All About Space
This month's planets
Track down the ringed giant in the evening sky throughout the warmer months – you’ll be glad that you did
3 min |
Issue 120
All About Space
NASA Wants To Change The Way It Protects Astronauts From Radiation
With long-term missions in the pipeline, safety is paramount
2 min |
Issue 120
All About Space
In the shops
The latest books, apps, software, tech and accessories for space and astronomy fans alike
3 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
Félicette: THE INSIDE STORY OF A SPACE CAT
What happened when a feline was blasted off into space?
9 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
JUPITER'S OCEAN MOON EUROPA MAY HAVE DEEP-SEA VOLCANOES
Jupiter moon may be an even more promising abode for life than scientists thought
1 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
WEIRD NEARBY GAMMA-RAY BURST DEFIES EXPECTATIONS
This isn’t how they’re supposed to behave
2 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
Deep sky challenge: Stars, clusters and nebulae of summer
Glittering stellar groupings, a star’s corpse and a beautiful double star can be seen through any size of telescope
2 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
MORE ACCURATE CLOCKS MAY ADD MORE DISORDER TO THE UNIVERSE
All clocks create entropy, but accuracy might come at a higher cost
3 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
3 Free Digital Books For Every Reader!
3 free digital books for every reader!
2 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
ORBITAL SERVICE STATION
If rockets could be refuelled in space, it could open up interplanetary travel
3 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
DR MEREDITH RAWLS: SATELLITES VS ASTRONOMY
Rawls speaks to All About Space about the impact of low-Earth orbit satellites on ground-based astronomy and how our experience of the night sky is going to change
10 min |
Issue 119
All About Space
SAMPLE RETURN FROM TITAN
A new NASA Institute of Advanced Concepts study is looking at the surprising advantages of a mission to Saturn’s moon
3 min |
Issue 118
All About Space
“IT'S THE BIGGEST PROBLEM THAT WE'RE NOT WRITING ABOUT”
All About Space speaks with the former NASA astronaut about his time in space and his newfound ‘cosmic perspective’
9 min |
Issue 118
All About Space
LAUNCH PAD
YOUR FIRST CONTACT WITH THE UNIVERSE
3 min |
Issue 118
All About Space
WORLDS WITHOUT SUNS
Astronomers are still on the hunt for rogue planets, but what can they tell us about the layout of our cosmos?
10+ min |
Issue 118
All About Space
ON BOARD THE VOMIT COMET
You’d better have a strong stomach: in space, everyone can hear you spew
9 min |
Issue 118
All About Space
APOLLO ANNIVERSARY BACK TO THE MOON
MANY NATIONS ARE INTERESTED IN RETURNING TO THE MOON TO EXPLORE AND MINE IT
10+ min |
Issue 118
All About Space
Could Life Exist Around Black Holes?
They warp time and space, but could they also nurture life?
10+ min |
Issue 118
BBC History Magazine
Marriage of misery
FERN RIDDELL recommends a vivid biography of a women’s rights campaigner who shook off the shackles of married life
2 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
Redrawing the battleground
MICHAEL WOOD gives his verdict on an ambitious book that attempts to finally provide a definitive location for one of the most famous battles in Anglo-Saxon history
3 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
Class dismissed
News that some UK universities are to cut their history degrees in favour of more “vocational” courses sparked a strong online reaction. ANNA WHITELOCK charted Twitter’s response
2 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
Mary Wortley Montagu The scourge of smallpox
That humanity won its battle with smallpox is in no small part down to the resilience of a woman who pioneered inoculation in 18th-century Britain, in the teeth of tremendous resistance. JO WILLETT reveals how Mary Wortley Montagu changed the course of medical history
6 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
Best and brightest?
PETER MANDLER considers a sweeping analysis of meritocracy’s role in shaping the western world and debates the effectiveness of attempts to usher in equality
5 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
Scheming and slaughter
NIGEL JONES appraises an extensive survey of assassinations throughout history, from the blood-soaked stabbings of ancient Rome to the drone strikes of modern warfare
2 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
Traditions constitute the invisible, under-the-surface flow of history
LIVING HISTORY IN THE AMERICAS
3 min |
July 2021
BBC History Magazine
ROME GLORIED IN CLEOPATRA'S TALE OF DECADENCE, LUST AND DEATH
Joyce Tyldesley on an Egyptian queen’s ill-fated entanglements with three Roman generals
10 min |
April 2021
BBC History Magazine
Flying the royal nest
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s departure from the royal family is the latest in a string of shock exits from the monarchy dating back centuries. TRACY BORMAN looks to the past to consider how one can leave “the Firm” successfully – and the difficulties of life as a royal exile
6 min |
May 2021
All About Space
FORGOTTEN PLANS TO REACH THE MOON
Before Apollo, many ingenious lunar landing schemes were proposed that could have changed history
10+ min |
Issue 117
All About Space
RISE OF VERA RUBIN'S SUPER OBSERVATORY
Astronomy’s new era will be defined by a wider and deeper view of the universe
10+ min |
Issue 117
All About Space
JEREMIAS PFAFF: THE BOUNDARIES OF QUANTUM PHYSICS
Jeremias Pfaff speaks to All About Space about what it takes to measure gravity on such a minute scale. The next step? To go even smaller
7 min |
