Stargazers across much of the world, including South Korea, have a prime opportunity tonight, March 1, 2026, to witness a ...
Astronomy enthusiasts and casual skywatchers alike have a reason to look up this February. On the evening of February 28, a ...
While February’s annular eclipse was likely viewed by more penguins than people, portions of March’s total lunar eclipse will ...
The next planetary alignment will occur on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026. The best time to view the planets will be just after ...
Mercury, Venus, Saturn and Jupiter can be seen with the naked eye; Uranus and Neptune with binoculars or a telecscope.
California will start to see a partial view of the eclipse at 12:44 a.m. The total lunar eclipse will reach its peak at 3:33 ...
Saturn’s reign in the evening sky comes to an end on March 25, when Saturn passes behind the Sun (conjunction). Saturn then swings into the morning sky, and will reappear in the east at dawn during ...
A six-planet parade — an alignment of Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and Jupiter — is coming Feb. 28. When and where ...
A total lunar eclipse is the highlight of the month. For planetary action, Jupiter is well placed most of the night and there are many events involving its Galilean moons. Soon after sunset, ...
March opens like a temple bell in the morning, clear and promising. The first week carries that “destiny is backing you” ...
A rare celestial event will be taking place in the sky above California on Saturday night, as six planets are expected to be visible in what is being called a "planetary parade." ...