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Yesterday — June 2nd 2025Astronomy Magazine
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  • The Sky Today on Monday, June 2: The Little LionAlison Klesman
    The smaller constellation Leo Minor lies to the upper right (north) of Leo in the west this evening. Leo Minor appears crouched above its larger counterpart, sandwiched between Leo and Ursa Major. The easiest way to find it is to search the space between two famous asterisms: the Sickle of Leo and the Big Dipper. Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, June 2: The Little Lion" The post The Sky Today on Monday, June 2: The Little Lion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Monday, June 2: The Little Lion

June 2nd 2025 at 8:30 am

The smaller constellation Leo Minor lies to the upper right (north) of Leo in the west this evening. Leo Minor appears crouched above its larger counterpart, sandwiched between Leo and Ursa Major. The easiest way to find it is to search the space between two famous asterisms: the Sickle of Leo and the Big Dipper. Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, June 2: The Little Lion"

The post The Sky Today on Monday, June 2: The Little Lion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

June 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Titan’s shadow transits Saturn, and Mercury meets with Jupiter in the evening

June 1st 2025 at 8:31 am

The innermost planets straddle nighttime, with Mercury in the evening and the greatest western elongation of Venus in the morning. Jupiter joins Mercury in early twilight for a few evenings, both setting quickly. Distant Mars lingers with Leo after dark, as our own planet hustles along its orbit well ahead of the Red Planet. SaturnContinue reading "June 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Titan’s shadow transits Saturn, and Mercury meets with Jupiter in the evening"

The post June 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Titan’s shadow transits Saturn, and Mercury meets with Jupiter in the evening appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • June 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?Alison Klesman
    The first evening of June finds Mars in the company of a lovely crescent Moon. The Red Planet reached opposition back in January and has faded considerably since then, glowing now at 1st magnitude. Mars spends the month moving eastward against the backdrop of Leo the Lion. It shares a small patch of sky withContinue reading "June 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?" The post June 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

June 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?

June 1st 2025 at 8:30 am

The first evening of June finds Mars in the company of a lovely crescent Moon. The Red Planet reached opposition back in January and has faded considerably since then, glowing now at 1st magnitude. Mars spends the month moving eastward against the backdrop of Leo the Lion. It shares a small patch of sky withContinue reading "June 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

The post June 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Sunday, June 1: The Moon passes MarsAlison Klesman
    The Moon passes 1.4° north of Mars at 6 A.M. EDT; the two are visible together this evening, slowly setting in the western sky and visible for a few hours after sunset. Both now lie in western Leo, with the Moon close to the Lion’s bright heart, Regulus (Alpha [α] Leonis). This magnitude 1.4 starContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, June 1: The Moon passes Mars" The post The Sky Today on Sunday, June 1: The Moon passes Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Sunday, June 1: The Moon passes Mars

June 1st 2025 at 8:30 am

The Moon passes 1.4° north of Mars at 6 A.M. EDT; the two are visible together this evening, slowly setting in the western sky and visible for a few hours after sunset. Both now lie in western Leo, with the Moon close to the Lion’s bright heart, Regulus (Alpha [α] Leonis). This magnitude 1.4 starContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, June 1: The Moon passes Mars"

The post The Sky Today on Sunday, June 1: The Moon passes Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Before yesterdayAstronomy Magazine
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  • Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead NASAMark Zastrow
    The Trump administration announced Saturday, May 31, that it would withdraw the nomination of entrepreneur and private astronaut Jared Isaacman for NASA administrator. The move came just days before the Senate was scheduled to vote on his nomination, where he was widely expected to be confirmed. The Senate committee on commerce, science, and transportation hadContinue reading "Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead NASA" The post Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead
     

Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead NASA

June 1st 2025 at 6:00 am

The Trump administration announced Saturday, May 31, that it would withdraw the nomination of entrepreneur and private astronaut Jared Isaacman for NASA administrator. The move came just days before the Senate was scheduled to vote on his nomination, where he was widely expected to be confirmed. The Senate committee on commerce, science, and transportation hadContinue reading "Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead NASA"

The post Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead NASA appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Saturday, May 31: Venus at greatest western elongationAlison Klesman
    Venus reaches its greatest western elongation (46°) from the Sun at midnight EDT. Earth’s sister planet is now visible in the early-morning sky, and today Venus rises in the east at 3:30 A.M. local daylight time — roughly two hours before the Sun. That gives observers plenty of time to view the bright morning planet,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 31: Venus at greatest western elongation" The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 31: Venus at greatest western elongation appeared f
     

The Sky Today on Saturday, May 31: Venus at greatest western elongation

May 31st 2025 at 8:30 am

Venus reaches its greatest western elongation (46°) from the Sun at midnight EDT. Earth’s sister planet is now visible in the early-morning sky, and today Venus rises in the east at 3:30 A.M. local daylight time — roughly two hours before the Sun. That gives observers plenty of time to view the bright morning planet,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 31: Venus at greatest western elongation"

The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 31: Venus at greatest western elongation appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789Dave Eicher
    When you’re gazing at objects in the northern sky, do not forget to look at one of the richest open star clusters you’ll ever see. NGC 7789 in Cassiopeia is particularly notable for its huge mass of relatively faint stars, all set in a rich Milky Way star field, which makes for a great sceneContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789

May 30th 2025 at 9:44 pm

When you’re gazing at objects in the northern sky, do not forget to look at one of the richest open star clusters you’ll ever see. NGC 7789 in Cassiopeia is particularly notable for its huge mass of relatively faint stars, all set in a rich Milky Way star field, which makes for a great sceneContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The hidden bridge of Markarian’s ChainMark Zastrow
    Overall Photons: Francisco Javier Pérez Olvera, Manuel Alejandro Chavarría Silva, George William Hoffman, Kollar Istvan, Jonathan Schwab, Giovanni Lombardi, Fumio Saito, Francesco Morini, David Serquera, Lorenzo Lilli & Giampiero Lilli, Gianni Melis, Richard Mongold, Emanuele La Barbera, Michele Mazzola, Ashley Brown, Satoshi Iino, Jeff Ratino, Ulli Wittur Fee, Marco Martinelli, Roberto Volpini, Krzysztof Gaudy, PatrickContinue reading "The hidden bridge of Markarian’s Chain" The post The hi
     

The hidden bridge of Markarian’s Chain

May 30th 2025 at 7:14 pm

Overall Photons: Francisco Javier Pérez Olvera, Manuel Alejandro Chavarría Silva, George William Hoffman, Kollar Istvan, Jonathan Schwab, Giovanni Lombardi, Fumio Saito, Francesco Morini, David Serquera, Lorenzo Lilli & Giampiero Lilli, Gianni Melis, Richard Mongold, Emanuele La Barbera, Michele Mazzola, Ashley Brown, Satoshi Iino, Jeff Ratino, Ulli Wittur Fee, Marco Martinelli, Roberto Volpini, Krzysztof Gaudy, PatrickContinue reading "The hidden bridge of Markarian’s Chain"

The post The hidden bridge of Markarian’s Chain appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: Universal TimeMichael E. Bakich
    Because astronomers have divided the globe into 24 time zones, using one clock time worldwide is impractical. That’s why the times of astronomical events are often given in Universal Time (UT). This practice started in 1928, when the International Astronomical Union recommended that title for the time used in the compilation of astronomical almanacs. UTContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Universal Time" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Universal Time appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Universal Time

May 30th 2025 at 5:37 pm

Because astronomers have divided the globe into 24 time zones, using one clock time worldwide is impractical. That’s why the times of astronomical events are often given in Universal Time (UT). This practice started in 1928, when the International Astronomical Union recommended that title for the time used in the compilation of astronomical almanacs. UTContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Universal Time"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Universal Time appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Friday, May 30: Saturn and Neptune rise togetherAlison Klesman
    Take a peek at the early-morning duo of Saturn and Neptune, rising together in Pisces around 2:30 A.M. local daylight time. By 4 A.M. local daylight time they are some 15° high, with blazing Venus visible to their lower left. Saturn stands out well to the naked eye at magnitude 1.1, but Neptune (magnitude 7.8)Continue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 30: Saturn and Neptune rise together" The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 30: Saturn and Neptune rise together appeared first on Astronomy M
     

The Sky Today on Friday, May 30: Saturn and Neptune rise together

May 30th 2025 at 8:30 am

Take a peek at the early-morning duo of Saturn and Neptune, rising together in Pisces around 2:30 A.M. local daylight time. By 4 A.M. local daylight time they are some 15° high, with blazing Venus visible to their lower left. Saturn stands out well to the naked eye at magnitude 1.1, but Neptune (magnitude 7.8)Continue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 30: Saturn and Neptune rise together"

The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 30: Saturn and Neptune rise together appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from May 30 to June 6: All eyes on VenusAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 30The crescent Moon lies in Cancer this evening, just a few degrees from the stunning Beehive Cluster (M44). If it seems that this cluster is mentioned in this column a lot — it is! The Beehive lies close to the ecliptic, theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 30 to June 6: All eyes on Venus" The post The Sky This Week from May 30 to June 6: All eyes on Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from May 30 to June 6: All eyes on Venus

May 30th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 30The crescent Moon lies in Cancer this evening, just a few degrees from the stunning Beehive Cluster (M44). If it seems that this cluster is mentioned in this column a lot — it is! The Beehive lies close to the ecliptic, theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 30 to June 6: All eyes on Venus"

The post The Sky This Week from May 30 to June 6: All eyes on Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl ClusterDavid J. Eicher
    The world is overflowing with crazily-named deep-sky objects. However, I am guilty of one such naming, many years ago, in Astronomy and Deep Sky magazines — the Owl Cluster, NGC 457, in Cassiopeia.  This object was discovered by William Herschel on August 18, 1780. When I first looked at this cluster with my Celestron 8,Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl Cluster" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl Cluster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl Cluster

May 29th 2025 at 11:18 pm

The world is overflowing with crazily-named deep-sky objects. However, I am guilty of one such naming, many years ago, in Astronomy and Deep Sky magazines — the Owl Cluster, NGC 457, in Cassiopeia.  This object was discovered by William Herschel on August 18, 1780. When I first looked at this cluster with my Celestron 8,Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl Cluster"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl Cluster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A planetary in the HareMark Zastrow
    Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India The faint planetary nebula Abell 7 in Lepus the Hare has an overall spherical appearance — the result of a dying star blowing its outer layers off into space. But deep narrowband imaging reveals complex detail in this expanding shell. For this Hα/OIII/RGB image, the photographer captured 67⅓ hoursContinue reading "A planetary in the Hare" The post A planetary in the Hare appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A planetary in the Hare

May 29th 2025 at 6:48 pm

Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India The faint planetary nebula Abell 7 in Lepus the Hare has an overall spherical appearance — the result of a dying star blowing its outer layers off into space. But deep narrowband imaging reveals complex detail in this expanding shell. For this Hα/OIII/RGB image, the photographer captured 67⅓ hoursContinue reading "A planetary in the Hare"

The post A planetary in the Hare appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart TelescopePhil Harrington
    Astronomy is one of the fastest changing sciences, and the equipment we use to explore and record the universe is advancing just as quickly. Smart telescopes epitomize the evolving equipment scene, combining a telescope, digital camera, and automated tracking in one sleek package. They allow novice astrophotographers to capture stunning deep-sky images on their first clearContinue reading "Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope" The post Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope appeared fi
     

Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope

May 29th 2025 at 5:33 pm

Astronomy is one of the fastest changing sciences, and the equipment we use to explore and record the universe is advancing just as quickly. Smart telescopes epitomize the evolving equipment scene, combining a telescope, digital camera, and automated tracking in one sleek package. They allow novice astrophotographers to capture stunning deep-sky images on their first clearContinue reading "Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope"

The post Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Thursday, May 29: Pull out binoculars for Upgren 1Alison Klesman
    Binocular observers, this one’s for you: Upgren 1, a small grouping of stars discovered in 1963 within the constellation Canes Venatici. High in the west around 10:30 P.M. local daylight time, the Hunting Dogs lie beneath the curve of the Big Dipper’s long handle.  Upgren 1 contains about 10 stars in an area roughly 14’Continue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 29: Pull out binoculars for Upgren 1" The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 29: Pull out binoculars for Upgren 1 appeared first
     

The Sky Today on Thursday, May 29: Pull out binoculars for Upgren 1

May 29th 2025 at 8:30 am

Binocular observers, this one’s for you: Upgren 1, a small grouping of stars discovered in 1963 within the constellation Canes Venatici. High in the west around 10:30 P.M. local daylight time, the Hunting Dogs lie beneath the curve of the Big Dipper’s long handle.  Upgren 1 contains about 10 stars in an area roughly 14’Continue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 29: Pull out binoculars for Upgren 1"

The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 29: Pull out binoculars for Upgren 1 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157David J. Eicher
    As we’ve seen in recent posts, the northern constellation Cassiopeia is chock-full of intriguing nebulae and bright star clusters. A large and relatively bright emission nebula among this group, Sharpless 2–157, is rarely observed by amateur astronomers. It is sometimes called the Lobster Claw Nebula due to its distinctive shape.  This big nebula lies inContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157

May 29th 2025 at 12:43 am

As we’ve seen in recent posts, the northern constellation Cassiopeia is chock-full of intriguing nebulae and bright star clusters. A large and relatively bright emission nebula among this group, Sharpless 2–157, is rarely observed by amateur astronomers. It is sometimes called the Lobster Claw Nebula due to its distinctive shape.  This big nebula lies inContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targetsMark Zastrow
    The ninth integrated test flight of SpaceX’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster avoided previous issues but encountered new ones as the company aims to ramp up launches this year. Let’s begin with the good. Flight 9 marked the first time SpaceX used a previously flown Super Heavy booster, which was caught back at theContinue reading "SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targets" The post SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targets appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targets

May 28th 2025 at 8:58 pm

The ninth integrated test flight of SpaceX’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster avoided previous issues but encountered new ones as the company aims to ramp up launches this year. Let’s begin with the good. Flight 9 marked the first time SpaceX used a previously flown Super Heavy booster, which was caught back at theContinue reading "SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targets"

The post SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targets appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The cave and the galaxyMark Zastrow
    Ashish Sinojia/Santanu Sir/Amit Sengar, taken from Kasheli, Maharashtra, India Waves wash ashore at Devghali Beach beneath a cave lit by Sinojia, as the Milky Way arches overhead. The photographers used a Sony mirrorless camera and 20mm lens at f/2.2 to capture eleven 30-second sky frames at ISO 2500 and five 58-second foreground frames at ISOContinue reading "The cave and the galaxy" The post The cave and the galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The cave and the galaxy

May 28th 2025 at 5:43 pm

Ashish Sinojia/Santanu Sir/Amit Sengar, taken from Kasheli, Maharashtra, India Waves wash ashore at Devghali Beach beneath a cave lit by Sinojia, as the Milky Way arches overhead. The photographers used a Sony mirrorless camera and 20mm lens at f/2.2 to capture eleven 30-second sky frames at ISO 2500 and five 58-second foreground frames at ISOContinue reading "The cave and the galaxy"

The post The cave and the galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 28: Glimpse Jupiter and its Galilean moonsAlison Klesman
    The Moon passes 5° north of Jupiter at 9 A.M. EDT. Just six percent illuminated by this evening, you can try to spot the young crescent Moon hanging above the gas giant in the western sky after sunset.  An hour after the Sun disappears, Jupiter (shining at magnitude –1.9) is just 4° high in theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 28: Glimpse Jupiter and its Galilean moons" The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 28: Glimpse Jupiter and its Galilean moons appeared first on Astronomy
     

The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 28: Glimpse Jupiter and its Galilean moons

May 28th 2025 at 8:30 am

The Moon passes 5° north of Jupiter at 9 A.M. EDT. Just six percent illuminated by this evening, you can try to spot the young crescent Moon hanging above the gas giant in the western sky after sunset.  An hour after the Sun disappears, Jupiter (shining at magnitude –1.9) is just 4° high in theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 28: Glimpse Jupiter and its Galilean moons"

The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 28: Glimpse Jupiter and its Galilean moons appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a cometBen Evans
    Update: The Long March 3B rocket carrying Tianwen-2 successfully launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in China’s Sichuan province at 1:31 P.M. EDT on Wednesday, May 28. Six centuries ago, Admiral Zheng He commanded seven “treasure voyages” around Asia in the halcyon days of China’s Ming Dynasty. His fleet of colossal four-masted wooden junksContinue reading "Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a comet" The post Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a comet appeared first on
     

Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a comet

By: Ben Evans
May 28th 2025 at 3:42 am

Update: The Long March 3B rocket carrying Tianwen-2 successfully launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in China’s Sichuan province at 1:31 P.M. EDT on Wednesday, May 28. Six centuries ago, Admiral Zheng He commanded seven “treasure voyages” around Asia in the halcyon days of China’s Ming Dynasty. His fleet of colossal four-masted wooden junksContinue reading "Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a comet"

The post Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a comet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    The far northern sky holds its richest region in Cassiopeia, a splendid area of bright Milky Way stars and gas. One of the greatest nebulae in the far north is NGC 7635, the Bubble Nebula, so named for its remarkable spherical bubble visible in images.  This object is an emission nebula with a reasonably highContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble Nebula" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble Nebula

May 28th 2025 at 1:08 am

The far northern sky holds its richest region in Cassiopeia, a splendid area of bright Milky Way stars and gas. One of the greatest nebulae in the far north is NGC 7635, the Bubble Nebula, so named for its remarkable spherical bubble visible in images.  This object is an emission nebula with a reasonably highContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble Nebula"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flightMark Zastrow
    SpaceX’s colossal Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster are poised to return to action Tuesday evening after the company wrapped up its investigation into the 400-foot-tall vehicle’s eighth test flight in March. Starship exploded during both that mission and Flight 7 in January. The FAA issued a vehicle return to flight determination for Starship on Friday, clearing theContinue reading "SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flight" The post SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flight appeared first
     

SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flight

May 28th 2025 at 12:57 am

SpaceX’s colossal Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster are poised to return to action Tuesday evening after the company wrapped up its investigation into the 400-foot-tall vehicle’s eighth test flight in March. Starship exploded during both that mission and Flight 7 in January. The FAA issued a vehicle return to flight determination for Starship on Friday, clearing theContinue reading "SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flight"

The post SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Fireworks showMark Zastrow
    Gianni Tumino from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy A shower of glowing material erupts from Mount Etna next to the Pleiades star cluster (M45) at lower right in this 1.9-second exposure taken July 31, 2024 with a Canon DSLR and 300mm lens at f/4. The post Fireworks show appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky WayDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out a bit later in the evening this time of year to see the Milky Way. Be sure to go out before the Moon comes up. The Milky Way rises in the east several hours after sunset and stretches from the north, where you’ll seeContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky Way" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky Way appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky Way

May 27th 2025 at 5:27 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out a bit later in the evening this time of year to see the Milky Way. Be sure to go out before the Moon comes up. The Milky Way rises in the east several hours after sunset and stretches from the north, where you’ll seeContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky Way"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky Way appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 27: The Spindle Galaxy, bright and beautifulAlison Klesman
    If you’ve got binoculars or a small scope at your disposal, take them out tonight to observe the lovely — and bright — edge-on lenticular galaxy NGC 3115, sometimes called the Spindle Galaxy. Located in Sextans, you’ll find this galaxy still 25° high in the southwest 90 minutes after sunset, in a region to theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 27: The Spindle Galaxy, bright and beautiful" The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 27: The Spindle Galaxy, bright and beautiful appeared fi
     

The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 27: The Spindle Galaxy, bright and beautiful

May 27th 2025 at 8:30 am

If you’ve got binoculars or a small scope at your disposal, take them out tonight to observe the lovely — and bright — edge-on lenticular galaxy NGC 3115, sometimes called the Spindle Galaxy. Located in Sextans, you’ll find this galaxy still 25° high in the southwest 90 minutes after sunset, in a region to theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 27: The Spindle Galaxy, bright and beautiful"

The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 27: The Spindle Galaxy, bright and beautiful appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat — here’s how 2025 is shaping upAlison Klesman
    Half a century after the Apollo astronauts left the last bootprints in lunar dust, the Moon has once again become a destination of fierce ambition and delicate engineering. This time, it’s not just superpowers racing to plant flags, but also private companies, multinational partnerships and robotic scouts aiming to unlock the Moon’s secrets and layContinue reading "Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat — here’s how 2025 is shaping up" The post Landing on the Moon is an incredibly d
     

Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat — here’s how 2025 is shaping up

May 26th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Half a century after the Apollo astronauts left the last bootprints in lunar dust, the Moon has once again become a destination of fierce ambition and delicate engineering. This time, it’s not just superpowers racing to plant flags, but also private companies, multinational partnerships and robotic scouts aiming to unlock the Moon’s secrets and layContinue reading "Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat — here’s how 2025 is shaping up"

The post Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat — here’s how 2025 is shaping up appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Monday, May 26: Dip your toes in the LagoonAlison Klesman
    With New Moon occurring late tonight at 11:02 P.M. EDT, today is an excellent opportunity for yet more deep-sky observing. This morning, we’re dipping into the Lagoon Nebula (M8) in Sagittarius. This stunning nebula is best seen around 3 A.M. local daylight time, when it stands 25° high in the south.  The Lagoon lies withinContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 26: Dip your toes in the Lagoon" The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 26: Dip your toes in the Lagoon appeared first on Astrono
     

The Sky Today on Monday, May 26: Dip your toes in the Lagoon

May 26th 2025 at 8:30 am

With New Moon occurring late tonight at 11:02 P.M. EDT, today is an excellent opportunity for yet more deep-sky observing. This morning, we’re dipping into the Lagoon Nebula (M8) in Sagittarius. This stunning nebula is best seen around 3 A.M. local daylight time, when it stands 25° high in the south.  The Lagoon lies withinContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 26: Dip your toes in the Lagoon"

The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 26: Dip your toes in the Lagoon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Space tourism’s growth blurs the line between scientific and symbolic achievement — a tourism scholar explains

May 25th 2025 at 4:30 pm

On April 14, 2025, Blue Origin launched six women — Aisha Bowe, Amanda Nguyễn, Gayle King, Katy Perry, Kerianne Flynn and Lauren Sánchez — on a suborbital journey to the edge of space. The headlines called it a historic moment for women in space. But as a tourism educator, I paused — not because IContinue reading "Space tourism’s growth blurs the line between scientific and symbolic achievement — a tourism scholar explains"

The post Space tourism’s growth blurs the line between scientific and symbolic achievement — a tourism scholar explains appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Sunday, May 25: Mars joins the Sickle of LeoAlison Klesman
    Mars has now crossed the border from Cancer into Leo, standing in the far western regions of the Lion’s domain. The Red Planet is visible after sunset this evening, slowly sinking in the west and setting around 1 A.M. local daylight time.  This offers plenty of time to inspect the ruddy world, which now glowsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, May 25: Mars joins the Sickle of Leo" The post The Sky Today on Sunday, May 25: Mars joins the Sickle of Leo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Sunday, May 25: Mars joins the Sickle of Leo

May 25th 2025 at 8:30 am

Mars has now crossed the border from Cancer into Leo, standing in the far western regions of the Lion’s domain. The Red Planet is visible after sunset this evening, slowly sinking in the west and setting around 1 A.M. local daylight time.  This offers plenty of time to inspect the ruddy world, which now glowsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, May 25: Mars joins the Sickle of Leo"

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  • How close are we to ‘The Martian’? A planetary scientist checks inAlison Klesman
    Andy Weir’s bestselling story The Martian predicts that by 2035 NASA will have landed humans on Mars three times, perfected return-to-Earth flight systems and collaborated with the China National Space Administration. We are now 10 years past the Hollywood adaptation’s 2015 release and 10 years shy of its fictional timeline. At this midpoint, Mars exploration looks aContinue reading "How close are we to ‘The Martian’? A planetary scientist checks in" The post How close are we to ‘The Martian’? A
     

How close are we to ‘The Martian’? A planetary scientist checks in

May 24th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Andy Weir’s bestselling story The Martian predicts that by 2035 NASA will have landed humans on Mars three times, perfected return-to-Earth flight systems and collaborated with the China National Space Administration. We are now 10 years past the Hollywood adaptation’s 2015 release and 10 years shy of its fictional timeline. At this midpoint, Mars exploration looks aContinue reading "How close are we to ‘The Martian’? A planetary scientist checks in"

The post How close are we to ‘The Martian’? A planetary scientist checks in appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Cosmic continentMark Zastrow
    Michael John Griffin/Warren Keller The North America Nebula (NGC 7000) glows in Cygnus at magnitude 4 at a distance of 2,600 light-years. This image was taken from Los Angeles with a one-shot color camera and 8 hours of exposure, roughly half of which was taken with dual-band Hα/OIII and SII/OIII filters and processed in theContinue reading "Cosmic continent" The post Cosmic continent appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Cosmic continent

May 24th 2025 at 8:40 am

Michael John Griffin/Warren Keller The North America Nebula (NGC 7000) glows in Cygnus at magnitude 4 at a distance of 2,600 light-years. This image was taken from Los Angeles with a one-shot color camera and 8 hours of exposure, roughly half of which was taken with dual-band Hα/OIII and SII/OIII filters and processed in theContinue reading "Cosmic continent"

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  • The Sky Today on Saturday, May 24: Revisit the Moon and VenusAlison Klesman
    The delicate waning crescent Moon stands directly to the left of the bright planet Venus before dawn. An hour before sunrise, the pair is some 10° high in the east, easily visible together in Pisces the Fish.  The Moon is now just 11 percent illuminated, well on its way to New in just two days.Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 24: Revisit the Moon and Venus" The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 24: Revisit the Moon and Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Saturday, May 24: Revisit the Moon and Venus

May 24th 2025 at 8:30 am

The delicate waning crescent Moon stands directly to the left of the bright planet Venus before dawn. An hour before sunrise, the pair is some 10° high in the east, easily visible together in Pisces the Fish.  The Moon is now just 11 percent illuminated, well on its way to New in just two days.Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 24: Revisit the Moon and Venus"

The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 24: Revisit the Moon and Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s CascadeDavid J. Eicher
    In the world of deep-sky observing, we think of major classes of objects: star clusters, nebulae, and galaxies. But once in a while an exception to this classification arises as a favorite object for observers. Back in 1980, the great Walter Scott Houston wrote one of his celebrated columns in Sky & Telescope and addressedContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s Cascade" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s Cascade appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s Cascade

May 24th 2025 at 12:50 am

In the world of deep-sky observing, we think of major classes of objects: star clusters, nebulae, and galaxies. But once in a while an exception to this classification arises as a favorite object for observers. Back in 1980, the great Walter Scott Houston wrote one of his celebrated columns in Sky & Telescope and addressedContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s Cascade"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s Cascade appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic fieldRobert Reeves
    Twentieth-century explorations answered many questions about our satellite and its place in the solar system. But they also raised many new and challenging questions that still remain unanswered.  One of these enduring mysteries has been the lunar magnetic field. The Moon generates no magnetic field of its own today. Yet analysis of Apollo rock samplesContinue reading "Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic field" The post Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic
     

Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic field

May 23rd 2025 at 9:30 pm

Twentieth-century explorations answered many questions about our satellite and its place in the solar system. But they also raised many new and challenging questions that still remain unanswered.  One of these enduring mysteries has been the lunar magnetic field. The Moon generates no magnetic field of its own today. Yet analysis of Apollo rock samplesContinue reading "Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic field"

The post Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic field appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet?Michael E. Bakich
    On May 21, the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center announced the discovery of 2017 OF201, which, because of its distance beyond Neptune, is classified as a trans-Neptunian object (TNO). The science team that found the new body was led by Sihao Cheng, Martin A., and Helen Chooljian Member of the Institute for Advanced Study’sContinue reading "Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet?" The post Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet? appeared first on Astronomy Magaz
     

Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet?

May 23rd 2025 at 5:50 pm

On May 21, the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center announced the discovery of 2017 OF201, which, because of its distance beyond Neptune, is classified as a trans-Neptunian object (TNO). The science team that found the new body was led by Sihao Cheng, Martin A., and Helen Chooljian Member of the Institute for Advanced Study’sContinue reading "Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet?"

The post Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Friday, May 23: The crescent Moon and VenusAlison Klesman
    The Moon is now situated between magnitude 1.1 Saturn and magnitude –4.5 Venus in the east an hour before dawn.  If you were outside yesterday morning, you’ll note that the Moon is now a thinner crescent as it wanes toward New. Only its western limb is directly sunlit. But look for earthshine lighting up itsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 23: The crescent Moon and Venus" The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 23: The crescent Moon and Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Friday, May 23: The crescent Moon and Venus

May 23rd 2025 at 8:30 am

The Moon is now situated between magnitude 1.1 Saturn and magnitude –4.5 Venus in the east an hour before dawn.  If you were outside yesterday morning, you’ll note that the Moon is now a thinner crescent as it wanes toward New. Only its western limb is directly sunlit. But look for earthshine lighting up itsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 23: The crescent Moon and Venus"

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  • The Sky This Week from May 23 to 30: Mars moves into LeoAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 23The Moon passes 4° north of Venus at 8 P.M. EDT, although neither is visible at that time.  Instead, let’s look tonight for the small constellation Sagitta the Arrow, which lies north of Aquila the Eagle. Although Sagitta is small, covering justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 23 to 30: Mars moves into Leo" The post The Sky This Week from May 23 to 30: Mars moves into Leo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from May 23 to 30: Mars moves into Leo

May 23rd 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 23The Moon passes 4° north of Venus at 8 P.M. EDT, although neither is visible at that time.  Instead, let’s look tonight for the small constellation Sagitta the Arrow, which lies north of Aquila the Eagle. Although Sagitta is small, covering justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 23 to 30: Mars moves into Leo"

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Face-on spiral IC 342David J. Eicher
    Let’s visit another galaxy in the mostly stark constellation Camelopardalis — which, although it is unexciting to naked-eye viewers, is an area of sky that contains some interesting, if somewhat isolated, deep-sky objects.  IC 342 is a big barred spiral galaxy of morphological type SAB(rs)cd. It glows brightly at magnitude 9.1 but has a lowContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Face-on spiral IC 342" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Face-on spiral IC 342 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Face-on spiral IC 342

May 22nd 2025 at 11:30 pm

Let’s visit another galaxy in the mostly stark constellation Camelopardalis — which, although it is unexciting to naked-eye viewers, is an area of sky that contains some interesting, if somewhat isolated, deep-sky objects.  IC 342 is a big barred spiral galaxy of morphological type SAB(rs)cd. It glows brightly at magnitude 9.1 but has a lowContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Face-on spiral IC 342"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Face-on spiral IC 342 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • An open cluster duoMark Zastrow
    Mark Germani from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada M35 and NGC 2158 are two open star clusters that appear next to each other in Gemini. M35 is the larger and closer of the two at a distance of 3,000 light-years; NGC 2158 is older and lies five times farther away. The imager took 2.4 hours ofContinue reading "An open cluster duo" The post An open cluster duo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

An open cluster duo

May 22nd 2025 at 10:30 pm

Mark Germani from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada M35 and NGC 2158 are two open star clusters that appear next to each other in Gemini. M35 is the larger and closer of the two at a distance of 3,000 light-years; NGC 2158 is older and lies five times farther away. The imager took 2.4 hours ofContinue reading "An open cluster duo"

The post An open cluster duo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: MosquitoesMichael E. Bakich
    While mosquitoes will attack whoever is handiest, they prefer adults to children, women to men, and pregnant women most. (They find ovulating women more attractive than those menstruating.) Movement attracts mosquitoes, so swatting at them is a good way to get them swarming around you. Contrary to popular belief, colors of clothing are not importantContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Mosquitoes" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Mosquitoes appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Mosquitoes

May 22nd 2025 at 5:48 pm

While mosquitoes will attack whoever is handiest, they prefer adults to children, women to men, and pregnant women most. (They find ovulating women more attractive than those menstruating.) Movement attracts mosquitoes, so swatting at them is a good way to get them swarming around you. Contrary to popular belief, colors of clothing are not importantContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Mosquitoes"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Mosquitoes appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Thursday, May 22: The Moon hangs with Saturn and NeptuneAlison Klesman
    The Moon hangs near Saturn and Neptune in the early-morning sky, and it’s best to catch them earlier rather than later. Try looking east 90 minutes before sunrise, where you’ll easily spot the crescent Moon in southwestern Pisces, below the Circlet asterism.  Just to the lower left of the Moon is 1st-magnitude Saturn, which standsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 22: The Moon hangs with Saturn and Neptune" The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 22: The Moon hangs with Saturn and
     

The Sky Today on Thursday, May 22: The Moon hangs with Saturn and Neptune

May 22nd 2025 at 8:30 am

The Moon hangs near Saturn and Neptune in the early-morning sky, and it’s best to catch them earlier rather than later. Try looking east 90 minutes before sunrise, where you’ll easily spot the crescent Moon in southwestern Pisces, below the Circlet asterism.  Just to the lower left of the Moon is 1st-magnitude Saturn, which standsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 22: The Moon hangs with Saturn and Neptune"

The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 22: The Moon hangs with Saturn and Neptune appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Dusty Hand GalaxyDavid J. Eicher
    One of the most enjoyable things about observing galaxies with your backyard scope is that there are so many unusual forms we can see. Another great example of a distorted galaxy lies in the northern constellation Camelopardalis, the Giraffe. It is NGC 2146, sometimes called the Dusty Hand Galaxy for its unusual appearance.  This strangeContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Dusty Hand Galaxy" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Dusty Hand Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Dusty Hand Galaxy

May 21st 2025 at 9:58 pm

One of the most enjoyable things about observing galaxies with your backyard scope is that there are so many unusual forms we can see. Another great example of a distorted galaxy lies in the northern constellation Camelopardalis, the Giraffe. It is NGC 2146, sometimes called the Dusty Hand Galaxy for its unusual appearance.  This strangeContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Dusty Hand Galaxy"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Dusty Hand Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: Virgo’s finest galaxiesMichael E. Bakich
    Virgo the Maiden is the second-largest constellation, covering 3.1 percent of the sky. It contains 11 Messier objects, tons of worthy targets from the New General Catalogue, and more faint galaxies than you can count. In this brief guide, I want to remove the intimidation of this constellation’s size and provide a list of the bestContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Virgo’s finest galaxies" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Virgo’s finest galaxies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Virgo’s finest galaxies

May 21st 2025 at 6:06 pm

Virgo the Maiden is the second-largest constellation, covering 3.1 percent of the sky. It contains 11 Messier objects, tons of worthy targets from the New General Catalogue, and more faint galaxies than you can count. In this brief guide, I want to remove the intimidation of this constellation’s size and provide a list of the bestContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Virgo’s finest galaxies"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Virgo’s finest galaxies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A sunspot pairingMark Zastrow
    Salvo Lauricella, imaged from Syracuse, Italy The large pair of sunspots in the active region AR 14079 illustrates their magnetically bipolar nature — one with north polarity and one with south — in this series of images taken May 1 in Hα, Ca-K, and white light. The post A sunspot pairing appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • Stellar gifts for Dad: 10 astronomy essentials for Father’s DayMichael E. Bakich
    Note: This post contains affiliate links. When you buy equipment through the links on this page, we may earn a commission. Listen, you really don’t want to get your dad a tie or another pair of socks for Father’s Day. And a gift certificate to some restaurant he goes to frequently is boring. Instead, why notContinue reading "Stellar gifts for Dad: 10 astronomy essentials for Father’s Day" The post Stellar gifts for Dad: 10 astronomy essentials for Father’s Day appeared first on Astronomy Magazin
     

Stellar gifts for Dad: 10 astronomy essentials for Father’s Day

May 21st 2025 at 5:46 pm

Note: This post contains affiliate links. When you buy equipment through the links on this page, we may earn a commission. Listen, you really don’t want to get your dad a tie or another pair of socks for Father’s Day. And a gift certificate to some restaurant he goes to frequently is boring. Instead, why notContinue reading "Stellar gifts for Dad: 10 astronomy essentials for Father’s Day"

The post Stellar gifts for Dad: 10 astronomy essentials for Father’s Day appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 21: The Sombrero GalaxyAlison Klesman
    Virgo the Maiden is draped across the southern sky late this evening, offering excellent views of a famous galaxy within its bounds: M104, also known as the Sombrero Galaxy.  Glowing at magnitude 8, this edge-on spiral is some 30 million light-years from Earth. It boasts a thin, dark dust lane that blocks light across itsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 21: The Sombrero Galaxy" The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 21: The Sombrero Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 21: The Sombrero Galaxy

May 21st 2025 at 8:30 am

Virgo the Maiden is draped across the southern sky late this evening, offering excellent views of a famous galaxy within its bounds: M104, also known as the Sombrero Galaxy.  Glowing at magnitude 8, this edge-on spiral is some 30 million light-years from Earth. It boasts a thin, dark dust lane that blocks light across itsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 21: The Sombrero Galaxy"

The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 21: The Sombrero Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Integral Sign GalaxyDavid J. Eicher
    The sky is full of really weird stuff. Many of the strangest objects are galaxies — so numerous in the cosmos — that show unusual forms. One of these great objects lies in the constellation Camelopardalis, an area of sky that looks pretty stark. But if you look closely at certain areas in such places in theContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Integral Sign Galaxy" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Integral Sign Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Integral Sign Galaxy

May 21st 2025 at 1:13 am

The sky is full of really weird stuff. Many of the strangest objects are galaxies — so numerous in the cosmos — that show unusual forms. One of these great objects lies in the constellation Camelopardalis, an area of sky that looks pretty stark. But if you look closely at certain areas in such places in theContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Integral Sign Galaxy"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Integral Sign Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Moon’s two different facesMichael E. Bakich
    The same side of the Moon always faces us. This means that we never get a chance to see the other side of it unless a spacecraft flies there. If we could see it in the night sky, though, it would be like a whole different world. Where the lunar face we’re used to, theContinue reading "The Moon’s two different faces" The post The Moon’s two different faces appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Moon’s two different faces

May 20th 2025 at 6:33 pm

The same side of the Moon always faces us. This means that we never get a chance to see the other side of it unless a spacecraft flies there. If we could see it in the night sky, though, it would be like a whole different world. Where the lunar face we’re used to, theContinue reading "The Moon’s two different faces"

The post The Moon’s two different faces appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Polar dustMark Zastrow
    Sara Harvey from Cork, Ireland The region around Polaris is rich with gas and dust that lies within the Milky Way, captured here with a 3.4-inch refractor and 16½ hours of LRGB exposure. These “objects” are also called integrated flux nebulae as they are faintly illuminated by the combined light of the Milky Way’s stars. The post Polar dust appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Polar dust

May 20th 2025 at 5:31 pm

Sara Harvey from Cork, Ireland The region around Polaris is rich with gas and dust that lies within the Milky Way, captured here with a 3.4-inch refractor and 16½ hours of LRGB exposure. These “objects” are also called integrated flux nebulae as they are faintly illuminated by the combined light of the Milky Way’s stars.

The post Polar dust appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 20: The Moon at Last QuarterAlison Klesman
    Last Quarter Moon occurs at 7:59 A.M. EDT. This phase of the Moon offers observers a chance to focus on our satellite’s western limb, including the huge, dark Ocean of Storms that stretches more than 1,600 miles (2,500 km) and is prominent in the lunar southwest.  A much smaller but nonetheless noticeable dark feature southwestContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 20: The Moon at Last Quarter" The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 20: The Moon at Last Quarter appeared first on Astrono
     

The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 20: The Moon at Last Quarter

May 20th 2025 at 8:30 am

Last Quarter Moon occurs at 7:59 A.M. EDT. This phase of the Moon offers observers a chance to focus on our satellite’s western limb, including the huge, dark Ocean of Storms that stretches more than 1,600 miles (2,500 km) and is prominent in the lunar southwest.  A much smaller but nonetheless noticeable dark feature southwestContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 20: The Moon at Last Quarter"

The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 20: The Moon at Last Quarter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Peculiar galaxy NGC 520David J. Eicher
    The sky is full of strange galaxies. A century ago Edwin Hubble discovered this, and a slew of researchers in the past century have cataloged these strange and troubled objects, perhaps most importantly Halton Arp with his Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies.  There’s a bright and highly distorted galaxy in the constellation Pisces, lying some 100Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Peculiar galaxy NGC 520" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Peculiar galaxy NGC 520 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Peculiar galaxy NGC 520

May 20th 2025 at 12:16 am

The sky is full of strange galaxies. A century ago Edwin Hubble discovered this, and a slew of researchers in the past century have cataloged these strange and troubled objects, perhaps most importantly Halton Arp with his Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies.  There’s a bright and highly distorted galaxy in the constellation Pisces, lying some 100Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Peculiar galaxy NGC 520"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Peculiar galaxy NGC 520 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Conjunction over the GulfMark Zastrow
    Amirreza Kamkar The Moon, Saturn, and Venus meet in a conjunction, seen Jan. 4 over the rocky shoreline of the Persian Gulf in southern Iran. The photographer used Canon mirrorless camera and wide-angle lens at 15mm to take a 4-second exposure at f/4 and ISO 1600. The post Conjunction over the Gulf appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon and VenusDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out in the early morning hours of May 22 and observe a close pairing of Venus and the Moon. About once a month these two celestial standouts come near each other, and this would be a nice one to photograph. The Moon will be aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon and Venus" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon and Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon and Venus

May 19th 2025 at 5:38 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out in the early morning hours of May 22 and observe a close pairing of Venus and the Moon. About once a month these two celestial standouts come near each other, and this would be a nice one to photograph. The Moon will be aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon and Venus"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon and Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Tarantula Nebula casts a wide webRichard Talcott
    The Orion Nebula (M42) and Carina Nebula (NGC 3372) may reign supreme among star-forming regions in the Milky Way, but they pale in comparison to the Tarantula Nebula (NGC 2070). The Tarantula resides in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy to our own located 160,000 light-years away. This nebula spans roughly 1,000 light-years andContinue reading "The Tarantula Nebula casts a wide web" The post The Tarantula Nebula casts a wide web appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Tarantula Nebula casts a wide web

May 19th 2025 at 4:30 pm

The Orion Nebula (M42) and Carina Nebula (NGC 3372) may reign supreme among star-forming regions in the Milky Way, but they pale in comparison to the Tarantula Nebula (NGC 2070). The Tarantula resides in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy to our own located 160,000 light-years away. This nebula spans roughly 1,000 light-years andContinue reading "The Tarantula Nebula casts a wide web"

The post The Tarantula Nebula casts a wide web appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Monday, May 19: The variable star R LeonisAlison Klesman
    An hour after sunset, you’ll find the constellation Leo the Lion pointing head-down toward the horizon in the southwest. The brightest star in this constellation is Alpha (α) Leonis, also known as Regulus. And just over 5° west of this star is a sun called R Leonis, the first variable star identified in the Lion. Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 19: The variable star R Leonis" The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 19: The variable star R Leonis appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Monday, May 19: The variable star R Leonis

May 19th 2025 at 8:30 am

An hour after sunset, you’ll find the constellation Leo the Lion pointing head-down toward the horizon in the southwest. The brightest star in this constellation is Alpha (α) Leonis, also known as Regulus. And just over 5° west of this star is a sun called R Leonis, the first variable star identified in the Lion. Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 19: The variable star R Leonis"

The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 19: The variable star R Leonis appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Sunday, May 18: Jupiter and Zeta TauriAlison Klesman
    The bright beacon of Jupiter stands 2° due north of Zeta (ζ) Tauri in the evening sky tonight. Look west and hour after sunset to find the magnitude –1.9 gas giant still 11° high. Zeta Tau, which shines at magnitude 3, lies to the planet’s lower left. Near this pairing is the location of M1,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, May 18: Jupiter and Zeta Tauri" The post The Sky Today on Sunday, May 18: Jupiter and Zeta Tauri appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Sunday, May 18: Jupiter and Zeta Tauri

May 18th 2025 at 8:30 am

The bright beacon of Jupiter stands 2° due north of Zeta (ζ) Tauri in the evening sky tonight. Look west and hour after sunset to find the magnitude –1.9 gas giant still 11° high. Zeta Tau, which shines at magnitude 3, lies to the planet’s lower left. Near this pairing is the location of M1,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, May 18: Jupiter and Zeta Tauri"

The post The Sky Today on Sunday, May 18: Jupiter and Zeta Tauri appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Saturday, May 17: Mars crosses CancerAlison Klesman
    Visible for some five hours after sunset is Mars, making its way through Cancer. Shining at 1st magnitude, this ruddy point of light is easy to find in the western sky during May evenings, standing directly above the bright star Procyon in Canis Minor as these constellations set.  Through a telescope, Mars’ disk spans justContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 17: Mars crosses Cancer" The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 17: Mars crosses Cancer appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Saturday, May 17: Mars crosses Cancer

May 17th 2025 at 8:30 am

Visible for some five hours after sunset is Mars, making its way through Cancer. Shining at 1st magnitude, this ruddy point of light is easy to find in the western sky during May evenings, standing directly above the bright star Procyon in Canis Minor as these constellations set.  Through a telescope, Mars’ disk spans justContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 17: Mars crosses Cancer"

The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 17: Mars crosses Cancer appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Coddington’s NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    Coddington’s Nebula is an obscure, fuzzy object discovered by the American astronomer Edwin Coddington (1870–1950) in 1898. The popular name for this object is a misnomer; it’s actually a galaxy, and was identified as such by the 1930s, in the era when Edwin Hubble was working through the initial classification of galaxies. It is alsoContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Coddington’s Nebula" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Coddington’s Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Coddington’s Nebula

May 16th 2025 at 10:44 pm

Coddington’s Nebula is an obscure, fuzzy object discovered by the American astronomer Edwin Coddington (1870–1950) in 1898. The popular name for this object is a misnomer; it’s actually a galaxy, and was identified as such by the 1930s, in the era when Edwin Hubble was working through the initial classification of galaxies. It is alsoContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Coddington’s Nebula"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Coddington’s Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Our newest look at aurorae on Mars and JupiterSamantha Hill
    The glowing veils of the aurora appear regularly in the sky above Earth and make for great images, but capturing this phenomenon on other planets has always been more of a challenge. Recent observations of Mars and Jupiter have now given scientists unprecedented views of these extraterrestrial aurorae that will help improve our understanding ofContinue reading "Our newest look at aurorae on Mars and Jupiter" The post Our newest look at aurorae on Mars and Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Maga
     

Our newest look at aurorae on Mars and Jupiter

May 16th 2025 at 10:14 pm

The glowing veils of the aurora appear regularly in the sky above Earth and make for great images, but capturing this phenomenon on other planets has always been more of a challenge. Recent observations of Mars and Jupiter have now given scientists unprecedented views of these extraterrestrial aurorae that will help improve our understanding ofContinue reading "Our newest look at aurorae on Mars and Jupiter"

The post Our newest look at aurorae on Mars and Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • An arctic monumentMark Zastrow
    Chirag Upreti from New York City Stetind Mountain — sometimes referred to as Norway’s “national mountain” — lies beneath a stunning display of aurora in this shot taken with a Sony mirrorless camera and 12mm fisheye lens. The post An arctic monument appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • The Sky Today on Friday, May 16: The Coma ClusterAlison Klesman
    High in the southern sky around 10 P.M. local daylight time is the constellation Coma Berenices. Look for it to the upper right of the bright star Arcturus in Boötes and to the left of Denebola, the sun marking Leo the Lion’s tail.  Coma Berenices might be a relatively unobtrusive constellation, but it houses aContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 16: The Coma Cluster" The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 16: The Coma Cluster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Friday, May 16: The Coma Cluster

May 16th 2025 at 8:30 am

High in the southern sky around 10 P.M. local daylight time is the constellation Coma Berenices. Look for it to the upper right of the bright star Arcturus in Boötes and to the left of Denebola, the sun marking Leo the Lion’s tail.  Coma Berenices might be a relatively unobtrusive constellation, but it houses aContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 16: The Coma Cluster"

The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 16: The Coma Cluster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from May 16 to 23: Venus meets the morning MoonAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 16Spring is a great time to observe star clusters, so tonight our target is the globular M68 in Hydra.  Look south after sunset and you’ll find the eastern end of the Water Snake just below Virgo and Corvus. M68 is a relativelyContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 16 to 23: Venus meets the morning Moon" The post The Sky This Week from May 16 to 23: Venus meets the morning Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from May 16 to 23: Venus meets the morning Moon

May 16th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 16Spring is a great time to observe star clusters, so tonight our target is the globular M68 in Hydra.  Look south after sunset and you’ll find the eastern end of the Water Snake just below Virgo and Corvus. M68 is a relativelyContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 16 to 23: Venus meets the morning Moon"

The post The Sky This Week from May 16 to 23: Venus meets the morning Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Lemon Slice NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    Of the approximately 3,000 planetary nebulae known in the galaxy, most are asymmetrical. But one planetary in Camelopardalis, just 7.5° from Polaris, is the poster child for symmetry.  The Lemon Slice Nebula (IC 3568) is a young planetary spanning only some 0.4 light-year. Its central star is dying and glows feebly at magnitude 12.3. The nebulaContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Lemon Slice Nebula" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Lemon Slice Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Lemon Slice Nebula

May 16th 2025 at 1:12 am

Of the approximately 3,000 planetary nebulae known in the galaxy, most are asymmetrical. But one planetary in Camelopardalis, just 7.5° from Polaris, is the poster child for symmetry.  The Lemon Slice Nebula (IC 3568) is a young planetary spanning only some 0.4 light-year. Its central star is dying and glows feebly at magnitude 12.3. The nebulaContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Lemon Slice Nebula"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Lemon Slice Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Quantum computers could crack the security codes used by satellitesDaniela Mata
    Panagiotis (Panos) Vlachos, Queen’s University Belfast Satellites are the invisible backbone of modern life. They guide airplanes, help us find our way with GPS, deliver TV and internet, and even help emergency services respond to disasters. But a new kind of computer – quantum computers – could put all of this at risk. Quantum computersContinue reading "Quantum computers could crack the security codes used by satellites" The post Quantum computers could crack the security codes used by satellit
     

Quantum computers could crack the security codes used by satellites

May 16th 2025 at 12:24 am

Panagiotis (Panos) Vlachos, Queen’s University Belfast Satellites are the invisible backbone of modern life. They guide airplanes, help us find our way with GPS, deliver TV and internet, and even help emergency services respond to disasters. But a new kind of computer – quantum computers – could put all of this at risk. Quantum computersContinue reading "Quantum computers could crack the security codes used by satellites"

The post Quantum computers could crack the security codes used by satellites appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Imaging Earth and the sky above itMichael E. Bakich
    India is home to some unique (and magnificent) landscapes spread across the country. This time, we travel to the extreme western parts of India to explore some of the ancient landscapes of the country. One of the biggest perks of doing astrophotography is to get a chance to explore these exciting places and photograph them.Continue reading "Imaging Earth and the sky above it" The post Imaging Earth and the sky above it appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Imaging Earth and the sky above it

May 15th 2025 at 6:41 pm

India is home to some unique (and magnificent) landscapes spread across the country. This time, we travel to the extreme western parts of India to explore some of the ancient landscapes of the country. One of the biggest perks of doing astrophotography is to get a chance to explore these exciting places and photograph them.Continue reading "Imaging Earth and the sky above it"

The post Imaging Earth and the sky above it appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A crescent at seaMark Zastrow
    Stian Mulelid Rondestveit, taken from Stølsheimen, Norway The Crescent Nebula (NGC 6888) lies in a rich sea of hydrogen in Cygnus in this image taken with a 2-inch refractor and a one-shot color camera. The nebula was sculpted by the winds of a star belonging to the rare Wolf-Rayet set of hot and massive stars. The post A crescent at sea appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A crescent at sea

May 15th 2025 at 5:38 pm

Stian Mulelid Rondestveit, taken from Stølsheimen, Norway The Crescent Nebula (NGC 6888) lies in a rich sea of hydrogen in Cygnus in this image taken with a 2-inch refractor and a one-shot color camera. The nebula was sculpted by the winds of a star belonging to the rare Wolf-Rayet set of hot and massive stars.

The post A crescent at sea appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Explore explosive supernovae from your backyardshill
    The universe is full of extreme phenomena. Perhaps this is what draws some people to astronomy — it has some of the most extreme physics out there. And supernovae are some of the most extraordinary objects that also have the benefit of being visible to astronomers here on Earth, even long after the explosive eventContinue reading "Explore explosive supernovae from your backyard" The post Explore explosive supernovae from your backyard appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Explore explosive supernovae from your backyard

By: shill
May 15th 2025 at 4:30 pm

The universe is full of extreme phenomena. Perhaps this is what draws some people to astronomy — it has some of the most extreme physics out there. And supernovae are some of the most extraordinary objects that also have the benefit of being visible to astronomers here on Earth, even long after the explosive eventContinue reading "Explore explosive supernovae from your backyard"

The post Explore explosive supernovae from your backyard appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Thursday, May 15: Juno and M5Alison Klesman
    The main-belt asteroid 3 Juno reached opposition yesterday afternoon, meaning it now lies directly opposite the Sun in our sky, rising at sunset and setting at sunrise.  Two hours after sunset tonight, Juno is 30° high in the southeast. Glowing at magnitude 10, it’s within reach of binoculars or a small telescope. You can findContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 15: Juno and M5" The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 15: Juno and M5 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Thursday, May 15: Juno and M5

May 15th 2025 at 8:30 am

The main-belt asteroid 3 Juno reached opposition yesterday afternoon, meaning it now lies directly opposite the Sun in our sky, rising at sunset and setting at sunrise.  Two hours after sunset tonight, Juno is 30° high in the southeast. Glowing at magnitude 10, it’s within reach of binoculars or a small telescope. You can findContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 15: Juno and M5"

The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 15: Juno and M5 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Deep-Sky Dreams: A great redshift controversyDavid J. Eicher
    The astronomer Halton C. Arp (1927–2013) was a very well-known researcher of galaxies and other distant objects. He is celebrated for a number of reasons, not the least of which is his magnificent Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, published in 1966. I was privileged to know “Chip” Arp, as he was known, and he was aContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: A great redshift controversy" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: A great redshift controversy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: A great redshift controversy

May 14th 2025 at 11:51 pm

The astronomer Halton C. Arp (1927–2013) was a very well-known researcher of galaxies and other distant objects. He is celebrated for a number of reasons, not the least of which is his magnificent Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, published in 1966. I was privileged to know “Chip” Arp, as he was known, and he was aContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: A great redshift controversy"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: A great redshift controversy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel — here’s why it’s significantDaniela Mata
    Deep observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have revealed an exceptionally large galaxy in the early universe. It’s a cosmic giant whose light has travelled over 12 billion years to reach us. We’ve dubbed it the Big Wheel, with our findings published March 17 in Nature Astronomy. This giant disk galaxy existed withinContinue reading "Astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel — here’s why it’s significant" The post Astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel — here’s why it’s signi
     

Astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel — here’s why it’s significant

May 14th 2025 at 8:43 pm

Deep observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have revealed an exceptionally large galaxy in the early universe. It’s a cosmic giant whose light has travelled over 12 billion years to reach us. We’ve dubbed it the Big Wheel, with our findings published March 17 in Nature Astronomy. This giant disk galaxy existed withinContinue reading "Astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel — here’s why it’s significant"

The post Astronomers have discovered the Big Wheel — here’s why it’s significant appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: CoordinatesMichael E. Bakich
    Today, I want to talk about the equatorial coordinate system. Start with this: What if we could project Earth’s coordinates of longitude and latitude into the sky? Latitude wouldn’t be a problem, but longitude would change continuously because of Earth’s rotation. Somehow, we need to attach longitude to the sky. If we project Earth’s equatorContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Coordinates" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Coordinates appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Coordinates

May 14th 2025 at 5:34 pm

Today, I want to talk about the equatorial coordinate system. Start with this: What if we could project Earth’s coordinates of longitude and latitude into the sky? Latitude wouldn’t be a problem, but longitude would change continuously because of Earth’s rotation. Somehow, we need to attach longitude to the sky. If we project Earth’s equatorContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Coordinates"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Coordinates appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • To a boilMark Zastrow
    Jeffrey Horne, taken from Nashville, Tennessee Sharpless 2–240 — also known as the Spaghetti Nebula — is the visible legacy of an exploded star, its energy having propelled debris into its surroundings. This image represents 567 hours of exposure in SHO filters from Bortle 8/9 skies taken over three winters, plus 1¼ hours of RGBContinue reading "To a boil" The post To a boil appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

To a boil

May 14th 2025 at 1:30 pm

Jeffrey Horne, taken from Nashville, Tennessee Sharpless 2–240 — also known as the Spaghetti Nebula — is the visible legacy of an exploded star, its energy having propelled debris into its surroundings. This image represents 567 hours of exposure in SHO filters from Bortle 8/9 skies taken over three winters, plus 1¼ hours of RGBContinue reading "To a boil"

The post To a boil appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 14: The Moon and AntaresAlison Klesman
    The Moon passes 0.3° south of Antares in the constellation Scorpius at 1 A.M. EDT. The pair is high in the southern sky at this time, particularly for observers in the eastern half of the U.S., offering an excellent view. (Observers farther west will want to wait an additional hour or two for the regionContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 14: The Moon and Antares" The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 14: The Moon and Antares appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 14: The Moon and Antares

May 14th 2025 at 8:30 am

The Moon passes 0.3° south of Antares in the constellation Scorpius at 1 A.M. EDT. The pair is high in the southern sky at this time, particularly for observers in the eastern half of the U.S., offering an excellent view. (Observers farther west will want to wait an additional hour or two for the regionContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 14: The Moon and Antares"

The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 14: The Moon and Antares appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • View the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant in 3D Daniela Mata
    With great, powerful space telescopes come great, powerful computational models. Astronomers have combined X-ray, optical, and infrared data from observatories including NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Space Telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope, the Spitzer Space Telescope, and the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescopic Array to create a new collection of 3D models: one of a young star andContinue reading "View the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant in 3D " The post View the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant in 3D
     

View the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant in 3D 

May 14th 2025 at 5:45 am

With great, powerful space telescopes come great, powerful computational models. Astronomers have combined X-ray, optical, and infrared data from observatories including NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Space Telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope, the Spitzer Space Telescope, and the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescopic Array to create a new collection of 3D models: one of a young star andContinue reading "View the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant in 3D "

The post View the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant in 3D  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cat’s Eye NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    One of the extreme northern sky’s most entertaining deep-sky objects, the Cat’s Eye Nebula in Draco (NGC 6543), is a planetary nebula with a high surface brightness. Discovered by William Herschel in 1786, it was the first planetary whose spectrum was observed, in 1864, by William Huggins. He therefore demonstrated that planetary nebulae are gaseous.Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cat’s Eye Nebula" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cat’s Eye Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cat’s Eye Nebula

May 14th 2025 at 1:24 am

One of the extreme northern sky’s most entertaining deep-sky objects, the Cat’s Eye Nebula in Draco (NGC 6543), is a planetary nebula with a high surface brightness. Discovered by William Herschel in 1786, it was the first planetary whose spectrum was observed, in 1864, by William Huggins. He therefore demonstrated that planetary nebulae are gaseous.Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cat’s Eye Nebula"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cat’s Eye Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The law doesn’t protect sites on the Moon – a lawyer describes a framework that couldA Cotey
    April 2025 was a busy month for space. Pop icon Katy Perry joined five other civilian women on a quick jaunt to the edge of space, making headlines. Meanwhile, another group of people at the United Nations was contemplating a critical issue for the future of space exploration: the discovery, extraction and utilization of naturalContinue reading "The law doesn’t protect sites on the Moon – a lawyer describes a framework that could" The post The law doesn’t protect sites on the Moon – a lawyer des
     

The law doesn’t protect sites on the Moon – a lawyer describes a framework that could

By: A Cotey
May 13th 2025 at 9:30 pm

April 2025 was a busy month for space. Pop icon Katy Perry joined five other civilian women on a quick jaunt to the edge of space, making headlines. Meanwhile, another group of people at the United Nations was contemplating a critical issue for the future of space exploration: the discovery, extraction and utilization of naturalContinue reading "The law doesn’t protect sites on the Moon – a lawyer describes a framework that could"

The post The law doesn’t protect sites on the Moon – a lawyer describes a framework that could appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Have astronomers found Planet Nine?Michael E. Bakich
    Science textbooks may be in for another revision. Our solar system shrank from nine planets to eight after the International Astronomical Union demoted Pluto in 2006. But there may yet be another world lurking beyond Neptune — and astronomers may have just found it. In 2016, astronomers proposed that our solar system could harbor a stealthy ninth planet basedContinue reading "Have astronomers found Planet Nine?" The post Have astronomers found Planet Nine? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Have astronomers found Planet Nine?

May 13th 2025 at 5:57 pm

Science textbooks may be in for another revision. Our solar system shrank from nine planets to eight after the International Astronomical Union demoted Pluto in 2006. But there may yet be another world lurking beyond Neptune — and astronomers may have just found it. In 2016, astronomers proposed that our solar system could harbor a stealthy ninth planet basedContinue reading "Have astronomers found Planet Nine?"

The post Have astronomers found Planet Nine? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The cosmic angelfishMark Zastrow
    Chris Schur, taken from Happy Jack, Arizona Sharpless 2-264 is a nebula with emission and a molecular cloud surrounding the star Lambda Orionis. Its nickname, the Angelfish Nebula, is due to its profile in shorter exposures, though it appears rounder in this deeper exposure. The imager used a 135mm f/2 lens and monochrome camera withContinue reading "The cosmic angelfish" The post The cosmic angelfish appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The cosmic angelfish

May 13th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Chris Schur, taken from Happy Jack, Arizona Sharpless 2-264 is a nebula with emission and a molecular cloud surrounding the star Lambda Orionis. Its nickname, the Angelfish Nebula, is due to its profile in shorter exposures, though it appears rounder in this deeper exposure. The imager used a 135mm f/2 lens and monochrome camera withContinue reading "The cosmic angelfish"

The post The cosmic angelfish appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 13: Catch you last glimpses of MercuryAlison Klesman
    Mercury is quickly dropping out of sight, so catch this early-morning planet while you still can. Today you’ll find the solar system’s smallest world just 3° high in the east 20 minutes before sunrise. Shining at magnitude –0.6, Mercury is readily visible, though not as eye-catchingly bright as blazing Venus (magnitude –4.6) some 26.5° toContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 13: Catch you last glimpses of Mercury" The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 13: Catch you last glimpses of Me
     

The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 13: Catch you last glimpses of Mercury

May 13th 2025 at 8:30 am

Mercury is quickly dropping out of sight, so catch this early-morning planet while you still can. Today you’ll find the solar system’s smallest world just 3° high in the east 20 minutes before sunrise. Shining at magnitude –0.6, Mercury is readily visible, though not as eye-catchingly bright as blazing Venus (magnitude –4.6) some 26.5° toContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 13: Catch you last glimpses of Mercury"

The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 13: Catch you last glimpses of Mercury appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Failed Soviet-era spacecraft returned to Earth on SaturdaySamantha Hill
    After failing to make it past Earth orbit on March 31, 1972, the remains of a Venus mission launched by the former Soviet Union circled our planet for years and was given the name Cosmos (or Kosmos) 482. While the rocket stage and other pieces returned to Earth weeks later, the lander itself made anContinue reading "Failed Soviet-era spacecraft returned to Earth on Saturday" The post Failed Soviet-era spacecraft returned to Earth on Saturday appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Failed Soviet-era spacecraft returned to Earth on Saturday

May 13th 2025 at 1:45 am

After failing to make it past Earth orbit on March 31, 1972, the remains of a Venus mission launched by the former Soviet Union circled our planet for years and was given the name Cosmos (or Kosmos) 482. While the rocket stage and other pieces returned to Earth weeks later, the lander itself made anContinue reading "Failed Soviet-era spacecraft returned to Earth on Saturday"

The post Failed Soviet-era spacecraft returned to Earth on Saturday appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Ursa Minor Dwarf GalaxyDavid J. Eicher
    Our Local Group of galaxies contains at least 80 members, the vast majority of which are dwarfs. These small galaxies are somewhat hard to detect in or near the plane of the Milky Way (thus, the uncertainty about the number); one such galaxy is the Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy. It was discovered by A.G. WilsonContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy

May 13th 2025 at 12:46 am

Our Local Group of galaxies contains at least 80 members, the vast majority of which are dwarfs. These small galaxies are somewhat hard to detect in or near the plane of the Milky Way (thus, the uncertainty about the number); one such galaxy is the Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy. It was discovered by A.G. WilsonContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Ursa Minor Dwarf Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Is dew point or relative humidity more important for good astronomical seeing?Astronomy Staff
    I’ve long wondered whether dew point or relative humidity is more important for good seeing. Which would be better: a cool night with lower dew point but higher humidity, or a warm night with higher dew point but lower humidity? William ShepardTroy, Michigan Dew point/relative humidity questions come up fairly often and this is aContinue reading "Is dew point or relative humidity more important for good astronomical seeing?" The post Is dew point or relative humidity more important for good astr
     

Is dew point or relative humidity more important for good astronomical seeing?

May 12th 2025 at 9:30 pm

I’ve long wondered whether dew point or relative humidity is more important for good seeing. Which would be better: a cool night with lower dew point but higher humidity, or a warm night with higher dew point but lower humidity? William ShepardTroy, Michigan Dew point/relative humidity questions come up fairly often and this is aContinue reading "Is dew point or relative humidity more important for good astronomical seeing?"

The post Is dew point or relative humidity more important for good astronomical seeing? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How spacecraft ‘brake’ in space using dragA Cotey
    When you put your hand out the window of a moving car, you feel a force pushing against you called drag. This force opposes a moving vehicle, and it’s part of the reason why your car naturally slows to a stop if you take your foot off the gas pedal. But drag doesn’t just slowContinue reading "How spacecraft ‘brake’ in space using drag" The post How spacecraft ‘brake’ in space using drag appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How spacecraft ‘brake’ in space using drag

By: A Cotey
May 12th 2025 at 7:44 pm

When you put your hand out the window of a moving car, you feel a force pushing against you called drag. This force opposes a moving vehicle, and it’s part of the reason why your car naturally slows to a stop if you take your foot off the gas pedal. But drag doesn’t just slowContinue reading "How spacecraft ‘brake’ in space using drag"

The post How spacecraft ‘brake’ in space using drag appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Owl NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and observe a planetary nebula in the constellation Ursa Major the Great Bear. Amateur astronomers call it the Owl Nebula because it has two dark circles superimposed on a bright round background. Overall, it looks like the face of an owl. Also known asContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Owl Nebula" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Owl Nebula appeared first on Astronomy
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Owl Nebula

May 12th 2025 at 5:27 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and observe a planetary nebula in the constellation Ursa Major the Great Bear. Amateur astronomers call it the Owl Nebula because it has two dark circles superimposed on a bright round background. Overall, it looks like the face of an owl. Also known asContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Owl Nebula"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Owl Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • These five famous stars in the sky host exoplanets — observe them tonightStephen James O'Meara
    Just a few decades ago, when we glanced skyward, we didn’t know for certain whether any star visible to the naked eye hosts planets like our own. Now, NASA scientists estimate that, on average, there may be at least one planet for every star in the Milky Way. That’s billions of extrasolar planets in ourContinue reading "These five famous stars in the sky host exoplanets — observe them tonight" The post These five famous stars in the sky host exoplanets — observe them tonight appeared first on As
     

These five famous stars in the sky host exoplanets — observe them tonight

May 12th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Just a few decades ago, when we glanced skyward, we didn’t know for certain whether any star visible to the naked eye hosts planets like our own. Now, NASA scientists estimate that, on average, there may be at least one planet for every star in the Milky Way. That’s billions of extrasolar planets in ourContinue reading "These five famous stars in the sky host exoplanets — observe them tonight"

The post These five famous stars in the sky host exoplanets — observe them tonight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Highs and lowsMark Zastrow
    Chris Cook from Harwich, Massachusetts The salt flats of Badwater Basin — the lowest point in North America — are lit by a First Quarter Moon in in this star trail shot representing 6 hours of exposure. The post Highs and lows appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • The Sky Today on Monday, May 12: May’s Full Moon, Mars, and the Beehive ClusterAlison Klesman
    Full Moon occurs at 12:56 P.M. EDT this afternoon. May’s Full Moon is also called the Flower Moon and because our satellite is still near apogee, it will appear some 29’ across, slightly smaller than the Full Moon’s average size (about 31’) in the sky.  The Full Moon rises roughly opposite the Sun, so LunaContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 12: May’s Full Moon, Mars, and the Beehive Cluster" The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 12: May’s Full Moon, Mars, and the Beehive Cluster appea
     

The Sky Today on Monday, May 12: May’s Full Moon, Mars, and the Beehive Cluster

May 12th 2025 at 8:30 am

Full Moon occurs at 12:56 P.M. EDT this afternoon. May’s Full Moon is also called the Flower Moon and because our satellite is still near apogee, it will appear some 29’ across, slightly smaller than the Full Moon’s average size (about 31’) in the sky.  The Full Moon rises roughly opposite the Sun, so LunaContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 12: May’s Full Moon, Mars, and the Beehive Cluster"

The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 12: May’s Full Moon, Mars, and the Beehive Cluster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky Today on Sunday, May 11: Callisto grazes JupiterAlison Klesman
    The gas giant Jupiter still dominates the constellation Taurus as it sets in the west after sunset. Jupiter now stands just to the right of Alheka (Zeta Tauri), one of the tips of the Bull’s two horns. The magnitude –1.9 planet remains the brightest point of light in the constellation, making it easy to centerContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, May 11: Callisto grazes Jupiter" The post The Sky Today on Sunday, May 11: Callisto grazes Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Sunday, May 11: Callisto grazes Jupiter

May 11th 2025 at 8:30 am

The gas giant Jupiter still dominates the constellation Taurus as it sets in the west after sunset. Jupiter now stands just to the right of Alheka (Zeta Tauri), one of the tips of the Bull’s two horns. The magnitude –1.9 planet remains the brightest point of light in the constellation, making it easy to centerContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, May 11: Callisto grazes Jupiter"

The post The Sky Today on Sunday, May 11: Callisto grazes Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Saturday, May 10: The Moon meets SpicaAlison Klesman
    The Moon passes 0.4° south of Spica at 4 A.M. EDT. The best time for observing this pairing is in the few hours between midnight and 3 A.M. local daylight time, when they are still comfortably high above the horizon.  At that time, turn west to see the nearly Full Moon (now 95 percent lit)Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 10: The Moon meets Spica" The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 10: The Moon meets Spica appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Saturday, May 10: The Moon meets Spica

May 10th 2025 at 8:30 am

The Moon passes 0.4° south of Spica at 4 A.M. EDT. The best time for observing this pairing is in the few hours between midnight and 3 A.M. local daylight time, when they are still comfortably high above the horizon.  At that time, turn west to see the nearly Full Moon (now 95 percent lit)Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, May 10: The Moon meets Spica"

The post The Sky Today on Saturday, May 10: The Moon meets Spica appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Venera program: Interplanetary probes from behind the Iron CurtainDoug Adler
    Venera 13, launched by the Soviets in 1981, captured this image of the surface of Venus. Dr. Ksanfomality/Astronomicheskii Vestnik Editor’s note: This story was originally published Aug. 26, 2020. It was updated May 9, 2025, with details of the failed mission Kosmos-482. The Pioneer and Voyager probes the United States sent to explore the outerContinue reading "The Venera program: Interplanetary probes from behind the Iron Curtain" The post The Venera program: Interplanetary probes from behind t
     

The Venera program: Interplanetary probes from behind the Iron Curtain

May 9th 2025 at 11:08 pm

Venera 13, launched by the Soviets in 1981, captured this image of the surface of Venus. Dr. Ksanfomality/Astronomicheskii Vestnik Editor’s note: This story was originally published Aug. 26, 2020. It was updated May 9, 2025, with details of the failed mission Kosmos-482. The Pioneer and Voyager probes the United States sent to explore the outerContinue reading "The Venera program: Interplanetary probes from behind the Iron Curtain"

The post The Venera program: Interplanetary probes from behind the Iron Curtain appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Abell 2256David J. Eicher
    In 1958 the great extragalactic astronomer George Abell of UCLA compiled a catalog of galaxy clusters. It was extended by Abell and collaborators in 1987 and eventually contained 4,076 clusters. Abell 2256 is a rich cluster lying in Ursa Minor. It contains more than 500 members and lies about 800 million light-years away. The clusterContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Abell 2256" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Abell 2256 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Abell 2256

May 9th 2025 at 10:51 pm

In 1958 the great extragalactic astronomer George Abell of UCLA compiled a catalog of galaxy clusters. It was extended by Abell and collaborators in 1987 and eventually contained 4,076 clusters. Abell 2256 is a rich cluster lying in Ursa Minor. It contains more than 500 members and lies about 800 million light-years away. The clusterContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Abell 2256"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Abell 2256 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: Leo the GreatMichael E. Bakich
    Congratulations to all Catholics. Yesterday, your College of Cardinals elected a new pope. In honor of him taking the name Leo XIV, I thought this would be a good time to tell you some facts about the constellation Leo the Lion. Actually, to commemorate the new pope, 14 facts. I) Leo is a springtime constellation in the Northern Hemisphere.Continue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Leo the Great" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Leo the Great appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Leo the Great

May 9th 2025 at 6:23 pm

Congratulations to all Catholics. Yesterday, your College of Cardinals elected a new pope. In honor of him taking the name Leo XIV, I thought this would be a good time to tell you some facts about the constellation Leo the Lion. Actually, to commemorate the new pope, 14 facts. I) Leo is a springtime constellation in the Northern Hemisphere.Continue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Leo the Great"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Leo the Great appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • More than 50 years later, a failed Soviet spacecraft is about to return to EarthAlice Gorman, The Conversation
    During the height of the Cold War in the 1960s and 1970s, the USSR launched 29 spacecraft towards Venus, the planet scientists call Earth’s “twin sister”. Three flew past Venus, and went into orbit around the Sun. Sixteen orbited or landed on Venus, where they experienced a climate often described as “hellish”. Ten got stuckContinue reading "More than 50 years later, a failed Soviet spacecraft is about to return to Earth" The post More than 50 years later, a failed Soviet spacecraft is about to
     

More than 50 years later, a failed Soviet spacecraft is about to return to Earth

During the height of the Cold War in the 1960s and 1970s, the USSR launched 29 spacecraft towards Venus, the planet scientists call Earth’s “twin sister”. Three flew past Venus, and went into orbit around the Sun. Sixteen orbited or landed on Venus, where they experienced a climate often described as “hellish”. Ten got stuckContinue reading "More than 50 years later, a failed Soviet spacecraft is about to return to Earth"

The post More than 50 years later, a failed Soviet spacecraft is about to return to Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Solar hummingbirdMark Zastrow
    Mark Johnston from Scottsdale, Arizona This large ejection of plasma on the Sun “looks like a hummingbird catching a mosquito,” the imager noted. He captured the feature March 24 with a 6-inch apochromat, a Daystar Hα “eyepiece,” and a monochrome solar camera. The post Solar hummingbird appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • The Sky Today on Friday, May 9: Metis reaches oppositionAlison Klesman
    Asteroid 9 Metis reaches opposition at 2 A.M. EDT in the constellation Libra — not far from Vesta, which reached opposition a week ago. Visible from sundown to sunup, the best time to look for Metis is around local midnight, when it is transiting and stands highest in the southern sky. Metis is shining atContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 9: Metis reaches opposition" The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 9: Metis reaches opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Friday, May 9: Metis reaches opposition

May 9th 2025 at 8:30 am

Asteroid 9 Metis reaches opposition at 2 A.M. EDT in the constellation Libra — not far from Vesta, which reached opposition a week ago. Visible from sundown to sunup, the best time to look for Metis is around local midnight, when it is transiting and stands highest in the southern sky. Metis is shining atContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, May 9: Metis reaches opposition"

The post The Sky Today on Friday, May 9: Metis reaches opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from May 9 to 16: May’s Full Flower Moon bloomsAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 9Asteroid 9 Metis reaches at opposition at 2 A.M. EDT in the constellation Libra. The 10th-magnitude main-belt world is visible with binoculars or a telescope all night from sunset to sunrise. It stands highest around local midnight when it appears in theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 9 to 16: May’s Full Flower Moon blooms" The post The Sky This Week from May 9 to 16: May’s Full Flower Moon blooms appeared first on A
     

The Sky This Week from May 9 to 16: May’s Full Flower Moon blooms

May 9th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 9Asteroid 9 Metis reaches at opposition at 2 A.M. EDT in the constellation Libra. The 10th-magnitude main-belt world is visible with binoculars or a telescope all night from sunset to sunrise. It stands highest around local midnight when it appears in theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from May 9 to 16: May’s Full Flower Moon blooms"

The post The Sky This Week from May 9 to 16: May’s Full Flower Moon blooms appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Vesta is simpler inside than previously thoughtDaniela Mata
    Located between Mars and Jupiter lies Vesta, the second-largest body within the main asteroid belt. For generations, astronomers thought Vesta wasn’t an ordinary asteroid: It also contained properties of a planet, with layers forming a crust, mantle, and core. However, a recent analysis using data from NASA’s Dawn spacecraft mission may force astronomers to throwContinue reading "Vesta is simpler inside than previously thought" The post Vesta is simpler inside than previously thought appeared fi
     

Vesta is simpler inside than previously thought

May 9th 2025 at 1:25 am

Located between Mars and Jupiter lies Vesta, the second-largest body within the main asteroid belt. For generations, astronomers thought Vesta wasn’t an ordinary asteroid: It also contained properties of a planet, with layers forming a crust, mantle, and core. However, a recent analysis using data from NASA’s Dawn spacecraft mission may force astronomers to throwContinue reading "Vesta is simpler inside than previously thought"

The post Vesta is simpler inside than previously thought appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: Gyulbudaghian’s NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    Northern Cepheus contains a strange nebula with a very long name. Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula (JAI-al-boo-dag-ian) was discovered by Armenian astronomer Armen Gyulbudaghian in 1977 and its variability was demonstrated by Martin Cohen in 1981.  It is a strange variable nebula associated with the variable star PV Cephei, which ranges from magnitude 14.6 to 18.1 and liesContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula appeared first on Astronomy
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula

May 9th 2025 at 12:00 am

Northern Cepheus contains a strange nebula with a very long name. Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula (JAI-al-boo-dag-ian) was discovered by Armenian astronomer Armen Gyulbudaghian in 1977 and its variability was demonstrated by Martin Cohen in 1981.  It is a strange variable nebula associated with the variable star PV Cephei, which ranges from magnitude 14.6 to 18.1 and liesContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: Gyulbudaghian’s Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: Dark adaptionMichael E. Bakich
    Today I want to talk about something beginning observers tend to overlook. It a process of the human eye called dark adaptation. In terrestrial terms, it helps us see better at night and in dark places. That makes it important for our safety. For amateur astronomers, however, it’s important because it allows us to seeContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Dark adaption" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Dark adaption appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Dark adaption

May 8th 2025 at 6:18 pm

Today I want to talk about something beginning observers tend to overlook. It a process of the human eye called dark adaptation. In terrestrial terms, it helps us see better at night and in dark places. That makes it important for our safety. For amateur astronomers, however, it’s important because it allows us to seeContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Dark adaption"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Dark adaption appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • 10 women who changed astronomySamantha Hill
    Women have long contributed meaningful scientific discoveries to the field of astronomy; however, men have primarily dominated the vocation. As of 2019, women earn about 40 percent of the Ph.D.s granted in the field of astronomy, but that has not always been the case. And there are many cases of women working in astronomy onlyContinue reading "10 women who changed astronomy" The post 10 women who changed astronomy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

10 women who changed astronomy

May 8th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Women have long contributed meaningful scientific discoveries to the field of astronomy; however, men have primarily dominated the vocation. As of 2019, women earn about 40 percent of the Ph.D.s granted in the field of astronomy, but that has not always been the case. And there are many cases of women working in astronomy onlyContinue reading "10 women who changed astronomy"

The post 10 women who changed astronomy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Circling the SunMark Zastrow
    Josh Dury, taken from Somerset, U.K. A parhelic circle — an optical phenomenon caused by sunlight reflecting off of atmospheric ice crystals — emerges in this photo from the Sun, which is simultaneously surrounded by a halo. A parhelic circle has the unique characteristic of circling sky at the same altitude (angle above the horizon)Continue reading "Circling the Sun" The post Circling the Sun appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Circling the Sun

May 8th 2025 at 1:30 pm

Josh Dury, taken from Somerset, U.K. A parhelic circle — an optical phenomenon caused by sunlight reflecting off of atmospheric ice crystals — emerges in this photo from the Sun, which is simultaneously surrounded by a halo. A parhelic circle has the unique characteristic of circling sky at the same altitude (angle above the horizon)Continue reading "Circling the Sun"

The post Circling the Sun appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Thursday, May 8: The swimming Swan NebulaAlison Klesman
    High in the southern sky around 4 A.M. local daylight time is the stunning Swan Nebula (M17), also known as the Omega Nebula. It glides serenely through northern Sagittarius, far above the spout of the Teapot asterism as it sits right-side up in the sky this morning.  With no Moon above the horizon, if you’veContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 8: The swimming Swan Nebula" The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 8: The swimming Swan Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Thursday, May 8: The swimming Swan Nebula

May 8th 2025 at 8:30 am

High in the southern sky around 4 A.M. local daylight time is the stunning Swan Nebula (M17), also known as the Omega Nebula. It glides serenely through northern Sagittarius, far above the spout of the Teapot asterism as it sits right-side up in the sky this morning.  With no Moon above the horizon, if you’veContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, May 8: The swimming Swan Nebula"

The post The Sky Today on Thursday, May 8: The swimming Swan Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why some astronomers are starting to doubt cosmology’s standard modelDaniela Mata
    A recent study published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters has provided the most precise distance to the Coma Cluster of galaxies yet — and also has deepened a crisis in cosmology. The problem is that when we look around the local universe, the universe seems to be expanding faster than predicted by the current modelsContinue reading "Why some astronomers are starting to doubt cosmology’s standard model" The post Why some astronomers are starting to doubt cosmology’s standard model appeared f
     

Why some astronomers are starting to doubt cosmology’s standard model

May 8th 2025 at 4:57 am

A recent study published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters has provided the most precise distance to the Coma Cluster of galaxies yet — and also has deepened a crisis in cosmology. The problem is that when we look around the local universe, the universe seems to be expanding faster than predicted by the current modelsContinue reading "Why some astronomers are starting to doubt cosmology’s standard model"

The post Why some astronomers are starting to doubt cosmology’s standard model appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Iris NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    High at northern latitudes lies a spectacular and unique nebula you should observe if you’re not already familiar with it. The Iris Nebula (NGC 7023) is an odd reflection nebula in Cepheus, not far from the border with Draco. Because of its slight resemblance to an iris flower, observers long ago gave it its popularContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Iris Nebula" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Iris Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Iris Nebula

May 8th 2025 at 12:19 am

High at northern latitudes lies a spectacular and unique nebula you should observe if you’re not already familiar with it. The Iris Nebula (NGC 7023) is an odd reflection nebula in Cepheus, not far from the border with Draco. Because of its slight resemblance to an iris flower, observers long ago gave it its popularContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Iris Nebula"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Iris Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • JWST reveals secrets of a sub-Neptune exoplanetSamantha Hill
    Beyond our solar system, sub-Neptunes — gassy planets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune — reign as the most common type of exoplanet observed in our galaxy. Despite their prevalence, no such planets exist around our Sun, so these worlds have remained shrouded in mystery. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) recently observed exoplanetContinue reading "JWST reveals secrets of a sub-Neptune exoplanet" The post JWST reveals secrets of a sub-Neptune exoplanet appeared first on Astronomy
     

JWST reveals secrets of a sub-Neptune exoplanet

May 7th 2025 at 9:51 pm

Beyond our solar system, sub-Neptunes — gassy planets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune — reign as the most common type of exoplanet observed in our galaxy. Despite their prevalence, no such planets exist around our Sun, so these worlds have remained shrouded in mystery. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) recently observed exoplanetContinue reading "JWST reveals secrets of a sub-Neptune exoplanet"

The post JWST reveals secrets of a sub-Neptune exoplanet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: Celebrating David FabriciusMichael E. Bakich
    On May 7, 1617, the German astronomer David Fabricius passed away. A contemporary of Johannes Kepler, the two frequently corresponded. I thought about him the other day when I was observing the Sun. And although I’d rather celebrate his birthday (March 9, 1564), I didn’t want to wait another 10 months to do so. FabriciusContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Celebrating David Fabricius" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Celebrating David Fabricius appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Celebrating David Fabricius

May 7th 2025 at 7:41 pm

On May 7, 1617, the German astronomer David Fabricius passed away. A contemporary of Johannes Kepler, the two frequently corresponded. I thought about him the other day when I was observing the Sun. And although I’d rather celebrate his birthday (March 9, 1564), I didn’t want to wait another 10 months to do so. FabriciusContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Celebrating David Fabricius"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Celebrating David Fabricius appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Standing stoneMark Zastrow
    Sérgio Conceição from Elvas, Portugal The Milky Way arches above the Menhir of Meada, thought to be the largest example on the Iberian Peninsula of a menhir — stones placed upright by Bronze Age (or possibly earlier) peoples for reasons unknown. The imager used a Canon mirrorless camera and 15mm lens to take two minutesContinue reading "Standing stone" The post Standing stone appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Standing stone

May 7th 2025 at 1:30 pm

Sérgio Conceição from Elvas, Portugal The Milky Way arches above the Menhir of Meada, thought to be the largest example on the Iberian Peninsula of a menhir — stones placed upright by Bronze Age (or possibly earlier) peoples for reasons unknown. The imager used a Canon mirrorless camera and 15mm lens to take two minutesContinue reading "Standing stone"

The post Standing stone appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 7: View Venus, Saturn, and NeptuneAlison Klesman
    Venus blazes a bright magnitude –4.7 in the morning sky today. To its right, 1st-magnitude Saturn is also readily visible to the naked eye, while elusive Neptune lies between them. You’ll have a brief opportunity to catch the distant magnitude 7.8 ice giant in your sights with binoculars — or, better yet, a telescope —Continue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 7: View Venus, Saturn, and Neptune" The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 7: View Venus, Saturn, and Neptune appeared first on
     

The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 7: View Venus, Saturn, and Neptune

May 7th 2025 at 8:30 am

Venus blazes a bright magnitude –4.7 in the morning sky today. To its right, 1st-magnitude Saturn is also readily visible to the naked eye, while elusive Neptune lies between them. You’ll have a brief opportunity to catch the distant magnitude 7.8 ice giant in your sights with binoculars — or, better yet, a telescope —Continue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 7: View Venus, Saturn, and Neptune"

The post The Sky Today on Wednesday, May 7: View Venus, Saturn, and Neptune appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cepheus Molecular CloudDavid J. Eicher
    The sky is filled with thousands of amazing objects for you to explore with binoculars or a small telescope. I’ll be highlighting an interesting object or group of objects in this new daily series, Deep-Sky Dreams. This takes me back to my earliest days in amateur astronomy, when I had a pair of binoculars, aContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cepheus Molecular Cloud" The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cepheus Molecular Cloud appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cepheus Molecular Cloud

May 7th 2025 at 12:16 am

The sky is filled with thousands of amazing objects for you to explore with binoculars or a small telescope. I’ll be highlighting an interesting object or group of objects in this new daily series, Deep-Sky Dreams. This takes me back to my earliest days in amateur astronomy, when I had a pair of binoculars, aContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cepheus Molecular Cloud"

The post Deep-Sky Dreams: The Cepheus Molecular Cloud appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope makes its debutDaniela Mata
    NASA launched the SPHEREx Space Observatory this year on March 25 — and the first results are in. The orange-hued image was taken at an infrared wavelength of 3.29 micrometers, capturing a cloud of molecules similar to smoke or soot. The blue-toned image is of the same portion of the sky, but was taken atContinue reading "NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope makes its debut" The post NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope makes its debut appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope makes its debut

May 6th 2025 at 11:34 pm

NASA launched the SPHEREx Space Observatory this year on March 25 — and the first results are in. The orange-hued image was taken at an infrared wavelength of 3.29 micrometers, capturing a cloud of molecules similar to smoke or soot. The blue-toned image is of the same portion of the sky, but was taken atContinue reading "NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope makes its debut"

The post NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope makes its debut appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Hubble examines a twisted galaxySamantha Hill
    The NASA and European Space Agency’s Hubble Space Telescope snapped a mesmerizing shot of an astronomical oddball, known as Arp 184 or NGC 1961. This strange spiral galaxy’s single broad arm earned it a place in Halton Arp’s Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, published in 1966. That structure, along with multiple past supernovae, makes it anContinue reading "Hubble examines a twisted galaxy" The post Hubble examines a twisted galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Hubble examines a twisted galaxy

May 6th 2025 at 6:52 pm

The NASA and European Space Agency’s Hubble Space Telescope snapped a mesmerizing shot of an astronomical oddball, known as Arp 184 or NGC 1961. This strange spiral galaxy’s single broad arm earned it a place in Halton Arp’s Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, published in 1966. That structure, along with multiple past supernovae, makes it anContinue reading "Hubble examines a twisted galaxy"

The post Hubble examines a twisted galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Michael’s Miscellany: Aperture masksMichael E. Bakich
    I hope this series of thoughts (can I call them blogs?) help you become better observers. I’ll include observing tips and techniques, facts about constellations, reviews of books or websites, and trivia. Because there’s no right way to order this series, I’m just going to do the one I’m thinking about on that day. SomeContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Aperture masks" The post Michael’s Miscellany: Aperture masks appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Michael’s Miscellany: Aperture masks

May 6th 2025 at 5:55 pm

I hope this series of thoughts (can I call them blogs?) help you become better observers. I’ll include observing tips and techniques, facts about constellations, reviews of books or websites, and trivia. Because there’s no right way to order this series, I’m just going to do the one I’m thinking about on that day. SomeContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Aperture masks"

The post Michael’s Miscellany: Aperture masks appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A shocking mysteryMark Zastrow
    Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India Abell 35 (Sharpless 2–313) is a nebula in Hydra surrounding a stellar binary, one of which is a white dwarf. The nebula resembles a planetary nebula, produced by a dying star in the process of becoming a white dwarf throwing off its outer layers. However, the prominent bow shockContinue reading "A shocking mystery" The post A shocking mystery appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A shocking mystery

May 6th 2025 at 1:30 pm

Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India Abell 35 (Sharpless 2–313) is a nebula in Hydra surrounding a stellar binary, one of which is a white dwarf. The nebula resembles a planetary nebula, produced by a dying star in the process of becoming a white dwarf throwing off its outer layers. However, the prominent bow shockContinue reading "A shocking mystery"

The post A shocking mystery appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 6: The Eta Aquariids peakAlison Klesman
    This morning is the best time to catch the annual Eta Aquariid meteors, born from the debris left by the famous Halley’s Comet.  The shower’s radiant lies in Aquarius, just to the lower left of the 3rd-magnitude star Sadalmelik as the constellation rises a few hours after midnight. That’s fine, though, because the best timeContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 6: The Eta Aquariids peak" The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 6: The Eta Aquariids peak appeared first on Astronomy Magazin
     

The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 6: The Eta Aquariids peak

May 6th 2025 at 8:30 am

This morning is the best time to catch the annual Eta Aquariid meteors, born from the debris left by the famous Halley’s Comet.  The shower’s radiant lies in Aquarius, just to the lower left of the 3rd-magnitude star Sadalmelik as the constellation rises a few hours after midnight. That’s fine, though, because the best timeContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 6: The Eta Aquariids peak"

The post The Sky Today on Tuesday, May 6: The Eta Aquariids peak appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Starmus Festival stretches continentsDavid J. Eicher
    On Wednesday, April 23, I set off for the Starmus Festival in La Palma, Canary Islands, along with my pal and fellow editor Michael Bakich and his wife Holley. But we didn’t get very far. Multiple delays from Tucson to Dallas meant we would miss our flight to Madrid. We had to wait until FridayContinue reading "Starmus Festival stretches continents" The post Starmus Festival stretches continents appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Starmus Festival stretches continents

May 6th 2025 at 3:22 am

On Wednesday, April 23, I set off for the Starmus Festival in La Palma, Canary Islands, along with my pal and fellow editor Michael Bakich and his wife Holley. But we didn’t get very far. Multiple delays from Tucson to Dallas meant we would miss our flight to Madrid. We had to wait until FridayContinue reading "Starmus Festival stretches continents"

The post Starmus Festival stretches continents appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A speeding pulsar may have ‘broken’ this cosmic boneDaniela Mata
    The Milky Way Galaxy is full of cosmic objects of varying shapes and sizes — sometimes resembling objects here on Earth. A galactic center radio filament called G359.13142-0.20005 (or G359.13 for short) is seen here in X-ray (blue) and radio (gray) light. Astronomers have likened the 230 light-year-long structure to a cosmic “bone” perpendicular toContinue reading "A speeding pulsar may have ‘broken’ this cosmic bone" The post A speeding pulsar may have ‘broken’ this cosmic bone appeared first o
     

A speeding pulsar may have ‘broken’ this cosmic bone

May 6th 2025 at 1:29 am

The Milky Way Galaxy is full of cosmic objects of varying shapes and sizes — sometimes resembling objects here on Earth. A galactic center radio filament called G359.13142-0.20005 (or G359.13 for short) is seen here in X-ray (blue) and radio (gray) light. Astronomers have likened the 230 light-year-long structure to a cosmic “bone” perpendicular toContinue reading "A speeding pulsar may have ‘broken’ this cosmic bone"

The post A speeding pulsar may have ‘broken’ this cosmic bone appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Do black holes exist forever?Astronomy Staff
    Do black holes exist forever? If not, how do they die? If yes, is the number of black holes in the universe always increasing? Eliot H. GinsbergRiverview, Florida Black holes are known for their voracious appetites, consuming everything — even light — that falls inside them with no hope of escape.  But in 1974, StephenContinue reading "Do black holes exist forever?" The post Do black holes exist forever? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Do black holes exist forever?

May 5th 2025 at 9:30 pm

Do black holes exist forever? If not, how do they die? If yes, is the number of black holes in the universe always increasing? Eliot H. GinsbergRiverview, Florida Black holes are known for their voracious appetites, consuming everything — even light — that falls inside them with no hope of escape.  But in 1974, StephenContinue reading "Do black holes exist forever?"

The post Do black holes exist forever? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars and the Beehive ClusterDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out the evening of May 5 to see Mars close to the Beehive Cluster in the constellation Cancer the Crab. In fact, because Mars doesn’t move all that fast, you’ll be able to spot the Red Planet near the open star cluster several days beforeContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars and the Beehive Cluster" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars and the Beehive Cluster appeared first on A
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars and the Beehive Cluster

May 5th 2025 at 5:48 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out the evening of May 5 to see Mars close to the Beehive Cluster in the constellation Cancer the Crab. In fact, because Mars doesn’t move all that fast, you’ll be able to spot the Red Planet near the open star cluster several days beforeContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars and the Beehive Cluster"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars and the Beehive Cluster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky Today on Monday, May 5: Europa vanishes behind JupiterAlison Klesman
    Look west this evening after sunset to catch a glimpse of bright Jupiter, slowly setting between the horns of Taurus the Bull. An hour after sunset, Aldebaran — the Bull’s eye — is getting low, but Jupiter remains some 20° high.  With a telescope, center the stately gas giant in your field of view. It’sContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 5: Europa vanishes behind Jupiter" The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 5: Europa vanishes behind Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky Today on Monday, May 5: Europa vanishes behind Jupiter

May 5th 2025 at 8:30 am

Look west this evening after sunset to catch a glimpse of bright Jupiter, slowly setting between the horns of Taurus the Bull. An hour after sunset, Aldebaran — the Bull’s eye — is getting low, but Jupiter remains some 20° high.  With a telescope, center the stately gas giant in your field of view. It’sContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, May 5: Europa vanishes behind Jupiter"

The post The Sky Today on Monday, May 5: Europa vanishes behind Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Remembering Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the yearMark Zastrow
    Comets are notoriously unpredictable. Some of the most spectacular of these icy visitors pop up unexpectedly, careening toward the Sun and bursting out in spectacular fashion with little advance notice. Others are spotted over a year before they make their closest approach, but break apart and fizzle out. Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS was the rare comet thatContinue reading "Remembering Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year" The post Remembering Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year
     

Remembering Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year

May 5th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Comets are notoriously unpredictable. Some of the most spectacular of these icy visitors pop up unexpectedly, careening toward the Sun and bursting out in spectacular fashion with little advance notice. Others are spotted over a year before they make their closest approach, but break apart and fizzle out. Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS was the rare comet thatContinue reading "Remembering Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year"

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  • Going deepMark Zastrow
    Emanuele La Barbera, taken from Piano Battaglia, Sicily, Italy This deep view of Bode’s Galaxy (M81; center), the Cigar Galaxy (M82; lower left), and NGC 3077 (lower right) is the result of more than 59 hours of HαLRGB exposure split across a a 3.3-inch refractor and 5-inch reflector. The wispy clouds this image reveals areContinue reading "Going deep" The post Going deep appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Going deep

May 5th 2025 at 1:30 pm

Emanuele La Barbera, taken from Piano Battaglia, Sicily, Italy This deep view of Bode’s Galaxy (M81; center), the Cigar Galaxy (M82; lower left), and NGC 3077 (lower right) is the result of more than 59 hours of HαLRGB exposure split across a a 3.3-inch refractor and 5-inch reflector. The wispy clouds this image reveals areContinue reading "Going deep"

The post Going deep appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA budget proposal boosts human exploration — at expense of scienceMark Zastrow
    The White House on Friday released its fiscal year 2026 discretionary budget request, proposing a dramatic reduction in NASA’s overall funding from about $25 billion to $18.8 billion, or about 25 percent. But not all programs will be affected equally. The discretionary or “skinny” budget is akin to a blueprint and is an early stepContinue reading "NASA budget proposal boosts human exploration — at expense of science" The post NASA budget proposal boosts human exploration — at expense of science
     

NASA budget proposal boosts human exploration — at expense of science

May 3rd 2025 at 2:24 am

The White House on Friday released its fiscal year 2026 discretionary budget request, proposing a dramatic reduction in NASA’s overall funding from about $25 billion to $18.8 billion, or about 25 percent. But not all programs will be affected equally. The discretionary or “skinny” budget is akin to a blueprint and is an early stepContinue reading "NASA budget proposal boosts human exploration — at expense of science"

The post NASA budget proposal boosts human exploration — at expense of science appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How much evidence do scientists need to claim they’ve found alien life?Daniela Mata
    The detection of life beyond Earth would be one of the most profound discoveries in the history of science. The Milky Way galaxy alone hosts hundreds of millions of potentially habitable planets. Astronomers are using powerful space telescopes to look for molecular indicators of biology in the atmospheres of the most Earth-like of these planets.Continue reading "How much evidence do scientists need to claim they’ve found alien life?" The post How much evidence do scientists need to claim they’ve
     

How much evidence do scientists need to claim they’ve found alien life?

May 2nd 2025 at 11:21 pm

The detection of life beyond Earth would be one of the most profound discoveries in the history of science. The Milky Way galaxy alone hosts hundreds of millions of potentially habitable planets. Astronomers are using powerful space telescopes to look for molecular indicators of biology in the atmospheres of the most Earth-like of these planets.Continue reading "How much evidence do scientists need to claim they’ve found alien life?"

The post How much evidence do scientists need to claim they’ve found alien life? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Trails of lightMark Zastrow
    Giovanni Passalacqua, taken in Sicily, Italy A flow of glowing lava is echoed by star trails (most prominently Sirius at left) in the skies above an erupting Mount Etna. The photographer used a Canon mirrorless camera and 150mm lens to capture this scene. The post Trails of light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • New astronomy products blossoming this monthAstronomy Staff
    Open sky Sky View TentsBuena Vista, CO The new Sky View XL Stargazing Tent is for those who want coverage while seeking the stars. This 90-by-90-inch (228.6 by 228.6 centimeters) tent offers views of the sky from every angle with a bug mesh specifically crafted for high visibility. It offers enough room for three adultsContinue reading "New astronomy products blossoming this month" The post New astronomy products blossoming this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

New astronomy products blossoming this month

May 2nd 2025 at 4:30 pm

Open sky Sky View TentsBuena Vista, CO The new Sky View XL Stargazing Tent is for those who want coverage while seeking the stars. This 90-by-90-inch (228.6 by 228.6 centimeters) tent offers views of the sky from every angle with a bug mesh specifically crafted for high visibility. It offers enough room for three adultsContinue reading "New astronomy products blossoming this month"

The post New astronomy products blossoming this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from May 2 to 9: The Eta Aquariids peakAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 2Asteroid 4 Vesta reaches opposition at 2 A.M. EDT this morning. The magnitude 5.7 main-belt world is visible all night throughout the month of May, arcing slowly through Libra the Balance. The best time to view it is overnight around local midnight,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from May 2 to 9: The Eta Aquariids peak" The post The Sky This Week from May 2 to 9: The Eta Aquariids peak appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from May 2 to 9: The Eta Aquariids peak

May 2nd 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, May 2Asteroid 4 Vesta reaches opposition at 2 A.M. EDT this morning. The magnitude 5.7 main-belt world is visible all night throughout the month of May, arcing slowly through Libra the Balance. The best time to view it is overnight around local midnight,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from May 2 to 9: The Eta Aquariids peak"

The post The Sky This Week from May 2 to 9: The Eta Aquariids peak appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • World’s biggest solar telescope captures sunspots as never seen beforeDaniela Mata
    A brand-new instrument has captured a cluster of sunspots — dark surface spots caused by strong magnetic fields — on our glorious Sun in an unprecedented amount of detail. This image was taken during the first-light observation of the new Visible Tunable Filter (VTF), which was recently installed on the U.S. National Science Foundation’s DanielContinue reading "World’s biggest solar telescope captures sunspots as never seen before" The post World’s biggest solar telescope captures sunspots as ne
     

World’s biggest solar telescope captures sunspots as never seen before

May 2nd 2025 at 12:06 am

A brand-new instrument has captured a cluster of sunspots — dark surface spots caused by strong magnetic fields — on our glorious Sun in an unprecedented amount of detail. This image was taken during the first-light observation of the new Visible Tunable Filter (VTF), which was recently installed on the U.S. National Science Foundation’s DanielContinue reading "World’s biggest solar telescope captures sunspots as never seen before"

The post World’s biggest solar telescope captures sunspots as never seen before appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Can we detect alien artifacts?Seth Shostak
    There are tens of billions of Sun-like stars in the Milky Way, an immense tally that encourages the possibility that extraterrestrial life peppers the universe. Finding evidence for aliens — even microscopic ones — would confirm the widespread belief that life is not an unlikely event, constrained to a small number of planets and moons.Continue reading "Can we detect alien artifacts?" The post Can we detect alien artifacts? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Can we detect alien artifacts?

May 1st 2025 at 4:30 pm

There are tens of billions of Sun-like stars in the Milky Way, an immense tally that encourages the possibility that extraterrestrial life peppers the universe. Finding evidence for aliens — even microscopic ones — would confirm the widespread belief that life is not an unlikely event, constrained to a small number of planets and moons.Continue reading "Can we detect alien artifacts?"

The post Can we detect alien artifacts? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • MoonhattanhengeMark Zastrow
    David Gluchowski from Brooklyn, New York City Sitting in the middle of 42nd Street (waiting for a bus?) is a day-old crescent Moon in this shot taken at 9:10 p.m. on April 28. The photographer used a Canon mirrorless camera and 600mm lens, taking a 1/15-second exposure at f/6.3 and ISO 1600. The post Moonhattanhenge appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Moonhattanhenge

May 1st 2025 at 1:30 pm

David Gluchowski from Brooklyn, New York City Sitting in the middle of 42nd Street (waiting for a bus?) is a day-old crescent Moon in this shot taken at 9:10 p.m. on April 28. The photographer used a Canon mirrorless camera and 600mm lens, taking a 1/15-second exposure at f/6.3 and ISO 1600.

The post Moonhattanhenge appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

May 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Jupiter and Mars shine in the evening, while more planets gather before dawn

May 1st 2025 at 8:31 am

Jupiter and Mars are on display during May evenings. It’s your last chance to grab a good view of Jupiter before it drops out of sight for midsummer. A gathering of planets in the morning sky offers some nice opportunities, and in the first week of May they’re joined by meteors from the annual EtaContinue reading "May 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Jupiter and Mars shine in the evening, while more planets gather before dawn"

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  • May 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?Alison Klesman
    As twilight fades to night these May evenings, Mars stands out in the northern sky. It begins the month near the center of Cancer the Crab not far from the magnificent Beehive star cluster (M44). The planet passes less than 1° north of the cluster during May’s first week. Mars’ eastward motion carries it intoContinue reading "May 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?" The post May 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

May 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?

May 1st 2025 at 8:30 am

As twilight fades to night these May evenings, Mars stands out in the northern sky. It begins the month near the center of Cancer the Crab not far from the magnificent Beehive star cluster (M44). The planet passes less than 1° north of the cluster during May’s first week. Mars’ eastward motion carries it intoContinue reading "May 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

The post May 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Review: The RedCat 91 is a refractor everyone should wantSamantha Hill
    Wide-field imaging is a passion of mine. Something about capturing a large swath of the night sky filled with delicate billows of ionized hydrogen stimulates the imagination and creates a sense of awe at the beauty of our universe. For two years, my favorite wide-field refractor has been my William Optics RedCat 71, but I’veContinue reading "Review: The RedCat 91 is a refractor everyone should want" The post Review: The RedCat 91 is a refractor everyone should want appeared first on Astronomy Ma
     

Review: The RedCat 91 is a refractor everyone should want

April 30th 2025 at 5:37 pm

Wide-field imaging is a passion of mine. Something about capturing a large swath of the night sky filled with delicate billows of ionized hydrogen stimulates the imagination and creates a sense of awe at the beauty of our universe. For two years, my favorite wide-field refractor has been my William Optics RedCat 71, but I’veContinue reading "Review: The RedCat 91 is a refractor everyone should want"

The post Review: The RedCat 91 is a refractor everyone should want appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • New findings suggest dark energy may be changing over timeAlison Klesman
    Our universe has been expanding ever since it was born in the Big Bang. For decades, most cosmologists believed the universe’s expansion was slowing. Gravity, pulling on all matter, would eventually overcome the momentum from the Big Bang, halting or even reversing the expansion. But in 1998, supernova observations revealed a surprise: the universe isContinue reading "New findings suggest dark energy may be changing over time" The post New findings suggest dark energy may be changing over time a
     

New findings suggest dark energy may be changing over time

April 30th 2025 at 5:30 pm

Our universe has been expanding ever since it was born in the Big Bang. For decades, most cosmologists believed the universe’s expansion was slowing. Gravity, pulling on all matter, would eventually overcome the momentum from the Big Bang, halting or even reversing the expansion. But in 1998, supernova observations revealed a surprise: the universe isContinue reading "New findings suggest dark energy may be changing over time"

The post New findings suggest dark energy may be changing over time appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA gives OK to build drone that will fly on Saturn’s moon TitanBen Evans
    About 800 million miles (1.2 billion kilometers) from Earth lies cloud-cloaked Titan, largest of Saturn’s 146-strong retinue of moons. In this dark, subfreezing patch of the outer solar system, the Sun glows at barely 1 percent of its strength in Earth’s skies. It’s hardly an ideal place to search for life, but impossible as itContinue reading "NASA gives OK to build drone that will fly on Saturn’s moon Titan" The post NASA gives OK to build drone that will fly on Saturn’s moon Titan appeared fi
     

NASA gives OK to build drone that will fly on Saturn’s moon Titan

By: Ben Evans
April 29th 2025 at 3:30 pm

About 800 million miles (1.2 billion kilometers) from Earth lies cloud-cloaked Titan, largest of Saturn’s 146-strong retinue of moons. In this dark, subfreezing patch of the outer solar system, the Sun glows at barely 1 percent of its strength in Earth’s skies. It’s hardly an ideal place to search for life, but impossible as itContinue reading "NASA gives OK to build drone that will fly on Saturn’s moon Titan"

The post NASA gives OK to build drone that will fly on Saturn’s moon Titan appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A twisted galaxyMark Zastrow
    Emil Andronic from Hemel Hempstead, U.K. The unusual shape of NGC 3718 is a barred spiral galaxy with an unusual, twisted shape — likely due to interactions with nearby NGC 3729. Lying around 120 million light-years away, it’s also listed as the 214th entry in Halton Arp’s Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies. This imager took 37⅓Continue reading "A twisted galaxy" The post A twisted galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A twisted galaxy

April 28th 2025 at 9:11 pm

Emil Andronic from Hemel Hempstead, U.K. The unusual shape of NGC 3718 is a barred spiral galaxy with an unusual, twisted shape — likely due to interactions with nearby NGC 3729. Lying around 120 million light-years away, it’s also listed as the 214th entry in Halton Arp’s Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies. This imager took 37⅓Continue reading "A twisted galaxy"

The post A twisted galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Whirlpool GalaxyDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out in the evening this spring to observe one of the sky’s finest deep-sky objects: the Whirlpool Galaxy, also known as M51. And as a bonus, you’ll also see a second galaxy — NGC 5195 — interacting with the Whirlpool. You’ll need a medium size telescope, such as aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Whirlpool Galaxy" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Whirlpool Galaxy appeared
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Whirlpool Galaxy

April 28th 2025 at 6:16 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out in the evening this spring to observe one of the sky’s finest deep-sky objects: the Whirlpool Galaxy, also known as M51. And as a bonus, you’ll also see a second galaxy — NGC 5195 — interacting with the Whirlpool. You’ll need a medium size telescope, such as aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Whirlpool Galaxy"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Whirlpool Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How does the universe make antimatter?Alison Klesman
    Our universe is filled with particles, such as electrons and protons, which make up all the stuff on our planet and beyond: animals, plants, people, planets, asteroids, stars, gas clouds, and galaxies. Antimatter was first discovered in 1928 by physicist Paul Dirac, but it wasn’t through any experiment. Instead, he was working to blend theContinue reading "How does the universe make antimatter?" The post How does the universe make antimatter? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How does the universe make antimatter?

April 28th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Our universe is filled with particles, such as electrons and protons, which make up all the stuff on our planet and beyond: animals, plants, people, planets, asteroids, stars, gas clouds, and galaxies. Antimatter was first discovered in 1928 by physicist Paul Dirac, but it wasn’t through any experiment. Instead, he was working to blend theContinue reading "How does the universe make antimatter?"

The post How does the universe make antimatter? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers find a strange pulsar blinking in slow motionAlison Klesman
    About 2,600 light-years away, a dead star is sending signals from beyond the grave.  Astronomers recently found the strange beacon, which appears to be a pulsar blinking in slow motion — something that shouldn’t be possible. “It’s incredibly exciting to discover such a long-period pulsar,” says Yuanming Wang, a postdoctoral researcher at Swinburne University inContinue reading "Astronomers find a strange pulsar blinking in slow motion" The post Astronomers find a strange pulsar blinking in slow
     

Astronomers find a strange pulsar blinking in slow motion

April 25th 2025 at 9:38 pm

About 2,600 light-years away, a dead star is sending signals from beyond the grave.  Astronomers recently found the strange beacon, which appears to be a pulsar blinking in slow motion — something that shouldn’t be possible. “It’s incredibly exciting to discover such a long-period pulsar,” says Yuanming Wang, a postdoctoral researcher at Swinburne University inContinue reading "Astronomers find a strange pulsar blinking in slow motion"

The post Astronomers find a strange pulsar blinking in slow motion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from April 25 to May 2: Venus at its brightestAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 25The Moon passes 1.9° due north of Neptune at 6 A.M. EDT this morning. Early rises will be able to catch the Moon hanging between Venus and Mercury in the predawn sky — check out last week’s column for details.   LaterContinue reading "The Sky This Week from April 25 to May 2: Venus at its brightest" The post The Sky This Week from April 25 to May 2: Venus at its brightest appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from April 25 to May 2: Venus at its brightest

April 25th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 25The Moon passes 1.9° due north of Neptune at 6 A.M. EDT this morning. Early rises will be able to catch the Moon hanging between Venus and Mercury in the predawn sky — check out last week’s column for details.   LaterContinue reading "The Sky This Week from April 25 to May 2: Venus at its brightest"

The post The Sky This Week from April 25 to May 2: Venus at its brightest appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A nearby planetaryMark Zastrow
    Andrea Arbizzi from Modena, Italy In May 1980, Alois Purgathofer and Ronald Weinberger discovered this faint planetary nebula, now known as Purgathofer-Weinberger 1 (PuWe 1). It lies just 1,300 light-years away in Lynx and is the second-largest known planetary in apparent size, with a diameter two-thirds that of the Full Moon. The imager took 28Continue reading "A nearby planetary" The post A nearby planetary appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A nearby planetary

April 25th 2025 at 12:25 am

Andrea Arbizzi from Modena, Italy In May 1980, Alois Purgathofer and Ronald Weinberger discovered this faint planetary nebula, now known as Purgathofer-Weinberger 1 (PuWe 1). It lies just 1,300 light-years away in Lynx and is the second-largest known planetary in apparent size, with a diameter two-thirds that of the Full Moon. The imager took 28Continue reading "A nearby planetary"

The post A nearby planetary appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Hubble’s best images, 35 years since its launchSamantha Hill
    In the 35 years since the Hubble Space Telescope flew to space, it has taken pictures of comets, merging galaxies, planets, supernova remnants, and more. The first-of-its-kind telescope — a joint NASA and European Space Agency effort — was lofted aboard the shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990. Since then it has made nearly 1.7Continue reading "Hubble’s best images, 35 years since its launch" The post Hubble’s best images, 35 years since its launch appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Hubble’s best images, 35 years since its launch

April 24th 2025 at 10:37 pm

In the 35 years since the Hubble Space Telescope flew to space, it has taken pictures of comets, merging galaxies, planets, supernova remnants, and more. The first-of-its-kind telescope — a joint NASA and European Space Agency effort — was lofted aboard the shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990. Since then it has made nearly 1.7Continue reading "Hubble’s best images, 35 years since its launch"

The post Hubble’s best images, 35 years since its launch appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Euclid unveils treasure trove of 380,000 galaxies in first major data releaseSamantha Hill
    Last month, the European Space Agency (ESA) released a huge dataset from its space telescope Euclid. The release featured three deep-field mosaics glittering with 380,000 galaxies and hundreds of examples where the light of distant objects is bent and magnified by the gravitational influence of massive galaxies. The mosaics were captured in the constellations ofContinue reading "Euclid unveils treasure trove of 380,000 galaxies in first major data release" The post Euclid unveils treasure trove
     

Euclid unveils treasure trove of 380,000 galaxies in first major data release

April 24th 2025 at 8:32 pm

Last month, the European Space Agency (ESA) released a huge dataset from its space telescope Euclid. The release featured three deep-field mosaics glittering with 380,000 galaxies and hundreds of examples where the light of distant objects is bent and magnified by the gravitational influence of massive galaxies. The mosaics were captured in the constellations ofContinue reading "Euclid unveils treasure trove of 380,000 galaxies in first major data release"

The post Euclid unveils treasure trove of 380,000 galaxies in first major data release appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Peanut-shaped surprise for Lucy in asteroid flybySamantha Hill
    NASA’s Lucy spacecraft visited the asteroid 52246 Donaldjohanson on Sunday, April 20, coming within 600 miles (920 kilometers) of the object located in the inner region of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.  The asteroid was named after the paleontologist Donald Johanson, who in 1974 co-discovered the first identified example of previously unknown typeContinue reading "Peanut-shaped surprise for Lucy in asteroid flyby" The post Peanut-shaped surprise for Lucy in asteroid flyby appeared
     

Peanut-shaped surprise for Lucy in asteroid flyby

April 24th 2025 at 12:50 am

NASA’s Lucy spacecraft visited the asteroid 52246 Donaldjohanson on Sunday, April 20, coming within 600 miles (920 kilometers) of the object located in the inner region of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.  The asteroid was named after the paleontologist Donald Johanson, who in 1974 co-discovered the first identified example of previously unknown typeContinue reading "Peanut-shaped surprise for Lucy in asteroid flyby"

The post Peanut-shaped surprise for Lucy in asteroid flyby appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Blood glowMark Zastrow
    Steve Leonard from Markham, Ontario, Canada The visual appearance of the March 13/14 total lunar eclipse was captured in this composite of three stacks of images: One for the eclipsed Moon, one for the background star field, and a third stack of overexposed frames to capture the diffuse glow around the Moon. The imager usingContinue reading "Blood glow" The post Blood glow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Blood glow

April 23rd 2025 at 1:39 am

Steve Leonard from Markham, Ontario, Canada The visual appearance of the March 13/14 total lunar eclipse was captured in this composite of three stacks of images: One for the eclipsed Moon, one for the background star field, and a third stack of overexposed frames to capture the diffuse glow around the Moon. The imager usingContinue reading "Blood glow"

The post Blood glow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning SkyDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out before sunrise and view brilliant Venus. The planet, which is only outshone by the Sun or the Moon, will lie low in the eastern sky. It will rise and hour or so before the Sun. Even as morning twilight begins to brighten the sky,Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning Sky" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning Sky appeared first on Astronomy Maga
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning Sky

April 21st 2025 at 5:49 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out before sunrise and view brilliant Venus. The planet, which is only outshone by the Sun or the Moon, will lie low in the eastern sky. It will rise and hour or so before the Sun. Even as morning twilight begins to brighten the sky,Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning Sky"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning Sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Scintillating star trailsMark Zastrow
    Huang Dandan/Liu Dongyu, taken from Ming’antu Town, Xilin Gol League, Inner Mongolia, China The stars spin above the north-south-aligned antennas of the Interplanetary Scintillation Observation (IPS) Telescope, China’s first radio telescope for studying interplanetary scintillation. This stacked image was captured with a Sony mirrorless camera and 14mm lens, with 15-second exposures at f/3.2 and ISOContinue reading "Scintillating star trails" The post Scintillating star trails appeared first on
     

Scintillating star trails

April 19th 2025 at 3:06 am

Huang Dandan/Liu Dongyu, taken from Ming’antu Town, Xilin Gol League, Inner Mongolia, China The stars spin above the north-south-aligned antennas of the Interplanetary Scintillation Observation (IPS) Telescope, China’s first radio telescope for studying interplanetary scintillation. This stacked image was captured with a Sony mirrorless camera and 14mm lens, with 15-second exposures at f/3.2 and ISOContinue reading "Scintillating star trails"

The post Scintillating star trails appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • PUNCH sees first light, prepares to study how the Sun creates our space weatherAlison Klesman
    NASA’s Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH) mission launched March 12, sending up a constellation of four Earth-orbiting satellites with the goal of studying how the Sun’s activity influences the space environment around Earth. This week, the four satellites opened their cameras to the sky and captured their so-called first light images inContinue reading "PUNCH sees first light, prepares to study how the Sun creates our space weather" The post PUNCH sees first light, prepares
     

PUNCH sees first light, prepares to study how the Sun creates our space weather

April 18th 2025 at 11:30 pm

NASA’s Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH) mission launched March 12, sending up a constellation of four Earth-orbiting satellites with the goal of studying how the Sun’s activity influences the space environment around Earth. This week, the four satellites opened their cameras to the sky and captured their so-called first light images inContinue reading "PUNCH sees first light, prepares to study how the Sun creates our space weather"

The post PUNCH sees first light, prepares to study how the Sun creates our space weather appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A dark, dusty pillar stretches across re-released Hubble imageSamantha Hill
    Looking like a bird ready to take flight from atop a post, this dusty filament within the Eagle Nebula was recently captured in intricate detail by the Hubble Space Telescope.  Also known as M16, this nebula lies some 7,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Serpens the Serpent and surrounds an open star cluster. ThisContinue reading "A dark, dusty pillar stretches across re-released Hubble image" The post A dark, dusty pillar stretches across re-released Hubble image appeared first on
     

A dark, dusty pillar stretches across re-released Hubble image

April 18th 2025 at 10:44 pm

Looking like a bird ready to take flight from atop a post, this dusty filament within the Eagle Nebula was recently captured in intricate detail by the Hubble Space Telescope.  Also known as M16, this nebula lies some 7,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Serpens the Serpent and surrounds an open star cluster. ThisContinue reading "A dark, dusty pillar stretches across re-released Hubble image"

The post A dark, dusty pillar stretches across re-released Hubble image appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Astronomers find a rare ‘dark galaxy’ within our Local GroupAlison Klesman
    Be careful out there, astronomers: There could be a dark galaxy in our midst.  In research published today in Science Advances, researchers from the Chinese National Academy of Sciences discovered that a fast-moving cloud of gas near the Milky Way may not be a cloud at all, but rather a small galaxy made mostly ofContinue reading "Astronomers find a rare ‘dark galaxy’ within our Local Group" The post Astronomers find a rare ‘dark galaxy’ within our Local Group appeared first on Astronomy Magazin
     

Astronomers find a rare ‘dark galaxy’ within our Local Group

April 18th 2025 at 9:30 pm

Be careful out there, astronomers: There could be a dark galaxy in our midst.  In research published today in Science Advances, researchers from the Chinese National Academy of Sciences discovered that a fast-moving cloud of gas near the Milky Way may not be a cloud at all, but rather a small galaxy made mostly ofContinue reading "Astronomers find a rare ‘dark galaxy’ within our Local Group"

The post Astronomers find a rare ‘dark galaxy’ within our Local Group appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from April 18 to 25: The Lyrid meteor shower peaksAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 18Jupiter still rules the early-evening skies, standing prominently in Taurus in the west as darkness falls. Located between the two horns of Taurus the Bull and above its red giant eye, Aldebaran, Jupiter is the brightest point of light in the west,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from April 18 to 25: The Lyrid meteor shower peaks" The post The Sky This Week from April 18 to 25: The Lyrid meteor shower peaks appeared first o
     

The Sky This Week from April 18 to 25: The Lyrid meteor shower peaks

April 18th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 18Jupiter still rules the early-evening skies, standing prominently in Taurus in the west as darkness falls. Located between the two horns of Taurus the Bull and above its red giant eye, Aldebaran, Jupiter is the brightest point of light in the west,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from April 18 to 25: The Lyrid meteor shower peaks"

The post The Sky This Week from April 18 to 25: The Lyrid meteor shower peaks appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • M83: Big, bright, and beautifulRichard Talcott
    The Southern Pinwheel Galaxy (M83) in Hydra checks almost every box an amateur astronomer could desire. This stunning barred spiral spans a hefty 14′ and, at magnitude 7.5, ranks among the sky’s 10 brightest galaxies. Its only drawback is location — at a declination of –30°, it lies farther south than any other galaxy inContinue reading "M83: Big, bright, and beautiful" The post M83: Big, bright, and beautiful appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

M83: Big, bright, and beautiful

April 17th 2025 at 4:30 pm

The Southern Pinwheel Galaxy (M83) in Hydra checks almost every box an amateur astronomer could desire. This stunning barred spiral spans a hefty 14′ and, at magnitude 7.5, ranks among the sky’s 10 brightest galaxies. Its only drawback is location — at a declination of –30°, it lies farther south than any other galaxy inContinue reading "M83: Big, bright, and beautiful"

The post M83: Big, bright, and beautiful appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • K2-18 b could have dimethyl sulfide in its air. But is it a sign of life?Mark Zastrow
    Scientists have reported new observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) that strengthen the case that the exoplanet K2-18 b has molecules in its atmosphere that, on Earth, are produced only by life. The work, announced Wednesday, builds on previous observations from JWST published in 2023 by the same team that yielded weak hintsContinue reading "K2-18 b could have dimethyl sulfide in its air. But is it a sign of life?" The post K2-18 b could have dimethyl sulfide in its air. But
     

K2-18 b could have dimethyl sulfide in its air. But is it a sign of life?

April 17th 2025 at 9:10 am

Scientists have reported new observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) that strengthen the case that the exoplanet K2-18 b has molecules in its atmosphere that, on Earth, are produced only by life. The work, announced Wednesday, builds on previous observations from JWST published in 2023 by the same team that yielded weak hintsContinue reading "K2-18 b could have dimethyl sulfide in its air. But is it a sign of life?"

The post K2-18 b could have dimethyl sulfide in its air. But is it a sign of life? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Vast bolsters commercial space station plans with key agreementsAlison Klesman
    Vast Space, one of several commercial firms vying to replace the International Space Station (ISS) following its planned deorbit at the end of the decade, this week signed key agreements that heighten the competition. At the 40th Space Symposium in Colorado, where Vast’s Haven-1 space station was on display, the company secured deals that give it direct ISS access andContinue reading "Vast bolsters commercial space station plans with key agreements" The post Vast bolsters commercial space statio
     

Vast bolsters commercial space station plans with key agreements

April 16th 2025 at 8:30 pm

Vast Space, one of several commercial firms vying to replace the International Space Station (ISS) following its planned deorbit at the end of the decade, this week signed key agreements that heighten the competition. At the 40th Space Symposium in Colorado, where Vast’s Haven-1 space station was on display, the company secured deals that give it direct ISS access andContinue reading "Vast bolsters commercial space station plans with key agreements"

The post Vast bolsters commercial space station plans with key agreements appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • NASA Chief nominee Isaacman fields questions about Moon, Mars, MuskAlison Klesman
    Shift4 Payments CEO Jared Isaacman, President Donald Trump’s nominee for NASA administrator, finally got his day in the Senate and laid out his vision for the space agency to pursue missions to both the Moon and Mars. During Isaacman’s confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on Wednesday, the billionaire entrepreneur and civilian astronaut fieldedContinue reading "NASA Chief nominee Isaacman fields questions about Moon, Mars, Musk" The post NASA
     

NASA Chief nominee Isaacman fields questions about Moon, Mars, Musk

April 16th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Shift4 Payments CEO Jared Isaacman, President Donald Trump’s nominee for NASA administrator, finally got his day in the Senate and laid out his vision for the space agency to pursue missions to both the Moon and Mars. During Isaacman’s confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on Wednesday, the billionaire entrepreneur and civilian astronaut fieldedContinue reading "NASA Chief nominee Isaacman fields questions about Moon, Mars, Musk"

The post NASA Chief nominee Isaacman fields questions about Moon, Mars, Musk appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Keeping up in the second Space Race takes diligenceAlison Klesman
    The U.S. is in the midst of a second Space Race, and NASA is in a time crunch. The space agency is preparing to send American astronauts to the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era. But after delaying the Artemis III lunar landing twice in 2024, there is much work to beContinue reading "Keeping up in the second Space Race takes diligence" The post Keeping up in the second Space Race takes diligence appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Keeping up in the second Space Race takes diligence

April 15th 2025 at 11:00 pm

The U.S. is in the midst of a second Space Race, and NASA is in a time crunch. The space agency is preparing to send American astronauts to the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era. But after delaying the Artemis III lunar landing twice in 2024, there is much work to beContinue reading "Keeping up in the second Space Race takes diligence"

The post Keeping up in the second Space Race takes diligence appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Blue Origin flies Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other customers to spaceAlison Klesman
    On Monday morning, an all-female group of civilians including pop star Katy Perry and award-winning broadcast journalist Gayle King flew to the edge of space and back. Perry, King, and four others were selected as the crew of Blue Origin’s New Shepard Mission 31 (NS-31), which launched at 9:30 a.m. EDT from the company’s Launch Site OneContinue reading "Blue Origin flies Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other customers to space" The post Blue Origin flies Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other customers t
     

Blue Origin flies Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other customers to space

April 15th 2025 at 9:07 pm

On Monday morning, an all-female group of civilians including pop star Katy Perry and award-winning broadcast journalist Gayle King flew to the edge of space and back. Perry, King, and four others were selected as the crew of Blue Origin’s New Shepard Mission 31 (NS-31), which launched at 9:30 a.m. EDT from the company’s Launch Site OneContinue reading "Blue Origin flies Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other customers to space"

The post Blue Origin flies Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other customers to space appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • JWST spots the earliest galaxy yet clearing the universe’s hydrogen ‘fog’Alison Klesman
    Since it began collecting data, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has shined a light on the early universe, helping us better understand the timeline of events that led to our modern-day cosmos.  In a paper published March 26 in Nature, a University of Copenhagen-led team reports finding a galaxy right at a crucial momentContinue reading "JWST spots the earliest galaxy yet clearing the universe’s hydrogen ‘fog’" The post JWST spots the earliest galaxy yet clearing the universe’s hydrogen ‘fo
     

JWST spots the earliest galaxy yet clearing the universe’s hydrogen ‘fog’

April 15th 2025 at 8:48 pm

Since it began collecting data, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has shined a light on the early universe, helping us better understand the timeline of events that led to our modern-day cosmos.  In a paper published March 26 in Nature, a University of Copenhagen-led team reports finding a galaxy right at a crucial momentContinue reading "JWST spots the earliest galaxy yet clearing the universe’s hydrogen ‘fog’"

The post JWST spots the earliest galaxy yet clearing the universe’s hydrogen ‘fog’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Why meteorites that hit Earth have less water than the asteroid bits brought back by space probes — a planetary scientist explains

April 15th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Much of what scientists know about the early solar system comes from meteorites – ancient rocks that travel through space and survive a fiery plunge through Earth’s atmosphere. Among meteorites, one type – called carbonaceous chondrites – stands out as the most primitive and provides a unique glimpse into the solar system’s infancy. The carbonaceousContinue reading "Why meteorites that hit Earth have less water than the asteroid bits brought back by space probes — a planetary scientist explains"

The post Why meteorites that hit Earth have less water than the asteroid bits brought back by space probes — a planetary scientist explains appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Upon further reflectionMark Zastrow
    Pete Scifres from Westlake Village, California Reflection Canyon, located at the end of an 8-mile hike into Utah’s Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, serves as the foreground for this view of the spring Milky Way. The photographer captured the sky with a Canon mirrorless camera and a 15-second exposure at f/1.8 and ISO 4000 withContinue reading "Upon further reflection" The post Upon further reflection appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Upon further reflection

April 15th 2025 at 5:25 am

Pete Scifres from Westlake Village, California Reflection Canyon, located at the end of an 8-mile hike into Utah’s Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, serves as the foreground for this view of the spring Milky Way. The photographer captured the sky with a Canon mirrorless camera and a 15-second exposure at f/1.8 and ISO 4000 withContinue reading "Upon further reflection"

The post Upon further reflection appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Trump’s nomination for NASA leader boasts business and commercial spaceflight experience

Jared Isaacman, billionaire, CEO and nominee to become the next NASA administrator, faced questions on April 9, 2025, from members of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation during his confirmation hearing for the position. Should the Senate confirm him, Isaacman will be the first billionaire – but not the first astronaut – to head NASA. Perhaps evenContinue reading "Trump’s nomination for NASA leader boasts business and commercial spaceflight experience"

The post Trump’s nomination for NASA leader boasts business and commercial spaceflight experience appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Before Einstein, what did astronomers think powered the Sun?Astronomy Staff
    Before Einstein, special relativity, and E = mc2, what was the prevailing theory on the Sun’s seemingly eternal energy? William FieldsDayton, Ohio The question of what energy source powers the Sun has been around for literally centuries. During the 1800s, some thought that a constant shower of meteors onto the Sun might do the trick.Continue reading "Before Einstein, what did astronomers think powered the Sun?" The post Before Einstein, what did astronomers think powered the Sun? appeared first
     

Before Einstein, what did astronomers think powered the Sun?

April 14th 2025 at 9:30 pm

Before Einstein, special relativity, and E = mc2, what was the prevailing theory on the Sun’s seemingly eternal energy? William FieldsDayton, Ohio The question of what energy source powers the Sun has been around for literally centuries. During the 1800s, some thought that a constant shower of meteors onto the Sun might do the trick.Continue reading "Before Einstein, what did astronomers think powered the Sun?"

The post Before Einstein, what did astronomers think powered the Sun? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A conjunction of planetsDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and view a close grouping of planets in the early morning hours of April 21. That morning, you’ll be able to see Venus, Mercury, and Saturn low in the east. You won’t need a telescope or binoculars to view them, just use your eyes.Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A conjunction of planets" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A conjunction of planets appeared first on Astronomy Ma
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A conjunction of planets

April 14th 2025 at 5:59 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and view a close grouping of planets in the early morning hours of April 21. That morning, you’ll be able to see Venus, Mercury, and Saturn low in the east. You won’t need a telescope or binoculars to view them, just use your eyes.Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A conjunction of planets"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A conjunction of planets appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Don’t want to observe alone? Go to a star party!shill
    Time under dark skies is precious, and for a lot of us, getting out to those sites can be tough. When we do, often we end up observing alone, or with a few intrepid others at an astronomy club observing session. And sometimes that solitude is what we’re looking for: just you and the sky.Continue reading "Don’t want to observe alone? Go to a star party!" The post Don’t want to observe alone? Go to a star party! appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Don’t want to observe alone? Go to a star party!

By: shill
April 14th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Time under dark skies is precious, and for a lot of us, getting out to those sites can be tough. When we do, often we end up observing alone, or with a few intrepid others at an astronomy club observing session. And sometimes that solitude is what we’re looking for: just you and the sky.Continue reading "Don’t want to observe alone? Go to a star party!"

The post Don’t want to observe alone? Go to a star party! appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • No relief for astronomy industry in new tariff exemptionsMark Zastrow
    Exceptions announced late Friday night to the Trump administration’s so-called “reciprocal tariffs” are unlikely to provide any relief to the amateur astronomy industry, as they do not cover categories for telescopes, mounts, or digital cameras. The updated guidance from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) affects the reciprocal tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald TrumpContinue reading "No relief for astronomy industry in new tariff exemptions" The post No relief for astronomy industry
     

No relief for astronomy industry in new tariff exemptions

April 12th 2025 at 11:03 pm

Exceptions announced late Friday night to the Trump administration’s so-called “reciprocal tariffs” are unlikely to provide any relief to the amateur astronomy industry, as they do not cover categories for telescopes, mounts, or digital cameras. The updated guidance from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) affects the reciprocal tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald TrumpContinue reading "No relief for astronomy industry in new tariff exemptions"

The post No relief for astronomy industry in new tariff exemptions appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • NASA faced with massive budget cuts in White House proposalSamantha Hill
    NASA could see a 20 percent cut to its overall 2026 budget, with funding for its science division slashed in half, if a preliminary budget proposal from the White House is enacted. The cuts would, among other impacts, cancel several missions and shut down NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. The proposed cuts were laid outContinue reading "NASA faced with massive budget cuts in White House proposal" The post NASA faced with massive budget cuts in White House proposal appeared first on Astronomy M
     

NASA faced with massive budget cuts in White House proposal

April 12th 2025 at 1:45 am

NASA could see a 20 percent cut to its overall 2026 budget, with funding for its science division slashed in half, if a preliminary budget proposal from the White House is enacted. The cuts would, among other impacts, cancel several missions and shut down NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. The proposed cuts were laid outContinue reading "NASA faced with massive budget cuts in White House proposal"

The post NASA faced with massive budget cuts in White House proposal appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • C/2025 F2 (SWAN): A new comet is in the spring skyMichael E. Bakich
    In late March, three amateur astronomers discovered Comet C/2025 F2 (SWAN). Immediately, predictions began appearing online stating the brightness this object might reach. But, as comet discoverer David Levy says, “Comets are like cats. They have tails and do what they want.”  In other words, don’t bet the house that current predictions will come true.Continue reading "C/2025 F2 (SWAN): A new comet is in the spring sky" The post C/2025 F2 (SWAN): A new comet is in the spring sky appeared first o
     

C/2025 F2 (SWAN): A new comet is in the spring sky

April 12th 2025 at 12:27 am

In late March, three amateur astronomers discovered Comet C/2025 F2 (SWAN). Immediately, predictions began appearing online stating the brightness this object might reach. But, as comet discoverer David Levy says, “Comets are like cats. They have tails and do what they want.”  In other words, don’t bet the house that current predictions will come true.Continue reading "C/2025 F2 (SWAN): A new comet is in the spring sky"

The post C/2025 F2 (SWAN): A new comet is in the spring sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from April 11 to 18: The April Full Pink Moon shinesAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 11An hour after sunset, the bright planet Jupiter stands out in eastern Taurus, forming a V with the two tips of the Bull’s horns, Zeta (ζ) Tauri and Gamma (γ) Aurigae. Below Jupiter shines Aldebaran, the Bull’s alpha star, a magnitude 0.9Continue reading "The Sky This Week from April 11 to 18: The April Full Pink Moon shines" The post The Sky This Week from April 11 to 18: The April Full Pink Moon shines appeared first on Astro
     

The Sky This Week from April 11 to 18: The April Full Pink Moon shines

April 11th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 11An hour after sunset, the bright planet Jupiter stands out in eastern Taurus, forming a V with the two tips of the Bull’s horns, Zeta (ζ) Tauri and Gamma (γ) Aurigae. Below Jupiter shines Aldebaran, the Bull’s alpha star, a magnitude 0.9Continue reading "The Sky This Week from April 11 to 18: The April Full Pink Moon shines"

The post The Sky This Week from April 11 to 18: The April Full Pink Moon shines appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Amateur astronomy industry grapples with tariff chaosMark Zastrow
    The telescope industry in the U.S. has been thrown into chaos as a result of the Trump administration’s escalating trade conflict with China, as manufacturers contemplate price hikes and worry about the possibility of slowing demand. In the latest round of tariffs, U.S. President Donald Trump announced April 9 that duties on goods imported fromContinue reading "Amateur astronomy industry grapples with tariff chaos" The post Amateur astronomy industry grapples with tariff chaos appeared first on
     

Amateur astronomy industry grapples with tariff chaos

April 11th 2025 at 7:45 am

The telescope industry in the U.S. has been thrown into chaos as a result of the Trump administration’s escalating trade conflict with China, as manufacturers contemplate price hikes and worry about the possibility of slowing demand. In the latest round of tariffs, U.S. President Donald Trump announced April 9 that duties on goods imported fromContinue reading "Amateur astronomy industry grapples with tariff chaos"

The post Amateur astronomy industry grapples with tariff chaos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Come with Astronomy associate editor Michael Bakich to EgyptMichael E. Bakich
    I’m leading another eclipse trip. No surprise there. I’ve traveled to observe 16 total solar eclipses, and on all but two of them I was the official astronomer. But this one’s special, even for me.  First, it boasts the longest totality — 6 minutes 23 seconds — that anyone alive will be able to witness.Continue reading "Come with Astronomy associate editor Michael Bakich to Egypt" The post Come with Astronomy associate editor Michael Bakich to Egypt appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Come with Astronomy associate editor Michael Bakich to Egypt

April 11th 2025 at 12:06 am

I’m leading another eclipse trip. No surprise there. I’ve traveled to observe 16 total solar eclipses, and on all but two of them I was the official astronomer. But this one’s special, even for me.  First, it boasts the longest totality — 6 minutes 23 seconds — that anyone alive will be able to witness.Continue reading "Come with Astronomy associate editor Michael Bakich to Egypt"

The post Come with Astronomy associate editor Michael Bakich to Egypt appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A fledgling SWANMark Zastrow
    Chris Schur from Payson, Arizona Comet C/2025 F2 (SWAN), discovered March. 29 by amateur astronomers in public imagery taken by the Solar Wind Anisotropies (SWAN) camera on ESA’s Solar and Heliospheric Observer (SOHO) spacecraft, has reached magnitude 7.5. This imager caught the comet on April 8 in the morning sky with an 8-inch RASA scopeContinue reading "A fledgling SWAN" The post A fledgling SWAN appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A fledgling SWAN

April 10th 2025 at 11:43 pm

Chris Schur from Payson, Arizona Comet C/2025 F2 (SWAN), discovered March. 29 by amateur astronomers in public imagery taken by the Solar Wind Anisotropies (SWAN) camera on ESA’s Solar and Heliospheric Observer (SOHO) spacecraft, has reached magnitude 7.5. This imager caught the comet on April 8 in the morning sky with an 8-inch RASA scopeContinue reading "A fledgling SWAN"

The post A fledgling SWAN appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How you can observe impacts on JupiterStephen James O'Meara
    Lucky is the word I’d use for any telescopic observers who got to see one of the most stunning spectacles in nature when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacted Jupiter in July 1994. The collision left inky scars in the planet’s atmosphere that persisted for months, with the largest welts visible in even the smallest of telescopes.Continue reading "How you can observe impacts on Jupiter" The post How you can observe impacts on Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How you can observe impacts on Jupiter

April 10th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Lucky is the word I’d use for any telescopic observers who got to see one of the most stunning spectacles in nature when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacted Jupiter in July 1994. The collision left inky scars in the planet’s atmosphere that persisted for months, with the largest welts visible in even the smallest of telescopes.Continue reading "How you can observe impacts on Jupiter"

The post How you can observe impacts on Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Three new planets found around Barnard’s StarAlison Klesman
    As of 2025, astronomers have identified at least 14 stars within 10 light-years of the Sun. After the Alpha Centauri system, the next closest is Barnard’s Star, a solo red dwarf roughly 6 light-years away. And thanks to new observations, we now know that Barnard’s Star is orbited by four small, rocky exoplanets. But it’sContinue reading "Three new planets found around Barnard’s Star" The post Three new planets found around Barnard’s Star appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Three new planets found around Barnard’s Star

April 9th 2025 at 9:30 pm

As of 2025, astronomers have identified at least 14 stars within 10 light-years of the Sun. After the Alpha Centauri system, the next closest is Barnard’s Star, a solo red dwarf roughly 6 light-years away. And thanks to new observations, we now know that Barnard’s Star is orbited by four small, rocky exoplanets. But it’sContinue reading "Three new planets found around Barnard’s Star"

The post Three new planets found around Barnard’s Star appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The April Lyrid Meteor ShowerDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and view the first major meteor shower of the spring, the Lyrids. Because more than one meteor shower originates from the constellation Lyra, these are the April Lyrids. This shower is visible from April 15 to April 29, with the peak coming on AprilContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The April Lyrid Meteor Shower" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The April Lyrid Meteor Shower ap
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The April Lyrid Meteor Shower

April 9th 2025 at 6:40 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and view the first major meteor shower of the spring, the Lyrids. Because more than one meteor shower originates from the constellation Lyra, these are the April Lyrids. This shower is visible from April 15 to April 29, with the peak coming on AprilContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The April Lyrid Meteor Shower"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The April Lyrid Meteor Shower appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Mystery ‘interstellar icy objects’ are carrying the seeds of lifeAlison Klesman
    In the century or so since Edwin Hubble discovered that the Milky Way is just one of countless galaxies in the universe, our understanding of our home galaxy has grown in leaps and bounds. But as recent research into a new type of cosmic object shows, there’s still plenty left to learn. Astronomers found twoContinue reading "Mystery ‘interstellar icy objects’ are carrying the seeds of life" The post Mystery ‘interstellar icy objects’ are carrying the seeds of life appeared first on Astronomy Mag
     

Mystery ‘interstellar icy objects’ are carrying the seeds of life

April 9th 2025 at 4:30 pm

In the century or so since Edwin Hubble discovered that the Milky Way is just one of countless galaxies in the universe, our understanding of our home galaxy has grown in leaps and bounds. But as recent research into a new type of cosmic object shows, there’s still plenty left to learn. Astronomers found twoContinue reading "Mystery ‘interstellar icy objects’ are carrying the seeds of life"

The post Mystery ‘interstellar icy objects’ are carrying the seeds of life appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The summer Milky Way returnsMark Zastrow
    Gianni Tumino from Ragusa, Italy Evening views of the Milky Way’s central regions return to the Northern Hemisphere, as seen in this shot taken from Punta Castellazzo on the island of Sicily, Italy. To image the sky, the imager used a Canon EOS Ra and 28mm lens at f/3.2 with a dual-band filter to captureContinue reading "The summer Milky Way returns" The post The summer Milky Way returns appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The summer Milky Way returns

April 9th 2025 at 1:34 am

Gianni Tumino from Ragusa, Italy Evening views of the Milky Way’s central regions return to the Northern Hemisphere, as seen in this shot taken from Punta Castellazzo on the island of Sicily, Italy. To image the sky, the imager used a Canon EOS Ra and 28mm lens at f/3.2 with a dual-band filter to captureContinue reading "The summer Milky Way returns"

The post The summer Milky Way returns appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • SpaceX, Blue Origin, ULA win Space Force contracts worth up to $13.7BAlison Klesman
    Launch providers SpaceX, Blue Origin, and United Launch Alliance — a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin Space — on Friday snapped up billions of dollars in national security launch contracts. Space Systems Command, the branch of Space Force responsible for development, acquisition, launch, and logistics, estimated the value of the National Security Space Launch (NSSL)Continue reading "SpaceX, Blue Origin, ULA win Space Force contracts worth up to $13.7B" The post SpaceX, Blue Origi
     

SpaceX, Blue Origin, ULA win Space Force contracts worth up to $13.7B

April 8th 2025 at 6:30 pm

Launch providers SpaceX, Blue Origin, and United Launch Alliance — a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin Space — on Friday snapped up billions of dollars in national security launch contracts. Space Systems Command, the branch of Space Force responsible for development, acquisition, launch, and logistics, estimated the value of the National Security Space Launch (NSSL)Continue reading "SpaceX, Blue Origin, ULA win Space Force contracts worth up to $13.7B"

The post SpaceX, Blue Origin, ULA win Space Force contracts worth up to $13.7B appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • ESO report shows energy plant would cause ‘devastating and irreversible’ impactChristopher Cokinos
    A new study by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) contradicts corporate claims that a proposed hydrogen fuel facility would not harm observatories in Chile. Earlier this year, ESO alerted the astronomy community that its facilities at Paranal — with some of the world’s darkest skies — were threatened by the plans to build a 7,400-acreContinue reading "ESO report shows energy plant would cause ‘devastating and irreversible’ impact" The post ESO report shows energy plant would cause ‘devastat
     

ESO report shows energy plant would cause ‘devastating and irreversible’ impact

April 8th 2025 at 4:30 pm

A new study by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) contradicts corporate claims that a proposed hydrogen fuel facility would not harm observatories in Chile. Earlier this year, ESO alerted the astronomy community that its facilities at Paranal — with some of the world’s darkest skies — were threatened by the plans to build a 7,400-acreContinue reading "ESO report shows energy plant would cause ‘devastating and irreversible’ impact"

The post ESO report shows energy plant would cause ‘devastating and irreversible’ impact appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The best new astronomy products we saw at NEAF 2025Phil Harrington
    The annual Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) was held over the weekend of April 5 and 6 at Rockland Community College in Suffern, New York. Organized by the Rockland Astronomy Club, NEAF is one of the world’s premier annual astronomy expos. It brings together amateur astronomers, professionals, and industry leaders for a weekend of discovery andContinue reading "The best new astronomy products we saw at NEAF 2025" The post The best new astronomy products we saw at NEAF 2025 appeared first on Astr
     

The best new astronomy products we saw at NEAF 2025

April 8th 2025 at 12:20 am

The annual Northeast Astronomy Forum (NEAF) was held over the weekend of April 5 and 6 at Rockland Community College in Suffern, New York. Organized by the Rockland Astronomy Club, NEAF is one of the world’s premier annual astronomy expos. It brings together amateur astronomers, professionals, and industry leaders for a weekend of discovery andContinue reading "The best new astronomy products we saw at NEAF 2025"

The post The best new astronomy products we saw at NEAF 2025 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Was there ever a planet between Mars and Jupiter? Astronomy Staff
    Is there evidence of a planet ever existing between Mars and Jupiter? MarkSmithtown, New York This splendid question gives us an opportunity to distinguish between what we know and what we believe might be true. First, we know that myriad small bodies orbit the Sun between Mars and Jupiter. These objects are the asteroids that comprise the mainContinue reading "Was there ever a planet between Mars and Jupiter? " The post Was there ever a planet between Mars and Jupiter?  appeared first on Astron
     

Was there ever a planet between Mars and Jupiter? 

April 7th 2025 at 9:30 pm

Is there evidence of a planet ever existing between Mars and Jupiter? MarkSmithtown, New York This splendid question gives us an opportunity to distinguish between what we know and what we believe might be true. First, we know that myriad small bodies orbit the Sun between Mars and Jupiter. These objects are the asteroids that comprise the mainContinue reading "Was there ever a planet between Mars and Jupiter? "

The post Was there ever a planet between Mars and Jupiter?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Review: Astronomy tests Vaonis’ Hestia telescope for your smartphoneRaymond Shubinski
    The new Hestia telescope by Vaonis is the third of the company’s innovative instruments I have reviewed, and once again, I’m impressed. Vaonis named their creation for the Greek goddess of the hearth and home, and released it after a successful 2023 Kickstarter campaign which raised $4.1 million in just a month. The Hestia isContinue reading "Review: Astronomy tests Vaonis’ Hestia telescope for your smartphone" The post Review: Astronomy tests Vaonis’ Hestia telescope for your smartphone appeare
     

Review: Astronomy tests Vaonis’ Hestia telescope for your smartphone

April 7th 2025 at 4:30 pm

The new Hestia telescope by Vaonis is the third of the company’s innovative instruments I have reviewed, and once again, I’m impressed. Vaonis named their creation for the Greek goddess of the hearth and home, and released it after a successful 2023 Kickstarter campaign which raised $4.1 million in just a month. The Hestia isContinue reading "Review: Astronomy tests Vaonis’ Hestia telescope for your smartphone"

The post Review: Astronomy tests Vaonis’ Hestia telescope for your smartphone appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How Project Gemini changed spaceflightBen Evans
    Sixty years ago, a fleet of sleek little spaceships paved the way for America to land a man on the Moon. Project Gemini was a series of two-man, Earth-orbital missions that pioneered rendezvous, docking, and maneuvering in-space, as well as spacewalking — all of which had to be perfected before there was any chance ofContinue reading "How Project Gemini changed spaceflight" The post How Project Gemini changed spaceflight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How Project Gemini changed spaceflight

By: Ben Evans
April 5th 2025 at 4:30 pm

Sixty years ago, a fleet of sleek little spaceships paved the way for America to land a man on the Moon. Project Gemini was a series of two-man, Earth-orbital missions that pioneered rendezvous, docking, and maneuvering in-space, as well as spacewalking — all of which had to be perfected before there was any chance ofContinue reading "How Project Gemini changed spaceflight"

The post How Project Gemini changed spaceflight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Horns of the SunMark Zastrow
    Fabrizio Melandri from Voltana, Italy The partial solar eclipse of March 29, 2025, gave viewers along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard a view of “devil’s horns” — the horns of a partially eclipsed Sun emerging from the horizon at sunrise. This photographer captured this phenomenon from Monticello, Maine, with a 4-inch f/7 refractor and Nikon DSLR. The post Horns of the Sun appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Horns of the Sun

April 4th 2025 at 9:30 am

Fabrizio Melandri from Voltana, Italy The partial solar eclipse of March 29, 2025, gave viewers along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard a view of “devil’s horns” — the horns of a partially eclipsed Sun emerging from the horizon at sunrise. This photographer captured this phenomenon from Monticello, Maine, with a 4-inch f/7 refractor and Nikon DSLR.

The post Horns of the Sun appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Fram2 astronauts splash down after historic polar spaceflightAlison Klesman
    The first astronaut crew to fly directly over Earth’s poles splashed down safely on Friday after nearly four days on orbit. Civilian astronauts Chun Wang, Jannicke Mikkelsen, Rabea Rogge, and Eric Phillips — the international crew of SpaceX’s private Fram2 mission — landed around 12:19 p.m. EDT and exited their SpaceX Dragon capsule without assistance, allowing researchers to study how theContinue reading "Fram2 astronauts splash down after historic polar spaceflight" The post Fram2 astronauts s
     

Fram2 astronauts splash down after historic polar spaceflight

April 5th 2025 at 12:45 am

The first astronaut crew to fly directly over Earth’s poles splashed down safely on Friday after nearly four days on orbit. Civilian astronauts Chun Wang, Jannicke Mikkelsen, Rabea Rogge, and Eric Phillips — the international crew of SpaceX’s private Fram2 mission — landed around 12:19 p.m. EDT and exited their SpaceX Dragon capsule without assistance, allowing researchers to study how theContinue reading "Fram2 astronauts splash down after historic polar spaceflight"

The post Fram2 astronauts splash down after historic polar spaceflight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Curiosity discovers largest organic molecules yet on MarsKorey Haynes
    The Mars Curiosity rover has found the largest organic molecules yet on the Red Planet. Organic molecules are the building blocks of life, although they can also be produced by geological processes. While there’s currently no way to prove whether these particular molecules were formed from processes associated with life, their very discovery shows thatContinue reading "Curiosity discovers largest organic molecules yet on Mars" The post Curiosity discovers largest organic molecules yet on Mars ap
     

Curiosity discovers largest organic molecules yet on Mars

April 4th 2025 at 6:52 pm

The Mars Curiosity rover has found the largest organic molecules yet on the Red Planet. Organic molecules are the building blocks of life, although they can also be produced by geological processes. While there’s currently no way to prove whether these particular molecules were formed from processes associated with life, their very discovery shows thatContinue reading "Curiosity discovers largest organic molecules yet on Mars"

The post Curiosity discovers largest organic molecules yet on Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from April 4 to 11: Catch your last views of UranusAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 4This evening, the roughly half-illuminated face of the Moon hangs in Gemini, high in the south an hour after sunset. First Quarter Moon occurs at 10:15 P.M. EDT. The two brightest stars in Gemini are Castor (magnitude 1.6) and Pollux (magnitude 1.2).Continue reading "The Sky This Week from April 4 to 11: Catch your last views of Uranus" The post The Sky This Week from April 4 to 11: Catch your last views of Uranus appeared firs
     

The Sky This Week from April 4 to 11: Catch your last views of Uranus

April 4th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, April 4This evening, the roughly half-illuminated face of the Moon hangs in Gemini, high in the south an hour after sunset. First Quarter Moon occurs at 10:15 P.M. EDT. The two brightest stars in Gemini are Castor (magnitude 1.6) and Pollux (magnitude 1.2).Continue reading "The Sky This Week from April 4 to 11: Catch your last views of Uranus"

The post The Sky This Week from April 4 to 11: Catch your last views of Uranus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Megaroc: The British manned space program that almost wasDoug Adler
    As World War II drew to a close, the Allies were eager to get their hands on one of the most technologically amazing yet terrifying weapons in Nazi Germany’s armamentarium: the V-2 rocket. A long-range, liquid-fueled supersonic guided missile, the V-2 could carry a 2,000-pound (910 kilograms) warhead a staggering 200 miles (320 kilometers) fromContinue reading "Megaroc: The British manned space program that almost was" The post Megaroc: The British manned space program that almost was appeared f
     

Megaroc: The British manned space program that almost was

April 3rd 2025 at 6:30 pm

As World War II drew to a close, the Allies were eager to get their hands on one of the most technologically amazing yet terrifying weapons in Nazi Germany’s armamentarium: the V-2 rocket. A long-range, liquid-fueled supersonic guided missile, the V-2 could carry a 2,000-pound (910 kilograms) warhead a staggering 200 miles (320 kilometers) fromContinue reading "Megaroc: The British manned space program that almost was"

The post Megaroc: The British manned space program that almost was appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Cosmic wingspanMark Zastrow
    Andrei Pleskatsevich, taken from Minsk, Belarus The Seagull Nebula is a region of nebulosity lying on the border between constellations Monoceros and Canis Major; the emission nebula forming the bird’s “head” carries the catalog designation IC 2177. The imager used a 3-inch f/4.5 scope and one-shot color camera to take 10 hours of exposure. The post Cosmic wingspan appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Cosmic wingspan

April 3rd 2025 at 9:26 am

Andrei Pleskatsevich, taken from Minsk, Belarus The Seagull Nebula is a region of nebulosity lying on the border between constellations Monoceros and Canis Major; the emission nebula forming the bird’s “head” carries the catalog designation IC 2177. The imager used a 3-inch f/4.5 scope and one-shot color camera to take 10 hours of exposure.

The post Cosmic wingspan appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Spring for new astronomy products this monthAstronomy Staff
    Sky watchers The University of Arizona PressTucson, AZ Star Gazers: Finding Joy in the Night Sky, by prolific astronomy writer David H. Levy, is a collection of personal essays celebrating amateur and professional astronomy. Bringing together his decades of sky-watching experience, this 172-page book gives readers insight into Levy’s thoughts on James Webb Space Telescope,Continue reading "Spring for new astronomy products this month" The post Spring for new astronomy products this month appeare
     

Spring for new astronomy products this month

April 2nd 2025 at 4:30 pm

Sky watchers The University of Arizona PressTucson, AZ Star Gazers: Finding Joy in the Night Sky, by prolific astronomy writer David H. Levy, is a collection of personal essays celebrating amateur and professional astronomy. Bringing together his decades of sky-watching experience, this 172-page book gives readers insight into Levy’s thoughts on James Webb Space Telescope,Continue reading "Spring for new astronomy products this month"

The post Spring for new astronomy products this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • FAA concludes Blue Origin, SpaceX January ‘mishap’ investigationsAlison Klesman
    The Federal Aviation Administration has completed its investigations looking into “mishaps” that occurred during Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket launch and SpaceX’s Starship Flight 7 in January. On Jan. 16, Blue Origin’s New Glenn-1 reached orbit on its debut flight. While the launch was successful, the rocket lost its lower stage during its descent. Later thatContinue reading "FAA concludes Blue Origin, SpaceX January ‘mishap’ investigations" The post FAA concludes Blue Origin, SpaceX January ‘m
     

FAA concludes Blue Origin, SpaceX January ‘mishap’ investigations

April 1st 2025 at 9:30 pm

The Federal Aviation Administration has completed its investigations looking into “mishaps” that occurred during Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket launch and SpaceX’s Starship Flight 7 in January. On Jan. 16, Blue Origin’s New Glenn-1 reached orbit on its debut flight. While the launch was successful, the rocket lost its lower stage during its descent. Later thatContinue reading "FAA concludes Blue Origin, SpaceX January ‘mishap’ investigations"

The post FAA concludes Blue Origin, SpaceX January ‘mishap’ investigations appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Debut flight of Isar Aerospace Spectrum rocket ends in explosionMark Zastrow
    he first commercially built rocket to lift off from continental Europe came tumbling back to Earth within seconds. But its manufacturer considers the mission a success. The test flight, “Going Full Spectrum,” was the debut launch of Norwegian company Isar Aerospace’s Spectrum, a two-stage orbital launch vehicle designed to compete with SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9Continue reading "Debut flight of Isar Aerospace Spectrum rocket ends in explosion" The post Debut flight of Isar Aerospace Spectrum ro
     

Debut flight of Isar Aerospace Spectrum rocket ends in explosion

April 1st 2025 at 7:18 pm

he first commercially built rocket to lift off from continental Europe came tumbling back to Earth within seconds. But its manufacturer considers the mission a success. The test flight, “Going Full Spectrum,” was the debut launch of Norwegian company Isar Aerospace’s Spectrum, a two-stage orbital launch vehicle designed to compete with SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9Continue reading "Debut flight of Isar Aerospace Spectrum rocket ends in explosion"

The post Debut flight of Isar Aerospace Spectrum rocket ends in explosion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Earth as a planetDavid J. Eicher
    From the editor: As the extraordinary pace of astronomical discovery carries on, we increasingly see that the stuff of life is spread throughout the cosmos. Life, even complex life, must be common out there. We know of several hundred billion stars in our galaxy, at least 100 billion galaxies, and planets around most of theContinue reading "Earth as a planet" The post Earth as a planet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Earth as a planet

April 1st 2025 at 4:30 pm

From the editor: As the extraordinary pace of astronomical discovery carries on, we increasingly see that the stuff of life is spread throughout the cosmos. Life, even complex life, must be common out there. We know of several hundred billion stars in our galaxy, at least 100 billion galaxies, and planets around most of theContinue reading "Earth as a planet"

The post Earth as a planet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Solving the climate equationshill
    My childhood fascination with the night sky led me to study astronomy and physics at university. By my second year, I was operating the telescope atop the physics building, tracking celestial objects — just like astronomy student Kate Dibiasky in the disaster movie Don’t Look Up.I never imagined I’d also soon find myself alerting othersContinue reading "Solving the climate equation" The post Solving the climate equation appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Solving the climate equation

By: shill
April 1st 2025 at 4:29 pm

My childhood fascination with the night sky led me to study astronomy and physics at university. By my second year, I was operating the telescope atop the physics building, tracking celestial objects — just like astronomy student Kate Dibiasky in the disaster movie Don’t Look Up.I never imagined I’d also soon find myself alerting othersContinue reading "Solving the climate equation"

The post Solving the climate equation appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How to build climate solutions: An interview with Tony FadellMark Zastrow
    In many ways, Tony Fadell built the digital world we live in. At the turn of the millennium, his efforts to build a pocket-sized, hard-disk-based device that could hold 1,000 songs in MP3 format caught the attention of Apple. Within months, he had been hired by the firm, and less than a year after hisContinue reading "How to build climate solutions: An interview with Tony Fadell" The post How to build climate solutions: An interview with Tony Fadell appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to build climate solutions: An interview with Tony Fadell

April 1st 2025 at 4:29 pm

In many ways, Tony Fadell built the digital world we live in. At the turn of the millennium, his efforts to build a pocket-sized, hard-disk-based device that could hold 1,000 songs in MP3 format caught the attention of Apple. Within months, he had been hired by the firm, and less than a year after hisContinue reading "How to build climate solutions: An interview with Tony Fadell"

The post How to build climate solutions: An interview with Tony Fadell appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • SpaceX’s Fram2 mission will aim for the polesshill
    Next week, a crew of private astronauts is expected to go where no one has gone before. Chun Wang, the crypto entrepreneur who purchased the Fram2 mission from SpaceX in August, announced Friday that the three-to-five-day sojourn — the first human spaceflight to fly directly over the Earth’s poles — is scheduled to launch fromContinue reading "SpaceX’s Fram2 mission will aim for the poles" The post SpaceX’s Fram2 mission will aim for the poles appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

SpaceX’s Fram2 mission will aim for the poles

By: shill
March 27th 2025 at 6:30 pm

Next week, a crew of private astronauts is expected to go where no one has gone before. Chun Wang, the crypto entrepreneur who purchased the Fram2 mission from SpaceX in August, announced Friday that the three-to-five-day sojourn — the first human spaceflight to fly directly over the Earth’s poles — is scheduled to launch fromContinue reading "SpaceX’s Fram2 mission will aim for the poles"

The post SpaceX’s Fram2 mission will aim for the poles appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • German firm eyes Thursday for Europe’s first commercial orbital launchshill
    After a scrubbed test flight on Monday, a German spaceflight company has determined its next opportunity to launch the first commercial orbital launch vehicle from mainland Europe. Munich-based Isar Aerospace postponed the debut launch of its Spectrum rocket, citing unfavorable winds at Norway’s Andøya Spaceport. On Tuesday, Isar said it will now target Thursday atContinue reading "German firm eyes Thursday for Europe’s first commercial orbital launch" The post German firm eyes Thursday for Euro
     

German firm eyes Thursday for Europe’s first commercial orbital launch

By: shill
March 26th 2025 at 9:56 pm

After a scrubbed test flight on Monday, a German spaceflight company has determined its next opportunity to launch the first commercial orbital launch vehicle from mainland Europe. Munich-based Isar Aerospace postponed the debut launch of its Spectrum rocket, citing unfavorable winds at Norway’s Andøya Spaceport. On Tuesday, Isar said it will now target Thursday atContinue reading "German firm eyes Thursday for Europe’s first commercial orbital launch"

The post German firm eyes Thursday for Europe’s first commercial orbital launch appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This dead star is still sending us radio signalsAlison Klesman
    Astronomers have finally identified the source of mysterious radio waves from deep space, tracing the signals back to an unusual stellar pair locked in a swift orbit, flashing out their location for the universe to hear. In research published March 12 in Nature Astronomy, a team of astrophysicists finally found the source of strange, minute-longContinue reading "This dead star is still sending us radio signals" The post This dead star is still sending us radio signals appeared first on Astronomy
     

This dead star is still sending us radio signals

March 26th 2025 at 6:39 pm

Astronomers have finally identified the source of mysterious radio waves from deep space, tracing the signals back to an unusual stellar pair locked in a swift orbit, flashing out their location for the universe to hear. In research published March 12 in Nature Astronomy, a team of astrophysicists finally found the source of strange, minute-longContinue reading "This dead star is still sending us radio signals"

The post This dead star is still sending us radio signals appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Ghost rivers, hidden lakes: The long search for water on MarsKnowable Magazine
    The quest to send humans to Mars is on: US President Donald Trump talked about it in his inauguration speech this year. Such an epic endeavor could help to answer fundamental questions about the Red Planet, including the biggest question of all: Did Mars once host life — and does it still? Central to thoseContinue reading "Ghost rivers, hidden lakes: The long search for water on Mars" The post Ghost rivers, hidden lakes: The long search for water on Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Ghost rivers, hidden lakes: The long search for water on Mars

March 26th 2025 at 4:30 pm

The quest to send humans to Mars is on: US President Donald Trump talked about it in his inauguration speech this year. Such an epic endeavor could help to answer fundamental questions about the Red Planet, including the biggest question of all: Did Mars once host life — and does it still? Central to thoseContinue reading "Ghost rivers, hidden lakes: The long search for water on Mars"

The post Ghost rivers, hidden lakes: The long search for water on Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Bathed in blueMark Zastrow
    Greg Polanski from Kanata, Ontario, Canada The ever-popular Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237–9/46) lies 10° east of Betelgeuse and is an impressive telescopic sight. Deep imaging reveals the line of dark Bok globules — small dense clouds where baby stars are forming — that appear to lie suspended within the nebula. The imager took 12⅓ hoursContinue reading "Bathed in blue" The post Bathed in blue appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Bathed in blue

March 26th 2025 at 1:38 am

Greg Polanski from Kanata, Ontario, Canada The ever-popular Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237–9/46) lies 10° east of Betelgeuse and is an impressive telescopic sight. Deep imaging reveals the line of dark Bok globules — small dense clouds where baby stars are forming — that appear to lie suspended within the nebula. The imager took 12⅓ hoursContinue reading "Bathed in blue"

The post Bathed in blue appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How do neutrino telescopes work?Alison Klesman
    To detect neutrinos, scientists use vast observatories located underground, shielded from cosmic ray interference. These detectors rely on Cherenkov radiation, a bluish light produced when high-speed muons, created by rare neutrino collisions, travel faster than light through water or ice. Photomultiplier tubes amplify this light, allowing astronomers to trace the neutrino’s path and energy. The post How do neutrino telescopes work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How do neutrino telescopes work?

March 26th 2025 at 12:52 am

To detect neutrinos, scientists use vast observatories located underground, shielded from cosmic ray interference. These detectors rely on Cherenkov radiation, a bluish light produced when high-speed muons, created by rare neutrino collisions, travel faster than light through water or ice. Photomultiplier tubes amplify this light, allowing astronomers to trace the neutrino’s path and energy.

The post How do neutrino telescopes work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Our solar system is not as unusual as we thoughtTheo Nicitopoulos
    Astronomers have discovered more than 300 exoplanetary systems that have three or more known planets. Most of these planets are about the same size and spaced close together, earning them the moniker “peas in a pod.” They also orbit near their stars, in many cases closer than Mercury is to the Sun.  Our solar system,Continue reading "Our solar system is not as unusual as we thought" The post Our solar system is not as unusual as we thought appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Our solar system is not as unusual as we thought

March 24th 2025 at 10:05 pm

Astronomers have discovered more than 300 exoplanetary systems that have three or more known planets. Most of these planets are about the same size and spaced close together, earning them the moniker “peas in a pod.” They also orbit near their stars, in many cases closer than Mercury is to the Sun.  Our solar system,Continue reading "Our solar system is not as unusual as we thought"

The post Our solar system is not as unusual as we thought appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Will Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova?Astronomy Staff
    Could the nearby star Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova, like some other white dwarf stars in binary star systems have? Bruce MasonEncinitas, California A type Ia supernova occurs when a white dwarf — the cooling remnant of an aging star — draws hydrogen from a companion sun. When the dwarf reaches 1.4Continue reading "Will Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova?" The post Will Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Will Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova?

March 24th 2025 at 9:30 pm

Could the nearby star Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova, like some other white dwarf stars in binary star systems have? Bruce MasonEncinitas, California A type Ia supernova occurs when a white dwarf — the cooling remnant of an aging star — draws hydrogen from a companion sun. When the dwarf reaches 1.4Continue reading "Will Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova?"

The post Will Sirius B explode as a type Ia supernova? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Solar EclipseDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to view an unusual event: a partial eclipse of the Sun. Depending on where you are, you might see the Moon cover up to 90 percent of the bright solar disk. Remember, however, even 10 percent of the Sun is dangerous to look at, so wear approvedContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Solar Eclipse" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Solar Eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Solar Eclipse

March 24th 2025 at 5:27 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to view an unusual event: a partial eclipse of the Sun. Depending on where you are, you might see the Moon cover up to 90 percent of the bright solar disk. Remember, however, even 10 percent of the Sun is dangerous to look at, so wear approvedContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Solar Eclipse"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Solar Eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Cosmic fledglingMark Zastrow
    Greg Meyer from Phoenix, Arizona This dusty figure of the Baby Eagle Nebula (LBN 777) is part of the larger Taurus Molecular Cloud. The dust is dimly lit by young stars within the cloud; the brownish color gives away the presence of larger dust grains. This image comprises nearly 24 hours of LRGB exposure withContinue reading "Cosmic fledgling" The post Cosmic fledgling appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Cosmic fledgling

March 22nd 2025 at 10:26 pm

Greg Meyer from Phoenix, Arizona This dusty figure of the Baby Eagle Nebula (LBN 777) is part of the larger Taurus Molecular Cloud. The dust is dimly lit by young stars within the cloud; the brownish color gives away the presence of larger dust grains. This image comprises nearly 24 hours of LRGB exposure withContinue reading "Cosmic fledgling"

The post Cosmic fledgling appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Our near galactic neighbor might have a supermassive black holeKorey Haynes
    The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is one of the Milky Way’s closest neighbors. It’s a small, irregular galaxy that orbits the Milky Way, and is an easy naked-eye object from the Southern Hemisphere. As one of the only galaxies outside our own where telescopes can resolve individual stars and small scale structures, astronomers love toContinue reading "Our near galactic neighbor might have a supermassive black hole" The post Our near galactic neighbor might have a supermassive black hole appeared
     

Our near galactic neighbor might have a supermassive black hole

March 21st 2025 at 10:35 pm

The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is one of the Milky Way’s closest neighbors. It’s a small, irregular galaxy that orbits the Milky Way, and is an easy naked-eye object from the Southern Hemisphere. As one of the only galaxies outside our own where telescopes can resolve individual stars and small scale structures, astronomers love toContinue reading "Our near galactic neighbor might have a supermassive black hole"

The post Our near galactic neighbor might have a supermassive black hole appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from March 21 to 28: Galilean moon actionAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, March 21By 10 P.M. local daylight time, the constellation Canes Venatici the Hunting Dogs is some 45° high in the east. Nestled under the curve of the Big Dipper’s handle, this seemingly innocuous star pattern hosts several popular deep-sky objects.  One of thoseContinue reading "The Sky This Week from March 21 to 28: Galilean moon action" The post The Sky This Week from March 21 to 28: Galilean moon action appeared first on Astronomy
     

The Sky This Week from March 21 to 28: Galilean moon action

March 21st 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, March 21By 10 P.M. local daylight time, the constellation Canes Venatici the Hunting Dogs is some 45° high in the east. Nestled under the curve of the Big Dipper’s handle, this seemingly innocuous star pattern hosts several popular deep-sky objects.  One of thoseContinue reading "The Sky This Week from March 21 to 28: Galilean moon action"

The post The Sky This Week from March 21 to 28: Galilean moon action appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • French space researcher denied entry to U.S. over views on Trump’s policies: reportMark Zastrow
    A French researcher was denied entry to the United States and expelled from the country for expressing “a personal opinion” on U.S. president Donald Trump’s research policies, the French government said March 19. France’s research minister, Philippe Baptiste, told the wire agency Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the researcher, from France’s National Center for Scientific ResearchContinue reading "French space researcher denied entry to U.S. over views on Trump’s policies: report" The post French
     

French space researcher denied entry to U.S. over views on Trump’s policies: report

March 21st 2025 at 5:22 am

A French researcher was denied entry to the United States and expelled from the country for expressing “a personal opinion” on U.S. president Donald Trump’s research policies, the French government said March 19. France’s research minister, Philippe Baptiste, told the wire agency Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the researcher, from France’s National Center for Scientific ResearchContinue reading "French space researcher denied entry to U.S. over views on Trump’s policies: report"

The post French space researcher denied entry to U.S. over views on Trump’s policies: report appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A (really) long exposureMark Zastrow
    Rui Santos, taken from Leiria, Portugal In this solargraph, the Sun’s journey across the sky is captured continuously for 43 days, its trails interrupted by overcast days and passing clouds. To create the image, the photographer transformed a beer can into a pinhole camera and lined the interior with light-sensitive photographic paper. In the foregroundContinue reading "A (really) long exposure" The post A (really) long exposure appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A (really) long exposure

March 20th 2025 at 8:19 pm

Rui Santos, taken from Leiria, Portugal In this solargraph, the Sun’s journey across the sky is captured continuously for 43 days, its trails interrupted by overcast days and passing clouds. To create the image, the photographer transformed a beer can into a pinhole camera and lined the interior with light-sensitive photographic paper. In the foregroundContinue reading "A (really) long exposure"

The post A (really) long exposure appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What’s next for Boeing Starliner?Mark Zastrow
    After 268 days aboard the International Space Station (ISS), NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams made their highly anticipated return to Earth on Tuesday evening. But while they are back on solid ground, the vehicle that flew them to the orbital laboratory faces an uncertain future. Wilmore and Williams were commander and pilot, respectively,Continue reading "What’s next for Boeing Starliner?" The post What’s next for Boeing Starliner? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What’s next for Boeing Starliner?

March 20th 2025 at 12:37 am

After 268 days aboard the International Space Station (ISS), NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams made their highly anticipated return to Earth on Tuesday evening. But while they are back on solid ground, the vehicle that flew them to the orbital laboratory faces an uncertain future. Wilmore and Williams were commander and pilot, respectively,Continue reading "What’s next for Boeing Starliner?"

The post What’s next for Boeing Starliner? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Andromeda has a new faintest satellite galaxyKorey Haynes
    Astronomers at the University of Michigan have discovered a new satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), the Milky Way’s closest major galactic neighbor, and it has broken the record for the faintest such galaxy yet discovered. Both the Milky Way and Andromeda are known to have a slew of smaller galaxies that orbit them, caughtContinue reading "Andromeda has a new faintest satellite galaxy" The post Andromeda has a new faintest satellite galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Andromeda has a new faintest satellite galaxy

March 19th 2025 at 9:37 pm

Astronomers at the University of Michigan have discovered a new satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), the Milky Way’s closest major galactic neighbor, and it has broken the record for the faintest such galaxy yet discovered. Both the Milky Way and Andromeda are known to have a slew of smaller galaxies that orbit them, caughtContinue reading "Andromeda has a new faintest satellite galaxy"

The post Andromeda has a new faintest satellite galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Martian moon caught on camera during Hera flybySamantha Hill
    Hera, European Space Agency’s (ESA) flagship planetary defense mission that launched in October 2024, took images of Mars and Deimos, one of its two moons, yesterday. The mission’s flyby was used as a gravity assist to its final destination at the binary asteroid system Dimorphos and Didymos. The mission also used this journey past MarsContinue reading "Martian moon caught on camera during Hera flyby" The post Martian moon caught on camera during Hera flyby appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Martian moon caught on camera during Hera flyby

March 19th 2025 at 8:57 pm

Hera, European Space Agency’s (ESA) flagship planetary defense mission that launched in October 2024, took images of Mars and Deimos, one of its two moons, yesterday. The mission’s flyby was used as a gravity assist to its final destination at the binary asteroid system Dimorphos and Didymos. The mission also used this journey past MarsContinue reading "Martian moon caught on camera during Hera flyby"

The post Martian moon caught on camera during Hera flyby appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX capsule returns NASA astronauts after nine months aboard ISSMark Zastrow
    SpaceX’s Dragon Freedom capsule safely splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday evening bringing astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams home after the two spent 286 days in space aboard the International Space Station. The post SpaceX capsule returns NASA astronauts after nine months aboard ISS appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

SpaceX capsule returns NASA astronauts after nine months aboard ISS

March 19th 2025 at 3:28 am

SpaceX’s Dragon Freedom capsule safely splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday evening bringing astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams home after the two spent 286 days in space aboard the International Space Station.

The post SpaceX capsule returns NASA astronauts after nine months aboard ISS appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to watch: Starliner crew set for splashdown after nine-month ISS stayAlison Klesman
    NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who flew to the International Space Station (ISS) in June for an intended eight-day stay, are expected to finally return to Earth Tuesday after spending more than nine months orbiting the planet. The space agency on Sunday said it expects the astronauts — the commander and pilot ofContinue reading "How to watch: Starliner crew set for splashdown after nine-month ISS stay" The post How to watch: Starliner crew set for splashdown after nine-month IS
     

How to watch: Starliner crew set for splashdown after nine-month ISS stay

March 19th 2025 at 12:15 am

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who flew to the International Space Station (ISS) in June for an intended eight-day stay, are expected to finally return to Earth Tuesday after spending more than nine months orbiting the planet. The space agency on Sunday said it expects the astronauts — the commander and pilot ofContinue reading "How to watch: Starliner crew set for splashdown after nine-month ISS stay"

The post How to watch: Starliner crew set for splashdown after nine-month ISS stay appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Inside radioisotope generators, the ‘nuclear batteries’ that power faraway spacecraftshill
    Powering spacecraft with solar energy may not seem like a challenge, given how intense the Sun’s light can feel on Earth. Spacecraft near the Earth use large solar panels to harness the Sun for the electricity needed to run their communications systems and science instruments. However, the farther into space you go, the weaker theContinue reading "Inside radioisotope generators, the ‘nuclear batteries’ that power faraway spacecraft" The post Inside radioisotope generators, the ‘nuclear batteries
     

Inside radioisotope generators, the ‘nuclear batteries’ that power faraway spacecraft

By: shill
March 18th 2025 at 9:30 pm

Powering spacecraft with solar energy may not seem like a challenge, given how intense the Sun’s light can feel on Earth. Spacecraft near the Earth use large solar panels to harness the Sun for the electricity needed to run their communications systems and science instruments. However, the farther into space you go, the weaker theContinue reading "Inside radioisotope generators, the ‘nuclear batteries’ that power faraway spacecraft"

The post Inside radioisotope generators, the ‘nuclear batteries’ that power faraway spacecraft appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • M17 stars in a cosmic vistaRichard Talcott
    You could forgive M17 for having an identity crisis. Observers refer to this emission region as the Omega, the Swan, and even the Checkmark Nebula. M17 doesn’t even know what constellation to call home — most of it lies in Sagittarius, but its northern edge crosses into Serpens. Yet no one can deny the stellarContinue reading "M17 stars in a cosmic vista" The post M17 stars in a cosmic vista appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

M17 stars in a cosmic vista

March 18th 2025 at 4:30 pm

You could forgive M17 for having an identity crisis. Observers refer to this emission region as the Omega, the Swan, and even the Checkmark Nebula. M17 doesn’t even know what constellation to call home — most of it lies in Sagittarius, but its northern edge crosses into Serpens. Yet no one can deny the stellarContinue reading "M17 stars in a cosmic vista"

The post M17 stars in a cosmic vista appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • From dusk til dawnMark Zastrow
    Marco Wong from Redhill, U.K. The Milky Way arches over the Cuckmere River in Sussex, U.K., in this blended panorama. The imager used a Canon DSLR and captured the sky panels with a 28mm f/1.4 and with exposures of 52 seconds at ISO 800; the foreground panels were captured with a 13mm f/2.8 lens atContinue reading "From dusk til dawn" The post From dusk til dawn appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

From dusk til dawn

March 18th 2025 at 4:27 pm

Marco Wong from Redhill, U.K. The Milky Way arches over the Cuckmere River in Sussex, U.K., in this blended panorama. The imager used a Canon DSLR and captured the sky panels with a 28mm f/1.4 and with exposures of 52 seconds at ISO 800; the foreground panels were captured with a 13mm f/2.8 lens atContinue reading "From dusk til dawn"

The post From dusk til dawn appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander nails lunar missionRobert Reeves
    The Blue Ghost lunar lander finished surface operations on March 16, 2025, wrapping up a smashing success of a mission. Designed, built, and flown by Firefly Aerospace, based near Austin, Texas, Blue Ghost executed a flawless two-month-long voyage, capped by a stunning landing and two weeks of operations at Mare Crisium. The success of theContinue reading "Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander nails lunar mission" The post Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander nails lunar mission appeared first on Astronomy Magazin
     

Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander nails lunar mission

March 18th 2025 at 6:51 am

The Blue Ghost lunar lander finished surface operations on March 16, 2025, wrapping up a smashing success of a mission. Designed, built, and flown by Firefly Aerospace, based near Austin, Texas, Blue Ghost executed a flawless two-month-long voyage, capped by a stunning landing and two weeks of operations at Mare Crisium. The success of theContinue reading "Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander nails lunar mission"

The post Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander nails lunar mission appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What is the difference between a 2″ eyepiece and a 1¼” eyepiece?Astronomy Staff
    What is the benefit of a 2″ eyepiece compared to a 1¼” eyepiece? Tom NagyNorth Ridgeville, Ohio A 2″ eyepiece delivers a wider true field of view (the actual amount of sky visible) than a 1¼” eyepiece of the same focal length. Two factors determine the true field: the telescope’s focal length and the diameterContinue reading "What is the difference between a 2″ eyepiece and a 1¼” eyepiece?" The post What is the difference between a 2″ eyepiece and a 1¼” eyepiece? appeared first on Astronomy Maga
     

What is the difference between a 2″ eyepiece and a 1¼” eyepiece?

March 17th 2025 at 9:30 pm

What is the benefit of a 2″ eyepiece compared to a 1¼” eyepiece? Tom NagyNorth Ridgeville, Ohio A 2″ eyepiece delivers a wider true field of view (the actual amount of sky visible) than a 1¼” eyepiece of the same focal length. Two factors determine the true field: the telescope’s focal length and the diameterContinue reading "What is the difference between a 2″ eyepiece and a 1¼” eyepiece?"

The post What is the difference between a 2″ eyepiece and a 1¼” eyepiece? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Observe the brightest deep-sky objectsMichael E. Bakich
    You know, after decades of pointing optics toward the sky, I consider myself a knowledgeable observer. But while researching the Pleiades a few months back, I was surprised to learn that it wasn’t the brightest star cluster. And there were other surprises when I started comparing overall brightnesses of deep-sky objects. For instance, you mightContinue reading "Observe the brightest deep-sky objects" The post Observe the brightest deep-sky objects appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Observe the brightest deep-sky objects

March 17th 2025 at 6:30 pm

You know, after decades of pointing optics toward the sky, I consider myself a knowledgeable observer. But while researching the Pleiades a few months back, I was surprised to learn that it wasn’t the brightest star cluster. And there were other surprises when I started comparing overall brightnesses of deep-sky objects. For instance, you mightContinue reading "Observe the brightest deep-sky objects"

The post Observe the brightest deep-sky objects appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • SpaceX proposal would more than double Falcon 9 launches at Cape Canaveralshill
    SpaceX, the world’s dominant commercial space launch provider, is looking to ramp up the activity of its workhorse rocket. The FAA on Friday released a draft environmental assessment (EA) analyzing the company’s proposal to more than double the number of Falcon 9 launches from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force StationContinue reading "SpaceX proposal would more than double Falcon 9 launches at Cape Canaveral" The post SpaceX proposal would more than double Falcon 9 l
     

SpaceX proposal would more than double Falcon 9 launches at Cape Canaveral

By: shill
March 17th 2025 at 6:19 pm

SpaceX, the world’s dominant commercial space launch provider, is looking to ramp up the activity of its workhorse rocket. The FAA on Friday released a draft environmental assessment (EA) analyzing the company’s proposal to more than double the number of Falcon 9 launches from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force StationContinue reading "SpaceX proposal would more than double Falcon 9 launches at Cape Canaveral"

The post SpaceX proposal would more than double Falcon 9 launches at Cape Canaveral appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Planets AlignDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out soon and look at the planets in the evening sky. The highest is Mars, the so-called Red Planet. The giant planet Jupiter is a bit lower but much brighter. Brightest of all is Venus, low in the west. If you want to see thatContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Planets Align" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Planets Align appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Planets Align

March 17th 2025 at 6:04 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out soon and look at the planets in the evening sky. The highest is Mars, the so-called Red Planet. The giant planet Jupiter is a bit lower but much brighter. Brightest of all is Venus, low in the west. If you want to see thatContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Planets Align"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Planets Align appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Space scientists fearful as Trump administration targets science and mulls NASA cutsChristopher Cokinos
    Astronomers and space scientists are living in a state of fear and anxiety as the Trump administration and Elon Musk-led U.S. DOGE Service target science spending and diversity initiatives with actions that are already damaging research and threaten to set back U.S. scientific leadership for years, scientists tell Astronomy. The assault began during Trump’s firstContinue reading "Space scientists fearful as Trump administration targets science and mulls NASA cuts" The post Space scientists fearf
     

Space scientists fearful as Trump administration targets science and mulls NASA cuts

March 17th 2025 at 1:54 am

Astronomers and space scientists are living in a state of fear and anxiety as the Trump administration and Elon Musk-led U.S. DOGE Service target science spending and diversity initiatives with actions that are already damaging research and threaten to set back U.S. scientific leadership for years, scientists tell Astronomy. The assault began during Trump’s firstContinue reading "Space scientists fearful as Trump administration targets science and mulls NASA cuts"

The post Space scientists fearful as Trump administration targets science and mulls NASA cuts appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Hide and seekMark Zastrow
    Philippe Moussette, taken at Cap-Rouge, Quebec, Canada The reddened shadow of Earth falling upon the Moon during the lunar eclipse of March 13/14 — a so-called Blood Moon — is captured in this sequence taken with a Canon mirrorless camera and 600mm lens. The post Hide and seek appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Hide and seek

March 14th 2025 at 7:23 pm

Philippe Moussette, taken at Cap-Rouge, Quebec, Canada The reddened shadow of Earth falling upon the Moon during the lunar eclipse of March 13/14 — a so-called Blood Moon — is captured in this sequence taken with a Canon mirrorless camera and 600mm lens.

The post Hide and seek appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why so many spacecraft carry magnetometersDoug Adler
    The public is enamored of images returned to Earth by space probes. Whether they show the moons of Jupiter, the rings of Saturn, or the icy surface of Pluto, these captivating images garner loads of attention.  In addition to cameras, robotic probes always carry an array of scientific instruments that get far less attention fromContinue reading "Why so many spacecraft carry magnetometers" The post Why so many spacecraft carry magnetometers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Why so many spacecraft carry magnetometers

March 14th 2025 at 7:13 pm

The public is enamored of images returned to Earth by space probes. Whether they show the moons of Jupiter, the rings of Saturn, or the icy surface of Pluto, these captivating images garner loads of attention.  In addition to cameras, robotic probes always carry an array of scientific instruments that get far less attention fromContinue reading "Why so many spacecraft carry magnetometers"

The post Why so many spacecraft carry magnetometers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from March 14 to 21: The start of springAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, March 14The Moon reaches Full phase early this morning at 2:55 A.M. EDT, with a total lunar eclipse underway. Everyone across the U.S. can watch the event, and no special equipment is needed — just your eyes!  Totality begins about half an hourContinue reading "The Sky This Week from March 14 to 21: The start of spring" The post The Sky This Week from March 14 to 21: The start of spring appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from March 14 to 21: The start of spring

March 14th 2025 at 8:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, March 14The Moon reaches Full phase early this morning at 2:55 A.M. EDT, with a total lunar eclipse underway. Everyone across the U.S. can watch the event, and no special equipment is needed — just your eyes!  Totality begins about half an hourContinue reading "The Sky This Week from March 14 to 21: The start of spring"

The post The Sky This Week from March 14 to 21: The start of spring appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The lunar southMark Zastrow
    Jamie Cooper from Northamptonshire, U.K. Craters dot the Moon’s rugged south pole region in this shot taken March 7 with a 16-inch Dobsonian. The central-peak crater just above and left of center is Moretus, and Clavius is the large crater at lower right (with multiple smaller craters inside). The post The lunar south appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The lunar south

March 13th 2025 at 10:36 pm

Jamie Cooper from Northamptonshire, U.K. Craters dot the Moon’s rugged south pole region in this shot taken March 7 with a 16-inch Dobsonian. The central-peak crater just above and left of center is Moretus, and Clavius is the large crater at lower right (with multiple smaller craters inside).

The post The lunar south appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Could Mars’ red color have formed under wet conditions?Alison Klesman
    We’ve always known Mars as the Red Planet — but it turns out, we may have had the reason why wrong. If so, it could revise much of what we know about the history of our smaller neighbor planet. In a study published Feb. 25 in Nature Communications, researchers tied the nature of Mars’ redContinue reading "Could Mars’ red color have formed under wet conditions?" The post Could Mars’ red color have formed under wet conditions? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Could Mars’ red color have formed under wet conditions?

March 12th 2025 at 8:30 pm

We’ve always known Mars as the Red Planet — but it turns out, we may have had the reason why wrong. If so, it could revise much of what we know about the history of our smaller neighbor planet. In a study published Feb. 25 in Nature Communications, researchers tied the nature of Mars’ redContinue reading "Could Mars’ red color have formed under wet conditions?"

The post Could Mars’ red color have formed under wet conditions? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Strange microbes on Earth might help us understand life on VenusKiona Smith
    A recent paper suggests that if astrobiologists want to make an educated guess about what life on Venus might look like, they should look to a weird microbe called A. ferrooxidans, found here onEarth. Earthly life-forms are the only examples we have of what life looks like, so astrobiologists often study them for clues aboutContinue reading "Strange microbes on Earth might help us understand life on Venus" The post Strange microbes on Earth might help us understand life on Venus appeared first o
     

Strange microbes on Earth might help us understand life on Venus

March 12th 2025 at 4:30 pm

A recent paper suggests that if astrobiologists want to make an educated guess about what life on Venus might look like, they should look to a weird microbe called A. ferrooxidans, found here onEarth. Earthly life-forms are the only examples we have of what life looks like, so astrobiologists often study them for clues aboutContinue reading "Strange microbes on Earth might help us understand life on Venus"

The post Strange microbes on Earth might help us understand life on Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers have spotted the most distant comet ever discoveredDavid L. Chandler
    Comets develop the spectacular long tails that they are known for by approaching the Sun. When they get too close, their icy volatile materials begin to sublimate away, carrying along clouds of dust. But this activity usually only happens relatively close to the Sun, as comets spend most of their time in the outer solarContinue reading "Astronomers have spotted the most distant comet ever discovered" The post Astronomers have spotted the most distant comet ever discovered appeared first on Astro
     

Astronomers have spotted the most distant comet ever discovered

March 11th 2025 at 11:26 pm

Comets develop the spectacular long tails that they are known for by approaching the Sun. When they get too close, their icy volatile materials begin to sublimate away, carrying along clouds of dust. But this activity usually only happens relatively close to the Sun, as comets spend most of their time in the outer solarContinue reading "Astronomers have spotted the most distant comet ever discovered"

The post Astronomers have spotted the most distant comet ever discovered appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to get the most out of the lunar eclipseshill
    During the night of March 13, most of North and South America will be treated to a total lunar eclipse, an event popularly referred to as a Blood Moon. The event is aptly named — the Moon is cast in a dark red, brown, or orange color during totality, giving it an eerie appearance inContinue reading "How to get the most out of the lunar eclipse" The post How to get the most out of the lunar eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to get the most out of the lunar eclipse

By: shill
March 11th 2025 at 4:30 pm

During the night of March 13, most of North and South America will be treated to a total lunar eclipse, an event popularly referred to as a Blood Moon. The event is aptly named — the Moon is cast in a dark red, brown, or orange color during totality, giving it an eerie appearance inContinue reading "How to get the most out of the lunar eclipse"

The post How to get the most out of the lunar eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Stellar nativity sceneMark Zastrow
    Simon Todd, taken from Haywards Heath, U.K. The Christmas Tree Cluster lies at the center of this image, filled with young, newborn stars and surrounding nebulosity cataloged as NGC 2264. That includes the Cone Nebula, just left of center. The Fox Fur Nebula lies directly below the bright blue star (S Monoceros) at center. ThisContinue reading "Stellar nativity scene" The post Stellar nativity scene appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Stellar nativity scene

March 11th 2025 at 1:43 am

Simon Todd, taken from Haywards Heath, U.K. The Christmas Tree Cluster lies at the center of this image, filled with young, newborn stars and surrounding nebulosity cataloged as NGC 2264. That includes the Cone Nebula, just left of center. The Fox Fur Nebula lies directly below the bright blue star (S Monoceros) at center. ThisContinue reading "Stellar nativity scene"

The post Stellar nativity scene appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How much less would you weigh on the Moon than on Earth?Astronomy Staff
    If you weigh a certain amount on Earth, how much less or more would you weigh on the Moon? MakaylaArkansas The short answer is that you would weigh roughly one-sixth your Earth weight on the Moon. So if your bathroom scale reads 180 pounds (81.6 kilograms) on Earth, it would read 30 pounds (13.6 kg)Continue reading "How much less would you weigh on the Moon than on Earth?" The post How much less would you weigh on the Moon than on Earth? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How much less would you weigh on the Moon than on Earth?

March 10th 2025 at 9:30 pm

If you weigh a certain amount on Earth, how much less or more would you weigh on the Moon? MakaylaArkansas The short answer is that you would weigh roughly one-sixth your Earth weight on the Moon. So if your bathroom scale reads 180 pounds (81.6 kilograms) on Earth, it would read 30 pounds (13.6 kg)Continue reading "How much less would you weigh on the Moon than on Earth?"

The post How much less would you weigh on the Moon than on Earth? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Cryovolcanism on Titan may replenish its thick atmosphereAlison Klesman
    Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, is particularly captivating for scientists. This is thanks in large part to its status as the only other planetary body in the solar system known to host an atmosphere about 1.5 times denser than Earth’s and bodies of liquid on its surface. (Unlike Earth, however, where most surface liquid is water,Continue reading "Cryovolcanism on Titan may replenish its thick atmosphere" The post Cryovolcanism on Titan may replenish its thick atmosphere appeared first on Astronom
     

Cryovolcanism on Titan may replenish its thick atmosphere

March 10th 2025 at 6:30 pm

Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, is particularly captivating for scientists. This is thanks in large part to its status as the only other planetary body in the solar system known to host an atmosphere about 1.5 times denser than Earth’s and bodies of liquid on its surface. (Unlike Earth, however, where most surface liquid is water,Continue reading "Cryovolcanism on Titan may replenish its thick atmosphere"

The post Cryovolcanism on Titan may replenish its thick atmosphere appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Total Eclipse of the MoonDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the evening of March 13. That’s when one of the year’s best celestial events — a total eclipse of the Moon — will begin. It will continue into the early morning hours of the 14th, so if you want to see it all, get ready for aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Total Eclipse of the Moon" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Total Eclipse of the Moon appeared first on Astronomy
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Total Eclipse of the Moon

March 10th 2025 at 7:01 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the evening of March 13. That’s when one of the year’s best celestial events — a total eclipse of the Moon — will begin. It will continue into the early morning hours of the 14th, so if you want to see it all, get ready for aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Total Eclipse of the Moon"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: A Total Eclipse of the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • We test Starfield Optics’ 115mm Géar Triplet APOPhil Harrington
    One of the most competitive segments in the amateur telescope marketplace these days spans 3- to 5-inch apochromatic refractors. Once considered telescopes for the well-to-do, these instruments are now affordable to many backyard stargazers. And one of the newest companies to enter this market segment is Starfield Optics from Caledon, Ontario, a suburb of Toronto.Continue reading "We test Starfield Optics’ 115mm Géar Triplet APO" The post We test Starfield Optics’ 115mm Géar Triplet APO appeared
     

We test Starfield Optics’ 115mm Géar Triplet APO

March 10th 2025 at 4:30 pm

One of the most competitive segments in the amateur telescope marketplace these days spans 3- to 5-inch apochromatic refractors. Once considered telescopes for the well-to-do, these instruments are now affordable to many backyard stargazers. And one of the newest companies to enter this market segment is Starfield Optics from Caledon, Ontario, a suburb of Toronto.Continue reading "We test Starfield Optics’ 115mm Géar Triplet APO"

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  • Group photoMark Zastrow
    Rob Lyons, taken from Vancouver, Canada This wide-field vista spans the constellations Cepheus and Cassiopeia and includes an host of deep-sky objects. From left to right: NGC 7822 (the Question Mark Nebula), LBN 576 (the Garlic Bulb Nebula), NGC 7635 (the Bubble Nebula), Sharpless 2–157 (the Lobster Claw Nebula), and Sharpless 2–155 (the Cave Nebula).Continue reading "Group photo" The post Group photo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Group photo

March 8th 2025 at 4:32 pm

Rob Lyons, taken from Vancouver, Canada This wide-field vista spans the constellations Cepheus and Cassiopeia and includes an host of deep-sky objects. From left to right: NGC 7822 (the Question Mark Nebula), LBN 576 (the Garlic Bulb Nebula), NGC 7635 (the Bubble Nebula), Sharpless 2–157 (the Lobster Claw Nebula), and Sharpless 2–155 (the Cave Nebula).Continue reading "Group photo"

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  • Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon lander is lying dead in a craterSamantha Hill
    Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 mission has ended after its lunar lander, Athena, apparently toppled over as it touched down and came to rest on its side yesterday in a shadowed crater, the company announced. In a statement released this morning, the company said its batteries had run out and they did not expect it to reawaken.Continue reading "Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon lander is lying dead in a crater" The post Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon lander is lying dead in a crater appeared first on Astron
     

Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon lander is lying dead in a crater

March 8th 2025 at 2:18 am

Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 mission has ended after its lunar lander, Athena, apparently toppled over as it touched down and came to rest on its side yesterday in a shadowed crater, the company announced. In a statement released this morning, the company said its batteries had run out and they did not expect it to reawaken.Continue reading "Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon lander is lying dead in a crater"

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  • SpaceX Starship explodes, disrupts air travel a second timeAlison Klesman
    Millions of viewers who tuned into Thursday’s broadcast of SpaceX Starship’s eighth test flight experienced a collective déjà vu as the mammoth rocket exploded and rained down flaming hunks of metal in eerily similar fashion to Flight 7. So too did pilots flying over the Caribbean ocean, many of whom were forced to change course to avoid theContinue reading "SpaceX Starship explodes, disrupts air travel a second time" The post SpaceX Starship explodes, disrupts air travel a second time appeared
     

SpaceX Starship explodes, disrupts air travel a second time

March 8th 2025 at 12:19 am

Millions of viewers who tuned into Thursday’s broadcast of SpaceX Starship’s eighth test flight experienced a collective déjà vu as the mammoth rocket exploded and rained down flaming hunks of metal in eerily similar fashion to Flight 7. So too did pilots flying over the Caribbean ocean, many of whom were forced to change course to avoid theContinue reading "SpaceX Starship explodes, disrupts air travel a second time"

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  • Look for these effects during the next lunar eclipseStephen James O'Meara
    All lunar eclipses — whether penumbral, partial, or total — offer us thought-provoking views of Earth’s shadow. Frequently, lunar eclipses offer up peculiar color effects, with the shadowed Moon appearing reddish due to the state of Earth’s atmosphere. But the March 14, 2025, total lunar eclipse all but guarantees additional optical phenomena of a differentContinue reading "Look for these effects during the next lunar eclipse" The post Look for these effects during the next lunar eclipse appeare
     

Look for these effects during the next lunar eclipse

March 7th 2025 at 5:30 pm

All lunar eclipses — whether penumbral, partial, or total — offer us thought-provoking views of Earth’s shadow. Frequently, lunar eclipses offer up peculiar color effects, with the shadowed Moon appearing reddish due to the state of Earth’s atmosphere. But the March 14, 2025, total lunar eclipse all but guarantees additional optical phenomena of a differentContinue reading "Look for these effects during the next lunar eclipse"

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  • The Sky This Week from March 7 to 14: A total lunar eclipseAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, March 7Look north after dark tonight to find the curved form of the Little Dipper. The smaller of the two famous dipper-shaped asterisms in the northern sky, the Little Dipper extends from the North Star, Polaris, at the end of its handle. ButContinue reading "The Sky This Week from March 7 to 14: A total lunar eclipse" The post The Sky This Week from March 7 to 14: A total lunar eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from March 7 to 14: A total lunar eclipse

March 7th 2025 at 9:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, March 7Look north after dark tonight to find the curved form of the Little Dipper. The smaller of the two famous dipper-shaped asterisms in the northern sky, the Little Dipper extends from the North Star, Polaris, at the end of its handle. ButContinue reading "The Sky This Week from March 7 to 14: A total lunar eclipse"

The post The Sky This Week from March 7 to 14: A total lunar eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • IM-2 lands on the Moon but its status is uncertainSamantha Hill
    After a successful launch last week aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 mission landed on the Moon on March 6 shortly after 11:30 a.m. EST. The craft is transmitting back to its control center and able to collect some level of solar power. However, its landing orientation and the status of otherContinue reading "IM-2 lands on the Moon but its status is uncertain" The post IM-2 lands on the Moon but its status is uncertain appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

IM-2 lands on the Moon but its status is uncertain

March 6th 2025 at 10:47 pm

After a successful launch last week aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 mission landed on the Moon on March 6 shortly after 11:30 a.m. EST. The craft is transmitting back to its control center and able to collect some level of solar power. However, its landing orientation and the status of otherContinue reading "IM-2 lands on the Moon but its status is uncertain"

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  • Get ready to attend the Tucson Astronomy FestivalMichael E. Bakich
    Mark your calendars for Saturday, March 22. That’s when the Tucson Amateur Astronomy Association (TAAA) will be out in force to show you the wonders of the heavens at the annual Tucson Astronomy Festival. The event will be held at Brandi Fenton Memorial Park, Ramada 1, 3482 E. River Road, Tucson. Things will get startedContinue reading "Get ready to attend the Tucson Astronomy Festival" The post Get ready to attend the Tucson Astronomy Festival appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Get ready to attend the Tucson Astronomy Festival

March 6th 2025 at 8:30 pm

Mark your calendars for Saturday, March 22. That’s when the Tucson Amateur Astronomy Association (TAAA) will be out in force to show you the wonders of the heavens at the annual Tucson Astronomy Festival. The event will be held at Brandi Fenton Memorial Park, Ramada 1, 3482 E. River Road, Tucson. Things will get startedContinue reading "Get ready to attend the Tucson Astronomy Festival"

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  • How to watch Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon landingMark Zastrow
    When Intuitive Machines’ Athena lunar lander makes moonfall around 12:30 p.m. EST Thursday, spectators on Earth will be able to watch it happen. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab is partnering with Comcast to stream the landing at the moon’s south pole, share never-before-seen 3D lunar images, and provide live updates of the 20-day missionContinue reading "How to watch Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon landing" The post How to watch Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon landing appea
     

How to watch Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon landing

March 6th 2025 at 7:43 pm

When Intuitive Machines’ Athena lunar lander makes moonfall around 12:30 p.m. EST Thursday, spectators on Earth will be able to watch it happen. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab is partnering with Comcast to stream the landing at the moon’s south pole, share never-before-seen 3D lunar images, and provide live updates of the 20-day missionContinue reading "How to watch Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon landing"

The post How to watch Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 Moon landing appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Rocket debris poses risks to aircraft operationsSamantha Hill
    In November 2022, a Chinese Long March 5B rocket reentered the atmosphere with no ability to control where it fell. As a precaution, France, Spain, and Monaco closed some of their airspace along the booster’s possible path. As it happened, the rocket reentered over the Pacific Ocean, not Europe. But the airspace closures still resultedContinue reading "Rocket debris poses risks to aircraft operations" The post Rocket debris poses risks to aircraft operations appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Rocket debris poses risks to aircraft operations

March 6th 2025 at 2:30 pm

In November 2022, a Chinese Long March 5B rocket reentered the atmosphere with no ability to control where it fell. As a precaution, France, Spain, and Monaco closed some of their airspace along the booster’s possible path. As it happened, the rocket reentered over the Pacific Ocean, not Europe. But the airspace closures still resultedContinue reading "Rocket debris poses risks to aircraft operations"

The post Rocket debris poses risks to aircraft operations appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Celestial spheresMark Zastrow
    Abhijit Patil, taken from Mendocino County, California The unusual rock formations that give Bowling Ball Beach its name are usually submerged and visible only at low tide. The imager used an astromodified Nikon mirrorless camera and 16mm lens to create a five-shot vertical panorama. The sky panel makes use of UV/IR-cut filter and star trackerContinue reading "Celestial spheres" The post Celestial spheres appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Celestial spheres

March 6th 2025 at 2:30 pm

Abhijit Patil, taken from Mendocino County, California The unusual rock formations that give Bowling Ball Beach its name are usually submerged and visible only at low tide. The imager used an astromodified Nikon mirrorless camera and 16mm lens to create a five-shot vertical panorama. The sky panel makes use of UV/IR-cut filter and star trackerContinue reading "Celestial spheres"

The post Celestial spheres appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Don’t miss tonight’s total lunar eclipseMichael E. Bakich
    Another great celestial event is coming. And this one’s really easy to observe because you can see it with just your eyes. Not only that, but anyone in the U.S. under a clear sky will be able to watch it. On Thursday, March 13 (and continuing into the 14th), the Moon will pass through theContinue reading "Don’t miss tonight’s total lunar eclipse" The post Don’t miss tonight’s total lunar eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Don’t miss tonight’s total lunar eclipse

March 13th 2025 at 4:49 pm

Another great celestial event is coming. And this one’s really easy to observe because you can see it with just your eyes. Not only that, but anyone in the U.S. under a clear sky will be able to watch it. On Thursday, March 13 (and continuing into the 14th), the Moon will pass through theContinue reading "Don’t miss tonight’s total lunar eclipse"

The post Don’t miss tonight’s total lunar eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The new golden age of Moon explorationRobert Reeves
    During the Cold War, the U.S. and USSR raced to be first to send robotic and human explorers to the Moon, traversing lunar terrain and returning samples to Earth. These exploits and their scientific returns were crucial to unlocking the history of the Moon — and by extension, the history of our solar system. ButContinue reading "The new golden age of Moon exploration" The post The new golden age of Moon exploration appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The new golden age of Moon exploration

March 5th 2025 at 7:00 pm

During the Cold War, the U.S. and USSR raced to be first to send robotic and human explorers to the Moon, traversing lunar terrain and returning samples to Earth. These exploits and their scientific returns were crucial to unlocking the history of the Moon — and by extension, the history of our solar system. ButContinue reading "The new golden age of Moon exploration"

The post The new golden age of Moon exploration appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The NEAF Expo is back again for its 34th yearAstronomy Staff
    The Northeast Astronomy Forum and Space Expo (NEAF) is celebrating 34 years in Suffern, New York, just 40 minutes outside of New York City. This two-day event, taking place April 5 and 6 at Rockland Community College, features 120 telescope and equipment vendors, talks from industry experts, and opportunities to do your own solar viewing.Continue reading "The NEAF Expo is back again for its 34th year" The post The NEAF Expo is back again for its 34th year appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The NEAF Expo is back again for its 34th year

March 4th 2025 at 8:02 pm

The Northeast Astronomy Forum and Space Expo (NEAF) is celebrating 34 years in Suffern, New York, just 40 minutes outside of New York City. This two-day event, taking place April 5 and 6 at Rockland Community College, features 120 telescope and equipment vendors, talks from industry experts, and opportunities to do your own solar viewing.Continue reading "The NEAF Expo is back again for its 34th year"

The post The NEAF Expo is back again for its 34th year appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What are Lagrangian points?Astronomy Staff
    What are Lagrangian points? Dean TreadwayJesup, Georgia The Lagrangian equilibrium stability points, or L points, are the five places where the combined gravitational forces of two bodies produce regions of gravitational balance. These are little pockets where other bodies can, in theory, remain orbiting in place without expending much energy. Three of these L points, L1, L2 andContinue reading "What are Lagrangian points?" The post What are Lagrangian points? appeared first on Astronomy Magazin
     

What are Lagrangian points?

March 3rd 2025 at 10:30 pm

What are Lagrangian points? Dean TreadwayJesup, Georgia The Lagrangian equilibrium stability points, or L points, are the five places where the combined gravitational forces of two bodies produce regions of gravitational balance. These are little pockets where other bodies can, in theory, remain orbiting in place without expending much energy. Three of these L points, L1, L2 andContinue reading "What are Lagrangian points?"

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  • Depth perceptionMark Zastrow
    Greg Meyer from Phoenix, Arizona Messier objects M97 (bottom right) and M108 (top left) are similar in apparent brightness and size. But while M97 (also known as the Owl Nebula) is a planetary nebula lying just 2,600 light-years away, M108 is a galaxy 30 million light-years away. This Hα/OIII/RGB image represents 27 hours of exposureContinue reading "Depth perception" The post Depth perception appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Depth perception

March 3rd 2025 at 11:09 pm

Greg Meyer from Phoenix, Arizona Messier objects M97 (bottom right) and M108 (top left) are similar in apparent brightness and size. But while M97 (also known as the Owl Nebula) is a planetary nebula lying just 2,600 light-years away, M108 is a galaxy 30 million light-years away. This Hα/OIII/RGB image represents 27 hours of exposureContinue reading "Depth perception"

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  • Lucky new astronomy product finds this monthAstronomy Staff
    To the Moon University of Chicago PressChicago, IL Lunar: A History of the Moon in Myths, Maps, and Matter compiles 44 hand-drawn cartographic charts created by illustrator-cartographers from the U.S. Geological Survey. This 256-page hardback contains 500 color images, as well as commentary on Earth’s natural satellite from experts and scholars, combining scientific observations andContinue reading "Lucky new astronomy product finds this month" The post Lucky new astronomy product finds this mon
     

Lucky new astronomy product finds this month

March 3rd 2025 at 8:30 pm

To the Moon University of Chicago PressChicago, IL Lunar: A History of the Moon in Myths, Maps, and Matter compiles 44 hand-drawn cartographic charts created by illustrator-cartographers from the U.S. Geological Survey. This 256-page hardback contains 500 color images, as well as commentary on Earth’s natural satellite from experts and scholars, combining scientific observations andContinue reading "Lucky new astronomy product finds this month"

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  • The first stars may have flooded the early universe with waterNola Taylor Tillman
    New research, published today in Nature Astronomy, found that water may have formed in the first 200 million years of the universe’s lifetime. The life-giving molecule may have been created so quickly by the deaths of the universe’s first stars. The study also found that rocky planets could be built in the water-rich environment leftContinue reading "The first stars may have flooded the early universe with water" The post The first stars may have flooded the early universe with water appeared fi
     

The first stars may have flooded the early universe with water

March 3rd 2025 at 7:30 pm

New research, published today in Nature Astronomy, found that water may have formed in the first 200 million years of the universe’s lifetime. The life-giving molecule may have been created so quickly by the deaths of the universe’s first stars. The study also found that rocky planets could be built in the water-rich environment leftContinue reading "The first stars may have flooded the early universe with water"

The post The first stars may have flooded the early universe with water appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets the PleiadesDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out during the early evening hours of March 5. That evening, the Moon will pass quite close to the Pleiades star cluster. Also known as the Seven Sisters and Messier 45, this group of stars is easy to see with your naked eyes. Still, binoculars mightContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets the Pleiades" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets the Pleiades appeared
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets the Pleiades

March 3rd 2025 at 5:52 pm

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out during the early evening hours of March 5. That evening, the Moon will pass quite close to the Pleiades star cluster. Also known as the Seven Sisters and Messier 45, this group of stars is easy to see with your naked eyes. Still, binoculars mightContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets the Pleiades"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets the Pleiades appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Explore 30 years of exoplanet discoveriesDonald Goldsmith
    In October 1995, after decades of serious effort, astronomers announced the first discovery of a planet orbiting a Sun-like star. Until then, the few planets known to exist beyond the solar system accompanied pulsars, the collapsed remnants of burnt-out stars, and had revealed themselves through glitches in the precise timing of the pulsars’ radio emission.Continue reading "Explore 30 years of exoplanet discoveries" The post Explore 30 years of exoplanet discoveries appeared first on Astronomy M
     

Explore 30 years of exoplanet discoveries

March 3rd 2025 at 5:30 pm

In October 1995, after decades of serious effort, astronomers announced the first discovery of a planet orbiting a Sun-like star. Until then, the few planets known to exist beyond the solar system accompanied pulsars, the collapsed remnants of burnt-out stars, and had revealed themselves through glitches in the precise timing of the pulsars’ radio emission.Continue reading "Explore 30 years of exoplanet discoveries"

The post Explore 30 years of exoplanet discoveries appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • March 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?Alison Klesman
    Two planets stand out in March’s evening sky, but let’s start our tour with a pair of lesser lights that hug the western horizon. Although Venus lies a respectable 30° from the Sun at the beginning of the month, it appears low in the sky. On the 1st, you can find the planet 5° highContinue reading "March 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?" The post March 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

March 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?

March 1st 2025 at 9:31 am

Two planets stand out in March’s evening sky, but let’s start our tour with a pair of lesser lights that hug the western horizon. Although Venus lies a respectable 30° from the Sun at the beginning of the month, it appears low in the sky. On the 1st, you can find the planet 5° highContinue reading "March 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

The post March 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

March 2025: What’s in the sky this month? A total lunar eclipse, Venus remains bright, and Mars and Jupiter continue to dominate

March 1st 2025 at 9:30 am

A total eclipse of the Moon is the highlight of this month, visible across North and South America. Venus remains very bright and transitions from evening to morning late in the month. Mercury joins Venus for a few evenings, offering the best opportunity to see both planets in twilight. Mars and Jupiter dominate the lateContinue reading "March 2025: What’s in the sky this month? A total lunar eclipse, Venus remains bright, and Mars and Jupiter continue to dominate"

The post March 2025: What’s in the sky this month? A total lunar eclipse, Venus remains bright, and Mars and Jupiter continue to dominate appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode?Michael E. Bakich
    If I’m being honest, the title of this story should be “When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode again?” T Coronae Borealis (T CrB) is classified as a recurrent nova — a star that blows its top over and over. Such objects are rare; fewer than a dozen have been identified in our galaxy.Continue reading "When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode?" The post When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode?

February 28th 2025 at 5:30 pm

If I’m being honest, the title of this story should be “When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode again?” T Coronae Borealis (T CrB) is classified as a recurrent nova — a star that blows its top over and over. Such objects are rare; fewer than a dozen have been identified in our galaxy.Continue reading "When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode?"

The post When is T Coronae Borealis going to explode? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from February 28 to March 7: The Moon joins the planetsAlison Klesman
    Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, February 28Venus is a prominent fixture in the evening sky, still hanging on at magnitude –4.8 and setting nearly three hours after the Sun. It’s currently located in central Pisces, far outshining any stars in the region.  Because Venus is an inferior planetContinue reading "The Sky This Week from February 28 to March 7: The Moon joins the planets" The post The Sky This Week from February 28 to March 7: The Moon joins the planets app
     

The Sky This Week from February 28 to March 7: The Moon joins the planets

February 28th 2025 at 9:30 am

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, February 28Venus is a prominent fixture in the evening sky, still hanging on at magnitude –4.8 and setting nearly three hours after the Sun. It’s currently located in central Pisces, far outshining any stars in the region.  Because Venus is an inferior planetContinue reading "The Sky This Week from February 28 to March 7: The Moon joins the planets"

The post The Sky This Week from February 28 to March 7: The Moon joins the planets appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA’s PUNCH is set to study how the Sun influences the space around usSten Odenwald
    UPDATE Wednesday, March 12, 2025: The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying PUNCH successfully launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 11:10 P.M. EDT on March 11. By early on March 12, the four satellites of the PUNCH constellation had been deployed and ground controllers confirmed acquisition of signal with them. On March 2, a SpaceXContinue reading "NASA’s PUNCH is set to study how the Sun influences the space around us" The post NASA’s PUNCH is set to study how the Sun influences the space aro
     

NASA’s PUNCH is set to study how the Sun influences the space around us

March 12th 2025 at 5:05 pm

UPDATE Wednesday, March 12, 2025: The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying PUNCH successfully launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 11:10 P.M. EDT on March 11. By early on March 12, the four satellites of the PUNCH constellation had been deployed and ground controllers confirmed acquisition of signal with them. On March 2, a SpaceXContinue reading "NASA’s PUNCH is set to study how the Sun influences the space around us"

The post NASA’s PUNCH is set to study how the Sun influences the space around us appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Pencil thickMark Zastrow
    Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India; taken via Obstech The Pencil Nebula (NGC 2736) is part of the Vela supernova remnant’s shock wave, which gives it a thin visual appearance. This deep image, however, reveals the trails of material left in the wake (at left) of the shock wave (center). The imager took 20⅔ hoursContinue reading "Pencil thick" The post Pencil thick appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Pencil thick

February 27th 2025 at 10:11 pm

Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India; taken via Obstech The Pencil Nebula (NGC 2736) is part of the Vela supernova remnant’s shock wave, which gives it a thin visual appearance. This deep image, however, reveals the trails of material left in the wake (at left) of the shock wave (center). The imager took 20⅔ hoursContinue reading "Pencil thick"

The post Pencil thick appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Scientists have discovered a 3-billion-year-old beach buried on Marsshill
    In the 1970s, images from the NASA Mariner 9 orbiter revealed water-sculpted surfaces on Mars. This settled the once-controversial question of whether water ever rippled over the Red Planet. Since then, more and more evidence has emerged that water once played a large role on our planetary neighbor. For example, martian meteorites record evidence forContinue reading "Scientists have discovered a 3-billion-year-old beach buried on Mars" The post Scientists have discovered a 3-billion-year-old bea
     

Scientists have discovered a 3-billion-year-old beach buried on Mars

By: shill
February 27th 2025 at 6:16 pm

In the 1970s, images from the NASA Mariner 9 orbiter revealed water-sculpted surfaces on Mars. This settled the once-controversial question of whether water ever rippled over the Red Planet. Since then, more and more evidence has emerged that water once played a large role on our planetary neighbor. For example, martian meteorites record evidence forContinue reading "Scientists have discovered a 3-billion-year-old beach buried on Mars"

The post Scientists have discovered a 3-billion-year-old beach buried on Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in spaceshill
    There are trillions of charged particles – protons and electrons, the basic building blocks of matter – whizzing around above your head at any given time. These high-energy particles, which can travel at close to the speed of light, typically remain thousands of kilometers away from Earth, trapped there by the shape of Earth’s magneticContinue reading "Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in space" The post Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in space appeared firs
     

Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in space

By: shill
February 26th 2025 at 8:30 pm

There are trillions of charged particles – protons and electrons, the basic building blocks of matter – whizzing around above your head at any given time. These high-energy particles, which can travel at close to the speed of light, typically remain thousands of kilometers away from Earth, trapped there by the shape of Earth’s magneticContinue reading "Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in space"

The post Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in space appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Intuitive Machines IM-2 mission launches to the MoonBen Evans
    UPDATE Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025: The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying IM-2 successfully lifted off at 7:16 P.M. EST on Wednesday, Feb. 26. Early next month, a robotic lander will arrive at the Moon’s south pole bearing an eclectic suite of payloads to search for subsurface water ice. Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 is targeting a touchdownContinue reading "Intuitive Machines IM-2 mission launches to the Moon" The post Intuitive Machines IM-2 mission launches to the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazi
     

Intuitive Machines IM-2 mission launches to the Moon

By: Ben Evans
February 27th 2025 at 6:19 pm

UPDATE Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025: The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying IM-2 successfully lifted off at 7:16 P.M. EST on Wednesday, Feb. 26. Early next month, a robotic lander will arrive at the Moon’s south pole bearing an eclectic suite of payloads to search for subsurface water ice. Intuitive Machines’ IM-2 is targeting a touchdownContinue reading "Intuitive Machines IM-2 mission launches to the Moon"

The post Intuitive Machines IM-2 mission launches to the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SPHEREx launches to conduct a cosmic censusBen Evans
    UPDATE Wednesday, March 12, 2025: The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying SPHEREx successfully launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 11:10 P.M. EDT on March 11. Following deployment, the SPHEREx observatory established a signal with ground controllers and its mission will soon begin. An infrared space telescope is scheduled to launch this week to mapContinue reading "SPHEREx launches to conduct a cosmic census" The post SPHEREx launches to conduct a cosmic census appeared first on Astronomy M
     

SPHEREx launches to conduct a cosmic census

By: Ben Evans
March 12th 2025 at 5:02 pm

UPDATE Wednesday, March 12, 2025: The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying SPHEREx successfully launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 11:10 P.M. EDT on March 11. Following deployment, the SPHEREx observatory established a signal with ground controllers and its mission will soon begin. An infrared space telescope is scheduled to launch this week to mapContinue reading "SPHEREx launches to conduct a cosmic census"

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  • Southern showcaseMark Zastrow
    Josh Jones/Kaptas Attila, taken via Deep Sky Chile The Carina Nebula (NGC 3372) is the sky’s most impressive emission nebula, bar none, for visual observers. Also pictured in this wide-field image at left is NGC 3324, an open star cluster that appears to lie within a blue lagoon in this Hubble-palette image taken with aContinue reading "Southern showcase" The post Southern showcase appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Southern showcase

February 25th 2025 at 12:15 am

Josh Jones/Kaptas Attila, taken via Deep Sky Chile The Carina Nebula (NGC 3372) is the sky’s most impressive emission nebula, bar none, for visual observers. Also pictured in this wide-field image at left is NGC 3324, an open star cluster that appears to lie within a blue lagoon in this Hubble-palette image taken with aContinue reading "Southern showcase"

The post Southern showcase appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: See the Horsehead NebulaDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and try to observe a celestial object that’s quite difficult to see — the Horsehead Nebula. This dark nebula, made of dust and super-cold gas, lies in the constellation Orion the Hunter. You’ll need a dark observing site and a large telescope, something like an 11-inch Celestron.Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: See the Horsehead Nebula" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: See the Horsehead Nebula appeared
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: See the Horsehead Nebula

February 24th 2025 at 6:08 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and try to observe a celestial object that’s quite difficult to see — the Horsehead Nebula. This dark nebula, made of dust and super-cold gas, lies in the constellation Orion the Hunter. You’ll need a dark observing site and a large telescope, something like an 11-inch Celestron.Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: See the Horsehead Nebula"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: See the Horsehead Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Underwater detector spots the most energetic neutrino yetAlison Klesman
    On Feb. 13, 2023, something extraordinary happened deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea. KM3NeT’s Astroparticle Research with Cosmics in the Abyss (ARCA) telescope, a sprawling underwater array of ultra-sensitive photodetectors, caught sight of the telltale sign of an incredibly rare cosmic messenger: a highly energetic fundamental particle known as a neutrino. With an estimated energy ofContinue reading "Underwater detector spots the most energetic neutrino yet" The post Underwater detector spots
     

Underwater detector spots the most energetic neutrino yet

February 21st 2025 at 7:22 pm

On Feb. 13, 2023, something extraordinary happened deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea. KM3NeT’s Astroparticle Research with Cosmics in the Abyss (ARCA) telescope, a sprawling underwater array of ultra-sensitive photodetectors, caught sight of the telltale sign of an incredibly rare cosmic messenger: a highly energetic fundamental particle known as a neutrino. With an estimated energy ofContinue reading "Underwater detector spots the most energetic neutrino yet"

The post Underwater detector spots the most energetic neutrino yet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from February 21 to 28: Saturn and Mercury meetAlison Klesman
    Friday, February 21The Moon passes 0.4° south of the bright red giant Antares in Scorpius this morning at 4 A.M. EST. The pair is visible in the predawn sky.  This evening, let’s look for another bright red giant: Betelgeuse, the famous star that serves as one shoulder of Orion the Hunter. An hour after sunset,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from February 21 to 28: Saturn and Mercury meet" The post The Sky This Week from February 21 to 28: Saturn and Mercury meet appeared first on Astronomy
     

The Sky This Week from February 21 to 28: Saturn and Mercury meet

February 21st 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, February 21The Moon passes 0.4° south of the bright red giant Antares in Scorpius this morning at 4 A.M. EST. The pair is visible in the predawn sky.  This evening, let’s look for another bright red giant: Betelgeuse, the famous star that serves as one shoulder of Orion the Hunter. An hour after sunset,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from February 21 to 28: Saturn and Mercury meet"

The post The Sky This Week from February 21 to 28: Saturn and Mercury meet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A glob and a starMark Zastrow
    Massimo di Fusco, data acquired via Chilescope The globular cluster M68 in Hydra lies at lower left of this image; at upper right is the variable star HD 109799. In 2021, astronomers confirmed the latter to be a member of the γ Doradus class of variable stars, which pulsate with waves driven by gravity, likeContinue reading "A glob and a star" The post A glob and a star appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A glob and a star

February 21st 2025 at 5:53 am

Massimo di Fusco, data acquired via Chilescope The globular cluster M68 in Hydra lies at lower left of this image; at upper right is the variable star HD 109799. In 2021, astronomers confirmed the latter to be a member of the γ Doradus class of variable stars, which pulsate with waves driven by gravity, likeContinue reading "A glob and a star"

The post A glob and a star appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Asteroid 2024 YR4’s odds of hitting Earth in 2032 are now effectively zeroKorey Haynes
    UPDATE Feb. 24, 2025: With new observations over the weekend, the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting Earth in 2032 have declined to 0.0039 percent — effectively eliminating concerns about that encounter. 2024 YR4 has now fallen from the riskiest asteroid on NASA’s automated Sentry list of potentially hazardous asteroids to the seventh highest position. InContinue reading "Asteroid 2024 YR4’s odds of hitting Earth in 2032 are now effectively zero" The post Asteroid 2024 YR4’s odds of hitting Earth in 2032
     

Asteroid 2024 YR4’s odds of hitting Earth in 2032 are now effectively zero

February 21st 2025 at 5:23 am

UPDATE Feb. 24, 2025: With new observations over the weekend, the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting Earth in 2032 have declined to 0.0039 percent — effectively eliminating concerns about that encounter. 2024 YR4 has now fallen from the riskiest asteroid on NASA’s automated Sentry list of potentially hazardous asteroids to the seventh highest position. InContinue reading "Asteroid 2024 YR4’s odds of hitting Earth in 2032 are now effectively zero"

The post Asteroid 2024 YR4’s odds of hitting Earth in 2032 are now effectively zero appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to get started with DSLR astrophotographyshill
    When we think of astrophotography, usually big telescopes on robotic mounts that cost thousands of dollars come to mind. But you can capture beautiful astrophotos a different way — with only a camera and a tripod. I created one of my first astrophotos on a work trip, on the side of the highway outside Albuquerque,Continue reading "How to get started with DSLR astrophotography" The post How to get started with DSLR astrophotography appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to get started with DSLR astrophotography

By: shill
February 20th 2025 at 5:30 pm

When we think of astrophotography, usually big telescopes on robotic mounts that cost thousands of dollars come to mind. But you can capture beautiful astrophotos a different way — with only a camera and a tripod. I created one of my first astrophotos on a work trip, on the side of the highway outside Albuquerque,Continue reading "How to get started with DSLR astrophotography"

The post How to get started with DSLR astrophotography appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Is human hibernation for long-duration space travel possible?Doug Adler
    Despite what Star Trek and Star Wars may have taught you, the amount of time required to travel between stars is vast.  Consider Voyager 1. The spacecraft is traveling at 38,000 mph (61,155 km/h). If Voyager 1 were pointed towards our nearest star, Proxima Centauri (which it isn’t), it would take 73,000 years to reachContinue reading "Is human hibernation for long-duration space travel possible?" The post Is human hibernation for long-duration space travel possible? appeared first on Astronomy M
     

Is human hibernation for long-duration space travel possible?

February 19th 2025 at 6:57 pm

Despite what Star Trek and Star Wars may have taught you, the amount of time required to travel between stars is vast.  Consider Voyager 1. The spacecraft is traveling at 38,000 mph (61,155 km/h). If Voyager 1 were pointed towards our nearest star, Proxima Centauri (which it isn’t), it would take 73,000 years to reachContinue reading "Is human hibernation for long-duration space travel possible?"

The post Is human hibernation for long-duration space travel possible? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A galactic veilMark Zastrow
    Overall Photons: Elisa Cuccu/Andrea Iorio/Fernando Linsalata/Giampiero Lilli/Roberto Volpini/Gianni Melis/Roberto Testi/Stephane Moinard/José Manuel López Arlandis/Michele Mazzola/Vitali Pelenjow/Leonardo Pelosi/Patrick Bisaillon/Aidan Guerra/Jeff Ratino/George William Hoffman/Vasile Unguru/Vakhtang Khutsishvili/Jonathan Schwab Lying 240 million light-years away, the members of the Perseus Galaxy Cluster shimmer in this deep-field portrait, mingling with delicate foreground wisps of hydrogen and
     

A galactic veil

February 18th 2025 at 4:02 pm

Overall Photons: Elisa Cuccu/Andrea Iorio/Fernando Linsalata/Giampiero Lilli/Roberto Volpini/Gianni Melis/Roberto Testi/Stephane Moinard/José Manuel López Arlandis/Michele Mazzola/Vitali Pelenjow/Leonardo Pelosi/Patrick Bisaillon/Aidan Guerra/Jeff Ratino/George William Hoffman/Vasile Unguru/Vakhtang Khutsishvili/Jonathan Schwab Lying 240 million light-years away, the members of the Perseus Galaxy Cluster shimmer in this deep-field portrait, mingling with delicate foreground wisps of hydrogen and galactic cirrus in the MilkyContinue reading "A galactic veil"

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  • DOGE personnel conducting spending review at NASAMark Zastrow
    The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), working under a mandate from President Donald Trump to reduce government spending, has its next target: NASA. The space agency told FLYING on Friday that DOGE personnel are already on-site to conduct a review of its payments. “We are a federal agency; we are going to have DOGE come,” said JanetContinue reading "DOGE personnel conducting spending review at NASA" The post DOGE personnel conducting spending review at NASA appeared first on Astronomy M
     

DOGE personnel conducting spending review at NASA

February 18th 2025 at 1:03 am

The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), working under a mandate from President Donald Trump to reduce government spending, has its next target: NASA. The space agency told FLYING on Friday that DOGE personnel are already on-site to conduct a review of its payments. “We are a federal agency; we are going to have DOGE come,” said JanetContinue reading "DOGE personnel conducting spending review at NASA"

The post DOGE personnel conducting spending review at NASA appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Lowell Observatory holds I Heart Pluto FestivalDavid J. Eicher
    An annual event over recent years, the I Heart Pluto Festival in Flagstaff, Arizona, celebrates the history, heritage, and cutting-edge astronomy at Lowell Observatory. On Feb. 18, 1930, the young astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto, considered for decades a planet and “demoted” to dwarf planet status in 2008. Following the discovery, Tombaugh traveled down MarsContinue reading "Lowell Observatory holds I Heart Pluto Festival" The post Lowell Observatory holds I Heart Pluto Festival appea
     

Lowell Observatory holds I Heart Pluto Festival

February 18th 2025 at 12:57 am

An annual event over recent years, the I Heart Pluto Festival in Flagstaff, Arizona, celebrates the history, heritage, and cutting-edge astronomy at Lowell Observatory. On Feb. 18, 1930, the young astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto, considered for decades a planet and “demoted” to dwarf planet status in 2008. Following the discovery, Tombaugh traveled down MarsContinue reading "Lowell Observatory holds I Heart Pluto Festival"

The post Lowell Observatory holds I Heart Pluto Festival appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Spike Nebula: How an educated artistic guess was fulfilledJon Lomberg
    As a space artist, I have had the thrill of participating in scientific discovery, often being the first artist to imagine what new objects might look like. Space artists usually work to the scientist’s directive, although sometimes they get it first. In the 1920s, Lucian Rudaux showed pinkish skies on Mars decades before Viking revealedContinue reading "The Spike Nebula: How an educated artistic guess was fulfilled" The post The Spike Nebula: How an educated artistic guess was fulfilled appeare
     

The Spike Nebula: How an educated artistic guess was fulfilled

February 17th 2025 at 11:04 pm

As a space artist, I have had the thrill of participating in scientific discovery, often being the first artist to imagine what new objects might look like. Space artists usually work to the scientist’s directive, although sometimes they get it first. In the 1920s, Lucian Rudaux showed pinkish skies on Mars decades before Viking revealedContinue reading "The Spike Nebula: How an educated artistic guess was fulfilled"

The post The Spike Nebula: How an educated artistic guess was fulfilled appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Do Saturn’s rings cast shadows? Astronomy Staff
    Why don’t Saturn’s rings throw a shadow onto the planet’s surface, like its moons do? John GrimleyToronto, Ontario The simple answer is that Saturn’s rings do cast shadows on the planet’s surface! NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017, took the dramatic image of the rings’ shadows on Saturn shown above.  TheContinue reading "Do Saturn’s rings cast shadows? " The post Do Saturn’s rings cast shadows?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Do Saturn’s rings cast shadows? 

February 17th 2025 at 8:30 pm

Why don’t Saturn’s rings throw a shadow onto the planet’s surface, like its moons do? John GrimleyToronto, Ontario The simple answer is that Saturn’s rings do cast shadows on the planet’s surface! NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017, took the dramatic image of the rings’ shadows on Saturn shown above.  TheContinue reading "Do Saturn’s rings cast shadows? "

The post Do Saturn’s rings cast shadows?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets AntaresDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and catch the Moon as it passes by Antares, the brightest star in the constellation Scorpius. This pairing will happen in the hours near dawn on the morning of February 21. As both objects rise, note the shape of the constellation — it really does look likeContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Antares" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Antares appeared first on Astronomy Magazine
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Antares

February 17th 2025 at 6:30 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and catch the Moon as it passes by Antares, the brightest star in the constellation Scorpius. This pairing will happen in the hours near dawn on the morning of February 21. As both objects rise, note the shape of the constellation — it really does look likeContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Antares"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Antares appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Listen to the universe: How sonification turns data into soundDavid Grossman
    Modern astronomical observatories send us an enormous amount of data, which is generally examined and shared in the form of images. But what if the myriad forms of information we receive from space could be converted into sounds that inspire, entertain, educate, and enlighten? And what if, more than that, these soundscapes could offer accessContinue reading "Listen to the universe: How sonification turns data into sound" The post Listen to the universe: How sonification turns data into sound app
     

Listen to the universe: How sonification turns data into sound

February 15th 2025 at 12:25 am

Modern astronomical observatories send us an enormous amount of data, which is generally examined and shared in the form of images. But what if the myriad forms of information we receive from space could be converted into sounds that inspire, entertain, educate, and enlighten? And what if, more than that, these soundscapes could offer accessContinue reading "Listen to the universe: How sonification turns data into sound"

The post Listen to the universe: How sonification turns data into sound appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Nikon’s Z 180–600mm f/5.6–6.3 VR lens reviewed for astrophotographyMark Zastrow
    In August 2023, Nikon released its first long telephoto zoom lens for its mirrorless Z-mount cameras: the Nikkor Z 180–600mm F/5.6-6.3 VR. This lens was highly anticipated, coming eight years after the company’s extremely popular 200–500mm lens for DSLRs. The lens is mainly targeted towards wildlife and bird photographers. But with its 600mm reach, itContinue reading "Nikon’s Z 180–600mm f/5.6–6.3 VR lens reviewed for astrophotography" The post Nikon’s Z 180–600mm f/5.6–6.3 VR lens reviewed for
     

Nikon’s Z 180–600mm f/5.6–6.3 VR lens reviewed for astrophotography

February 14th 2025 at 6:59 pm

In August 2023, Nikon released its first long telephoto zoom lens for its mirrorless Z-mount cameras: the Nikkor Z 180–600mm F/5.6-6.3 VR. This lens was highly anticipated, coming eight years after the company’s extremely popular 200–500mm lens for DSLRs. The lens is mainly targeted towards wildlife and bird photographers. But with its 600mm reach, itContinue reading "Nikon’s Z 180–600mm f/5.6–6.3 VR lens reviewed for astrophotography"

The post Nikon’s Z 180–600mm f/5.6–6.3 VR lens reviewed for astrophotography appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • In Galileo’s trailMark Zastrow
    Marco Meniero from Civitavecchia, Italy Galileo Galilei was born on Feb. 15, 1564 in the city of Pisa, which is also the location of this mural by the Brazilian street artist Eduardo Kobra. The photographer used a Nikon mirrorless camera and 14–24mm lens to capture this scene; the star trails in this image were imagedContinue reading "In Galileo’s trail" The post In Galileo’s trail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

In Galileo’s trail

February 14th 2025 at 2:30 pm

Marco Meniero from Civitavecchia, Italy Galileo Galilei was born on Feb. 15, 1564 in the city of Pisa, which is also the location of this mural by the Brazilian street artist Eduardo Kobra. The photographer used a Nikon mirrorless camera and 14–24mm lens to capture this scene; the star trails in this image were imagedContinue reading "In Galileo’s trail"

The post In Galileo’s trail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from February 14 to 21: Venus reaches greatest brilliancyAlison Klesman
    Friday, February 14The dwarf planet 1 Ceres is in conjunction with the Sun at 5 P.M. EST today. While this means we can’t see Ceres for now, we can see Venus — which is at its brightest, reaching greatest brilliancy this evening at 6 P.M. EST Earth’s sister planet is now a long-lingering “evening star,”Continue reading "The Sky This Week from February 14 to 21: Venus reaches greatest brilliancy" The post The Sky This Week from February 14 to 21: Venus reaches greatest brilliancy appeared first o
     

The Sky This Week from February 14 to 21: Venus reaches greatest brilliancy

February 14th 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, February 14The dwarf planet 1 Ceres is in conjunction with the Sun at 5 P.M. EST today. While this means we can’t see Ceres for now, we can see Venus — which is at its brightest, reaching greatest brilliancy this evening at 6 P.M. EST Earth’s sister planet is now a long-lingering “evening star,”Continue reading "The Sky This Week from February 14 to 21: Venus reaches greatest brilliancy"

The post The Sky This Week from February 14 to 21: Venus reaches greatest brilliancy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Go with the flowMark Zastrow
    Gianni Tumino from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy Lava snakes its way down the slopes of Mount Etna from a fissure near its summit as the stars rotate above in this shot taken the evening of Feb. 10. The post Go with the flow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • 40 cosmic questions and answersMichael E. Bakich
    There are thousands upon thousands of questions related to the topic of astronomy, from the basics of the science to the complexities of the distant cosmos. Here are just 40 such questions that we as astronomers — professional and amateur — hear. I hope their answers help you explain some of these concepts to family,Continue reading "40 cosmic questions and answers" The post 40 cosmic questions and answers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

40 cosmic questions and answers

February 13th 2025 at 5:30 pm

There are thousands upon thousands of questions related to the topic of astronomy, from the basics of the science to the complexities of the distant cosmos. Here are just 40 such questions that we as astronomers — professional and amateur — hear. I hope their answers help you explain some of these concepts to family,Continue reading "40 cosmic questions and answers"

The post 40 cosmic questions and answers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Let AI teach you how to take great astrophotosAlison Klesman
    Astrophotography is both an art and science, and has long been a source of fascination and fun for amateur astronomers. Yet the steep learning curve of mastering equipment, planning shoots, and processing images can feel overwhelming. Now, a groundbreaking new astrophotography course, powered by AI and available for iPhone, can guide you step by stepContinue reading "Let AI teach you how to take great astrophotos" The post Let AI teach you how to take great astrophotos appeared first on Astronom
     

Let AI teach you how to take great astrophotos

February 11th 2025 at 7:24 pm

Astrophotography is both an art and science, and has long been a source of fascination and fun for amateur astronomers. Yet the steep learning curve of mastering equipment, planning shoots, and processing images can feel overwhelming. Now, a groundbreaking new astrophotography course, powered by AI and available for iPhone, can guide you step by stepContinue reading "Let AI teach you how to take great astrophotos"

The post Let AI teach you how to take great astrophotos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Fall in love with new astronomy products this monthAstronomy Staff
    Fluorite triplet TakahashiTokyo, Japan The ​​FCT-65D is a low-dispersion Fluorite Triplet refractor. It has a 400mm focal length and a f/6.2 focal ratio, and a high Strehl ratio of .98. It also comes with a camera-angle adjuster and can be equipped with different Takahashi reducers, as well as dovetail plates and aluminum rings to accompanyContinue reading "Fall in love with new astronomy products this month" The post Fall in love with new astronomy products this month appeared first on Astronom
     

Fall in love with new astronomy products this month

February 11th 2025 at 5:30 pm

Fluorite triplet TakahashiTokyo, Japan The ​​FCT-65D is a low-dispersion Fluorite Triplet refractor. It has a 400mm focal length and a f/6.2 focal ratio, and a high Strehl ratio of .98. It also comes with a camera-angle adjuster and can be equipped with different Takahashi reducers, as well as dovetail plates and aluminum rings to accompanyContinue reading "Fall in love with new astronomy products this month"

The post Fall in love with new astronomy products this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Starry side upMark Zastrow
    Abhijit Patil, taken from Bisti, New Mexico These “deviled egg” rock formations — also called the “Alien eggs” — lie under the Milky Way in this panorama taken with an astromodified Nikon Z 6II and 14–24mm zoom lens. The sky is a 4-panel mosaic, each frame taken at a focal length of 24mm and anContinue reading "Starry side up" The post Starry side up appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Starry side up

February 11th 2025 at 2:42 am

Abhijit Patil, taken from Bisti, New Mexico These “deviled egg” rock formations — also called the “Alien eggs” — lie under the Milky Way in this panorama taken with an astromodified Nikon Z 6II and 14–24mm zoom lens. The sky is a 4-panel mosaic, each frame taken at a focal length of 24mm and anContinue reading "Starry side up"

The post Starry side up appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Bennu isn’t likely to hit Earth — but if it did, here’s what would happenAlison Klesman
    In 2018, NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission reached asteroid 101955 Bennu. Two years later, the spacecraft snagged a sample of its surface, which has since been returned to Earth. Now, astronomers are getting to know Bennu like never before — and a new study looks at how it could wreck us.  Bennu is classified as a near-EarthContinue reading "Bennu isn’t likely to hit Earth — but if it did, here’s what would happen" The post Bennu isn’t likely to hit Earth — but if it did, here’s what would happen appear
     

Bennu isn’t likely to hit Earth — but if it did, here’s what would happen

February 10th 2025 at 11:51 pm

In 2018, NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission reached asteroid 101955 Bennu. Two years later, the spacecraft snagged a sample of its surface, which has since been returned to Earth. Now, astronomers are getting to know Bennu like never before — and a new study looks at how it could wreck us.  Bennu is classified as a near-EarthContinue reading "Bennu isn’t likely to hit Earth — but if it did, here’s what would happen"

The post Bennu isn’t likely to hit Earth — but if it did, here’s what would happen appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxy merge?Astronomy Staff
    What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way completes the merger with the Andromeda Galaxy? Bryan MitchellMaricopa, Arizona Your excellent question affords us the opportunity to distinguish between near-certain astronomical predictions and those which are far less so.  Astronomers predict that our home galaxy and the nearest major galaxy to it, AndromedaContinue reading "What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxy merge?" The post What will happen to
     

What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxy merge?

February 10th 2025 at 8:30 pm

What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way completes the merger with the Andromeda Galaxy? Bryan MitchellMaricopa, Arizona Your excellent question affords us the opportunity to distinguish between near-certain astronomical predictions and those which are far less so.  Astronomers predict that our home galaxy and the nearest major galaxy to it, AndromedaContinue reading "What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxy merge?"

The post What will happen to the solar system when the Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxy merge? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Zodiacal LightDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and spot the elusive zodiacal light. Caused by light reflecting and scattering off dust in the plane of our solar system, one of the best times to see it is in the late winter and early spring. So, head to a reasonably dark site andContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Zodiacal Light" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Zodiacal Light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Zodiacal Light

February 10th 2025 at 6:43 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and spot the elusive zodiacal light. Caused by light reflecting and scattering off dust in the plane of our solar system, one of the best times to see it is in the late winter and early spring. So, head to a reasonably dark site andContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Zodiacal Light"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Zodiacal Light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How moonquakes could rattle Artemis astronautsRobert Reeves
    More than 3 billion years ago, when the Moon’s volcanic mare (the dark lunar “seas”) were formed, the Moon was rife with tectonic activity and moonquakes that shook its surface. Evidence of these ground-shuddering events can be seen on the Moon’s nearside in the form of long features called wrinkle ridges — created when sheetsContinue reading "How moonquakes could rattle Artemis astronauts" The post How moonquakes could rattle Artemis astronauts appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How moonquakes could rattle Artemis astronauts

February 8th 2025 at 2:01 am

More than 3 billion years ago, when the Moon’s volcanic mare (the dark lunar “seas”) were formed, the Moon was rife with tectonic activity and moonquakes that shook its surface. Evidence of these ground-shuddering events can be seen on the Moon’s nearside in the form of long features called wrinkle ridges — created when sheetsContinue reading "How moonquakes could rattle Artemis astronauts"

The post How moonquakes could rattle Artemis astronauts appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Oberwerk’s binoculars is really a pair of 5-inch refractorsTony Hallas
    I have always enjoyed looking at the sky on a clear night through binoculars. Seeing through individual optics for each eye creates a feeling of being in space. It’s different than looking through a telescope. Aesthetically, I find it much more pleasing. Most binoculars, unfortunately, just don’t collect enough light for real deep-sky viewing. ButContinue reading "Oberwerk’s binoculars is really a pair of 5-inch refractors" The post Oberwerk’s binoculars is really a pair of 5-inch refractors app
     

Oberwerk’s binoculars is really a pair of 5-inch refractors

February 7th 2025 at 5:30 pm

I have always enjoyed looking at the sky on a clear night through binoculars. Seeing through individual optics for each eye creates a feeling of being in space. It’s different than looking through a telescope. Aesthetically, I find it much more pleasing. Most binoculars, unfortunately, just don’t collect enough light for real deep-sky viewing. ButContinue reading "Oberwerk’s binoculars is really a pair of 5-inch refractors"

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  • The Sun and the stationMark Zastrow
    Shakeel Anwar from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada Prominences dance around the limb of the Sun as the International Space Station crosses in front of the disk, imaged here in Hα with a 3.2-inch solar telescope. The imager took two 60-second videos with an astronomical camera — one to capture the transit and another to capture theContinue reading "The Sun and the station" The post The Sun and the station appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sun and the station

February 7th 2025 at 2:30 pm

Shakeel Anwar from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada Prominences dance around the limb of the Sun as the International Space Station crosses in front of the disk, imaged here in Hα with a 3.2-inch solar telescope. The imager took two 60-second videos with an astronomical camera — one to capture the transit and another to capture theContinue reading "The Sun and the station"

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  • The Sky This Week from February 7 to 14: The February Full Snow Moon shinesAlison Klesman
    Friday, February 7 Mighty Jupiter stands high in the east at sunset, dominating the stars of Taurus the Bull as they begin to appear in the deepening darkness. Once the Sun is safely below the horizon, center your telescope on the gas giant — those in the eastern half of the U.S. will see the planetContinue reading "The Sky This Week from February 7 to 14: The February Full Snow Moon shines" The post The Sky This Week from February 7 to 14: The February Full Snow Moon shines appeared first on As
     

The Sky This Week from February 7 to 14: The February Full Snow Moon shines

February 7th 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, February 7 Mighty Jupiter stands high in the east at sunset, dominating the stars of Taurus the Bull as they begin to appear in the deepening darkness. Once the Sun is safely below the horizon, center your telescope on the gas giant — those in the eastern half of the U.S. will see the planetContinue reading "The Sky This Week from February 7 to 14: The February Full Snow Moon shines"

The post The Sky This Week from February 7 to 14: The February Full Snow Moon shines appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The best objects to view and photograph along the Milky Wayshill
    I began photographing the Milky Way around 2018, but the hobby took off in earnest for me at the onset of the COVID years as I took myself out to remote dark sites to capture images. For many observers, the Milky Way’s prime attraction is the northern galactic bulge from the Large Sagittarius Star CloudContinue reading "The best objects to view and photograph along the Milky Way" The post The best objects to view and photograph along the Milky Way appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The best objects to view and photograph along the Milky Way

By: shill
February 5th 2025 at 5:30 pm

I began photographing the Milky Way around 2018, but the hobby took off in earnest for me at the onset of the COVID years as I took myself out to remote dark sites to capture images. For many observers, the Milky Way’s prime attraction is the northern galactic bulge from the Large Sagittarius Star CloudContinue reading "The best objects to view and photograph along the Milky Way"

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  • A look aheadMark Zastrow
    Emmanuel Joly from Le Cannet-des-Maures, France Sharpless 2–216 is one of the closest planetary nebulae to Earth, just 415 light-years away in Perseus. On the sky, it has a diameter three times larger than that of the Full Moon. Of course, the term “planetary nebula” is a misnomer — such objects are actually produced by starsContinue reading "A look ahead" The post A look ahead appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A look ahead

February 5th 2025 at 2:30 pm

Emmanuel Joly from Le Cannet-des-Maures, France Sharpless 2–216 is one of the closest planetary nebulae to Earth, just 415 light-years away in Perseus. On the sky, it has a diameter three times larger than that of the Full Moon. Of course, the term “planetary nebula” is a misnomer — such objects are actually produced by starsContinue reading "A look ahead"

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  • The Moon’s epic ‘grand canyons’ were gouged out in 10 minutes by an asteroid strikeRobert Reeves
    Each year, millions of visitors marvel at the geological intricacy and beauty of the vast chasm of the Grand Canyon carved through the Arizona desert by 5 million years of water erosion. It is interesting to contemplate the force of water as over the eons the Colorado River meticulously sliced through layers of Arizona bedrock.Continue reading "The Moon’s epic ‘grand canyons’ were gouged out in 10 minutes by an asteroid strike" The post The Moon’s epic ‘grand canyons’ were gouged out in 10 minut
     

The Moon’s epic ‘grand canyons’ were gouged out in 10 minutes by an asteroid strike

February 4th 2025 at 7:30 pm

Each year, millions of visitors marvel at the geological intricacy and beauty of the vast chasm of the Grand Canyon carved through the Arizona desert by 5 million years of water erosion. It is interesting to contemplate the force of water as over the eons the Colorado River meticulously sliced through layers of Arizona bedrock.Continue reading "The Moon’s epic ‘grand canyons’ were gouged out in 10 minutes by an asteroid strike"

The post The Moon’s epic ‘grand canyons’ were gouged out in 10 minutes by an asteroid strike appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’Stephen James O'Meara
    As Valentine’s Day approaches, I thought I’d share with you a lunar phenomenon created by the interplay of light and shadow on the Moon. It’s a delightful pattern of lunar peaks and ridges that, when illuminated in the correct way, looks like a string of beads forming the shape of a heart. Catch it underContinue reading "When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’" The post When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’

April 4th 2025 at 9:30 pm

As Valentine’s Day approaches, I thought I’d share with you a lunar phenomenon created by the interplay of light and shadow on the Moon. It’s a delightful pattern of lunar peaks and ridges that, when illuminated in the correct way, looks like a string of beads forming the shape of a heart. Catch it underContinue reading "When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’"

The post When to see the Moon’s beaded ‘heart’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A galactic megaconglomerateMark Zastrow
    Team ShaRA; data acquired via Chilescope in Rio Hurtado, Chile The galaxy Fornax A (NGC 1316) is famed for its enormous radio lobes, but deep optical imaging reveals dizzying layers of structure generated by a series of mergers that made the galaxy what it is today. Just right of Fornax A is the smaller spiralContinue reading "A galactic megaconglomerate" The post A galactic megaconglomerate appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A galactic megaconglomerate

February 4th 2025 at 12:31 am

Team ShaRA; data acquired via Chilescope in Rio Hurtado, Chile The galaxy Fornax A (NGC 1316) is famed for its enormous radio lobes, but deep optical imaging reveals dizzying layers of structure generated by a series of mergers that made the galaxy what it is today. Just right of Fornax A is the smaller spiralContinue reading "A galactic megaconglomerate"

The post A galactic megaconglomerate appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why do the solar system’s planets have different compositions? Astronomy Staff
    If everything in our solar system formed from the same solar nebula, why do the planets have different compositions? Herbert WichTitusville, Florida To better understand why the planets have variable compositions, we have to first understand the process of how stars form. While the composition of gas and dust in a precursor molecular cloud isContinue reading "Why do the solar system’s planets have different compositions? " The post Why do the solar system’s planets have different compositions? 
     

Why do the solar system’s planets have different compositions? 

February 3rd 2025 at 8:30 pm

If everything in our solar system formed from the same solar nebula, why do the planets have different compositions? Herbert WichTitusville, Florida To better understand why the planets have variable compositions, we have to first understand the process of how stars form. While the composition of gas and dust in a precursor molecular cloud isContinue reading "Why do the solar system’s planets have different compositions? "

The post Why do the solar system’s planets have different compositions?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Bright Planets and StarsDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and spot the many planets currently in our night sky. You’ll see four of the five planets visible without optical aid. Venus and Saturn are in the west; Jupiter lies overhead; and Mars is in the east. Opportunities to see so many easy-to-spot planets don’tContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Bright Planets and Stars" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Bright Planets and Stars appeared first on Astronomy Magaz
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Bright Planets and Stars

February 3rd 2025 at 7:10 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and spot the many planets currently in our night sky. You’ll see four of the five planets visible without optical aid. Venus and Saturn are in the west; Jupiter lies overhead; and Mars is in the east. Opportunities to see so many easy-to-spot planets don’tContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Bright Planets and Stars"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Bright Planets and Stars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How did walking on the Moon affect the Apollo astronauts?Doug Adler
    Strange as it may sound, where the astronauts sat (or “sat” – the crew actually stood) in the Apollo Lunar Module may have profoundly impacted the way the experience of walking on the Moon affected them.  Mission commanders were in what is referred to in aviation as the “left seat” position and lunar module pilotsContinue reading "How did walking on the Moon affect the Apollo astronauts?" The post How did walking on the Moon affect the Apollo astronauts? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How did walking on the Moon affect the Apollo astronauts?

February 3rd 2025 at 5:30 pm

Strange as it may sound, where the astronauts sat (or “sat” – the crew actually stood) in the Apollo Lunar Module may have profoundly impacted the way the experience of walking on the Moon affected them.  Mission commanders were in what is referred to in aviation as the “left seat” position and lunar module pilotsContinue reading "How did walking on the Moon affect the Apollo astronauts?"

The post How did walking on the Moon affect the Apollo astronauts? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Top 10 space stories of 2024Alison Klesman
    This past year brought much of the world together through events both anticipated and unexpected. April’s highly awaited total solar eclipse delighted millions with the sight of a lifetime — though dodging clouds got a bit stressful for some. Less than a month later, the Sun unleashed a massive storm that lit the skies withContinue reading "Top 10 space stories of 2024" The post Top 10 space stories of 2024 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Top 10 space stories of 2024

February 1st 2025 at 5:30 pm

This past year brought much of the world together through events both anticipated and unexpected. April’s highly awaited total solar eclipse delighted millions with the sight of a lifetime — though dodging clouds got a bit stressful for some. Less than a month later, the Sun unleashed a massive storm that lit the skies withContinue reading "Top 10 space stories of 2024"

The post Top 10 space stories of 2024 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • February 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?Alison Klesman
    As February begins, Venus appears low in the western evening sky. The brilliant planet stands nearly 15° high an hour after the Sun goes down and dominates the faint background stars of Pisces the Fish. Although the inner world lies a healthy 45° east of the Sun, it doesn’t climb high because the ecliptic —Continue reading "February 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?" The post February 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazi
     

February 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?

February 1st 2025 at 9:31 am

As February begins, Venus appears low in the western evening sky. The brilliant planet stands nearly 15° high an hour after the Sun goes down and dominates the faint background stars of Pisces the Fish. Although the inner world lies a healthy 45° east of the Sun, it doesn’t climb high because the ecliptic —Continue reading "February 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

The post February 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

February 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Venus, Jupiter, and Mars continue to dominate the sky, and the Moon occults the Pleiades

February 1st 2025 at 9:30 am

We’re quickly losing sight of Saturn, but Venus, Jupiter, and Mars dominate the sky. Uranus and Neptune are easy binocular objects. Mars is still at its best, having reached opposition last month. Jupiter has many satellite transits visible in small telescopes. And early in the month, the Moon passes in front of the Pleiades, visibleContinue reading "February 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Venus, Jupiter, and Mars continue to dominate the sky, and the Moon occults the Pleiades"

The post February 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Venus, Jupiter, and Mars continue to dominate the sky, and the Moon occults the Pleiades appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Scientists find life’s ‘building blocks’ in asteroid Bennu samplesKorey Haynes
    The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft returned triumphantly to Earth in 2023 after collecting 4.3 ounces (121.6 grams) of precious grains of dust and rock from the asteroid Bennu in 2020. While that sample return was an incredible feat of engineering, its arrival on Earth was just the beginning of the scientific adventure.  On Jan. 29, NASA heldContinue reading "Scientists find life’s ‘building blocks’ in asteroid Bennu samples" The post Scientists find life’s ‘building blocks’ in asteroid Bennu samples app
     

Scientists find life’s ‘building blocks’ in asteroid Bennu samples

January 31st 2025 at 10:50 pm

The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft returned triumphantly to Earth in 2023 after collecting 4.3 ounces (121.6 grams) of precious grains of dust and rock from the asteroid Bennu in 2020. While that sample return was an incredible feat of engineering, its arrival on Earth was just the beginning of the scientific adventure.  On Jan. 29, NASA heldContinue reading "Scientists find life’s ‘building blocks’ in asteroid Bennu samples"

The post Scientists find life’s ‘building blocks’ in asteroid Bennu samples appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • 20 years ago, the discovery of Eris spelled doom for planet PlutoBen Evans
    Eight billion miles (14 billion kilometers) from Earth, at the solar system’s ragged edge, lies Eris — a planet-sized oddball of a world that emerged unexpectedly from the darkness 20 years ago. Named for the capricious Greek goddess of discord, trouble-stirring Eris would doubtless be pleased that her celestial namesake caused even mild-mannered astronomers toContinue reading "20 years ago, the discovery of Eris spelled doom for planet Pluto" The post 20 years ago, the discovery of Eris spelled
     

20 years ago, the discovery of Eris spelled doom for planet Pluto

By: Ben Evans
January 31st 2025 at 10:16 pm

Eight billion miles (14 billion kilometers) from Earth, at the solar system’s ragged edge, lies Eris — a planet-sized oddball of a world that emerged unexpectedly from the darkness 20 years ago. Named for the capricious Greek goddess of discord, trouble-stirring Eris would doubtless be pleased that her celestial namesake caused even mild-mannered astronomers toContinue reading "20 years ago, the discovery of Eris spelled doom for planet Pluto"

The post 20 years ago, the discovery of Eris spelled doom for planet Pluto appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Lighting up the neighborhoodMark Zastrow
    Chiradeep Chhaya, imaged from Deep Sky West, New Mexico The dark nebula Barnard 37 in Monoceros is surrounded by a entourage of reflection nebulae in this scene — most prominently IC 447 (at lower left), which is visually connected by a trail of dark dust (LDN 1607) to IC 446. NGC 2245/7 are another pairContinue reading "Lighting up the neighborhood" The post Lighting up the neighborhood appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Lighting up the neighborhood

January 31st 2025 at 9:59 pm

Chiradeep Chhaya, imaged from Deep Sky West, New Mexico The dark nebula Barnard 37 in Monoceros is surrounded by a entourage of reflection nebulae in this scene — most prominently IC 447 (at lower left), which is visually connected by a trail of dark dust (LDN 1607) to IC 446. NGC 2245/7 are another pairContinue reading "Lighting up the neighborhood"

The post Lighting up the neighborhood appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from January 31 to February 7: Watch the Pleiades disappearAlison Klesman
    Friday, January 31 After passing through its New phase last week, the Moon is now a thin waxing crescent some 8 percent lit by sunset this evening. You can find it setting in the southwest as soon as the Sun goes down, accompanied by Saturn (magnitude 1.1) and Venus (magnitude –4.7) above it.  Saturn sitsContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 31 to February 7: Watch the Pleiades disappear" The post The Sky This Week from January 31 to February 7: Watch the Pleiades disappear appeared f
     

The Sky This Week from January 31 to February 7: Watch the Pleiades disappear

January 31st 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, January 31 After passing through its New phase last week, the Moon is now a thin waxing crescent some 8 percent lit by sunset this evening. You can find it setting in the southwest as soon as the Sun goes down, accompanied by Saturn (magnitude 1.1) and Venus (magnitude –4.7) above it.  Saturn sitsContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 31 to February 7: Watch the Pleiades disappear"

The post The Sky This Week from January 31 to February 7: Watch the Pleiades disappear appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Starmus La Palma announces first round of artists lineup and program structureAlison Klesman
    STARMUS is thrilled to announce the first round of artists and the program structure for the highly anticipated STARMUS La Palma festival, set to take place from April 25 to 28, 2025. This year’s lineup features an extraordinary array of luminaries, including renowned ethologist Jane Goodall -founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and UN MessengerContinue reading "Starmus La Palma announces first round of artists lineup and program structure" The post Starmus La Palma announces first round of art
     

Starmus La Palma announces first round of artists lineup and program structure

January 31st 2025 at 2:44 am

STARMUS is thrilled to announce the first round of artists and the program structure for the highly anticipated STARMUS La Palma festival, set to take place from April 25 to 28, 2025. This year’s lineup features an extraordinary array of luminaries, including renowned ethologist Jane Goodall -founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and UN MessengerContinue reading "Starmus La Palma announces first round of artists lineup and program structure"

The post Starmus La Palma announces first round of artists lineup and program structure appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A southern targetMark Zastrow
    Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia RCW 85 is a faint emission nebula in the southern constellation of Centaurus. The designation “RCW” comes from a catalog of Hα emission regions published in 1960 by a trio of researchers working in Australia under the astronomer Bart Bok: Alexander Rodgers, Colin Campbell, and John Whiteoak. ThisContinue reading "A southern target" The post A southern target appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A southern target

January 30th 2025 at 4:18 am

Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia RCW 85 is a faint emission nebula in the southern constellation of Centaurus. The designation “RCW” comes from a catalog of Hα emission regions published in 1960 by a trio of researchers working in Australia under the astronomer Bart Bok: Alexander Rodgers, Colin Campbell, and John Whiteoak. ThisContinue reading "A southern target"

The post A southern target appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Astronomy in Chile Educator Ambassadors Program: Sharing the skies above ChileAlison Klesman
    Chile is home to SOME of the world’s best skies — and some of the world’s most advanced instruments to observe them. From the radio telescope array charting complex chemistry in Titan’s atmosphere to the telescopes that pinpointed the neutron star merger last year, Chilean observatories play a starring role in today’s groundbreaking discoveries. ManyContinue reading "The Astronomy in Chile Educator Ambassadors Program: Sharing the skies above Chile" The post The Astronomy in Chile Educator Ambas
     

The Astronomy in Chile Educator Ambassadors Program: Sharing the skies above Chile

January 30th 2025 at 3:30 am

Chile is home to SOME of the world’s best skies — and some of the world’s most advanced instruments to observe them. From the radio telescope array charting complex chemistry in Titan’s atmosphere to the telescopes that pinpointed the neutron star merger last year, Chilean observatories play a starring role in today’s groundbreaking discoveries. ManyContinue reading "The Astronomy in Chile Educator Ambassadors Program: Sharing the skies above Chile"

The post The Astronomy in Chile Educator Ambassadors Program: Sharing the skies above Chile appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left?Astronomy Staff
    After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left? Richard LivitskiSeal Beach, California Our Sun will become a white dwarf in about 7 billion years. At that point, it will no longer produce energy through nuclear fusion, having exhausted its fuel (hydrogen and helium). Just like the embers of anContinue reading "After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left?" The post After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be l
     

After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left?

January 27th 2025 at 10:30 pm

After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left? Richard LivitskiSeal Beach, California Our Sun will become a white dwarf in about 7 billion years. At that point, it will no longer produce energy through nuclear fusion, having exhausted its fuel (hydrogen and helium). Just like the embers of anContinue reading "After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left?"

The post After our Sun becomes a white dwarf and cools completely, what will be left? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Parade crasherMark Zastrow
    Josh Dury, taken from the Mendip Hills in Somerset, U.K. The International Space Station sails through the sky in this long exposure, its arc in this long exposure intersecting the ongoing “planet parade” along the ecliptic, including (left to right) Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. To view the photographer’s annotated version highlighting the planets, clickContinue reading "Parade crasher" The post Parade crasher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Parade crasher

January 27th 2025 at 10:14 pm

Josh Dury, taken from the Mendip Hills in Somerset, U.K. The International Space Station sails through the sky in this long exposure, its arc in this long exposure intersecting the ongoing “planet parade” along the ecliptic, including (left to right) Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. To view the photographer’s annotated version highlighting the planets, clickContinue reading "Parade crasher"

The post Parade crasher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A Parade of Planets: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and spot the many planets currently in our night sky. You’ll see four of the five planets visible without optical aid. Venus and Saturn are in the west; Jupiter lies overhead; and Mars is in the east. Opportunities to see so many easy-to-spot planets don’tContinue reading "A Parade of Planets: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post A Parade of Planets: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A Parade of Planets: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

January 27th 2025 at 7:19 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and spot the many planets currently in our night sky. You’ll see four of the five planets visible without optical aid. Venus and Saturn are in the west; Jupiter lies overhead; and Mars is in the east. Opportunities to see so many easy-to-spot planets don’tContinue reading "A Parade of Planets: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post A Parade of Planets: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots — here’s whyshill
    The U.S.’s return to the Moon with NASA’s Artemis program will not be a mere stroll in the park. Instead it will be a perilous journey to a lunar location representing one of the most extreme environments in the solar system. For the Artemis program astronauts, walking on the Moon will require new ways ofContinue reading "Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots — here’s why" The post Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots — here’s 
     

Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots — here’s why

By: shill
January 27th 2025 at 5:30 pm

The U.S.’s return to the Moon with NASA’s Artemis program will not be a mere stroll in the park. Instead it will be a perilous journey to a lunar location representing one of the most extreme environments in the solar system. For the Artemis program astronauts, walking on the Moon will require new ways ofContinue reading "Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots — here’s why"

The post Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots — here’s why appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Green hydrogen project threatens pristine Paranal skies in ChileChristopher Cokinos
    A proposed massive hydrogen-fuel production project in Chile has astronomers galvanized in concern and opposition. One astronomer calls the possible Chilean facility a “nightmare” for the Paranal Observatory’s dark skies. One study has found that Paranal, located in Chile’s Atacama Desert, has the darkest skies of any major astronomical research site. That would change ifContinue reading "Green hydrogen project threatens pristine Paranal skies in Chile" The post Green hydrogen project threatens
     

Green hydrogen project threatens pristine Paranal skies in Chile

January 25th 2025 at 1:35 am

A proposed massive hydrogen-fuel production project in Chile has astronomers galvanized in concern and opposition. One astronomer calls the possible Chilean facility a “nightmare” for the Paranal Observatory’s dark skies. One study has found that Paranal, located in Chile’s Atacama Desert, has the darkest skies of any major astronomical research site. That would change ifContinue reading "Green hydrogen project threatens pristine Paranal skies in Chile"

The post Green hydrogen project threatens pristine Paranal skies in Chile appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Solar scopeMark Zastrow
    Chris Cook from Long Beach, California The McMath-Pierce Solar Telescope stands beneath a dark, moonless sky at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona. The photographer took 90 one-minute exposures with a Canon DSLR at f/2.8 and ISO 2500. The post Solar scope appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Solar scope

January 25th 2025 at 12:57 am

Chris Cook from Long Beach, California The McMath-Pierce Solar Telescope stands beneath a dark, moonless sky at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona. The photographer took 90 one-minute exposures with a Canon DSLR at f/2.8 and ISO 2500.

The post Solar scope appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA administrator steps down, urges continuity under new leadershipMark Zastrow
    NASA Administrator Bill Nelson stepped down on Monday, Jan. 20, after President Donald Trump was inaugurated, and the departing space agency chief had some words of advice for his replacement. In a letter addressed to the next NASA administrator — who, if Trump’s nomination is confirmed, will be Shift4 CEO and SpaceX ally Jared Isaacman — NelsonContinue reading "NASA administrator steps down, urges continuity under new leadership" The post NASA administrator steps down, urges continuity under ne
     

NASA administrator steps down, urges continuity under new leadership

January 25th 2025 at 12:39 am

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson stepped down on Monday, Jan. 20, after President Donald Trump was inaugurated, and the departing space agency chief had some words of advice for his replacement. In a letter addressed to the next NASA administrator — who, if Trump’s nomination is confirmed, will be Shift4 CEO and SpaceX ally Jared Isaacman — NelsonContinue reading "NASA administrator steps down, urges continuity under new leadership"

The post NASA administrator steps down, urges continuity under new leadership appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers find the most distant supernova yetDaniela Mata
    Last week at the 245th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in National Harbor, Maryland, astronomers presented some of their most recent and exciting finds from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). One such discovery was the identification of the most distant so-called core-collapse supernova ever confirmed. These explosions mark the end of life for massiveContinue reading "Astronomers find the most distant supernova yet" The post Astronomers find the most distant supernova yet appear
     

Astronomers find the most distant supernova yet

January 24th 2025 at 6:32 pm

Last week at the 245th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in National Harbor, Maryland, astronomers presented some of their most recent and exciting finds from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). One such discovery was the identification of the most distant so-called core-collapse supernova ever confirmed. These explosions mark the end of life for massiveContinue reading "Astronomers find the most distant supernova yet"

The post Astronomers find the most distant supernova yet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from January 24 to 31: The Moon mingles with AntaresAlison Klesman
    Friday, January 24The Moon passes 0.3° south of the bright red giant star Antares at 7 P.M. EST. However, the pair isn’t visible this evening, as they’ll rise in the early-morning sky, so we’ll feature them tomorrow.  Tonight, we’ll focus instead on Mars. The Red Planet recently reached opposition and is still visible essentially allContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 24 to 31: The Moon mingles with Antares" The post The Sky This Week from January 24 to 31: The Moon mingles with Ant
     

The Sky This Week from January 24 to 31: The Moon mingles with Antares

January 24th 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, January 24The Moon passes 0.3° south of the bright red giant star Antares at 7 P.M. EST. However, the pair isn’t visible this evening, as they’ll rise in the early-morning sky, so we’ll feature them tomorrow.  Tonight, we’ll focus instead on Mars. The Red Planet recently reached opposition and is still visible essentially allContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 24 to 31: The Moon mingles with Antares"

The post The Sky This Week from January 24 to 31: The Moon mingles with Antares appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Could planets orbiting red dwarfs host life?Alison Klesman
    A nearby star that may host a planet or two could provide a clue about whether planets orbiting the smallest stars can survive the bullying of their suns.  In a press conference last week at the 245th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, Scott Wolk of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory presented his findings on WolfContinue reading "Could planets orbiting red dwarfs host life?" The post Could planets orbiting red dwarfs host life? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Could planets orbiting red dwarfs host life?

January 23rd 2025 at 7:20 pm

A nearby star that may host a planet or two could provide a clue about whether planets orbiting the smallest stars can survive the bullying of their suns.  In a press conference last week at the 245th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, Scott Wolk of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory presented his findings on WolfContinue reading "Could planets orbiting red dwarfs host life?"

The post Could planets orbiting red dwarfs host life? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Cozy up with new astronomy products this monthAstronomy Staff
    Deeper look Imm Astrophotography SeriesOnalaska, TX The 750 Best Deep Sky Objects (Reachable From the Northern Hemisphere) by amateur astronomer Gary Imm is a precise visual guide to deep-sky objects, complete with rankings and images for every target. This 88-page reference gives readers a detailed list of where the targets are in the Northern HemisphereContinue reading "Cozy up with new astronomy products this month" The post Cozy up with new astronomy products this month appeared first on Ast
     

Cozy up with new astronomy products this month

January 23rd 2025 at 5:30 pm

Deeper look Imm Astrophotography SeriesOnalaska, TX The 750 Best Deep Sky Objects (Reachable From the Northern Hemisphere) by amateur astronomer Gary Imm is a precise visual guide to deep-sky objects, complete with rankings and images for every target. This 88-page reference gives readers a detailed list of where the targets are in the Northern HemisphereContinue reading "Cozy up with new astronomy products this month"

The post Cozy up with new astronomy products this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • All aglowMark Zastrow
    Huang Dandan, taken from Yulong Latso, Gangzi, Sichuan Province, China The Milky Way, zodiacal light, and airglow are all visible in this all-sky mosaic, capturing the glow of phenomena on planetary, solar system, and galactic scales. The photographer used an astromodified Sony mirrorless camera and 11mm fisheye lens to capture this mosaic, taking 20-second exposuresContinue reading "All aglow" The post All aglow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

All aglow

January 23rd 2025 at 12:20 am

Huang Dandan, taken from Yulong Latso, Gangzi, Sichuan Province, China The Milky Way, zodiacal light, and airglow are all visible in this all-sky mosaic, capturing the glow of phenomena on planetary, solar system, and galactic scales. The photographer used an astromodified Sony mirrorless camera and 11mm fisheye lens to capture this mosaic, taking 20-second exposuresContinue reading "All aglow"

The post All aglow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers just deleted an asteroid because it turned out to be Elon Musk’s Tesla RoadsterMark Zastrow
    On Jan. 2, the Minor Planet Center at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, announced the discovery of an unusual asteroid, designated 2018 CN41. First identified and submitted by a citizen scientist, the object’s orbit was notable: It came less than 150,000 miles (240,000 km) from Earth, closer than the orbit of theContinue reading "Astronomers just deleted an asteroid because it turned out to be Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster" The post Astronomers just delete
     

Astronomers just deleted an asteroid because it turned out to be Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster

January 22nd 2025 at 10:20 pm

On Jan. 2, the Minor Planet Center at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, announced the discovery of an unusual asteroid, designated 2018 CN41. First identified and submitted by a citizen scientist, the object’s orbit was notable: It came less than 150,000 miles (240,000 km) from Earth, closer than the orbit of theContinue reading "Astronomers just deleted an asteroid because it turned out to be Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster"

The post Astronomers just deleted an asteroid because it turned out to be Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Venus meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and watch a close pairing of two naked-eye planets: Venus and Saturn. The two will be in the southwestern evening sky, and will be closest during the week of January 19. Each night, brilliant Venus and much less bright (but still easy to see) Saturn will be a bit more than 3Continue reading "Venus meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Venus meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronom
     

Venus meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

January 21st 2025 at 6:14 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and watch a close pairing of two naked-eye planets: Venus and Saturn. The two will be in the southwestern evening sky, and will be closest during the week of January 19. Each night, brilliant Venus and much less bright (but still easy to see) Saturn will be a bit more than 3Continue reading "Venus meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Venus meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Does a comet’s period change because it loses mass every time it nears the Sun?Astronomy Staff
    Do the periods of comets decrease because they lose mass every time they get near the Sun? Robert BaileyConover, Wisconsin Great question! Assuming you’re referring specifically to the orbital period — in other words, how long comets take to make one revolution around the Sun, or a cometary “year” — according to basic physics, the periodContinue reading "Does a comet’s period change because it loses mass every time it nears the Sun?" The post Does a comet’s period change because it loses mass ev
     

Does a comet’s period change because it loses mass every time it nears the Sun?

January 20th 2025 at 10:30 pm

Do the periods of comets decrease because they lose mass every time they get near the Sun? Robert BaileyConover, Wisconsin Great question! Assuming you’re referring specifically to the orbital period — in other words, how long comets take to make one revolution around the Sun, or a cometary “year” — according to basic physics, the periodContinue reading "Does a comet’s period change because it loses mass every time it nears the Sun?"

The post Does a comet’s period change because it loses mass every time it nears the Sun? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Fire and iceMark Zastrow
    Chris Schur, taken from Payson, Arizona Comet C/2024 G3 (ATLAS) lies above a mountain ridge in this shot taken before sunrise on Jan. 11, with particulate matter from forest fires giving the sky a reddish hue. The imager used a 3.2-inch refractor and a one-shot color camera to take a 0.1-second exposure. The post Fire and ice appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Fire and ice

January 20th 2025 at 2:30 pm

Chris Schur, taken from Payson, Arizona Comet C/2024 G3 (ATLAS) lies above a mountain ridge in this shot taken before sunrise on Jan. 11, with particulate matter from forest fires giving the sky a reddish hue. The imager used a 3.2-inch refractor and a one-shot color camera to take a 0.1-second exposure.

The post Fire and ice appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Unusual spiral quasar seen dancing with a companionMark Zastrow
    The jets of a supermassive black hole are one of the cosmos’ greatest spectacles — and also one of its greatest mysteries. These beams of ionized matter burst forth from the cores of galaxies at speeds approaching that of light. How those black holes harness and focus that energy remains hotly contested. In recent years,Continue reading "Unusual spiral quasar seen dancing with a companion" The post Unusual spiral quasar seen dancing with a companion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Unusual spiral quasar seen dancing with a companion

January 18th 2025 at 4:14 am

The jets of a supermassive black hole are one of the cosmos’ greatest spectacles — and also one of its greatest mysteries. These beams of ionized matter burst forth from the cores of galaxies at speeds approaching that of light. How those black holes harness and focus that energy remains hotly contested. In recent years,Continue reading "Unusual spiral quasar seen dancing with a companion"

The post Unusual spiral quasar seen dancing with a companion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX Starship Flight 7 explodes midair, but Super Heavy booster catch successfulAlison Klesman
    Losing the Block 2 Starship on its debut flight was not the optimal outcome. But SpaceX still managed to make significant progress on Flight 7. In October, SpaceX made history by snaring the Super Heavy booster from the sky using a pair of metal chopstick arms attached to a tower on the launch pad, which the companyContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 7 explodes midair, but Super Heavy booster catch successful" The post SpaceX Starship Flight 7 explodes midair, but Super Heavy booster catch
     

SpaceX Starship Flight 7 explodes midair, but Super Heavy booster catch successful

January 18th 2025 at 3:24 am

Losing the Block 2 Starship on its debut flight was not the optimal outcome. But SpaceX still managed to make significant progress on Flight 7. In October, SpaceX made history by snaring the Super Heavy booster from the sky using a pair of metal chopstick arms attached to a tower on the launch pad, which the companyContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 7 explodes midair, but Super Heavy booster catch successful"

The post SpaceX Starship Flight 7 explodes midair, but Super Heavy booster catch successful appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Starbase rocket testing facility is permanently changing the landscape of southern Texasshill
    If there is a leader in the aerospace industry, SpaceX is it. The company’s Crew Dragon and Cargo Dragon spacecrafts are the current go-to vehicles to deliver astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station. NASA contracts awarded to SpaceX through 2030 alone are worth nearly US$5 billion and include research and development for theContinue reading "The Starbase rocket testing facility is permanently changing the landscape of southern Texas" The post The Starbase rocket testing facili
     

The Starbase rocket testing facility is permanently changing the landscape of southern Texas

By: shill
January 18th 2025 at 12:30 am

If there is a leader in the aerospace industry, SpaceX is it. The company’s Crew Dragon and Cargo Dragon spacecrafts are the current go-to vehicles to deliver astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station. NASA contracts awarded to SpaceX through 2030 alone are worth nearly US$5 billion and include research and development for theContinue reading "The Starbase rocket testing facility is permanently changing the landscape of southern Texas"

The post The Starbase rocket testing facility is permanently changing the landscape of southern Texas appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Be right backMark Zastrow
    Chirag Upreti, taken from the Bronx, New York City Mars is seen just before dipping behind the Moon during its occultation Jan. 13. The photographer used a Sony mirrorless camera and 600mm lens with a x2 teleconverter. The post Be right back appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • Galactic ‘conveyor belt’ circulates elements like carbon in and out of galaxiesAlison Klesman
    Star-forming galaxies, including ours, are rich in elements — and secrets. Stars come to life fastest in the early histories of such galaxies, but this process doesn’t last at such a high rate forever. The star-formation rate (SFR) eventually slows.  Thanks to a recent study published Dec. 27, 2024, in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, weContinue reading "Galactic ‘conveyor belt’ circulates elements like carbon in and out of galaxies" The post Galactic ‘conveyor belt’ circulates elements like c
     

Galactic ‘conveyor belt’ circulates elements like carbon in and out of galaxies

January 17th 2025 at 7:01 pm

Star-forming galaxies, including ours, are rich in elements — and secrets. Stars come to life fastest in the early histories of such galaxies, but this process doesn’t last at such a high rate forever. The star-formation rate (SFR) eventually slows.  Thanks to a recent study published Dec. 27, 2024, in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, weContinue reading "Galactic ‘conveyor belt’ circulates elements like carbon in and out of galaxies"

The post Galactic ‘conveyor belt’ circulates elements like carbon in and out of galaxies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from January 17 to 24: A conjunction of Venus and SaturnAlison Klesman
    Friday, January 17Although Jupiter and Mars have been dominating the eastern sky, there’s more here to view than just planets. Already 50° high an hour after sunset, the bright, magnitude 0.1 star Capella stands high above Mars and to Jupiter’s upper left. This is the alpha star of the constellation Auriga, which sits directly aboveContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 17 to 24: A conjunction of Venus and Saturn" The post The Sky This Week from January 17 to 24: A conjunction of Venus
     

The Sky This Week from January 17 to 24: A conjunction of Venus and Saturn

January 17th 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, January 17Although Jupiter and Mars have been dominating the eastern sky, there’s more here to view than just planets. Already 50° high an hour after sunset, the bright, magnitude 0.1 star Capella stands high above Mars and to Jupiter’s upper left. This is the alpha star of the constellation Auriga, which sits directly aboveContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 17 to 24: A conjunction of Venus and Saturn"

The post The Sky This Week from January 17 to 24: A conjunction of Venus and Saturn appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A young star-forming region shines bright for JWST Samantha Hill
    Like the Sun shining through the clouds in the early morning, a bright star within the star-forming nebula N79 appears to burst forth through a web of cooler gas and dust in this image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Located in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a satellite of our Milky WayContinue reading "A young star-forming region shines bright for JWST " The post A young star-forming region shines bright for JWST  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A young star-forming region shines bright for JWST 

January 17th 2025 at 12:24 am

Like the Sun shining through the clouds in the early morning, a bright star within the star-forming nebula N79 appears to burst forth through a web of cooler gas and dust in this image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Located in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a satellite of our Milky WayContinue reading "A young star-forming region shines bright for JWST "

The post A young star-forming region shines bright for JWST  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbitWendy Whitman Cobb, The Conversation
    Just past 2 a.m. Eastern time on Jan. 16, 2025, a new rocket blasted off from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. By reaching orbit, Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket launch has marked a milestone for a commercial space company that has big ambitions. As a space policy expert, I see New Glenn’sContinue reading "Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbit" The post Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbit appeared first on Astronomy M
     

Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbit

Just past 2 a.m. Eastern time on Jan. 16, 2025, a new rocket blasted off from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. By reaching orbit, Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket launch has marked a milestone for a commercial space company that has big ambitions. As a space policy expert, I see New Glenn’sContinue reading "Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbit"

The post Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbit appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The early universe’s ‘Little Red Dots’ are still a big mysteryKorey Haynes
    On Tuesday, at the 245th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, astronomers revisited some recent mysteries. Dale Kocevski, from Colby College in Maine, spoke during a press conference about the Little Red Dots (LRDs) found in data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). These are the same as the “universe-breaking” galaxies first reported roughlyContinue reading "The early universe’s ‘Little Red Dots’ are still a big mystery" The post The early universe’s ‘Little Red Dots’ are still
     

The early universe’s ‘Little Red Dots’ are still a big mystery

January 15th 2025 at 5:46 pm

On Tuesday, at the 245th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, astronomers revisited some recent mysteries. Dale Kocevski, from Colby College in Maine, spoke during a press conference about the Little Red Dots (LRDs) found in data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). These are the same as the “universe-breaking” galaxies first reported roughlyContinue reading "The early universe’s ‘Little Red Dots’ are still a big mystery"

The post The early universe’s ‘Little Red Dots’ are still a big mystery appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Observe the dark side of the famous Orion NebulaStephen James O'Meara
    Many know the Great Orion Nebula (M42) in Orion’s Sword as a bright diffuse nebula — a glowing cloud of cosmic gas illuminated by the Trapezium star cluster. But the Orion Nebula also has a dark side, formed by its lanes and clouds of dust. They frequently avoid scrutiny, as the surrounding brightness tends toContinue reading "Observe the dark side of the famous Orion Nebula" The post Observe the dark side of the famous Orion Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Observe the dark side of the famous Orion Nebula

January 15th 2025 at 5:30 pm

Many know the Great Orion Nebula (M42) in Orion’s Sword as a bright diffuse nebula — a glowing cloud of cosmic gas illuminated by the Trapezium star cluster. But the Orion Nebula also has a dark side, formed by its lanes and clouds of dust. They frequently avoid scrutiny, as the surrounding brightness tends toContinue reading "Observe the dark side of the famous Orion Nebula"

The post Observe the dark side of the famous Orion Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Supermassive black hole births jets, hosts orbiting white dwarf, all while astronomers watchAlison Klesman
    In 2018, a distant black hole threw a fit. The 1.4-million-solar-mass black hole at the center of the galaxy 1ES 1927+654 some 270 million light-years away suddenly began spewing radiation, flaring in optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray light.  Then, astronomers watched as the so-called X-ray corona of high-energy particles close in to the black hole vanishedContinue reading "Supermassive black hole births jets, hosts orbiting white dwarf, all while astronomers watch" The post Supermassive black hol
     

Supermassive black hole births jets, hosts orbiting white dwarf, all while astronomers watch

January 15th 2025 at 12:50 am

In 2018, a distant black hole threw a fit. The 1.4-million-solar-mass black hole at the center of the galaxy 1ES 1927+654 some 270 million light-years away suddenly began spewing radiation, flaring in optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray light.  Then, astronomers watched as the so-called X-ray corona of high-energy particles close in to the black hole vanishedContinue reading "Supermassive black hole births jets, hosts orbiting white dwarf, all while astronomers watch"

The post Supermassive black hole births jets, hosts orbiting white dwarf, all while astronomers watch appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Rocket Lab takes jab at NASA with release of Mars sample return planAlison Klesman
    In what appears to be a jab at NASA, Rocket Lab this week unveiled its own plan to return rock and dust samples the space agency has been collecting from Mars’ Jezero Crater since 2021. NASA earlier this week said it needs more time to determine the path forward for its Mars Sample Return program, punting aContinue reading "Rocket Lab takes jab at NASA with release of Mars sample return plan" The post Rocket Lab takes jab at NASA with release of Mars sample return plan appeared first on Astronom
     

Rocket Lab takes jab at NASA with release of Mars sample return plan

January 13th 2025 at 11:56 pm

In what appears to be a jab at NASA, Rocket Lab this week unveiled its own plan to return rock and dust samples the space agency has been collecting from Mars’ Jezero Crater since 2021. NASA earlier this week said it needs more time to determine the path forward for its Mars Sample Return program, punting aContinue reading "Rocket Lab takes jab at NASA with release of Mars sample return plan"

The post Rocket Lab takes jab at NASA with release of Mars sample return plan appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How does adaptive optics work?Astronomy Staff
    Could a telescope be vibrated with the right frequency to counter the atmospheric twinkle of stars? Robert ByerlyWindsor, California Yes, it can! This is one facet of adaptive optics, which astronomical observatories can use to compensate for distortions in astronomical images caused by our atmosphere. Let’s set the stage first: Stars twinkle because on Earth,Continue reading "How does adaptive optics work?" The post How does adaptive optics work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How does adaptive optics work?

January 13th 2025 at 10:30 pm

Could a telescope be vibrated with the right frequency to counter the atmospheric twinkle of stars? Robert ByerlyWindsor, California Yes, it can! This is one facet of adaptive optics, which astronomical observatories can use to compensate for distortions in astronomical images caused by our atmosphere. Let’s set the stage first: Stars twinkle because on Earth,Continue reading "How does adaptive optics work?"

The post How does adaptive optics work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • See mighty Mars at oppositionshill
    At public stargazes and evenings with friends at the telescope, we love to set our eyes on the wonders of Saturn and Jupiter at every opportunity. Year-round, whenever they’re above the horizon, they never cease to amaze. Mars, on the other hand, is easy to underappreciate because it appears small for much of the year,Continue reading "See mighty Mars at opposition" The post See mighty Mars at opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

See mighty Mars at opposition

By: shill
January 13th 2025 at 8:30 pm

At public stargazes and evenings with friends at the telescope, we love to set our eyes on the wonders of Saturn and Jupiter at every opportunity. Year-round, whenever they’re above the horizon, they never cease to amaze. Mars, on the other hand, is easy to underappreciate because it appears small for much of the year,Continue reading "See mighty Mars at opposition"

The post See mighty Mars at opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon covers MarsDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and watch the Full Moon pass in front of the Red Planet. Astronomers call such an event an occultation. Pretty much anyone in the continental U.S. with a clear sky will be able to see this rare happening. The next time residents of the U.S.Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon covers Mars" The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon covers Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon covers Mars

January 13th 2025 at 7:52 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and watch the Full Moon pass in front of the Red Planet. Astronomers call such an event an occultation. Pretty much anyone in the continental U.S. with a clear sky will be able to see this rare happening. The next time residents of the U.S.Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon covers Mars"

The post This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon covers Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Mars at opposition: See the Red Planet all night longMichael E. Bakich
    On Jan. 15, Mars will reach a point in its orbit that astronomers call opposition. That evening, Mars will lie opposite the Sun from our perspective. It will rise at sunset, reach its highest point at midnight, and set at sunrise.  No matter when you go out, Mars will be somewhere in the sky. AndContinue reading "Mars at opposition: See the Red Planet all night long" The post Mars at opposition: See the Red Planet all night long appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Mars at opposition: See the Red Planet all night long

January 13th 2025 at 6:30 pm

On Jan. 15, Mars will reach a point in its orbit that astronomers call opposition. That evening, Mars will lie opposite the Sun from our perspective. It will rise at sunset, reach its highest point at midnight, and set at sunrise.  No matter when you go out, Mars will be somewhere in the sky. AndContinue reading "Mars at opposition: See the Red Planet all night long"

The post Mars at opposition: See the Red Planet all night long appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A Geminid spectacularMark Zastrow
    Osama Fathi, taken from the Black Desert, Egypt Jupiter and the Geminid meteors highlight this winter skyscape above a mudbrick dovecote in Egypt’s Black Desert. The shot was taken Dec. 8, 2024 with an astromodified Nikon mirrorless camera and lens at 24mm. The imager took a 6-minute sky exposure, a 30-second foreground exposure, and aContinue reading "A Geminid spectacular" The post A Geminid spectacular appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A Geminid spectacular

January 13th 2025 at 2:30 pm

Osama Fathi, taken from the Black Desert, Egypt Jupiter and the Geminid meteors highlight this winter skyscape above a mudbrick dovecote in Egypt’s Black Desert. The shot was taken Dec. 8, 2024 with an astromodified Nikon mirrorless camera and lens at 24mm. The imager took a 6-minute sky exposure, a 30-second foreground exposure, and aContinue reading "A Geminid spectacular"

The post A Geminid spectacular appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • More than a spiralMark Zastrow
    Bob Fera/Steve Mandel, taken from ObsTech El Sauce Observatory, Chile NGC 1512 is a barred spiral galaxy with a unique double ring roughly 33 million light-years distant in the southern constellation Horologium. Ultraviolet space telescope views reveal the full extent of the spiral arms, and how distorted they are by the galaxy’s gravitational tango withContinue reading "More than a spiral" The post More than a spiral appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

More than a spiral

January 12th 2025 at 1:35 am

Bob Fera/Steve Mandel, taken from ObsTech El Sauce Observatory, Chile NGC 1512 is a barred spiral galaxy with a unique double ring roughly 33 million light-years distant in the southern constellation Horologium. Ultraviolet space telescope views reveal the full extent of the spiral arms, and how distorted they are by the galaxy’s gravitational tango withContinue reading "More than a spiral"

The post More than a spiral appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Watch the Full Moon cover Mars on MondayMichael E. Bakich
    On Jan. 13, the Full Moon will pass in front of Mars during an event astronomers call an occultation. And pretty much anyone in the U.S. with binoculars and a clear sky that night will be able to see it. Every Full Moon rises at sunset because it lies in the opposite direction of theContinue reading "Watch the Full Moon cover Mars on Monday" The post Watch the Full Moon cover Mars on Monday appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Watch the Full Moon cover Mars on Monday

January 11th 2025 at 6:30 pm

On Jan. 13, the Full Moon will pass in front of Mars during an event astronomers call an occultation. And pretty much anyone in the U.S. with binoculars and a clear sky that night will be able to see it. Every Full Moon rises at sunset because it lies in the opposite direction of theContinue reading "Watch the Full Moon cover Mars on Monday"

The post Watch the Full Moon cover Mars on Monday appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Jet Propulsion Lab and Mount Wilson Observatory closed amid Eaton fireMark Zastrow
    NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the historic Mount Wilson Observatory in California appear to be unscathed by the Eaton fire burning through Pasadena and Altadena — for now. However, over 150 JPL employees have lost their homes, said the center’s director Laurie Leshin in a post on X on Friday morning. “Significant devastation inContinue reading "Jet Propulsion Lab and Mount Wilson Observatory closed amid Eaton fire" The post Jet Propulsion Lab and Mount Wilson Observatory closed amid
     

Jet Propulsion Lab and Mount Wilson Observatory closed amid Eaton fire

January 11th 2025 at 1:39 am

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the historic Mount Wilson Observatory in California appear to be unscathed by the Eaton fire burning through Pasadena and Altadena — for now. However, over 150 JPL employees have lost their homes, said the center’s director Laurie Leshin in a post on X on Friday morning. “Significant devastation inContinue reading "Jet Propulsion Lab and Mount Wilson Observatory closed amid Eaton fire"

The post Jet Propulsion Lab and Mount Wilson Observatory closed amid Eaton fire appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • BepiColombo nabs its best views yet of MercuryMichael E. Bakich
    BepiColombo, the current spacecraft studying Mercury, is a joint mission of the European Space Agency and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. Launched October 20, 2018, it’s actually two satellites in one, the Mercury Planetary Orbiter and the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter, and it will reach its destination in November 2026. To reach its final position, however,Continue reading "BepiColombo nabs its best views yet of Mercury" The post BepiColombo nabs its best views yet of Mercury appeared
     

BepiColombo nabs its best views yet of Mercury

January 10th 2025 at 11:41 pm

BepiColombo, the current spacecraft studying Mercury, is a joint mission of the European Space Agency and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. Launched October 20, 2018, it’s actually two satellites in one, the Mercury Planetary Orbiter and the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter, and it will reach its destination in November 2026. To reach its final position, however,Continue reading "BepiColombo nabs its best views yet of Mercury"

The post BepiColombo nabs its best views yet of Mercury appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Moon’s water is sparking a new ‘gold rush’Michael Carroll
    On a cold January morning in 1848, James Marshall was busy building a lumber mill in northern California. to process timber destined for the nearby towns of Sacramento and San Francisco. But within the mill’s outflow, Marshall caught a glimpse of some sparkling pebbles. After close inspection, Marshall realized he had found gold in “themContinue reading "The Moon’s water is sparking a new ‘gold rush’" The post The Moon’s water is sparking a new ‘gold rush’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Moon’s water is sparking a new ‘gold rush’

January 10th 2025 at 6:30 pm

On a cold January morning in 1848, James Marshall was busy building a lumber mill in northern California. to process timber destined for the nearby towns of Sacramento and San Francisco. But within the mill’s outflow, Marshall caught a glimpse of some sparkling pebbles. After close inspection, Marshall realized he had found gold in “themContinue reading "The Moon’s water is sparking a new ‘gold rush’"

The post The Moon’s water is sparking a new ‘gold rush’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A southern cometMark Zastrow
    Gianni Tumino, taken from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy Comet C/2024 G3 (ATLAS) isn’t easy to spot — those in the Southern Hemisphere have the best opportunities for visual observations. But it is still within reach for Northern Hemisphere photographers, as evidenced by this pre-dawn shot taken Jan. 9 from Sicily. The imager used a Canon mirrorlessContinue reading "A southern comet" The post A southern comet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A southern comet

January 10th 2025 at 12:30 pm

Gianni Tumino, taken from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy Comet C/2024 G3 (ATLAS) isn’t easy to spot — those in the Southern Hemisphere have the best opportunities for visual observations. But it is still within reach for Northern Hemisphere photographers, as evidenced by this pre-dawn shot taken Jan. 9 from Sicily. The imager used a Canon mirrorlessContinue reading "A southern comet"

The post A southern comet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from January 10 to 17: Mars reaches oppositionAlison Klesman
    Friday, January 10The waxing gibbous Moon passes 5° north of Jupiter in Taurus at 6 P.M. EST. This evening, our satellite appears to Jupiter’s upper left in the sky, forming the apex of a triangle with the magnitude 1.7 star Elnath to Luna’s lower left. Jupiter is still extremely bright and easy to find, shiningContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 10 to 17: Mars reaches opposition" The post The Sky This Week from January 10 to 17: Mars reaches opposition appeared first on Astronomy M
     

The Sky This Week from January 10 to 17: Mars reaches opposition

January 10th 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, January 10The waxing gibbous Moon passes 5° north of Jupiter in Taurus at 6 P.M. EST. This evening, our satellite appears to Jupiter’s upper left in the sky, forming the apex of a triangle with the magnitude 1.7 star Elnath to Luna’s lower left. Jupiter is still extremely bright and easy to find, shiningContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 10 to 17: Mars reaches opposition"

The post The Sky This Week from January 10 to 17: Mars reaches opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A total solar eclipse may have ended Egypt’s 4th dynastyAlison Klesman
    Astronomy can often give us clues to the past that are otherwise lost to history. In one case, an Italian astronomer has proposed that a dramatic total solar eclipse triggered a religious crisis in ancient Egypt and led the last pharaoh of the 4th dynasty to abandon the pyramid-building of his ancestors. Related: The greatestContinue reading "A total solar eclipse may have ended Egypt’s 4th dynasty" The post A total solar eclipse may have ended Egypt’s 4th dynasty appeared first on Astronomy Mag
     

A total solar eclipse may have ended Egypt’s 4th dynasty

January 9th 2025 at 7:00 pm

Astronomy can often give us clues to the past that are otherwise lost to history. In one case, an Italian astronomer has proposed that a dramatic total solar eclipse triggered a religious crisis in ancient Egypt and led the last pharaoh of the 4th dynasty to abandon the pyramid-building of his ancestors. Related: The greatestContinue reading "A total solar eclipse may have ended Egypt’s 4th dynasty"

The post A total solar eclipse may have ended Egypt’s 4th dynasty appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Explore the constellation CassiopeiaMichael E. Bakich
    Cassiopeia (pronounced kass ee oh pee’ uh) the Queen is one of the first constellations amateur astronomers come to recognize. That’s because its five brightest stars form an asterism that looks like a large letter W. Cassiopeia is observable in the autumn and winter throughout the Northern Hemisphere. It lies opposite the Sun in earlyContinue reading "Explore the constellation Cassiopeia" The post Explore the constellation Cassiopeia appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Explore the constellation Cassiopeia

January 9th 2025 at 5:30 pm

Cassiopeia (pronounced kass ee oh pee’ uh) the Queen is one of the first constellations amateur astronomers come to recognize. That’s because its five brightest stars form an asterism that looks like a large letter W. Cassiopeia is observable in the autumn and winter throughout the Northern Hemisphere. It lies opposite the Sun in earlyContinue reading "Explore the constellation Cassiopeia"

The post Explore the constellation Cassiopeia appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Parker Solar Probe just made its closest ever approach to the SunSamantha Hill
    On Dec. 26, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe went where no mission has gone before and came within 3.8 million miles (6 million kilometers) of the Sun’s surface, flying through the solar corona — the Sun’s upper atmosphere. The pass broke its previous record of traveling within 8.1 million miles (13 million km) of the surfaceContinue reading "The Parker Solar Probe just made its closest ever approach to the Sun" The post The Parker Solar Probe just made its closest ever approach to the Sun appeared fir
     

The Parker Solar Probe just made its closest ever approach to the Sun

January 8th 2025 at 9:33 pm

On Dec. 26, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe went where no mission has gone before and came within 3.8 million miles (6 million kilometers) of the Sun’s surface, flying through the solar corona — the Sun’s upper atmosphere. The pass broke its previous record of traveling within 8.1 million miles (13 million km) of the surfaceContinue reading "The Parker Solar Probe just made its closest ever approach to the Sun"

The post The Parker Solar Probe just made its closest ever approach to the Sun appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Starmus comes to AmericaDavid J. Eicher
    In the world of science and entertainment, there’s nothing like Starmus. Founded by astronomer Garik Israelian and his close friend astronomer and guitarist Brian May, founding member of Queen, the festival periodically presents a celebration of what we know about the cosmos like no other event.  On April 1–2, 2025, Starmus — the word comingContinue reading "Starmus comes to America" The post Starmus comes to America appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Starmus comes to America

January 8th 2025 at 8:45 pm

In the world of science and entertainment, there’s nothing like Starmus. Founded by astronomer Garik Israelian and his close friend astronomer and guitarist Brian May, founding member of Queen, the festival periodically presents a celebration of what we know about the cosmos like no other event.  On April 1–2, 2025, Starmus — the word comingContinue reading "Starmus comes to America"

The post Starmus comes to America appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • NASA decision on Mars Sample Return reboot slides to 2026Mark Zastrow
    NASA has set a goal to return rock and soil samples from the surface of Mars in the 2030s. The mission would represent the first time scientific samples from another planet have been returned to Earth. But the space agency said it needs another year to determine how to do it. NASA Administrator Bill NelsonContinue reading "NASA decision on Mars Sample Return reboot slides to 2026" The post NASA decision on Mars Sample Return reboot slides to 2026 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

NASA decision on Mars Sample Return reboot slides to 2026

January 8th 2025 at 7:06 am

NASA has set a goal to return rock and soil samples from the surface of Mars in the 2030s. The mission would represent the first time scientific samples from another planet have been returned to Earth. But the space agency said it needs another year to determine how to do it. NASA Administrator Bill NelsonContinue reading "NASA decision on Mars Sample Return reboot slides to 2026"

The post NASA decision on Mars Sample Return reboot slides to 2026 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Diamonds in the skyMark Zastrow
    Vikas Chander from New Dehli, India Barnard’s Loop, the Pleiades (M45), and the California Nebula (NGC 1499) are just some of the deep-sky objects aglow with ionized hydrogen in the sky over an abandoned washing plant at a diamond mine in the Sperrgebiet (“forbidden territory”) of southwestern Namibia. Th photographer used an astromodified Sony mirrorlessContinue reading "Diamonds in the sky" The post Diamonds in the sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Diamonds in the sky

January 7th 2025 at 9:50 pm

Vikas Chander from New Dehli, India Barnard’s Loop, the Pleiades (M45), and the California Nebula (NGC 1499) are just some of the deep-sky objects aglow with ionized hydrogen in the sky over an abandoned washing plant at a diamond mine in the Sperrgebiet (“forbidden territory”) of southwestern Namibia. Th photographer used an astromodified Sony mirrorlessContinue reading "Diamonds in the sky"

The post Diamonds in the sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Blue Ghost Mission 1 will send the first U.S. lander to Mare CrisiumBen Evans
    Near the Moon’s eastern limb lies Mare Crisium — the Sea of Crises — a low basalt plain embayed by rugged mountains. Carved by a colossal impact some 3.9 billion years ago, the 460-mile-wide (740 kilometers) mare appears largely flat and featureless. But lingering whispers of a volcanic past are everywhere, from its ubiquitous darknessContinue reading "Blue Ghost Mission 1 will send the first U.S. lander to Mare Crisium" The post Blue Ghost Mission 1 will send the first U.S. lander to Mare Crisi
     

Blue Ghost Mission 1 will send the first U.S. lander to Mare Crisium

By: Ben Evans
January 7th 2025 at 12:47 am

Near the Moon’s eastern limb lies Mare Crisium — the Sea of Crises — a low basalt plain embayed by rugged mountains. Carved by a colossal impact some 3.9 billion years ago, the 460-mile-wide (740 kilometers) mare appears largely flat and featureless. But lingering whispers of a volcanic past are everywhere, from its ubiquitous darknessContinue reading "Blue Ghost Mission 1 will send the first U.S. lander to Mare Crisium"

The post Blue Ghost Mission 1 will send the first U.S. lander to Mare Crisium appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Pluto may have ‘kissed’ Charon to capture itMark Zastrow
    New research suggests that Pluto may have acquired its most massive moon, Charon, through an ancient grazing impact, which the science team refers to as a “kiss and capture”.  The study uses computer models to suggest a possible new method by which large bodies in the Kuiper Belt could come into orbit of one another.Continue reading "Pluto may have ‘kissed’ Charon to capture it" The post Pluto may have ‘kissed’ Charon to capture it appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Pluto may have ‘kissed’ Charon to capture it

January 7th 2025 at 12:23 am

New research suggests that Pluto may have acquired its most massive moon, Charon, through an ancient grazing impact, which the science team refers to as a “kiss and capture”.  The study uses computer models to suggest a possible new method by which large bodies in the Kuiper Belt could come into orbit of one another.Continue reading "Pluto may have ‘kissed’ Charon to capture it"

The post Pluto may have ‘kissed’ Charon to capture it appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Where is the solar system heading?Astronomy Staff
    Earth spins as it orbits the Sun, and the solar system is orbiting the galactic center. So, if I go outside and look up, in what direction are we heading? Dale PetersonOak View, California When you gaze up at the constellation Hercules, you are looking out the front window of the spacecraft called Earth. Our planetContinue reading "Where is the solar system heading?" The post Where is the solar system heading? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Where is the solar system heading?

January 6th 2025 at 10:30 pm

Earth spins as it orbits the Sun, and the solar system is orbiting the galactic center. So, if I go outside and look up, in what direction are we heading? Dale PetersonOak View, California When you gaze up at the constellation Hercules, you are looking out the front window of the spacecraft called Earth. Our planetContinue reading "Where is the solar system heading?"

The post Where is the solar system heading? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Open cluster M35: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the open star cluster M35, which lies at the feet of the constellation Gemini the Twins. It’s easy to spot even through binoculars, and it makes a great sight through a telescope. Also, you’ll spot another open cluster nearby, NGC 2158, which is smaller and fainter,Continue reading "Open cluster M35: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Open cluster M35: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Open cluster M35: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

January 6th 2025 at 6:15 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the open star cluster M35, which lies at the feet of the constellation Gemini the Twins. It’s easy to spot even through binoculars, and it makes a great sight through a telescope. Also, you’ll spot another open cluster nearby, NGC 2158, which is smaller and fainter,Continue reading "Open cluster M35: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Open cluster M35: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Does Planet Nine exist?David L. Chandler
    Growing up, I was taught that there were nine planets in the solar system. That all changed in 2006, when the International Astronomical Union voted to demote Pluto’s status to that of dwarf planet. But now, there is a chance that within the next year or two, the solar system could once again be gracedContinue reading "Does Planet Nine exist?" The post Does Planet Nine exist? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Does Planet Nine exist?

January 6th 2025 at 5:30 pm

Growing up, I was taught that there were nine planets in the solar system. That all changed in 2006, when the International Astronomical Union voted to demote Pluto’s status to that of dwarf planet. But now, there is a chance that within the next year or two, the solar system could once again be gracedContinue reading "Does Planet Nine exist?"

The post Does Planet Nine exist? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A dancing horseMark Zastrow
    Michael Telesco, taken from Peña Trevinca, Spain This previously unnoticed reflection nebula in Perseus was found by Michael Telesco. Inspired by discoveries of objects by astrophotographers like Julian Shapiro and Bray Falls, he says he did some “extensive survey deep-diving” and found a bright mid-infrared region that had been identified by the Infrared Astronomical SatelliteContinue reading "A dancing horse" The post A dancing horse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A dancing horse

January 4th 2025 at 12:49 am

Michael Telesco, taken from Peña Trevinca, Spain This previously unnoticed reflection nebula in Perseus was found by Michael Telesco. Inspired by discoveries of objects by astrophotographers like Julian Shapiro and Bray Falls, he says he did some “extensive survey deep-diving” and found a bright mid-infrared region that had been identified by the Infrared Astronomical SatelliteContinue reading "A dancing horse"

The post A dancing horse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The middle-aged Moon had a magnetic fieldRobert Reeves
    New results from China’s Chang’e 5 mission suggest that the Moon possessed a magnetic field well into its midlife, much longer than previously documented. In work published Jan. 1 in Science Advances, researchers report rocks recovered from the sample-return mission that are weakly magnetized — and just 2 billion years old. While not conclusive, the resultsContinue reading "The middle-aged Moon had a magnetic field" The post The middle-aged Moon had a magnetic field appeared first on Astronomy M
     

The middle-aged Moon had a magnetic field

January 3rd 2025 at 8:28 pm

New results from China’s Chang’e 5 mission suggest that the Moon possessed a magnetic field well into its midlife, much longer than previously documented. In work published Jan. 1 in Science Advances, researchers report rocks recovered from the sample-return mission that are weakly magnetized — and just 2 billion years old. While not conclusive, the resultsContinue reading "The middle-aged Moon had a magnetic field"

The post The middle-aged Moon had a magnetic field appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Could the Seestar S50 be your first imaging telescope?Phil Harrington
    You and I are living through a revolution in amateur astronomy. Not long ago, I would have advised beginners to stay away from astroimaging, because getting good results is both expensive and time consuming. Not anymore. Today, I tell them that state-of-the-art smart telescopes are available at comparatively reasonable prices that let tech-savvy neophytes getContinue reading "Could the Seestar S50 be your first imaging telescope?" The post Could the Seestar S50 be your first imaging telescope? a
     

Could the Seestar S50 be your first imaging telescope?

January 3rd 2025 at 6:30 pm

You and I are living through a revolution in amateur astronomy. Not long ago, I would have advised beginners to stay away from astroimaging, because getting good results is both expensive and time consuming. Not anymore. Today, I tell them that state-of-the-art smart telescopes are available at comparatively reasonable prices that let tech-savvy neophytes getContinue reading "Could the Seestar S50 be your first imaging telescope?"

The post Could the Seestar S50 be your first imaging telescope? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The awkward job of the NASA administratorWendy Whitman Cobb, The Conversation
    Leaders of NASA sit in an awkward position. While they are the head of a widely recognized organization, they’re often not the most famous individual in the agency. More people probably know the names of Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, the astronauts currently “stranded” on the International Space Station, than Bill Nelson, the current NASAContinue reading "The awkward job of the NASA administrator" The post The awkward job of the NASA administrator appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The awkward job of the NASA administrator

Leaders of NASA sit in an awkward position. While they are the head of a widely recognized organization, they’re often not the most famous individual in the agency. More people probably know the names of Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, the astronauts currently “stranded” on the International Space Station, than Bill Nelson, the current NASAContinue reading "The awkward job of the NASA administrator"

The post The awkward job of the NASA administrator appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from January 3 to 10: Earth’s closest approach to the SunAlison Klesman
    Friday, January 3Asteroid 14 Irene reaches opposition at 2 A.M. EST within northwestern Gemini the Twins. The magnitude 9.6 main-belt world is visible roughly all night, from sunset until sunrise, located roughly halfway between the stars Tau (τ) and Epsilon (ε) Geminorum. Irene was the 14th asteroid discovered in the main belt, spotted by JohnContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 3 to 10: Earth’s closest approach to the Sun" The post The Sky This Week from January 3 to 10: Earth’s cl
     

The Sky This Week from January 3 to 10: Earth’s closest approach to the Sun

January 3rd 2025 at 9:30 am

Friday, January 3Asteroid 14 Irene reaches opposition at 2 A.M. EST within northwestern Gemini the Twins. The magnitude 9.6 main-belt world is visible roughly all night, from sunset until sunrise, located roughly halfway between the stars Tau (τ) and Epsilon (ε) Geminorum. Irene was the 14th asteroid discovered in the main belt, spotted by JohnContinue reading "The Sky This Week from January 3 to 10: Earth’s closest approach to the Sun"

The post The Sky This Week from January 3 to 10: Earth’s closest approach to the Sun appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • When everything in the universe changedMark Zastrow
    For millions of years following the Big Bang, after the universe’s roiling soup of particles had cooled, the cosmos was a dark and boring place. There were no stars to make light. No familiar swirls of galaxies. Certainly no planets. And the entire universe was shrouded in neutral hydrogen gas. Then, perhaps 100 million yearsContinue reading "When everything in the universe changed" The post When everything in the universe changed appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

When everything in the universe changed

January 2nd 2025 at 2:30 pm

For millions of years following the Big Bang, after the universe’s roiling soup of particles had cooled, the cosmos was a dark and boring place. There were no stars to make light. No familiar swirls of galaxies. Certainly no planets. And the entire universe was shrouded in neutral hydrogen gas. Then, perhaps 100 million yearsContinue reading "When everything in the universe changed"

The post When everything in the universe changed appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How Artemis will land humans on the MoonRobert Reeves
    Sixty-five years ago, the USSR shocked the world by sending the first robotic emissary from Earth to the Moon. The September 1959 impact of Luna 2 on northeastern Mare Imbrium was a stunning achievement, reaching the Moon less than two years after the launch of Sputnik 1 ushered in the Space Age. The event helpedContinue reading "How Artemis will land humans on the Moon" The post How Artemis will land humans on the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How Artemis will land humans on the Moon

January 1st 2025 at 7:30 pm

Sixty-five years ago, the USSR shocked the world by sending the first robotic emissary from Earth to the Moon. The September 1959 impact of Luna 2 on northeastern Mare Imbrium was a stunning achievement, reaching the Moon less than two years after the launch of Sputnik 1 ushered in the Space Age. The event helpedContinue reading "How Artemis will land humans on the Moon"

The post How Artemis will land humans on the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • January 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?Alison Klesman
    Summer nights mean late sunsets and lingering twilight, hardly a recipe for great night-sky observing. But this January exceeds expectations with fine views of four bright planets. Venus punches through the deepening twilight first. The brilliant planet brightens from magnitude –4.4 to magnitude –4.7 during January, far surpassing any other planet or star. Venus reachesContinue reading "January 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?" The post January 2025: What’s in the Southern
     

January 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?

January 1st 2025 at 9:31 am

Summer nights mean late sunsets and lingering twilight, hardly a recipe for great night-sky observing. But this January exceeds expectations with fine views of four bright planets. Venus punches through the deepening twilight first. The brilliant planet brightens from magnitude –4.4 to magnitude –4.7 during January, far surpassing any other planet or star. Venus reachesContinue reading "January 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

The post January 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

January 2025: What’s in the sky this month? The Moon occults Mars and the Pleiades, plus Mars reaches opposition

January 1st 2025 at 9:30 am

All the major planets are on view this month. Venus has a fine evening conjunction with Saturn and Jupiter is high in Taurus. Uranus and Neptune are binocular targets, while Mars reaches opposition. Early morning reveals Mercury. Additionally, on the 9th the Moon crosses the Pleiades (M45), and on the 13th it hides Mars inContinue reading "January 2025: What’s in the sky this month? The Moon occults Mars and the Pleiades, plus Mars reaches opposition"

The post January 2025: What’s in the sky this month? The Moon occults Mars and the Pleiades, plus Mars reaches opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Coming in 2025: From new commercial Moon landers to asteroid investigations, expect a slate of exciting space missions

December 31st 2024 at 6:30 pm

In 2024, space exploration dazzled the world. NASA’s Europa Clipper began its journey to study Jupiter’s moon Europa. SpaceX’s Starship achieved its first successful landing, a critical milestone for future deep space missions. China made headlines with the Chang’e 6 mission, which successfully returned samples from the far side of the Moon. Meanwhile, the InternationalContinue reading "Coming in 2025: From new commercial Moon landers to asteroid investigations, expect a slate of exciting space missions"

The post Coming in 2025: From new commercial Moon landers to asteroid investigations, expect a slate of exciting space missions appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • JWST reveals surprising surface chemistry is occurring on Pluto’s moon CharonAlison Klesman
    As part of its extensive slate of observations, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) recently took a closer look at Pluto’s moon Charon, where it helped scientists to make a surprising discovery.  Charon, the largest and most well-studied of Pluto’s five moons, was first visited in 2015 as part of the groundbreaking New Horizons mission,Continue reading "JWST reveals surprising surface chemistry is occurring on Pluto’s moon Charon" The post JWST reveals surprising surface chemistry is occurring
     

JWST reveals surprising surface chemistry is occurring on Pluto’s moon Charon

December 31st 2024 at 5:30 pm

As part of its extensive slate of observations, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) recently took a closer look at Pluto’s moon Charon, where it helped scientists to make a surprising discovery.  Charon, the largest and most well-studied of Pluto’s five moons, was first visited in 2015 as part of the groundbreaking New Horizons mission,Continue reading "JWST reveals surprising surface chemistry is occurring on Pluto’s moon Charon"

The post JWST reveals surprising surface chemistry is occurring on Pluto’s moon Charon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Newfound galaxy gives glimpse into the Milky Way’s pastDaniela Mata
    Gravitational lensing (an effect that causes distant objects to be magnified or stretched by the gravity of a large object along their line of sight) is one of astronomers’ most useful observing tools. In work published earlier this month, a group of astronomers and the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) used this technique to theirContinue reading "Newfound galaxy gives glimpse into the Milky Way’s past" The post Newfound galaxy gives glimpse into the Milky Way’s past appeared first on Astronomy
     

Newfound galaxy gives glimpse into the Milky Way’s past

December 30th 2024 at 7:30 pm

Gravitational lensing (an effect that causes distant objects to be magnified or stretched by the gravity of a large object along their line of sight) is one of astronomers’ most useful observing tools. In work published earlier this month, a group of astronomers and the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) used this technique to theirContinue reading "Newfound galaxy gives glimpse into the Milky Way’s past"

The post Newfound galaxy gives glimpse into the Milky Way’s past appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A trio in AurigaMark Zastrow
    Andrea Arbizzi, taken from Modena, Italy The constellation Auriga the Charioteer is home to a close trio of iconic nebulae (from left to right): IC 417 (the Spider Nebula), IC 410 (home of the “Tadpoles”), and IC 405 (the Flaming Star Nebula). The imager used a 3.5-inch scope to obtain 29⅓ hours of exposure, theContinue reading "A trio in Auriga" The post A trio in Auriga appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A trio in Auriga

December 30th 2024 at 2:30 pm

Andrea Arbizzi, taken from Modena, Italy The constellation Auriga the Charioteer is home to a close trio of iconic nebulae (from left to right): IC 417 (the Spider Nebula), IC 410 (home of the “Tadpoles”), and IC 405 (the Flaming Star Nebula). The imager used a 3.5-inch scope to obtain 29⅓ hours of exposure, theContinue reading "A trio in Auriga"

The post A trio in Auriga appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • ‘Dark comets’ could reveal how Earth got its oceansAlison Klesman
    The water that makes up the oceans acted as a key ingredient for the development of life on Earth. However, scientists still do not know where the water here on Earth came from in the first place. One leading idea is that space rocks such as comets and asteroids delivered water to the Earth throughContinue reading "‘Dark comets’ could reveal how Earth got its oceans" The post ‘Dark comets’ could reveal how Earth got its oceans appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

‘Dark comets’ could reveal how Earth got its oceans

December 28th 2024 at 12:05 am

The water that makes up the oceans acted as a key ingredient for the development of life on Earth. However, scientists still do not know where the water here on Earth came from in the first place. One leading idea is that space rocks such as comets and asteroids delivered water to the Earth throughContinue reading "‘Dark comets’ could reveal how Earth got its oceans"

The post ‘Dark comets’ could reveal how Earth got its oceans appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Seen on highMark Zastrow
    Emmanuel Delgadillo from Jalisco, Mexico The Angel Nebula (NGC 2170) lies in Monoceros and features hydrogen gas glowing red, as well as reflected blue light from young, hot stars. The imager took nearly 7 hours of exposure with a one-shot color camera on a 6-inch scope. The post Seen on high appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Seen on high

December 27th 2024 at 10:55 pm

Emmanuel Delgadillo from Jalisco, Mexico The Angel Nebula (NGC 2170) lies in Monoceros and features hydrogen gas glowing red, as well as reflected blue light from young, hot stars. The imager took nearly 7 hours of exposure with a one-shot color camera on a 6-inch scope.

The post Seen on high appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from December 27 to January 3: The Quadrantid meteor shower peaksAlison Klesman
    Friday, December 27By 8 P.M. local time, Gemini is well above the eastern horizon, rising to the left of the widely recognizable constellation Orion. The Twins’ two standout stars are Castor and Pollux in the northeastern reaches of the constellation, but tonight, look toward the opposite end of this star pattern: southwestern Gemini, near Orion’sContinue reading "The Sky This Week from December 27 to January 3: The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks" The post The Sky This Week from December 27 to J
     

The Sky This Week from December 27 to January 3: The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks

December 27th 2024 at 9:30 am

Friday, December 27By 8 P.M. local time, Gemini is well above the eastern horizon, rising to the left of the widely recognizable constellation Orion. The Twins’ two standout stars are Castor and Pollux in the northeastern reaches of the constellation, but tonight, look toward the opposite end of this star pattern: southwestern Gemini, near Orion’sContinue reading "The Sky This Week from December 27 to January 3: The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks"

The post The Sky This Week from December 27 to January 3: The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Mars Express captures the beauty of a martian frostscapeSamantha Hill
    Although these frosty fields look like a picturesque winter wonderland blanketed in snow, this ice is actually composed of frozen carbon dioxide over the southern Australe Scopuli region of Mars. The European Space Agency’s (ESA) Mars Express spotted this scene using its High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) during its 23,324th orbit of the Red Planet.Continue reading "Mars Express captures the beauty of a martian frostscape" The post Mars Express captures the beauty of a martian frostscape appea
     

Mars Express captures the beauty of a martian frostscape

December 24th 2024 at 11:30 am

Although these frosty fields look like a picturesque winter wonderland blanketed in snow, this ice is actually composed of frozen carbon dioxide over the southern Australe Scopuli region of Mars. The European Space Agency’s (ESA) Mars Express spotted this scene using its High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) during its 23,324th orbit of the Red Planet.Continue reading "Mars Express captures the beauty of a martian frostscape"

The post Mars Express captures the beauty of a martian frostscape appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How do spacecraft avoid collisions in the asteroid belt?Astronomy Staff
    How do spacecraft avoid collisions when passing through the asteroid belt? Val-David SmithsonPleasant Grove, Utah Let’s begin by reviewing some astronomical “history”: Han Solo and his rebel cohorts Leia Organa, Chewbacca, and C-3PO are nestled uncomfortably together in the Millennium Falcon’s cockpit while their ship is pursued by a battalion of Imperial fighters. Unable toContinue reading "How do spacecraft avoid collisions in the asteroid belt?" The post How do spacecraft avoid collisions in
     

How do spacecraft avoid collisions in the asteroid belt?

December 23rd 2024 at 10:30 pm

How do spacecraft avoid collisions when passing through the asteroid belt? Val-David SmithsonPleasant Grove, Utah Let’s begin by reviewing some astronomical “history”: Han Solo and his rebel cohorts Leia Organa, Chewbacca, and C-3PO are nestled uncomfortably together in the Millennium Falcon’s cockpit while their ship is pursued by a battalion of Imperial fighters. Unable toContinue reading "How do spacecraft avoid collisions in the asteroid belt?"

The post How do spacecraft avoid collisions in the asteroid belt? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Smallest main-belt asteroids ever detected found hiding in JWST dataSamantha Hill
    Over the past 200 years, astronomers have cataloged over a million asteroids in the solar system’s main belt, down to the size of around a kilometer in diameter. But smaller asteroids were elusive — until recently, when a team of scientists utilized data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to spot some tiny asteroidsContinue reading "Smallest main-belt asteroids ever detected found hiding in JWST data" The post Smallest main-belt asteroids ever detected found hiding in JWST data appeared
     

Smallest main-belt asteroids ever detected found hiding in JWST data

December 23rd 2024 at 3:30 pm

Over the past 200 years, astronomers have cataloged over a million asteroids in the solar system’s main belt, down to the size of around a kilometer in diameter. But smaller asteroids were elusive — until recently, when a team of scientists utilized data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to spot some tiny asteroidsContinue reading "Smallest main-belt asteroids ever detected found hiding in JWST data"

The post Smallest main-belt asteroids ever detected found hiding in JWST data appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • FAA approves SpaceX for more Starship test missionsMark Zastrow
    SpaceX has the FAA’s green light to launch more test missions of its colossal Starship spacecraft, the largest and most powerful rocket to ever fly. The aviation regulator last week issued SpaceX a modified Part 450 launch license, allowing the firm to conduct multiple missions of Starship and the Super Heavy booster under the configurationContinue reading "FAA approves SpaceX for more Starship test missions" The post FAA approves SpaceX for more Starship test missions appeared first on Astronom
     

FAA approves SpaceX for more Starship test missions

December 23rd 2024 at 1:42 pm

SpaceX has the FAA’s green light to launch more test missions of its colossal Starship spacecraft, the largest and most powerful rocket to ever fly. The aviation regulator last week issued SpaceX a modified Part 450 launch license, allowing the firm to conduct multiple missions of Starship and the Super Heavy booster under the configurationContinue reading "FAA approves SpaceX for more Starship test missions"

The post FAA approves SpaceX for more Starship test missions appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • All lit upMark Zastrow
    John Quach 2024 was a banner year for aurora chasers, as the Sun reached solar maximum. This shot of the aurorae dancing above Mount Stuart in the Central Cascades of Washington was taken on Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. local time. The photographer used a Canon DSLR and 11mm f/2.8 lens to take a singleContinue reading "All lit up" The post All lit up appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

All lit up

December 23rd 2024 at 11:49 am

John Quach 2024 was a banner year for aurora chasers, as the Sun reached solar maximum. This shot of the aurorae dancing above Mount Stuart in the Central Cascades of Washington was taken on Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. local time. The photographer used a Canon DSLR and 11mm f/2.8 lens to take a singleContinue reading "All lit up"

The post All lit up appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Want to find a black hole? Pick up a rockKorey Haynes
    While black holes are perplexing at any size, some of the most mysterious are hypothetical primordial black holes, those that sprung into existence in the first second after the Big Bang and some of which are featherweights on the black hole scale.  Because black holes collapse matter down to nothing, a black hole with theContinue reading "Want to find a black hole? Pick up a rock" The post Want to find a black hole? Pick up a rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Want to find a black hole? Pick up a rock

December 21st 2024 at 5:30 pm

While black holes are perplexing at any size, some of the most mysterious are hypothetical primordial black holes, those that sprung into existence in the first second after the Big Bang and some of which are featherweights on the black hole scale.  Because black holes collapse matter down to nothing, a black hole with theContinue reading "Want to find a black hole? Pick up a rock"

The post Want to find a black hole? Pick up a rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • You’re almost certainly not being visited by aliensDavid J. Eicher
    The recent furor over drones, planes, helicopters, aliens, or whatever centered on aerial sightings in New Jersey is causing a flap. Given the huge number of sightings and the tenor of alarm from many, the Federal Aviation Administration has issued 22 temporary flight restrictions along the approach paths to Newark International Airport and a fewContinue reading "You’re almost certainly not being visited by aliens" The post You’re almost certainly not being visited by aliens appeared first on As
     

You’re almost certainly not being visited by aliens

December 21st 2024 at 1:06 am

The recent furor over drones, planes, helicopters, aliens, or whatever centered on aerial sightings in New Jersey is causing a flap. Given the huge number of sightings and the tenor of alarm from many, the Federal Aviation Administration has issued 22 temporary flight restrictions along the approach paths to Newark International Airport and a fewContinue reading "You’re almost certainly not being visited by aliens"

The post You’re almost certainly not being visited by aliens appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Io’s magma ocean may not exist after allshill
    Plenty of worlds in our solar system have oceans — and not all of them are made of water. Io, Jupiter’s innermost moon, was purported to have one made of basalt and bits of sulfur just under its surface, powering its volcanic eruptions. But according to a study published in Nature last week, a globalContinue reading "Io’s magma ocean may not exist after all" The post Io’s magma ocean may not exist after all appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Io’s magma ocean may not exist after all

By: shill
December 20th 2024 at 3:41 pm

Plenty of worlds in our solar system have oceans — and not all of them are made of water. Io, Jupiter’s innermost moon, was purported to have one made of basalt and bits of sulfur just under its surface, powering its volcanic eruptions. But according to a study published in Nature last week, a globalContinue reading "Io’s magma ocean may not exist after all"

The post Io’s magma ocean may not exist after all appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Cosmic confluenceMark Zastrow
    Anushtup Roychoudhury from Kolkata, India The crowded core of the Milky Way (at top) and the colorful Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex (at right) hang over the Drang-Drung Glacier in India’s Ladakh region. The imager captured the sky with a Sony mirrorless camera and a 50mm lens, taking 2-minute subframes at f/3.5 and ISO 2500 forContinue reading "Cosmic confluence" The post Cosmic confluence appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Cosmic confluence

December 20th 2024 at 2:30 pm

Anushtup Roychoudhury from Kolkata, India The crowded core of the Milky Way (at top) and the colorful Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex (at right) hang over the Drang-Drung Glacier in India’s Ladakh region. The imager captured the sky with a Sony mirrorless camera and a 50mm lens, taking 2-minute subframes at f/3.5 and ISO 2500 forContinue reading "Cosmic confluence"

The post Cosmic confluence appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from December 20 to 27: Welcome the winter solsticeAlison Klesman
    Friday, December 20Now that the evening sky is Moon-free, it’s time to aim for fainter targets, including 12th-magnitude Comet 333P/LINEAR. Located in far northern Cygnus, close to where that constellation’s border meets those of Cepheus and Draco, LINEAR sits some 8.4° northeast of magnitude 3.8 Kappa (κ) Cygni tonight. The comet is roughly halfway alongContinue reading "The Sky This Week from December 20 to 27: Welcome the winter solstice" The post The Sky This Week from December 20 to 27: Wel
     

The Sky This Week from December 20 to 27: Welcome the winter solstice

December 20th 2024 at 9:30 am

Friday, December 20Now that the evening sky is Moon-free, it’s time to aim for fainter targets, including 12th-magnitude Comet 333P/LINEAR. Located in far northern Cygnus, close to where that constellation’s border meets those of Cepheus and Draco, LINEAR sits some 8.4° northeast of magnitude 3.8 Kappa (κ) Cygni tonight. The comet is roughly halfway alongContinue reading "The Sky This Week from December 20 to 27: Welcome the winter solstice"

The post The Sky This Week from December 20 to 27: Welcome the winter solstice appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • ‘Blue straggler’ likely born from a collision of starsAlison Klesman
    Meet HD 65907, an imposter. It’s a star that appears far too young for its age. Astronomers have finally cracked the case of this mysterious object, which has not led a normal life. Instead, the star appears to be the result of the merger of two much older stars. Astronomers have a name for starsContinue reading "‘Blue straggler’ likely born from a collision of stars" The post ‘Blue straggler’ likely born from a collision of stars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

‘Blue straggler’ likely born from a collision of stars

December 19th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Meet HD 65907, an imposter. It’s a star that appears far too young for its age. Astronomers have finally cracked the case of this mysterious object, which has not led a normal life. Instead, the star appears to be the result of the merger of two much older stars. Astronomers have a name for starsContinue reading "‘Blue straggler’ likely born from a collision of stars"

The post ‘Blue straggler’ likely born from a collision of stars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Calcium arcadeMark Zastrow
    Chris Schur from Payson, Arizona A magnificent arcade of coronal loops appeared on the Sun’s limb Sept. 1, 2024, captured here with a 3.2-inch refractor, CMOS camera, and a Calcium-K filter. These arcing features are caused by glowing plasma trapped in the Sun’s magnetic field. While often seen in Hα, they are less frequently visibleContinue reading "Calcium arcade" The post Calcium arcade appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Calcium arcade

December 18th 2024 at 9:15 pm

Chris Schur from Payson, Arizona A magnificent arcade of coronal loops appeared on the Sun’s limb Sept. 1, 2024, captured here with a 3.2-inch refractor, CMOS camera, and a Calcium-K filter. These arcing features are caused by glowing plasma trapped in the Sun’s magnetic field. While often seen in Hα, they are less frequently visibleContinue reading "Calcium arcade"

The post Calcium arcade appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Earth’s gravity gave the Moon an early faceliftRobert Reeves
    Earth and the Moon are forever locked in a gravitational embrace that has played a critical role in determining the fate of both worlds. Although they have grown more distant since their formative years, new research published today in Nature shows just how powerful their attraction was in their youth: According to the study, Earth’sContinue reading "Earth’s gravity gave the Moon an early facelift" The post Earth’s gravity gave the Moon an early facelift appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Earth’s gravity gave the Moon an early facelift

December 18th 2024 at 9:02 pm

Earth and the Moon are forever locked in a gravitational embrace that has played a critical role in determining the fate of both worlds. Although they have grown more distant since their formative years, new research published today in Nature shows just how powerful their attraction was in their youth: According to the study, Earth’sContinue reading "Earth’s gravity gave the Moon an early facelift"

The post Earth’s gravity gave the Moon an early facelift appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why the winter solstice is the longest night every year, and when it happens in 2024Richard Talcott
    Winter does not officially arrive until the solstice. The 2024 winter solstice — the precise moment when the Sun appears farthest south in the sky — is at 4:21 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST) on Saturday, Dec. 21, in the Northern Hemisphere, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory. Throughout the Northern Hemisphere, the day ofContinue reading "Why the winter solstice is the longest night every year, and when it happens in 2024" The post Why the winter solstice is the longest night every year,
     

Why the winter solstice is the longest night every year, and when it happens in 2024

December 18th 2024 at 12:10 am

Winter does not officially arrive until the solstice. The 2024 winter solstice — the precise moment when the Sun appears farthest south in the sky — is at 4:21 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST) on Saturday, Dec. 21, in the Northern Hemisphere, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory. Throughout the Northern Hemisphere, the day ofContinue reading "Why the winter solstice is the longest night every year, and when it happens in 2024"

The post Why the winter solstice is the longest night every year, and when it happens in 2024 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Binary star system finally discovered near Milky Way centerRandall Hyman
    Veiled in gas and clouds, the Milky Way’s center does not easily give up secrets. The initial detection of its supermassive black hole (SMBH) decades ago posed as many riddles as it solved, including the puzzling absence of binary stars around it. The hot, massive stars that populate the region are almost always found asContinue reading "Binary star system finally discovered near Milky Way center" The post Binary star system finally discovered near Milky Way center appeared first on Astronomy Ma
     

Binary star system finally discovered near Milky Way center

December 17th 2024 at 7:35 pm

Veiled in gas and clouds, the Milky Way’s center does not easily give up secrets. The initial detection of its supermassive black hole (SMBH) decades ago posed as many riddles as it solved, including the puzzling absence of binary stars around it. The hot, massive stars that populate the region are almost always found asContinue reading "Binary star system finally discovered near Milky Way center"

The post Binary star system finally discovered near Milky Way center appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Moon passes Mars: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the nearly full Moon as it passes Mars on the evening of December 17. Both objects closely follow the Sun’s apparent path through the stars, called the ecliptic. This time, however, they’ll be quite close, only about 1 degree apart. That distance is twice the diameterContinue reading "The Moon passes Mars: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon passes Mars: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy
     

The Moon passes Mars: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

December 17th 2024 at 6:08 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the nearly full Moon as it passes Mars on the evening of December 17. Both objects closely follow the Sun’s apparent path through the stars, called the ecliptic. This time, however, they’ll be quite close, only about 1 degree apart. That distance is twice the diameterContinue reading "The Moon passes Mars: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Moon passes Mars: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Pearl Young, the first woman to work in a technical role at NASA, overcame barriers and ‘raised hell’

December 17th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Thirteen years before any other woman joined the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics – or the NACA, NASA’s predecessor – in a technical role, a young lab assistant named Pearl Young was making waves in the agency. Her legacy as an outspoken and persistent advocate for herself and her team would pave the way for women inContinue reading "Pearl Young, the first woman to work in a technical role at NASA, overcame barriers and ‘raised hell’"

The post Pearl Young, the first woman to work in a technical role at NASA, overcame barriers and ‘raised hell’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Erupting at the MoonMark Zastrow
    Massimo Tamajo from Syracuse, Sicily, Italy A Last Quarter Moon lies above an erupting Mount Etna in this shot taken in the early morning of July 28, 2024. The imager used a Nikon Z 6II camera and 150mm lens at f/8 to take a 2-second exposure at ISO 2000. The post Erupting at the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • What happened to the jettisoned Apollo lunar modules? Astronomy Staff
    What became of the discarded lunar modules from the Apollo missions? James JarvisSan Francisco, California All but one of the Apollo program’s used lunar modules either crashed into the Moon’s surface or burned up in Earth’s atmosphere. Apollo 10’s lunar module, Snoopy, is still out there, drifting aimlessly around the solar system, waiting for someContinue reading "What happened to the jettisoned Apollo lunar modules? " The post What happened to the jettisoned Apollo lunar modules?  appeared fi
     

What happened to the jettisoned Apollo lunar modules? 

December 16th 2024 at 10:30 pm

What became of the discarded lunar modules from the Apollo missions? James JarvisSan Francisco, California All but one of the Apollo program’s used lunar modules either crashed into the Moon’s surface or burned up in Earth’s atmosphere. Apollo 10’s lunar module, Snoopy, is still out there, drifting aimlessly around the solar system, waiting for someContinue reading "What happened to the jettisoned Apollo lunar modules? "

The post What happened to the jettisoned Apollo lunar modules?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers urge FCC to research impacts of space junkSamantha Hill
    Citing environmental concerns, 120 astronomers and researchers implored the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in an Oct. 24 letter to halt launches of internet satellites like SpaceX’s Starlink. The letter, which was organized by the Public Interest Research Group, also urged FCC Space Bureau Chief Julie Kearney to investigate the potential negative environmental and health impactsContinue reading "Astronomers urge FCC to research impacts of space junk" The post Astronomers urge FCC to res
     

Astronomers urge FCC to research impacts of space junk

December 16th 2024 at 9:30 pm

Citing environmental concerns, 120 astronomers and researchers implored the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in an Oct. 24 letter to halt launches of internet satellites like SpaceX’s Starlink. The letter, which was organized by the Public Interest Research Group, also urged FCC Space Bureau Chief Julie Kearney to investigate the potential negative environmental and health impactsContinue reading "Astronomers urge FCC to research impacts of space junk"

The post Astronomers urge FCC to research impacts of space junk appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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