Our November edition contains club updates galore, from sun puzzles to space cowboy costumes to astrophotography. It also features musings on Pluto’s planet status, a poetic spin on our usual moon pieces, and the return of the CAS crossword!
We celebrate autumn with the fall of an asteroid sample back to Earth, everything you need to know about the two upcoming eclipses, a prize-winning article about spacecrafts passing in the night, and much more!
Our final issue of Spring '23 travels to the International Space Station and Europa! Help us welcome next year's club officers, and follow along on our trip back to Cherry Springs!
Our flowery April edition features a new volcanic discovery on Venus, a sugary look at Saturn’s moon Mimas, the Doppler Shift, and multiple pictures from our members (including an asteroid)!
Our first full-length issue of spring 2023 reviews the Green Comet, examines an impossible ring, peers through multiple wavelengths, and takes a journey to Uranus's moon, Miranda!
For our December edition, we take a trip to Triton, gaze up at winter constellations and the Andromeda galaxy, discuss parallax and exoplanets, and wonder about the future of Artemis.
This post-Halloween edition features a letter to Carl Sagan for his 88th birthday, recent astrophotography by club members, a spooooky look at dark matter and dark energy, an investigation of why stars shine, and more!
This candy-corn-colored edition takes a trip to Callisto, reviews recent failures to launch, tells us why stars twinkle, and exposes a Carl Sagan-quoting mishap.
Our final issue of the 2021-22 school year investigates Sagittarius A*, reviews a club trip to Mount Pleasant, and discusses the Planetary Sciences Decadal! Plus our usual crossword and a constellation overview.
We examine the CAS solar telescope and water on exoplanets, as well as interview Quanta Magazine writer Natalie Wolchover. Also, two pieces of creative writing from club members!
Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Pioneer 10! We also bring you updates from the Parker Solar Probe and Cornell's Alpha CubeSat mission hoping to launch a light sail!