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In
its original incarnation Mercury, the magazine of the Astronomical
Society of the Pacific, was first published by the Society in 1925.
Mercury is now read by about 3,500 ASP members and at 350 school,
university, and public libraries, observatories, and other institutions
around the world. Formed in 1889 by a small group of northern-Californian
professional astronomers, the ASP has grown to be the largest general
astronomy society in the world. The ASP is a non-profit organization
whose goal is to promote public interest and awareness of astronomy
through education and outreach programs. Our members include professional
and amateur astronomers, educators, students, and motivated non-scientists.
The
ASP serves the professional community by publishing the technical
journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific,
as well as conference proceedings. In contrast, Mercury serves the
Societys broader goal of communicating astronomy to the general
public. Because of Mercurys broad audience, articles written
for the magazine must be accessible to non-scientists while containing
in-depth, accurate information. Beginning in 2008, Mercury is no
longer a print magazine. It is published electronically in PDF format.
An
article should not focus solely on the research or history of any
particular individual, unless it is of unusual importance. Articles
should appeal to readers personal experiences and draw broader
conclusions about how science is conducted. We encourage writers
to be innovative and forceful, to devise clever metaphors, to walk
out onto a limb. The ASP does not endorse anything our Mercury contributors
say, but we believe in challenging readers and making Mercury a
vigorous part of the marketplace of ideas.
Level
of Articles
We
encourage writers to read past issues to get a sense of Mercurys
style. Mercury strives for a conversational tone. As you write your
article, envision yourself sitting next to a stranger during a long
airplane flight. The stranger asks about your interests, and after
you tell him or her that you are an astronomer or are interested
in astronomy, the stranger asks you for more detail. The stranger
is intelligent and inquisitive, and may have a basic knowledge of
science and astronomy, but he or she does not have a formal education
in astronomy. Write the article as if you are speaking to this person.
And remember that most readers will be reading your article in their
leisure time.
To
help communicate science to a broad audience, follow these guidelines:
1.
The first three paragraphs (the "lead") must grab the
attention of readers and entice them to read the entire article.
The lead must be written in non-technical language and it must establish
the theme of the article. The lead can be short in details and specifics,
those can come later. If the reader is bored or confused by the
lead, it is unlikely that he or she will read the rest of the article.
2.
Use active voice as much as possible, and avoid passive voice as
you would avoid the Ebola virus. This means writing "Astronomers
discovered a new planet" (active voice) rather than "A
new planet was discovered by astronomers" (passive voice).
You should write less than 10 percent of your sentences in passive
voice.
3.
Use active verbs as much as possible, and avoid using the most boring
verbs in the English language the various incarnations of
"to be" such as am, is, are, was, and were.
4.
Vary the length of sentences, but keep most sentences short and
simple. If you find yourself using many commas, colons, and semi-colons
in a sentence, break it up into two or more shorter sentences. Few
sentences should exceed 30 words in length.
5.
Keep paragraphs short. Each paragraph should communicate a specific
idea, and the beginning sentence of most paragraphs should act as
a topical sentence for the paragraph as whole. Rarely should a paragraph
exceed 150 words in length.
6.
Use analogies relating to everyday life to explain complex ideas.
In a recent Mercury article about frame-dragging (an extremely complicated
effect of general relativity), the author used the following analogy
to great effect: "To visualize frame dragging, imagine a bowling
ball with something sticky on it. The ball pulls at a sheet as it
spins. A marble rolling on the sheet not only curves around the
ball, it also gets pulled forward a bit. Likewise, with frame dragging
the region of space-time around a neutron star feels a tug."
7.
Avoid jargon, needlessly complex terms, lists, and acronyms, except
for common acronyms such as NASA. Acronyms make the authors
job easier, but the readers job harder.
8.
Try not to leave unanswered questions lingering in the minds of
readers. If something is not known, say so.
9.
Whenever possible, include amazing and interesting facts. For example,
if writing about neutrinos, mention that 100 billion neutrinos pass
through a human body in the time it takes a person to read the sentence.
10.
Think about what the typical reader is likely to know. Do not explain
basic concepts while leaving more complex concepts unexplained.
Make sure to introduce concepts in a logical order, so the readers
are grounded in broad, basic concepts before moving to more difficult
concepts.
11.
Try to inject your personality as much as possible into your writing.
Be creative, be yourself, feel free to inject humor, and try to
have fun as you write the article. If you have fun writing the article,
theres a good chance the reader will enjoy reading your piece.
Length
of Articles
Regular
columns are 600 to 700 words long and usually include an image;
guest columnists are always welcome. Features in Mercury generally
run 2,000 to 2,500 words in length, include illustrations, and contain
at least one sidebar (which is included in the word count).
Illustrations
We
ask the writer to provide, help to obtain, or at least suggest photographs
and illustrations. This ensures that the illustrations are what
the writer intends. In many cases, writers have better access to
illustrations than we do. We require images in electronic form as
either JPEG or TIFF files. Image files must be a minimum
of 500k in size, and preferably larger.
Fees
We
do not pay for submissions or images. Writing for Mercury is a labor
of love and good exposure for your ideas.
Queries
We
do review unsolicited manuscripts, but if you have article ideas,
we ask that you email the Editor first. In your letter, discuss
the basic idea for the article, its general content, its relevance
to our readership, and your relationship to the subject matter.
The Editor tries to respond to all correspondence within a month.
Rights
The
ASP asks that contributors transfer their copyright to the ASP,
in order to facilitate electronic distribution and future reproduction
requests (which we routinely grant free-of-charge). In return, we
grant writers the non-exclusive right to reuse any part or all of
their work. (What this means is that you give us the right to publish
your work in Mercury or any other ASP publication, but you also
have the right to publish it anywhere.) We have found that this
arrangement avoids hassles, but if contributors prefer to retain
copyright, we have no problem with that. Our concern is simply to
protect ourselves legally. The minimum we can accept is worldwide
first-appearance, non-exclusive print and electronic rights. You
also agree that the work you submit is original and will not violate
copyright laws.
Submission
To
avoid transcription errors, we require electronic submission. We
prefer Microsoft Word 6.0 (or later) format, but we will accept
plain text. You can email the document to editor {at} astrosociety.org.
Deadlines
First
drafts of all features are due 3 months prior to their publication
date in Mercury. Those publication dates are early February, early
May, early August, and early November.
Editing
When
you submit an article, Mercury assumes that you agree to work with
the Editor in preparing it for publication. Editing
occurs in two stages. First, the Editor reads the submitted draft
and makes suggestions for a revised draft. On occasion, the Editor
may ask an anonymous outside reviewer for advice. In some cases
the Editor may proceed directly stage two.
Second,
the Editor copy-edits the revised draft for grammar, spelling, flow,
style, and so forth. We make every reasonable effort to show writers
the final, edited version of their articles while there is time
to make changes. There is one exception: During layout, the Editor
sometimes must condense in order to fine-tune length, eliminate
widows, or correct errors noticed at the last minute. Such changes
are usually minor. We usually do not have the time to inform writers
of such changes.
Titles,
abstracts, subheads, and captions are our domain, although we generally
work from writers suggestions and include these elements in
the drafts we return for their approval.
Spelling,
Grammar and Style
Run
the article through a spell checker before submitting it to the
Editor. Make absolutely sure that all proper names are spelled correctly.
Mercury
does not have footnotes or formal bibliographies. If acknowledgment
has to be given, work it into the body of the article or the biography.
Articles should not include a bibliography.
Mercury
almost always uses metric units. Spell out the names of measurement
units. Take care not to overstate precision. Normally, two significant
figures suffice.
Biography
Following
every article is a one-paragraph biography of the writer, written
in third-person, including research interests, personal anecdote
or factoid, and an email address if the writer desires to include
one.
Contact
Should
you have questions about a current or future submission, please
do not hesitate to contact the Editor, Paul Deans, via email at
editor {at} astrosociety.org
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