Astronomical Society

Nibiru-Astronomical Society (Spanish: Sociedad Astronomica) is a non-profit academic and student astronomical society created at the Faculty of Sciences (UNAM) of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in 2001.

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NASA Citizen Scientist Wins Award from the Astronomical Society of the Pacific

Kepler’s last planet discoveries: two new planets and one single-transit candidate from K2 campaign 19 | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

After nearly 30 years, the Canadian Magazine of Astronomy, SkyNews, is closing. The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada (RASC) has subsidized its operations for years

Galaxy interactions are the dominant trigger for local type 2 quasars | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Royal Astronomical Society announces all journals to publish as open access from 2024

Scientists will present new research from NASA at the 241st meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS), on topics ranging from the universe’s early galaxies to planets outside our solar system

[Journal Article by Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan] Super-Earth orbiting near the inner edge of the habitable zone around the M4.5 dwarf Ross 508

NASA Discoveries Highlighted at American Astronomical Society Meeting

FYI, as of January 1 all scientific journals of the American Astronomical Society (like the Astrophysical Journal) are open access!

In a discovery detailed in an upcoming study to be published in the Monthly Notices of Astronomical Society, an international team of researchers discovered evidence of a galaxy that seems to have no dark matter, further adding to the mystery of the elusive force.

Paper presented at the European Astronomical Society meeting explores the potential for Dyson spheres across the Milky Way, finding at least five stars could possibly house a Dyson sphere (a theoretical megastructure built around a star to harness its energy output).

American Astronomical Society Journals Will Switch to Open Access from 1st January 2022

A 2000 paper by an Astronomical Society identified two reasons why there are fewer women in amateur astronomy. After family and career obligations "there is neither time nor energy left over for going observing". Also, many astronomy clubs in the woods are cold and lack toilet facilities