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 • Are Einstein’s white holes too weird to be real?
Sky at Night – lots of ways to enjoy the night sky…
This month's contributors
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SO NEAR AND YET SO FAR… • This spiral duo shows that appearances can be deceptive
New exoplanet defies explanation • Baffling helium-and-carbon world breaks the rules of planetary science
Black hole unleashes record-breaking jet • Super-heated galaxy-wide stream is so powerful that it's shutting down star formation
Mini factory with 1,000°C furnace ignites in space • Breakthrough in low-Earth-orbit manufacturing could transform semiconductors industry
Half of Mars was once under water • Coastlines seen from orbit reveal that a vast ocean covered the northern hemisphere
Spaceflight's surprising impact on the brain • Microgravity causes the brain to move upward and backward within the skull
Revealed: how the most common planets form • Super-Earths and sub-Neptunes are everywhere – now we finally know how they’re made
Iron ‘bar’ found in iconic Ring Nebula • The Mars-sized amount of iron, trillions of miles wide, was hiding in plain sight
Hubble Telescope finds Cloud-9 • New class of starless cloud offers rare insight into dark matter and galaxy formation
Galaxies caught in a cosmic tango • JWST and Chandra data reveals spiral galaxies locked in a slow gravitational embrace
Could we chase comet 3I/ATLAS out of the Solar System? • An audacious plan could get a probe up close to the interstellar oddity
Private gamble on the next space telescope • Ex-Google boss may launch a biggerthan-Hubble scope within three years
INSIDE THE SKY AT NIGHT • Do we really need to send humans to the Moon and Mars? George Dransfield thinks the case – and the true motivation behind NASA’s Artemis programme – is anything but clear
Voyage to Mars: The Longest Goodbye
Star trek - the next generation
BBC Sky at Night
SOCIETY IN FOCUS
How a supermoon really affects life on Earth • Earthquakes, floods and far-fetched claims – supermoons certainly get the internet buzzing. Penny Wozniakiewicz sifts the lunar facts from the fake news
The explosive Universe • Join Govert Schilling on a turbulent tour through the most powerful explosions in the cosmos
Artemis II return to the Moon • As Artemis II becomes the first crewed voyage around the Moon in over 50 years, Stuart Atkinson explores how it compares with the mission that did it first: 1968’s groundbreaking Apollo 8
NASA's grand Moon-return plan • Each Artemis mission builds on the last to get humans safely to the lunar surface
Star tech: from Apollo to Artemis • It’s a similar mission, but how has the technology changed in 57 years?
Mining in space The great off-Earth gold ruch • Sam Walker examines the scramble to harvest metals from asteroids – and why we should think twice about it
Riches without limits? • From rare metals to rocket fuel, what’s driving the race to mine near-Earth asteroids
The Sky Guide • MARCH 2026
MARCH HIGHLIGHTS • Your guide to the night sky this month
NEED TO KNOW
THE BIG THREE • The top sights to observe or image this month
THE PLANETS • Our celestial neighbourhood in March
The planets in March • The phase and relative sizes of the planets this month. Each planet is shown with south at the top, to show its...