6:17 Gingerich, Owen, and Richard C. Henry, Planetary Hubble’s Anniversary Present, 3:44 hobby Q&A, 4:112 Pretzels, 5:81 Image-Stabilize Your Binoculars, 4:107 Beish, Jeffrey D., Mars Observing Forecast, A, 3:70 Goldman, Stuart J., Ancient Star Catalog Found, 1:22 Low-Mass Exoplanet, A, 3:19 Bobra, Monica, book review: Empire of the Stars, book review: Astronomy with a Home Computer, Meteors in the Telescope, 1:65 Arthur I. Miller, 3:103 Neale Monks, 6:104 October 3rd Annular Eclipse, The, 4:64 Brown, David, Taking a Stand, 2:12 book review: Jupiter, Fran Bagenal, Timothy October 17th Partial Lunar Eclipse, The, 4:66 Bruns, Donald, Resolution Realities, 6:118 Dowling, and William McKinnon, eds., 2:94 One Super Star Cluster, 1:20 Bryant, Greg, Contrasts in Capricornus, 4:55 book review: Meteorites, Robert Hutchison, 2:94 Perseids 2005: Right on Schedule, 6:84 Deep-Sea Nights, 6:55 Classic Book Reborn, A, 6:106 Short Gamma-Ray Burst Nailed at Last, 2:16 Migrating South, 5:55 Comet Grazing, 2:96 Shreds of a Swallowed Spiral, 2:17 Pointers to the Night’s Diversity, 1:55 Seeing the Big Pictures, 3:108 So You Want Giant Binoculars: RB-66 Reverse Sagittarius’s Stellar Playgrounds, 1:28 This Software Club Wants You, 1:106 Binoculars, 3:96 Shielded Arm, A, 2:55 Gordon, Rodger W., and William Sheehan, Solved: The Truly Ancient Relic Star, A, 1:19 Stellar Sights in Sagittarius, 3:55 Mars-Crater Mystery, 5:64 MacRobert, Alan M., and Daniel M. Troiani, Great Burdell, Ed, Discovered Treasure, 1:12 Grego, Peter, book review: Atlas of the Moon, Mars Apparition of 2005, The, 3:67 Capon, Robert, Automate Your Backyard Observatory, Antonín Rükl, 4:92 Madore, Barry F., and Armando Gil de Paz, Discovery 1:113 Guzman Sanz, Tomas, Importing Astronomy, 4:13 Among the Disks, 5:40 Castellano, Joseph A., “Ice” Breaker, 3:12 Heafner, Joe, book review: Mathematical Astronomy Magnuson, Bob, Shaky Ground, 4:12 Crisp, Richard, Narrowband Imaging in Color, 2:112 Morsels III, Jean Meeus, 2:93 Malin, Michael C., Hidden in Plain Sight: Finding Croswell, Ken, Dating the Milky Way, 4:22 Double Duty: Binary Maker 3.0, 4:82 Martian Landers, 1:42 Dalrymple, Les, Seven Messier Globulars of Henden, Arne A., And Science Too, 4:79 Marler, Larry P., Inappropriate, 1:12 Ophiuchus, The, 1:79 Henry, Richard C., see Gingerich, Owen Marsden, Brian G., see Hoffman, Tony Southern Binocular Highlight: Cluster in the Hoffman, Tony, and Brian G. Marsden, Booming McDowell, Jonathan, Astro-E2, 2:25 Wrong Spot, A, 5:53 Science of Sungrazing Comets, The, 2:32 Astro-F, 2:25 M75: The Loneliest Globular, 4:53 Horne, Johnny, Deep-Sky Imaging for Everyone: DSI Cosmos-1/Volna, 4:24 NGC 288 in Sculptor, 6:53 Color CCD Camera, 4:76 Hard Times for Space Science, 1:24 NGC 6124 in Scorpius, 2:53 Hostetter, Clyde, Seeking the Crescent of Venus, 6:66 Juno, 3:24 Southern Pointers, The, 1:53 Hynes, Steven J., Evolution in the Classroom, 5:12 Messenger, 6:26 Watching Kappa Pavonis, 3:53 Isles, John, book review: Observing Variable Stars, Solar-B, 2:25 DeCristofano, Carolyn, Taking a Stand, 2:12 Novae, and Supernovae, Gerald North, 3:105 Space Shuttle Return to Flight, 5:26 Deman, Chris, Sky Vision, 6:12 Johnston, Lisa R., book review: Evolving Cosmos, Spitzer Space Telescope, 4:24 Denton, Stephen, Discovered Treasure, 1:12 Govert Schilling, 6:101 , 5:26 de Paz, Armando Gil, see Madore, Barry F. book review: Violent Universe, The, Kimberly Venus Express, 6:26 di Cicco, Dennis, book review: The Mount Wilson Weaver, 6:102 Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, 3:24 Observatory, Allan Sandage, 1:105 Early Universe Shows Signs of Life, 5:24 Medkeff, Jeff, book review: The New Amateur hobby Q&A, 1:118 GALEX Sees Ultraviolet Explosion, 3:17 Astronomer, Martin Mobberley, 1:101 Doescher, Russell L., see Olson, Donald W., Milky Way’s Youngest Globular, The, 2:19 Meeus, Jean, Hybrid Eclipse, 1:13 D. T., see Tytell, David Johnston, Tom, Big Binos Bounce Back, 6:12 Miller, Mike, Sky Vision, 6:12 Dunham, David W., Planetary Occultations for Jones, Paul B., Thy Neighbor’s Scope, 1:142 Minami, Masatsugu, see Sheehan, William August–December, 2:68 J. R., see Roth, Joshua Mitte Honor Students, The, see Olson, Donald W. Dyer, Alan, Canon’s Astrocamera: The EOS 20Da, 5:84 Kalix, Eric, Showing the Way, 4:13 Morris, Steven, Taking a Stand, 2:13 Celestron’s Advanced Series “Go To” Mount, 2:82 Kammerer, Andreas, Naked-Eye Comets in 2004, 1:12 Nadis, Steve, Sizing Up Inflation, 5:32 Vixen’s Sphinx “Go To” Mount, 1:84 Kerste, Alexander, Solar Power, 3:12 Naeye, Robert, Bigger Andromeda Galaxy, A, 2:18 Fienberg, Richard Tresch, Einstein Forever? 1:8 Krajci, Tom, Sky Vision, 6:12 book review: Grand Tour, The, Ron Miller and E-Publish or Perish, 4:8 Krupp, E. C., Buttermilk Sky, 6:46 William K. Hartmann, 4:94 Eyesight Insight, 3:8 Generation Gap, 3:48 book and video review: Voyage to the Planets and

© 2005 Sky Publishing Corp. 1 pindex to volume 110

Beyond, Tim Haines and Christopher Riley, 4:94 Mars in Full Glory, 5:56 Planetary Masters, 4:115 Chaos and Capture, 3:18 Mars Returns to the Stage, 1:56 Planetary Processing with RegiStax 3, 6:94 Dominatrix Planet, The, 5:20 Near Sky, The: The Countersun Revisited, 3:91 Wanjek, Christopher, LASIK Eye Surgery for the Europe’s Eye on Mars, 6:30 Pairings at Dusk and Dawn, 3:56 Amateur Astronomer, 3:36 Exo-Asteroid Belt, An, 2:22 Putting Taurus Together, 6:50 Werner, Michael, and B. Thomas Soifer, Spitzer Extrasolar Planets: Pictured at Last? 2:38 Really Big Story, A, 5:50 Response, 3:13 Extreme Pulsars, 6:20 Red Planet Rising, 2:56 Wilke, John, Taking a Stand, 2:13 Follow That Story: Big Bang Brew, 2:24 Starry Scorpion, The, 2:50 Wood, Charles A., Ancient Lunar Faults, 6:63 Follow That Story: Chandra Observes Supernova Starry Skies to Count On, 1:50 Basin Too Big to Believe, A, 3:63 1987A, 2:24 Tangle of Triangles, A, 3:50 Mysteries of the Eastern Limb, 5:62 Follow That Story: One-Sided Superflare, 2:24 Think Outside the Great Square, 4:50 Polar Pleasures, 1:62 Giant African Scope Sees First Light, 6:21 Venus Blooms as Mars’s Fire Fades, 6:56 Pyroclastics on the Moon, 2:62 M82 Has Spiral Arms, 4:20 Seronik, Gary, Low-Cost Starter Scopes, 6:86 Straight Story on Linear Rilles, The, 4:62 Meet the Milky Way’s Newfound Neighbors, 1:16 Northern Binocular Highlight: Andromeda’s ■ New Exoplanet Imaged? A, 1:18 Companions, 6:52 departments One Big Ball of Rock, 4:16 Globular Cluster Season, 1:52 Amateur Telescope Making — Planet-Disk Connection, The, 4:18 M27 in Vulpecula, 3:52 Automate Your Backyard Observatory, 1:113 Prospecting for Martian Ice, 4:18 M57 and Expectations, 2:52 Image-Stabilize Your Binoculars, 4:107 Red Planet Roundup, 5:18 Magnificent Mu Cephei, 4:52 Remote Collimation for a Big Dob, 5:107 Scattered Planet, 2:22 Two Lacerta Clusters, 5:52 Astronomy Online — Short GRBs Linked to Mergers, 6:21 Sharp, Christopher, Evolution in the Classroom, 5:13 Classic Book Reborn, A, 6:106 Supernova in the Whirlpool, 4:20 Sheehan, William, E. E. Barnard’s Milky Way, 6:38 Comet Grazing, 2:96 Survivor Planets, 5:20 Keats’s Steadfast Star, 3:12 Seeing the Big Pictures, 3:108 13 New Saturnian Moons, 2:20 To Mars by Way of Noto, 6:108 This Software Club Wants You, 1:106 video review: Hubble: 15 Years of Discovery, see also Gordon, Rodger W. Astrophotography — European Space Agency, 5:98 Sheehan, William, and Masatsugu Minami, Renowned Capturing the Colors of the Moon, 1:120 World’s Largest Scope Takes Shape, 5:22 Japanese Mars Observers, 6:112 Digicam Astrophotography, 5:114 Naeye, Robert, and Edwin L. Aguirre, Amateurs Help Simpson, Janet P., Never Seen? 4:12 Narrowband Imaging in Color, 2:112 Discover Exoplanet, 4:96 Sinnott, Roger W., book review: From Eudoxus to Planetary Masters, 4:115 Nicolaisen, Curtis, Taking a Stand, 2:12 Einstein, C. M. Linton, 3:106 Resolution Realities, 6:118 Olson, Donald W., Russell L. Doescher, and The Mitte Collision Course, 2:66 Books & Beyond — Honor Students, Ansel Adams and an “Autumn hobby Q&A, 1:118, 2:110, 3:116, 4:112, 5:112 Astro Turf, M. G. Lord, 2:94 Moon,” 4:40 November Meteors, 5:68 Astronomy with a Home Computer, Neale O’Meara, Stephen James, Haidinger’s Brush — Part I, Variable Stars for August, 2:72 Monks, 6:104 1:72 Variable Stars for December, 6:68 Atlas of the Moon, Antonín Rükl, 4:92 Haidinger’s Brush — Part II, 2:74 Variable Stars for July, 1:68 Art of Collecting Meteorites, The, Kevin hobby Q&A, 6:116 Variable Stars for November, 5:68 Kichinka, 6:104 Mercury by Day, 6:74 Variable Stars for October, 4:65 Backyard Stargazer, The: An Absolute Beginner’s Seeing Red? 5:70 Variable Stars for September, 3:72 Guide to Skywatching with and without a Shadow Play, 4:68 Soifer, B. Thomas, see Werner, Michael Telescope, Pat Price, 6:103 Twisted Meteors, 3:77 Solomon, Mark, Young Einstein, 5:13 Centennial History of the Carnegie Institution of Pedreira, Tom, Capturing the Moment, 6:13 Steyaert, Christian, Save the Leap Second! 6:134 Washington: The Mount Wilson Observatory, Poole, Rowen, Symbol Formerly Known As . . . 4:12 Stienmier, Richard, Evolution in the Classroom, 5:12 Allan Sandage, 1:105 Ratledge, David, Telescope Schooling: The Stars at a Suskin, Greg, Taking a Stand, 2:12 Deep Sky Observer’s Guide, Neil Bone, 4:90 Click, 1:91 Syed, Andy, Second Chances, 4:12 Empire of the Stars, Arthur I. Miller, 3:103 Raymo, Chet, book review: Backyard Stargazer, The, Troiani, Daniel M., see MacRobert, Alan M. Evolving Cosmos, Govert Schilling, 6:101 Pat Price, 6:103 Tytell, David, book review: Art of Collecting Exploring Ancient Skies, David H. Kelley and book review: Sky Phenomena, Norman Davidson, Meteorites, The, Kevin Kichinka, 6:104 Eugene F. Milone, 2:91 6:104 book review: Astro Turf, M. G. Lord, 2:94 From Eudoxus to Einstein, C. M. Linton, 3:106 Reade, Gordon, Night Flight, 5:134 book review: Lunar Prospector, Alan B. Binder, Grand Tour, The, Ron Miller and William K. Rector, Travis A., Cavity in Cassiopeia, A, 2:28 3:106 Hartmann, 4:94 Richards, Rev. David P., Taking a Stand, 2:12 book review: New Quotable Einstein, The, Alice Hubble: 15 Years of Discovery, the European R. N., see Naeye, Robert Calaprice, ed., 3:106 Space Agency, 5:98 Robinson, Leif J., 50 & 25 Years Ago, 1:20, 2:24, 3:24, book review: Norton’s Star Atlas and Reference Infinite Worlds, Ray Villard and Lynette R. Cook, 4:24, 5:26, 6:26 Handbook, Ian Ridpath, ed., 4:94 5:98 Roth, Joshua, Binary Dwarf Bagged, 6:20 book review: Pathways to the Planets, John R. Jupiter, Fran Bagenal, Timothy Dowling, and book review: Navigating the Night Sky, Strand, 2:94 William McKinnon, eds., 2:94 Guilherme de Almeida, 1:103 book review: Stargazer: The Life and Times of Lunar Prospector, Alan B. Binder, 3:106 book review: On the Shoulders of Giants, 1:102 the Telescope, Fred Watson, 5:96 Mathematical Astronomy Morsels III, Jean book review: Walk through the Heavens, A, Comet That Doesn’t Quit, The, 5:18 Meeus, 2:93 Milton D. Heifetz and Wil Tirion, 1:103 “Death Star” Revisited, The, 5:17 Meteorites, Robert Hutchison, 2:94 book review: Year of the Comets: A Journey from Deep Impact Revisited, 6:16 Navigating the Night Sky, Guilherme de Almeida, Sadness to the Stars, Jan DeBlieu, 5:97 Deep Impact: The Sequel, 4:39 1:103 Dark-Matter Developments, 1:19 Deep Impact’s Hammer Throw, 4:34 New Amateur Astronomer, The, Martin Echoes of a Black Hole’s Feisty Past, 3:20 Deposits Point to Evaporated Water on Mars, 1:18 Mobberley, 1:101 Homeless Black Hole? 6:24 Enceladus’s Frozen Volcanoes? 5:16 New Quotable Einstein, The, Alice Calaprice, ed., Record-Setting Solar Flare, A, 3:16 hobby Q&A, 3:116 3:106 Setback for Alternative Cosmology, 6:22 Lakes on Titan Found? 2:20 Night Sky Atlas, Robin Scagell, 4:90 Sloan Survey Extended, 6:22 New Kings of the Kuiper Belt, The, 4:28 Norton’s Star Atlas and Reference Handbook, Ian Spectacles for Spectacular Skies, 3:30 Revising Asteroid Warnings, 3:22 Ridpath, ed., 4:94 Tuning In to Cosmic Rays, 3:20 They’re Back! 6:18 Observing Variable Stars, Novae, and Weighing a Monstrous Black Hole, 5:22 Understanding Titan’s Terrain, 6:18 Supernovae, Gerald North, 3:105 R. W. S., see Sinnott, Roger W. Van Dyke, Donald, Brush with Success, A, 5:12 On the Shoulders of Giants, 1:102 Ryan, Bill, 14° Twitch, The, 2:134 VanderBrugge, John, Remote Collimation for a Big Pathways to the Planets, John R. Strand, 2:94 Schaaf, Fred, Eye and I: Awesome Augusts, 2:67 Dob, 5:107 Sky Phenomena, Norman Davidson, 6:104 Eye and I: Conquering Kuma, 5:82 Walker, Sean, Blueshift: Coronado’s Calcium-Light Stargazer: The Life and Times of the Telescope, Light-Pollution Notes, 1:83, 4:101 Solar Telescope, 5:90 Fred Watson, 5:96 Mars at Its Biggest and Best, 4:56 German Equatorial “Go To” Mounts, 1:98 Stargazing with a Telescope, Robin Scagell, 4:90

© 2005 Sky Publishing Corp. 2 pindex to volume 110

Violent Universe, The, Kimberly Weaver, 6:102 Focal Point — Mission Update — Voyage to the Planets and Beyond, Tim Haines Conversation with a Wizard, 4:134 Astro-E2, 2:25 and Christopher Riley (and video), 4:94 14° Twitch, The, 2:134 Astro-F, 2:25 Walk through the Heavens, A, Milton D. Heifetz Night Flight, 5:134 Cosmos-1/Volna, 4:24 and Wil Tirion, 1:103 Observing by Ear, 3:134 Hard Times for Space Science, 1:24 Year of the Comets: A Journey from Sadness to Save the Leap Second! 6:134 Juno, 3:24 the Stars, Jan DeBlieu, 5:97 Thy Neighbor’s Scope, 1:142 Messenger, 6:26 Buyer’s Guide — Gallery, 1:26, 2:118, 3:120, 4:120, 5:120, 6:122 Solar-B, 2:25 German Equatorial “Go To” Mounts, 1:98 Hobby Q&A — Space Shuttle Return to Flight, 5:26 Celestial Calendar — Can the lunar crescent be seen in a telescope at Spitzer Space Telescope, 4:24 Christmas-Morning Spica Occultation, The, 6:67 new Moon when the Moon is at its greatest Suzaku, 5:26 Collision Course, 2:66 inclination? 3:116 Venus Express, 6:26 Eye and I: Awesome Augusts, 2:67 Do Saturn’s moons cast observable shadows on Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, 3:24 Fine Antares Occultation, A, 1:66 that planet? 3:116 New Product Showcase — Fine Year for a Perseid Watch, 2:65 Does stopping down your telescope to a smaller Burgess/TMB Multi-Reticle Finder, 4:88 Great Mars Apparition of 2005, The, 3:67 aperture produce sharper images? 1:118 Dioptrx Eyepieces, 4:88 Mars Observing Forecast, A, 3:70 How bright is the combined magnitude of all visi- ETX Premier Edition Series, 4:86 Meteors in the Telescope, 1:65 ble stars? 2:110 Feather Touch Focusers, 4:86 Minima of Algol, 1:69 How can giant stars in a binary system have an GradientXTerminator, 3:100 November Meteors, 5:68 of a few days? 5:112 Gravity Simulator 2.0, 2:88 October 3rd Annular Eclipse, The, 4:64 How do I convert equinox 1950.0 celestial coordi- Guide Port Interface Adapter, 1:94 October 17th Partial Lunar Eclipse, The, 4:66 nates to the current standard 2000.0? 5:112 ImagesPlus 2.5, 3:100 Planetary Occultations for August–December, How is the time of new Moon defined? 3:116 Lunar Map Pro 4.0 Deluxe, 4:88 2:68 How would Earth look to a Martian observer? Lynkeos, 1:94 Seeking the Crescent of Venus, 6:66 3:116 MaxDSLR, 6:98 Solved: The Mars-Crater Mystery, 5:64 If I lived on Saturn, would the rings be visible? NGF-XTc Focuser, 3:100 Variable Stars for August, 2:72 2:110 PixInsight LE, 1:96 Variable Stars for December, 6:68 Is it possible to see the crescent of Venus naked- Precision Digital Focuser, 1:94 Variable Stars for July, 1:68 eye? 6:116 PST Bino-Corrector Adapter, 5:92 Variable Stars for November, 5:68 Is there another planet whose moon(s) would fit RS-Spectroscope, 4:86 Variable Stars for October, 4:65 over the Sun producing a perfect fit for a total ScopeRoller 8, 2:88 Variable Stars for September, 3:72 eclipse? 5:112 Series 5000 Plössl Eyepieces, 6:98 Deep-Sky Wonders — What happened to Saturn’s ring “spokes” that ServoCAT Jr., 5:93 Cygnus Sampler, A, 4:71 were revealed by the 1979 Voyager spacecraft? Sidewalk Astronomer, A, 5:93 Cygnus Sampler — Part II, 5:75 4:112 Sight Saver, 1:96 Island Universe, 6:77 What percentage of our galaxy’s stars move in 6-inch Maksutov-Cassegrain Telescope, 6:98 More Summer Planetaries, 2:77 retrograde ? 6:116 SkyAlign, 5:92 Scuttling Around the Scorpion, 1:75 When was the last time the two stars of Alpha Solar Scope Covers, 2:88 Towering Eagle, The, 3:81 Centauri were closest? 4:112 StarChartGL, 5:92 Exploring the Moon — Why aren’t the Magellanic Clouds included on Starry Night Pro Plus 5.0, 1:96 Ancient Lunar Faults, 6:63 deep-sky-object lists? 6:116 Trifid-2 CCD Cameras, 5:93 Basin Too Big to Believe, A, 3:63 Why do astrophotographers stack exposures? ZenithStar 66 Petzval ED Semi-APO Refractor, Mysteries of the Eastern Limb, 5:62 1:118 6:98 Polar Pleasures, 1:62 Why is Uranus considered to have a retrograde News Notes — Pyroclastics on the Moon, 2:62 spin? 1:118 Ancient Star Catalog Found, 1:22 Straight Story on Linear Rilles, The, 4:62 Why not list the name of the question writers in Astro News Brief: Ancient Novae, 1:22 Eye on the Sky — the Hobby Q&A column? 2:110 Asteroid with Two Moons, An, 5:24 Haidinger’s Brush — Part I, 1:72 Why wouldn’t a GPS receiver display zero longi- Binary Going Berserk, 3:22 Haidinger’s Brush — Part II, 2:74 tude at Greenwich Observatory? 2:110 Cosmic-Ray Milestone, 4:22 Mercury by Day, 6:74 Will a 12- or 14-inch scope dramatically improve Cygnus X-1’s Dark Jet, 6:24 Seeing Red? 5:70 my view of nebulae and galaxies over my 6- Dark-Matter Galaxy? 5:24 Shadow Play, 4:68 inch telescope? 4:112 Dusty White Dwarf, 6:24 Twisted Meteors, 3:77 Letters — Eta Carinae Twin, 1:22 Feature — Big Binos Bounce Back, 6:12 Icy Ceres? 6:24 Amateur Sightings: Watching History Happen, Brush with Success, A, 5:12 Leap Second, 4:22 4:38 Capturing the Moment, 6:13 Mars Rovers Extended, 1:22 Ansel Adams and an “Autumn Moon,” 4:40 Celestial Growing Pains, 5:12 Martian Sky Shows, 3:22 Booming Science of Sungrazing Comets, The, Discovered Treasure, 1:12 Moon for the “10th Planet,” A, 6:24 2:32 Evolution in the Classroom, 5:12 New Way To Find E.T., A, 1:22 Deep Impact: The Sequel, 4:39 Hybrid Eclipse, 1:13 No Kuiper Belt Jupiters, 6:24 Deep Impact’s Hammer Throw, 4:34 “Ice” Breaker, 3:12 Opportunity Unstuck, 3:22 Discovery Among the Disks, 5:40 Importing Astronomy, 4:13 Supernova Stardust, 5:24 E. E. Barnard’s Milky Way, 6:38 Inappropriate, 1:12 “10th Planet” Bigger Than Thought? 5:24 Europe’s Eye on Mars, 6:30 Keats’s Steadfast Star, 3:12 Titan Lake Imaged? 4:22 Extrasolar Planets: Pictured at Last? 2:38 Naked-Eye Comets in 2004, 1:12 Voyager Crosses Boundary, 3:22 Hidden in Plain Sight: Finding Martian Landers, Never Seen? 4:12 Auroras Aren’t Mirror Images, 1:19 1:42 Right Tools for the Job, The, 1:12 Bigger Andromeda Galaxy, A, 2:18 Hubble’s Anniversary Present, 3:44 Science in Iraq, 1:13 Binary Dwarf Bagged, 6:20 LASIK Eye Surgery for the Amateur Astronomer, Science Lost, 4:12 Chaos and Capture, 3:18 3:36 Second Chances, 4:12 Comet That Doesn’t Quit, The, 5:18 New Kings of the Kuiper Belt, The, 4:28 Shaky Ground, 4:12 Dark-Matter Developments, 1:19 Putting Einstein to the Test, 1:32 Showing the Way, 4:13 Dating the Milky Way, 4:22 Sizing Up Inflation, 5:32 Sky Vision, 6:12 “Death Star” Revisited, The, 5:17 Spectacles for Spectacular Skies, 3:30 Solar Power, 3:12 Deep Impact Revisited, 6:16 Test Einstein at Home, 1:39 Spitzer Response, 3:13 Deposits Point to Evaporated Water on Mars, 1:18 Vision Quest: Optimizing Your Eyes for Symbol Formerly Known As . . ., 4:12 Dominatrix Planet, The, 5:20 Astronomy, 3:28 Taking a Stand, 2:12 Early Universe Shows Signs of Life, 5:24 50 & 25 Years Ago, 1:20, 2:24, 3:24, 4:24, 5:26, 6:26 Young Einstein, 5:13 Echoes of a Black Hole’s Feisty Past, 3:20

© 2005 Sky Publishing Corp. 3 pindex to volume 110

Enceladus’s Frozen Volcanoes? 5:16 Planetary Processing with RegiStax 3, 6:94 Exo-Asteroid Belt, An, 2:22 Stars at a Click, The, Maxfactory, 1:91 Extreme Pulsars, 6:20 Vixen’s Sphinx “Go To” Mount, 1:84 Follow That Story: Big Bang Brew, 2:24 Southern Hemisphere’s Sky — Follow That Story: Chandra Observes Supernova Contrasts in Capricornus, 4:55 Turn Your 1987A, 2:24 Deep-Sea Nights, 6:55 Follow That Story: One-Sided Superflare, 2:24 Migrating South, 5:55 GALEX Sees Ultraviolet Explosion, 3:17 Pointers to the Night’s Diversity, 1:55 CELL PHONE Gamma-Ray Re-Bursts, 3:20 Shielded Arm, A, 2:55 into Your Own

Giant African Scope Sees First Light, 6:21 Southern Binocular Highlight: Cluster in the

&A Mizar

Hayabusa Arrives at Asteroid Itokawa, 6:17 Wrong Spot, A, 5:53 D

lcor ip

B

p

M75: The Loneliest Globular, 4:53 ig

Homeless Black Hole? 6:24 e

r Hubble’s Prospects Brighten, 2:25 NGC 288 in Sculptor, 6:53 MAJOR

Lakes on Titan Found? 2:20 NGC 6124 in Scorpius, 2:53 URSA

Southern Pointers, The, 1:53 PLANETARIUMVENAT Low-Mass Exoplanet, A, 3:19 CAN M82 Has Spiral Arms, 4:20 Watching Kappa Pavonis, 3:53 Meet the Milky Way’s Newfound Neighbors, 1:16 Southern Hemisphere’s Sky Chart, 1:53, 2:53, Milky Way’s Youngest Globular, The, 2:19 3:53, 4:53, 5:53, 6:53 New Exoplanet Imaged? A, 1:18 Stellar Sights in Sagittarius, 3:55 with Sky & Telescope’s One Big Ball of Rock, 4:16 Spectrum — One Super Star Cluster, 1:20 Einstein Forever? 1:8 Mobile Sky Chart Planet-Disk Connection, The, 4:18 E-Publish or Perish, 4:8 Prospecting for Martian Ice, 4:18 Eyesight Insight, 3:8 Record-Setting Solar Flare, A, 3:16 Paradigm Shift, 2:8 900 stars, about half of which are Red Planet Roundup, 5:18 Parallel Universes, 6:8 Revising Asteroid Warnings, 3:22 Planetary Plasticity, 5:8 above the horizon at any time Scattered Planet, 2:22 Spotlight On . . . — Setback for Alternative Cosmology, 6:22 Cavity in Cassiopeia, A, 2:28 Star names of the 26 brightest stars Short Gamma-Ray Burst Nailed at Last, 2:16 Sagittarius’s Stellar Playgrounds, 1:28 Short GRBs Linked to Mergers, 6:21 Swan Song in Aquarius, A, 5:30 Moon and five naked-eye planets Shreds of a Swallowed Spiral, 2:17 Star Trails — (Mercury,Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Sloan Survey Extended, 6:22 Crimson Ring, A, 2:107 Supernova in the Whirlpool, 4:20 Earth Strikes Back, 5:104 and Saturn) Survivor Planets, 5:20 In Praise of Penumbral Eclipses, 3:113 They’re Back! 6:18 Master Storyteller, A, 4:104 86 constellations with stick-figure 13 New Saturnian Moons, 2:20 Seeing Einstein’s Gravity Lens, 1:108 lines and labels Truly Ancient Relic Star, A, 1:19 Voyage to Remember, A, 6:114 Tuning In to Cosmic Rays, 3:20 Sun, Moon, and Planets — Understanding Titan’s Terrain, 6:18 Mars at Its Biggest and Best, 4:56 Weighing a Monstrous Black Hole, 5:22 Mars in Full Glory, 5:56 World’s Largest Scope Takes Shape, 5:22 Mars Returns to the Stage, 1:56 Northern Hemisphere’s Sky — Moons of Mars and Saturn, 4:59 Northern Binocular Highlight: Andromeda’s Pairings at Dusk and Dawn, 3:56 Companions, 6:52 Red Planet Rising, 2:56 Globular Cluster Season, 1:52 Venus Blooms as Mars’s Fire Fades, 6:56 M27 in Vulpecula, 3:52 Targets — M57 and Expectations, 2:52 Eye and I: Conquering Kuma, 5:82 Magnificent Mu Cephei, 4:52 Introducing the Levy List, 6:80 Two Lacerta Clusters, 5:52 Light-Pollution Notes, 1:83 Northern Hemisphere’s Sky Chart, 1:51, 2:51, Planetary Pretzels, 5:81 3:51, 4:51, 5:51, 6:51 Seven Messier Globulars of Ophiuchus, The, 1:79 Putting Taurus Together, 6:50 The Astronomy Scene — Really Big Story, A, 5:50 Amateur Team Finds 100 Supernovae, 5:101 Amateurs Help Discover Exoplanet, 4:96 Starry Scorpion, The, 2:50 Canadian Amateurs Access Big Hawaiian Scopes, Starry Skies to Count On, 1:50 4:98 Tangle of Triangles, A, 3:50 Community News: America’s Young Astronomers Think Outside the Great Square, 4:50 Recognized, 2:102 Observer’s Log — Comet Discoverers Recognized, 4:100 April’s Unique Solar Eclipse, 3:87 Constellation Stamps to Be Issued, 4:100 Near Sky, The: The Countersun Revisited, 3:91 S&T Executive Editor Honored, 4:100 Perseids 2005: Right on Schedule, 6:84 Universo Celebrates Its 10th Anniversary, 2:102 Rambling Through the Skies — German Amateur’s Supernova in M51, 5:103 Buttermilk Sky, 6:46 Greenwich: Center of Space and Time, 2:99 Generation Gap, 3:48 Light-Pollution Notes, 4:101 Great Expectations, 1:48 Renowned Japanese Mars Observers, 6:112 Hole in One, 2:46 To Mars by Way of Noto, 6:108 On the Air, 4:46 Why Are Supernovae Important? 5:102 Available through Skin Deep, 5:46 Verizon on selected S&T Test Report — phones. And Science Too, 4:79 Binary Maker 3.0, Contact Software, 4:82 A searchable index to all issues of Sky & Tele- Canon’s Astrocamera: The EOS 20Da, 5:84 Celestron’s Advanced Series “Go To” Mount, 2:82 scope is available in Sky Publishing’s Magazine Coronado’s SolarMax CaK Calcium-Light Solar Archive on ProQuest. Articles from July 1996 Telescope, 5:90 forward are available for download in Adobe JMI Telescope’s RB-66 Reverse Binoculars, 3:96 Acrobat PDF format. Point your Web browser to SkyandTelescope.com/archive 800-253-0245 Low-Cost Starter Scopes, 6:86 SkyandTelescope.com Meade DSI Color CCD Camera, 4:76

© 2005 Sky Publishing Corp. 4