News

Neptune and Saturn are two Moon-widths apart all month, while the morning sky hosts Venus and Uranus together in Taurus.
Mercury is the month's highlight, reaching greatest elongation July 4. Also on show in the Southern Hemisphere: Mars, Saturn, ...
Last week the Rubin Observatory released the first data from a newly commissioned telescope. Astronomers, engineers and ...
July’s predawn sky offers some rare events, providing another reason to get outdoors to enjoy the relatively cool mornings.
Texas astronomers are part of the effort to construct the Giant Magellan Telescope – an effort that will bring a new level of ...
The scientists who precisely measure the position of Earth are in a bit of trouble. Their measurements are essential for the ...
Ouranos is an AI-powered astronomy weather app that helps Moon watchers find the best nights to observe the sky ... especially knowing that each phase is visible without a telescope and will likely ...
Researchers identified the likely planetary candidate’s infrared light after blocking out its host star’s overwhelming glare ...
How does the camera on the James Webb Space Telescope work and see so far out? – Kieran G., age 12, Minnesota Imagine a ...
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Milestone recognizes decades of innovation that has helped shape modern ...
Matter in intergalactic space is not randomly scattered - it forms a vast network of filamentary structures that make up the ...
Meanwhile, Venus and Saturn — both beaming in the morning sky — welcome Jupiter into the fold. The gas giant makes its first appearance at mid-month in Gemini, low in the northeast about an hour ...