Mercury (magazine) explained

Image Alt:The cover of Mercury magazine, Spring 2019
Editor:Ian O'Neill
Frequency:Quarterly
Category:Astronomy
Company:Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Publisher:Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Founded:1972
Finaldate:2008 (print)
Country:United States
Based:San Francisco
Language:English
Issn:0047-6773

Mercury is an online quarterly science magazine that features articles and columns about astronomy for a general audience published by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) for its members.[1]

History

The first issue of Mercury was published in January 1972 as a bimonthly popular journal to boost public understanding of astronomy and act as a science communication platform to interpret the results of astronomical research for the nonspecialist. In 2007, the magazine was offered in printed and digital form, transitioning to all-digital the following year.[2] Mercury continues as an ASP members-only digital publication and, as of 2019, the publicly-accessible Mercury Online companion blog was launched, featuring articles from the Mercury archives.[3]

Editors of Mercury over the years include Leon Salanave, Richard Reis, Andrew Fraknoi, Sally Stephens, James White III, George Musser, Robert Naeye, Paul Deans, Ian O'Neill, and Liz Kruesi.

Mercury has its headquarters in San Francisco.[4] Contributors include (as of 2019): Jennifer Birriel, Clifford Cunningham, Matthew R. Francis, C. Renee James, Brian Kruse, Arianna Long, Jason Major, Steve Murray, James Negus, M. Katy Rodriguez Wimberly, Linda Shore, Tracy Staedter, Christopher Wanjek.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ASP: Mercury Magazine. Library of Congress. 1 August 2016.
  2. Web site: History of Mercury.
  3. Web site: So, What IS Mercury Online?. Ian O'Neill.
  4. Book: Stephen Blake Mettee. Michelle Doland. Doris Hall. American Directory of Writer's Guidelines. 1 August 2016. 1 December 2006. Quill Driver Books. 978-1-884956-58-4. 397.