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Sky & Telescope's Pocket Sky Atlas | Spiral-bound

by Roger W. Sinnott (Author)

List Price: $19.95  
Price:  $13.57
You Save:  $6.38 (32%)
Available:  Usually ships in 24 hours

Binding:  Spiral-bound
Publisher:  Sky Publishing
Page Count:  110 Pages
Publication Date:  March 30, 2006
Sales Rank:  7,604th

FEATURES

  • ISBN13: 9781931559317
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
  • Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 47 reviews)

Must have for observers by Kevin M (Fremont, CA) 5 Stars
November 01, 2009
As a beginner, I didn't like this much. However, as I developed my observing skills, I really LOVE this! This is really a requirement if you're going to get serious about observing. If you're new to astronomy, hold off a bit and pick up a good guidebook instead, like Turn Left at Orion, Nightwatch, and Star Watch. Once you get through those, then you can find things on your own, without a computer, using this atlas. I have a computer on my dob, but it's more fun to star hop using this guide than to just type it in and push. Think of this as a map to the universe. In fact, that's what it is! You wouldn't go on a trip without a good map, would you?

Sky In Your Pocket by WayneG (Pennsylvania, USA) 5 Stars
October 14, 2009
Heaven knows I don't need another star chart, but the other day I received yet another one after the recommendation of a friend. It was the Pocket Sky Atlas. There was something in the descriptor that struck a chord with me. The one I got I received new, still sealed and in perfect condition. If I were to change anything, and this is a very petty complaint, I would rather have seen that the front and back cover were both separate pages individually bound on the spiral rather than the front merely being a wrap around from the back. Also, I found a link mentioning two serious errors in the charts, an omission concerning part of Corona Borealis and the Virgo Cluster, however I see nothing wrong with those parts of my Atlas that I received. Apparently you want the second edition 2006 or later to avoid this very tiny discrepancy. The Pocket Atlas is interesting in that it is broken into 8 vertical sections or orange peels based on Right Ascension, but different in that each starts at the north pole and works all the way to the south pole, for just that section (45° sector out of the full 360° sphere), and then starts back at the north pole again in the next section, rather than starting at the north and spiraling down to the south pole like a corkscrew as most other charts do. At first I had my doubts about that approach but in fact it works quite well here. If I am to suggest and do anything, that would be to number each "peel" as "1" through "8" on the Contents page, then stick a numbered tab on the first page of each section. this way you could look up the month or time of year (or time of night) on the contents page, find which section that date is under, then flip right to that section using the tab! Or use the back page to look up the particular area of sky by page number. The charts themselves are essentially like a Deluxe (Color) Sky Atlas 2000 just shrunk down in size. As such they have the benefit of having nearly all of the objects and detail of its larger brethren but also with the liability of getting a little "busy" and harder to read due to the crowding and smaller size of symbols needed--- a necessary and acceptable "evil" of being both powerful and pocket-able. But they manage this very well and the charts remain very attractive and readable. In the back are cross references for stars, DSO's and the like so that one can look up NGC 1234 and find out which chart it is on. All in all, I agree, this may overall become my most often used set of charts, not because it is my "best" or my favorite, but because it is perhaps one of the most well thought out and practical set of charts for at the telescope (or nightstand) table, for ready and convenient reference.

Not for beginners by Marquita Griffin (Demopolis, AL USA) 3 Stars
September 19, 2009
This is a very precise atlas, but it is not for beginners or those who don't read the map very well. It's in latitude/longitude terms and diagrams.

an amazing sky atlas by Amir Alon (Israel) 5 Stars
August 19, 2009
I met this atlas in a star party that was conducted by the Israeli astronomocal association in the desert.I was delighed to use it:it has a very accurate star charts with many objects that are not mentioned in many other atlases like "the snake nebula" - i did'nt know it is even exist without this atlas!.the atlas is very friendly and is sutible for the novice astronomy amateur and for the advanced one.it contains objects for small aperture telescopes and for large ones as well.it is in A5 size and is very convenient to carry to the field.a very convenient atlas "to the eyes": the constellations lines are colored in green,the milky way in blue and deep sky objects are in:red,yellow,and green.It is highly recommanded product by me!

Just for grab it and go by O. R. Bermello (Madrid, Spain) 5 Stars
June 17, 2009
First of all, thanks to Sky & Telescope team for this book. I've been reading reviews for different atlases for almost a week before I bought it. But full of doubts. The reason? The price! Mmm... those 14 bucks sounds like it would not be a telescope class atlas. Anyway, I was looking for portability. And I mean portability, not pocket size or all-in-4-folders stuff. So, I purchase it and start waiting. And then it comes. First, I love the nice colours and publishing quality. Even the smell... But is not a mere fact of aesthetically confort, so I grab it and go for a star party and open the package just under the stars. Well, not bad at all. I found almost everything just using the telrad-like add in the front cover and making some visits to the last pages. In a word: "perfecto" for those 14 dollars! But human nature is to be always asking for more, so I missed some features: - An small table or resume about globular clusters and galaxies at the beginning of each "RA block". I'm not talking about a full in depth list, but maybe some (up to 10th magnitude list, for instance) - Better or harder cover. It is too fragile! - A small list of typical meteor radiant position (might be a one page list) Anyway, is a 5 stars choice.

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