Learn more about some of the safe ways to view and attract wildfire, and view untold wonders in the sky and the ocean.
Here's where to go for meteor showers, dark skies and the kind of cosmic splendor you just can't get in a city.
The Arietids are considered the most intense daytime meteor shower of the year, delivering up to 60 meteors per hour. Active from May 22 to July 3, 2026, they peak on June 10. Hard to spot with the ...
The Dark Sky Alqueva reserve has been recognised at the 2026 Tourism Leaders Awards, but investment in astrotourism remains ...
There are still tons of mysteries in the universe, and the Bootids meteor shower is one of them. The upcoming meteor shower ...
If you think you saw a meteor fly through the sky in the GTA on Wednesday morning, you’re not alone. Some people r ...
The night sky puts on the same basic show every summer: the Big Dipper overhead, a few planets hanging in the west, the ...
The Perseids result from Earth passing through debris — bits of ice and rock — left behind by Comet Swift-Tuttle, which last ...
The gorgeous astrophotographs highlight the dazzling night sky and remind viewers what we risk losing to light pollution ...
WASHINGTON — A meteor shower from Halley's Comet will light up the night skies with glowing trails overnight. The annual Eta Aquarid meteor shower peaks on Tuesday May 5 into Wednesday May 6. The ...
The Eta Aquarids meteor shower is set to peak this week, giving stargazers across New York a chance to catch shooting stars in the early morning sky. The annual meteor shower began April 19 and runs ...
The Eta Aquariid meteor shower, fueled by debris from Halley’s Comet, will peak overnight on May 5–6, offering up to 60 meteors per hour in Southern Hemisphere skies and around half that in the north.