
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Capturing a first: the Spin Nebula
Amateur astronomers work collaboratively to produce first high-resolution image of little-known nebula He 2-11
1 min |
September 2023

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
When it comes to lighting, less is more
Patricia Yanez on designing considerate lighting for a luxury Red Sea resort
2 min |
September 2023

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Early Universe seen running slow
Cosmic clocks appear to run slower soon after the Big Bang, just as Einstein predicted
2 min |
September 2023

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Mastering flats
Adding DSLR flat frames to your workflow to improve your deep-sky images
3 min |
September 2023

All About Space UK
WHAT CAN WE DO WITH A CAPTURED ASTEROID?
Asteroids could provide us with rare resources
2 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
NEPTUNE
The isolated azure ice giant remains a relative mystery
4 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
CELESTRON STARSENSE EXPLORER DX 102AZ
Innovative technology provides the simplest and quickest solution yet to finding objects to observe, and this instrument will be very popular with beginners
7 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
Neil deGrasse Tyson - "It would be cool if we were some simulation"
The host of StarTalk has become one of the world's best known astrophysicists, popularising space and science for millions
7 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
CLIMATES CHANGE IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
Alongside Earth, our planetary neighbourhood is changing. But not for the better…
8 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
OBJECT HOTTER THAN THE SUN FOUND ORBITING A DISTANT STAR AT BREAKNECK SPEED
A weird celestial object that’s blurring the line between planet and star has been uncovered
2 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
TIME APPEARED TO MOVE FIVE TIMES SLOWER IN THE FIRST BILLION YEARS AFTER THE BIG BANG
Time dilation, brought about by the relativistic expansion of space, has resulted in the observed slowing of ‘clocks’ in the early universe
3 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
A HUNGRY BLACK HOLE 'SWITCHES ON' AS ASTRONOMERS WATCH IN SURPRISE
J221951 is one of the most extreme examples yet
3 min |
Issue 146

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Lights in the darkness Photographing the aurora
Wilderness photographer Valtteri Hirvonen - who spends nearly half the year in darkness in his native Finland - reveals how he found new inspiration in the Northern Lights
5 min |
September 2023

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
The rock hunter RETURNS
As OSIRIS-REx becomes the latest spacecraft to bring back samples from another world, Ezzy Pearson examines how these missions help reveal our Solar System's history
8 min |
September 2023

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Star-hopping
Steve Tonkin explains an easy technique to navigate your way around the night sky
3 min |
September 2023

All About Space UK
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE MILKY WAY
The Milky Way is our home galaxy – a vast star factory with a monstrous black hole at its heart. Join our tour of the cosmic pinwheel that’s home to every star we can see in the night sky
10+ min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
MARS HELICOPTER PHONES HOME AFTER A 63-DAY SILENCE
Rugged terrain had kept Ingenuity from communicating with its robotic partner, the Perseverance rover
1 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
SIX OF THE BEST SPACE PRANKS
It turns out that the sky isn’t the limit when it comes to a good old-fashioned practical joke
4 min |
Issue 146

BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Highlights of the autumn skies
From returning favourites to unmissable one-off events, Katrin Raynor picks out the best night-sky sights coming up in the months ahead
5 min |
September 2023

All About Space UK
COSMIC 'SANDWICH' THEORY COULD EXPLAIN HOW SMALLER PLANETS ARE FORMED
Sandwiched planet formation may arise as the result of gas and dust being squeezed between large planets
3 min |
Issue 146

All About Space UK
MOON TOUR - COPERNICUS
Get up close to the ‘Monarch of the Moon’
3 min |
Issue 146

BBC Science Focus
How does the fitness app on my phone know how many steps I've taken, especially if it's in my bag?
Your phone uses GPS to track distance travelled. But try disabling it and you'll notice that fitness apps will still give you step counts.
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
Blood and bone
The human body is a wealth of parts and connections the skeleton, 86 billion 206 bones in neurons in the brain, roughly 25 quadrillion potential neural pathway routes... and yet there are just 20 arteries carrying your entire blood supply.
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
Who needs wings?
This little critter with the cheeky grin is a Mizoram parachute gecko, Gekko mizoramensis, a previously unknown species of gliding gecko from the tropical forests of northern India.
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
SPACE: A RADIATION 'ECHO' FROM A SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLE IS SPREADING ACROSS THE GALAXY
The sleeping cosmological giant woke up around 200 years ago and devoured everything in the vicinity, releasing intense amounts of radiation in the process
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
ENERGY: THE COSTS OF SWITCHING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY WILL HIT THE SUPER-WEALTHY HARDEST
A new study says a future fuelled by sustainable energy is possible, if the top 10 per cent are prepared to accept some losses
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
COSMOLOGY: GRAVITATIONAL RIPPLES COULD HELP CRACK THE UNIVERSE'S SECRETS
New findings provide evidence of a background hum’ produced by low-frequency gravitational waves rippling across spacetime
2 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
BIOLOGY: WORMS CAUGHT HITCHING RIDES ON BEES BY USING ELECTRIC FIELDS
As well as hitchhiking, the nematode worms also form conga lines
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
MEDICINE: SCIENTISTS TO TEST 'POO TRANSPLANT' PILLS IN GROUND-BREAKING GUT HEALTH TRIAL
Your number twos could be the number-one defence against liver disease
1 min |
August 2023

BBC Science Focus
MEDICINE: SCIENTISTS DISCOVER WHY SPACE TRAVEL WEAKENS ASTRONAUTS' IMMUNE SYSTEMS
Astronauts routinely break out in rashes or get ill while aboard the International Space Station. Now we know why
1 min |