American Astronomical Society "The American Astronomical Society (AAS) is the major professional organization in North America for astronomers and other scientists and individuals interested in astronomy." Their website has information about the organization, its history and membership, projects, and related information, including links to other astronomical resources.
Astrosociology.Com explores the sociology of space, a long neglected area of sociological theory and research.
Bishop Museum Planetarium HOME PAGE--Sky maps for Hawaii, sunrise and sunset tables for all islands, monthly skywatch column, and links to other sources of information about Hawaii and the Pacific.
Cambridge Astronomy Home Page--entry point for the Royal Greenwich Observatory, The Institute of Astronomy, Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory, and a wide range of information, photos, and other astronomical links. There's also information about Cambridge: the University, the town, network links, transportation, etc.
Cornell University Department of Astronomy Informative web page includes the archives of Icarus, the international journal of solar system exploration, as well as much helpful guidance for websurfers in search of planetary information.
Lunar Phases Web Tool
Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy Pages are devoted to airing out myths and misconceptions in astronomy and related topics. Delightful site.
Plan a Planet Orbiting a Main Sequence Star
The Solar System in Pictures has astronomy webquests and pictures of all the planets in the solar system.
Space Telescope Institute: Their on-line archives include GIF/JPEG images of photographs taken by the
Hubble as well as press releases (many of them technical in nature)
about the Hubble and its discoveries. There are also ways for anyone
to access the raw hubble picture data from which the fancy multi-color
pictures are created.
The Stellar Database gives a list of stars with data on each star as a distance from any given point. The first page only allows you to see the 100 nearest stars to Sol, but if you pick Sol as your star and the data page comes up, you can then chose stars between any given light years, i.e. find stars at least 48 LY and less than 52 LY from Sol.
Your Sky is an interactive planetarium that can produce maps for any time and date, viewpoint, and observing location.
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