The moon dims, the meteors fly, and the planets dance—these are the most exciting celestial events happening this month.
Prior to 2040, the last planetary quintuplet occurred in the year 1186, and according to Uptain, records show that the close ...
Even though Venus moves between the Earth and sun every 19.5 months, it becomes visible after sunset and before sunrise only ...
NEW YORK — Venus will pass between the Earth and sun on Saturday during what's called an inferior conjunction. But don't plan ...
As well as some of the darkest skies on the U.S. East Coast, it's also the nation's southernmost point. At 24.5 degrees north ...
We’ll update this article multiple times each week with the latest moonrise, moonset, Full Moon schedule, and some of what you can see in the sky each ... 9° south of Venus at 10 A.M. EDT ...
The Keeble Observatory at Randolph-Macon College holds weekly public viewing during spring semester. Check their website ( or ...
For things like seeing the phases of Venus, you need a telescope. For seeing the rings of Saturn, you need a telescope. But seeing these motions across the sky, seeing the moon occulting Mars or ...
From a partial solar eclipse, to bright planets, and the end of the meteor shower 'drought', there is plenty to see in the ...
On March 29, skywatchers across parts of the Northern Hemisphere will be treated to a rare astronomical double feature: a ...
On April evenings, look to the west to spot the bright winter constellations of Orion, Gemini, Taurus, Auriga, Canis Major and Canis Minor. They’ll be gone soon, so check them ...
The James Webb Space Telescope identified the lights in the distant planet’s atmosphere, which could not be seen by earlier ...