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A field journal,
written from below.

Most astronomy writing assumes a telescope, a clear horizon, and a degree in physics. We assume a balcony, a folding chair, and an evening with nothing better to do — and we work outward from there.

Write with us.

We accept short pitches from observers at any level — a 200-word note on a memorable evening is just as welcome as a 4,000-word piece on stellar nucleosynthesis. Send what you have.

Pitch an entry

Slow astronomy.

Careful writing.

We publish one long-form entry per lunar cycle. Each piece is researched against primary sources — observatory archives, peer-reviewed papers, JPL ephemerides — and then translated into something a reader can carry into the dark with them.

There are no breaking-news takes here. The sky has been moving for 13.8 billion years; another week will not hurt it. We would rather get the constellations right than get them first.

When we use a photograph, it is credited. When we are unsure, we say so. When we are wrong, we correct in place and note the date.

Journal entries
Contributors
Observatories
Light-years out

The people behind the page.

Dr. Aroha Marsh

Astrophysicist, Cerro Tololo. Writes the monthly long-form entries on planetary atmospheres.

Lev Olafsson

Captures the journal’s covers from a converted shed in Reykjavík. Specialty: faint nebulae.

Mei Tanaka

Maintains the rise/set tables. Believes a good chart can replace a thousand words.

Theo Okafor

Files dispatches from Mauna Kea and the SAAO. Most likely to mention coffee.

Sara Linde

Runs the Field Updates newsletter. Insists that astronomy is for everyone with sky overhead.

Yusuf Akram

Translates the very big things — dark matter, expansion, deep time — into things a reader can hold.