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The Sky Today on Tuesday, September 2: Mercury meets Regulus

Mercury passes 1.2° north of Regulus at 6 A.M. EDT; the pair is visible in the east just before sunrise, but it might be a challenging observation. You’ll want to get to a location above the surrounding terrain if possible, with an eastern horizon free of tall trees or buildings.  Rising around 5:30 A.M. localContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, September 2: Mercury meets Regulus"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus and the Beehive

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Emeritus Dave Eicher invites you to head out during the early morning hours the first week of September. It’s then when you’ll see the brilliant planet Venus pass by the Beehive Cluster, which lies in the constellation Cancer the Crab. Venus will be easy to spot but if twilight has started,Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus and the Beehive"

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An introduction to common astronomical catalogs

Humanity is obsessed with astronomical record keeping. The Babylonians compiled their first listing of the stars in the 12th century b.c.e. Around 1000 b.c.e., they followed it with an expanded catalog that includes familiar constellations and star clusters, as well as motions of the Sun, the Moon, and the planets. The Mayans inscribed into stoneContinue reading "An introduction to common astronomical catalogs"

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The Sky Today on Monday, September 1: Observe Delta Cephei

Cepheid variables are some of the most well-known variable stars in the sky, responsible for helping astronomers accurately measure cosmic distances and famously clueing Edwin Hubble in to the fact that the Andromeda Galaxy was far beyond the Milky Way. So, tonight let’s begin September by finding the Cepheid variable that started it all: DeltaContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, September 1: Observe Delta Cephei"

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Sept. 1, 1804: Karl Harding spots 3 Juno

On Sept. 1, 1804, German astronomer Karl Ludwig Harding peered through a 5-centimeter refracting telescope at a private observatory near Bremen, and discovered a celestial body he named Juno. Harding was part of the so-called Celestial Police. This group of astronomers had dedicated themselves to the search for the “missing planet” that the Titius-Bode lawContinue reading "Sept. 1, 1804: Karl Harding spots 3 Juno"

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September 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Saturn and Neptune reach opposition, as Jupiter and Venus greet the dawn

September’s sky is rich with opportunities. Titan’s shadow continues to transit Saturn. The ringed planet reaches opposition along with Neptune, with both worlds in the same region of the sky. Mars is descending toward solar conjunction. Uranus is a fine binocular target, while Jupiter dominates the early morning. Venus starts the month near M44, thenContinue reading "September 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Saturn and Neptune reach opposition, as Jupiter and Venus greet the dawn"

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

The evening sky boasts two naked-eye planets. Start your night’s viewing with ruddy Mars, which lies in the west as darkness falls. It treks eastward against the backdrop of Virgo, passing 2° north of the Maiden’s brightest star, 1st-magnitude Spica, on Sept. 12. The Red Planet shines at magnitude 1.6, slightly fainter than the blue-whiteContinue reading "September 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

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Aug. 31, 1913: Birth of Bernard Lovell

On Aug. 31, 1913, Alfred Charles Bernard Lovell was born in England. When he was 15, a school trip to hear a lecture on electricity prompted a keen interest in science and math, and Lovell would go on to study physics at Bristol University. He graduated with honors in 1934 and finished his Ph.D. onlyContinue reading "Aug. 31, 1913: Birth of Bernard Lovell"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, August 31: Venus hangs with the Beehive

Bright Venus hangs near the lovely Beehive Cluster (M44) in Cancer this morning. Both rise more than two hours before the Sun and reach nearly 20° high in the east an hour before sunrise. Venus shines at magnitude –3.9, a blazing beacon just 1.4° southwest (to the upper right) of the Beehive.  At magnitude 3.1,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, August 31: Venus hangs with the Beehive"

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Aug. 30, 1984: Space Shuttle Discovery launches

The third member of NASA’s space shuttle program, Discovery had a fraught journey to its launch. First, a test in June of 1984 found a flaw in the thermal shield; then a launch scheduled for later the same month was delayed due to a computer failure. Attempt No. 2 was halted only four seconds beforeContinue reading "Aug. 30, 1984: Space Shuttle Discovery launches"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, August 30: Iapetus reaches western elongation

Saturn’s moon Iapetus reaches greatest western elongation today, now located 9.5’ west of the ringed planet. Iapetus has two vastly different hemispheres, one light and one dark. As the moon orbits Saturn, it slowly rotates so that one and then the other side faces us, with its brightness varying vastly depending on which region isContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, August 30: Iapetus reaches western elongation"

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Experience the Moon on Earth

On Saturday, September 20, an ambitious project will be announced and celebrated in Animas, New Mexico, which lies near the Arizona border. And you’re invited. Dubbed “Lunar Base Alpha,” it will replicate the lunar landscape and feature rovers conducting science experiments and habitats that you’ll be able to stay in. The initial project will coverContinue reading "Experience the Moon on Earth"

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Aug. 29, 1990: Hubble sees Supernova 1987A clearly

The first light from the explosion that was the death of a massive star in the nearby Large Magellanic Cloud reached Earth on Feb. 23, 1987. Supernova 1987A’s proximity gave astronomers unprecedented access into the final stages of stellar life, and in 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope began taking high-res images of the former star.Continue reading "Aug. 29, 1990: Hubble sees Supernova 1987A clearly"

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Spot the supernova

Rodney Pommier, taken from Portland, Oregon Roughly 40 million years ago near the core of the spiral galaxy NGC 7331, a white dwarf star ended its life in a thermonuclear explosion. The light from that explosion was detected July 14 by the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer project. This astroimager acquired the shot on the leftContinue reading "Spot the supernova"

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The Sky Today on Friday, August 29: Saturn’s moons line up

This evening Titan stands east of Saturn and Iapetus is far to the west, the latter approaching its greatest western elongation tomorrow. You can find the ringed planet already 15° high in the east at 10 P.M. local daylight time, continuing to rise until around 2:30 A.M., when it reaches the highest point in itsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, August 29: Saturn’s moons line up"

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The Sky This Week from August 29 to September 5: Saturn’s time to shine

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, August 29The waxing Moon lies in southern Libra tonight. Our satellite is quickly approaching Scorpius, where it will meet the Scorpion’s brightest star in just a few days.  High in the southeast in the few hours after sunset is the small constellation SagittaContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 29 to September 5: Saturn’s time to shine"

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Hidden no more

Patrick A. Cosgrove from Honeoye Falls, New York Sharpless 2–124 is a faint emission nebula located around 15,000 light-years away in Cygnus. This image reveals intricate filaments of dust crossing the bright central region, reminiscent of the Trifid Nebula (M20). The imager took 14.2 hours of SHO and LRGB data with a 2.8-inch f/5.6 astrograph.

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Make summer last with these new astronomy products

iAFS2 automatic focuser  iOptronWoburn, MA The iAFS2 automatic focuser is designed to stay focused even after it is adjusted. It allows the user to control its movement three ways: by connecting to a computer, with affixed adjuster buttons, or with a manual focus wheel. The focuser also features a built-in temperature sensor and two USBContinue reading "Make summer last with these new astronomy products"

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Scientists seek to discover what came before the Big Bang

A team of scientists claims a computational tool for studying black hole collisions could be our best bet for answering mysterious questions about the universe’s origins. In a new paper in Living Reviews in Relativity, they argue for applying a technique called numerical relativity to peer into the moment before the Big Bang.  At itsContinue reading "Scientists seek to discover what came before the Big Bang"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Observe the Wild Duck Cluster

The Northern Hemisphere’s summer is — by far — the best time to view our galaxy’s rich star fields. And it’s during summer that the spectacular Wild Duck Cluster flies through the Milky Way. German astronomer Gottfried Kirch discovered the Wild Duck Cluster in 1681. Messier made it his 11th catalog entry May 30, 1764,Continue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Observe the Wild Duck Cluster"

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Watch as the Roman Space Telescope unfurls its solar panels and visor in successful test

Engineers at NASA successfully tested key hardware for the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope in a crucial two-day sequence on Aug. 7 and 8, according to an Aug. 26 press release from the agency. In simulated space-like conditions, the team confirmed that the telescope’s four solar panels and a unique, visor-like sunshade will unfold asContinue reading "Watch as the Roman Space Telescope unfurls its solar panels and visor in successful test"

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Aug. 28, 1993: An asteroid harbors a surprise

The space probe Galileo was launched in 1989 with the goal of studying Jupiter and its moons. On its way to the gas giant, it became the first spacecraft to do a flyby of an asteroid as it zoomed past 951 Gaspra on Oct. 29, 1991. Then, on Aug. 28, 1993, Galileo made its secondContinue reading "Aug. 28, 1993: An asteroid harbors a surprise"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, August 28: Comet Wierzchoś passes Lambda Coronae Borealis

Comet C/2024 E1 (Wierzchoś) is passing less than 0.5° from magnitude 5.4 Lambda (λ) Coronae Borealis in the western sky this evening. The comet is quite faint at 15th magnitude, so you’ll want a dark observing site and a large scope to net it. Fortunately, you have the luxury of waiting until the sky isContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, August 28: Comet Wierzchoś passes Lambda Coronae Borealis"

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Tips for imaging during a Full Moon

In the late 20th century, when we still captured celestial images on film, the few days around New Moon were the only times we could image deep-sky objects. The grainy, low-sensitivity films we used back then demanded the darkest skies possible for quality portraits. When First Quarter arrived, it was time to say goodbye toContinue reading "Tips for imaging during a Full Moon"

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SpaceX Starship Flight 10 viewed as roaring success

SpaceX’s more than 400-foot-tall Starship rocket returned to form Tuesday, deploying its first payload and completing critical heat shield tests following a string of in-flight and preflight failures. The spacecraft experienced different issues on each of its previous three test flights, with explosions in January and March disrupting air travel. In June, a Starship exploded on the test stand asContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 10 viewed as roaring success"

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A new theory explains how Jupiter’s core formed

New research suggests a giant impact may not have been responsible for the formation of Jupiter’s core. Most planetary scientists thought that a colossal collision with an early planet containing half of Jupiter’s core material could have mixed up the central region of the gas giant enough to explain its interior today. But a newContinue reading "A new theory explains how Jupiter’s core formed"

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Aug. 27, 2003: Mars zooms in

When the Sun, Earth, and Mars all align so that from an earthly perspective, Mars is opposite the Sun, Mars is said to be at opposition. Mars oppositions happen about every other year, and at opposition – or rather, within a few days of it – Mars is also at its closest approach to EarthContinue reading "Aug. 27, 2003: Mars zooms in"

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A comet in Hercules

José J. Chambó, taken from Farm Hakos, Namibia Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) glides by the star 9 Herculis in this Aug. 21 image, glowing with a greenish coma about 2′ wide and a 20″ tail. Captured at roughly magnitude 12.5, this icy visitor was 0.33 astronomical units (the average Earth-Sun distance) from the Sun. TheContinue reading "A comet in Hercules"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 27: The Moon moves past Spica

The Moon moves 1.2° south of Spica during the daylight hours, sitting due south of Virgo’s luminary at 11 A.M. EDT. By this evening, a new line has formed in the sky, with Spica now between Mars and the Moon, which sits to the star’s left. An hour after sunset, Spica is still some 7°Continue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 27: The Moon moves past Spica"

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A supergiant star’s expanding mystery

Astronomers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have discovered a huge expanding bubble of gas and dust surrounding a red supergiant star. It’s the largest structure of its kind ever seen in the Milky Way. The bubble was blown into space around 4000 years ago. The question scientists are asking is, “Why did the starContinue reading "A supergiant star’s expanding mystery"

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Aug. 26, 1918: The birth of Katherine Johnson

Born on Aug. 26, 1918, in West Virginia, Katherine Goble Johnson showed exceptional aptitude for mathematics from an early age. She skipped several grades, graduating high school by 14 and college by 18. Johnson was enrolled in West Virginia University in 1939 as one of the first three Black students to integrate the state’s graduateContinue reading "Aug. 26, 1918: The birth of Katherine Johnson"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 26: Asteroid Hebe reaches opposition

Asteroid 6 Hebe reaches opposition this morning at 10 A.M. EDT. Shining at magnitude 7.5, Hebe is located in Aquarius and rises shortly after sunset, remaining visible all night. You should be able to spot in binoculars or any small telescope. The best time to observe it is late in the evening and overnight intoContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 26: Asteroid Hebe reaches opposition"

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SpaceX’s tenth Starship flight test now targeting Monday, August 25, after scrub

Mission highlight: A weekend of scrubs for Starship and New Shepard SpaceX was forced to scrub the highly anticipated tenth flight test of its Super Heavy Starship vehicle on Sunday, August 24, due to an undisclosed ground system issue. The call came just 30 minutes before liftoff from the company’s Starbase facility in Texas. TheContinue reading "SpaceX’s tenth Starship flight test now targeting Monday, August 25, after scrub"

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Home on the range

Owain Scullion New Zealand’s Arrowsmith Range, on the nation’s South Island, is the setting for this Milky Way panorama. The photographer used an astromodifed Fujifilm mirrorless camera to take two panoramas: the ground with a 23mm lens at f/2 and the sky with a 27mm f/1.4 lens and Hα and star glow filters. Subframes wereContinue reading "Home on the range"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Mars

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the evening of August 26 and observe the pairing of a thin crescent Moon with Mars. A good strategy is to start looking around half an hour after sunset through binoculars. You’ll easily spot the Moon. Look just to the right of itContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon meets Mars"

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As Earth’s axis precesses over 26,000 years, what bright stars become the North Star?

What is the circle that Earth’s axis traces out in its 26,000-year precession cycle? What bright stars are close to it? Tim BoyleNishinomiya, Japan As Earth orbits the Sun, it also spins about its axis in just less than 24 hours. Our planet exhibits other motions as well — the most dramatic of them isContinue reading "As Earth’s axis precesses over 26,000 years, what bright stars become the North Star?"

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Aug. 25, 2003: The Spitzer Space Telescope launches

NASA’s Great Observatories were intended to peer at the universe in different wavelengths: the Hubble Space Telescope in visible light, the Compton Gamma Ray in gamma rays, the Chandra X-ray Observatory in X-rays, and the Spitzer Space Telescope in infrared. The last of the four to be launched, Spitzer was carried into space on Aug.Continue reading "Aug. 25, 2003: The Spitzer Space Telescope launches"

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The Sky Today on Monday, August 25: The Moon reappears in Virgo

Observers who are quick to step outside after sunset can catch a delicate crescent Moon sinking in the west, now just 8 percent lit as sunrise begins to creep over the lunar nearside.  Magnitude 1.6 Mars sits 7° to the upper left (east) of the Moon, slowly becoming visible as the sky darkens. You canContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, August 25: The Moon reappears in Virgo"

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Aug. 24, 2006: Pluto is demoted

After much discussion and debate, an International Astronomical Union (IAU) vote on Aug. 24, 2006, reclassified Pluto as a dwarf planet. “Throw away the placemats. Grab a magic marker for the classroom charts. Take a pair of scissors to the solar system mobile,” crowed the New York Times coverage. While sentiment from the general publicContinue reading "Aug. 24, 2006: Pluto is demoted"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, August 24: Virgo’s double star, Porrima

Mars is just less than 3° south of the gorgeous double star Porrima (Gamma Virginis) this evening. At magnitude 1.6, Mars is about a full magnitude brighter than Porrima (magnitude 2.7); the star will appear to the planet’s upper right in the western sky an hour after sunset, when they are roughly 7° high. ToContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, August 24: Virgo’s double star, Porrima"

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Aug. 23, 1991: Water on Mercury

On Aug. 8 and Aug. 23, 1991, scientists from CalTech and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory turned the 70-meter dish antenna at the Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex on Mercury. The goal was to produce a radar map of the portions of Mercury not photographed by Mariner 10 during its 1974-75 flybys. But to the researchers’Continue reading "Aug. 23, 1991: Water on Mercury"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, August 23: The Black Moon

New Moon occurs at 2:07 A.M. EDT. This particular New Moon has been garnering headlines as a Black Moon — specifically, a seasonal Black Moon. This is a non-scientific name that can be attributed to the third of four New Moons to occur in an astronomical season — e.g., between the summer solstice and theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, August 23: The Black Moon"

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How a mysterious particle could explain the universe’s missing antimatter

Everything we see around us, from the ground beneath our feet to the most remote galaxies, is made of matter. For scientists, that has long posed a problem: According to physicists’ best current theories, matter and its counterpart, antimatter, ought to have been created in equal amounts at the time of the Big Bang. ButContinue reading "How a mysterious particle could explain the universe’s missing antimatter"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Meet the Local Group

American astronomer Edwin Hubble (after whom the Hubble Space Telescope is named) coined the term “Local Group” for the galaxies he had identified as moving through space with the Milky Way. The term appeared in his 1936 book, The Realm of the Nebulae. He identified 11 definite members with a possible 12th. Today, astronomers have shownContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Meet the Local Group"

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Aug. 22, 1989: Voyager 2 reveals Neptune

On Aug. 20, 1977, Voyager 2 launched from Cape Canaveral and began its epic journey to the outer planets – and beyond. Twelve years later, the spacecraft photographed Neptune as it approached the ice giant. Two days after that, on Aug. 22, 1989, NASA announced that Neptune had a ring system; the images had revealedContinue reading "Aug. 22, 1989: Voyager 2 reveals Neptune"

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Swan deep-dive

Andrea Arbizza, taken from Modena, Italy The Omega Nebula (M17) in Sagittarius is also known as the Swan Nebula for its appearance in visual observations. But this deep image was taken with nearly 41 hours of exposure in Hα/OIII and SII/OIII dual-band filters with a 4-inch scope at f/4.8, revealing intricate detail in this star-formingContinue reading "Swan deep-dive"

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The Sky Today on Friday, August 22: Comet Wierzchoś passes planetary nebula NGC 6058

With no Moon in the evening sky, it’s time to check in with Comet C/2024 E1 (Wierzchoś), now in Hercules and visible for several hours after sunset. By 9:30 P.M. local daylight time, Wierzchoś is still 60° high in the west. You’ll find it about 9.5° west of magnitude 3.5 Eta (η) Herculis, one ofContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, August 22: Comet Wierzchoś passes planetary nebula NGC 6058"

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The Sky This Week from August 22 to 29: A Black Moon

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, August 22Reaching its highest point in the sky around 11 P.M. local daylight time tonight is the Swan Nebula (M17). This gorgeous deep-sky object is a fan favorite of amateur astronomers thanks to its brightness, which makes it easy to find and observeContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 22 to 29: A Black Moon"

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To find alien life, try eavesdropping on their conversations with spacecraft, astronomers suggest

A new study suggests a novel approach in the long-running scientific endeavor to find intelligent life beyond Earth. Instead of casting a wide, speculative net across the cosmos, researchers from Penn State and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory propose a more targeted strategy: listen for alien civilizations in the same way they might be listening forContinue reading "To find alien life, try eavesdropping on their conversations with spacecraft, astronomers suggest"

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The first supernova of its kind

An international team of scientists, led by Northwestern University astrophysicists, has detected a never-before-seen type of exploding star, or supernova, that is rich with silicon, sulfur, and argon. Astronomers long have theorized that massive stars (10 to 100 times heavier than our Sun) have a layered structure. The outermost layers are made of the lightestContinue reading "The first supernova of its kind"

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Aug. 21, 1914: Total solar eclipse tensions

On Aug. 21, 1914, a total solar eclipse over Europe on the eve of World War I drew much attention. Albert Einstein had been waiting for an eclipse to verify his theory of relativity – specifically the light-bending effects of gravity – and enlisted help from Erwin Findlay-Freundlich of Berlin Observatory. Findlay-Freundlich was to leadContinue reading "Aug. 21, 1914: Total solar eclipse tensions"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, August 21: Venus treks past Pollux

Venus passes 7° south of Pollux at 5 A.M. EDT and the crescent Moon is now close to Mercury, preparing to pass 4° north of the solar system’s smallest planet at noon EDT. Let’s start in Gemini, which rises first and sits higher in the eastern sky before sunrise. An hour before the Sun crestsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, August 21: Venus treks past Pollux"

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SpaceX dissects Starship issues ahead of Flight 10

SpaceX’s powerful Starship rocket is nearing a return to action following an explosion on the company’s test stand in Texas and anomalies during three consecutive test flights. The FAA on Friday closed its mishap investigation into Starship Flight 9, during which the rocket reached orbit for the first time in 2025 but failed to hit its test objectives. That opens the doorContinue reading "SpaceX dissects Starship issues ahead of Flight 10"

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The Milky Way’s faintest dwarf galaxy might actually be a star cluster

Ursa Major III orbits the Milky Way at a distance of 32,600 light-years. Until now, it was considered a dwarf spheroidal galaxy. Normally such a faint object wouldn’t be classified as such, but astronomers did so because of its large mass, which they assumed contains a lot of invisible dark matter. Recently, however, an internationalContinue reading "The Milky Way’s faintest dwarf galaxy might actually be a star cluster"

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JWST’s view of the Phoenix Cluster sparks scientific conundrum

Scientists have a good idea how stars should form in the central galaxies of rich clusters. The hot gas surrounding a cluster’s dominant innermost galaxy cools rapidly, sparking furious star formation. The problem: No one had found evidence for this cooling gas, and most central galaxies don’t create many stars. Astronomers suspect the solution toContinue reading "JWST’s view of the Phoenix Cluster sparks scientific conundrum"

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Our atmosphere is responding differently to solar storms, and satellites will feel the effects

Rising levels of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere aren’t just affecting climate on Earth — they could also make weather in space more dramatic, says new research. A team led by scientists from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado, reports that the Earth’s upper atmosphere is changing how it responds toContinue reading "Our atmosphere is responding differently to solar storms, and satellites will feel the effects"

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Earth-sized TRAPPIST-1 d does not have an Earth-like atmosphere

Recent observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) delivered a blow to hopes that the exoplanet TRAPPIST-1 d could be an Earth-like world, according to a new study published in The Astrophysical Journal. The data reveal that the rocky, Earth-sized planet does not possess a thick, Earth-like atmosphere. The finding is critical because aContinue reading "Earth-sized TRAPPIST-1 d does not have an Earth-like atmosphere"

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Aug. 20, 2001: Cosmologist Fred Hoyle dies

Born in 1915 in England, cosmologist Fred Hoyle attend Cambridge University, where he would later become a professor. Among other things, Hoyle would become known as the man who coined the term big bang – but, ironically, he used the phrase in his criticism of the theory. Instead of believing that the universe originated inContinue reading "Aug. 20, 2001: Cosmologist Fred Hoyle dies"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 20: An early-morning gathering

The Moon passes 5° north of Venus at 7 A.M. EDT; in the early-morning sky, Luna now floats to the upper left of the blazing planet, between that world and the magnitude 1.2 star Pollux in Gemini.  Although cataloged as the Twins’ beta star, Pollux is actually a tad brighter than Alpha Geminorum, also calledContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 20: An early-morning gathering"

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Did Earth once have a ring?

Amid the cold silence of the main belt, a giant rock drifts through space. It has existed for billions of years unchanged, but today, it will be irrevocably broken. Another rocky object hurtles toward it, smashing the asteroid and sending a shower of shards outward. One dangerously large fragment careens toward the Sun on aContinue reading "Did Earth once have a ring?"

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Webb spots a new, tiny moon orbiting Uranus

Astronomers have discovered a new, tiny moon orbiting Uranus, bringing the ice giant’s total number of known satellites to 29. A team led by the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in Boulder, Colorado, identified the previously unknown moon using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), according to a recent NASA press release. The detection was madeContinue reading "Webb spots a new, tiny moon orbiting Uranus"

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What a mission to a black hole could look like

Voyager 2 has traveled farther than any spacecraft. It’s a little more than 12.4 billion miles (20 billion kilometers) away, just beyond the edge of our solar system. But Fudan University astrophysicist Cosimo Bambi is already thinking about how we might study black holes a generation from now: by sending tiny spacecraft on a decades-longContinue reading "What a mission to a black hole could look like"

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A Georgia meteorite older than Earth

A rock that crashed through the roof of a Georgia home this summer has a story to tell, and it begins long before the existence of our planet. Scientists at the University of Georgia (UGA) who studied fragments of the object determined it is approximately 4.56 billion years old, making it about 20 million yearsContinue reading "A Georgia meteorite older than Earth"

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Aug. 19, 1646: The birth of John Flamsteed

On Aug. 19, 1646, John Flamsteed was born in Derbyshire, England. Though he left school early due to illness and family obligations, he studied astronomy independently and eventually attended Cambridge University. European maritime trade was rapidly expanding during his lifetime, yet sailors still struggled with the longitude problem – north-south distance was easy to calculateContinue reading "Aug. 19, 1646: The birth of John Flamsteed"

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A Cygnus pair

Greg Polanski, taken remotely via AstroCamp in Nerpio, Albatece, Spain The emission nebulae Sharpless 2–115 glows in this image at right, while planetary nebula Sh 2–116 sits just left of top center in this scene near Deneb in Cygnus. The photographer used a 5-inch scope to take 16.8 hours of data in the Hubble palette.

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 19: Mercury reaches greatest western elongation

Mercury reaches its greatest western elongation 19° from the Sun at 6 A.M. EDT. Now shining a bright magnitude 0, it stands 5° high in the east an hour before sunrise. The planet is now some 42 percent lit and 7” wide.  Mercury is located near central Cancer, just 2° south of M44, the BeehiveContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 19: Mercury reaches greatest western elongation"

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SpaceX’s tenth Starship flight test lifts off Sunday, August 24

Mission highlight: Starship Flight 10 scheduled for Sunday  With the future of NASA’s Artemis moon missions riding on its success, SpaceX is targeting this Sunday, August 24, for the tenth flight test of its Super Heavy Starship vehicle. Liftoff from the company’s Starbase facility in Texas is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. EDT. This flight isContinue reading "SpaceX’s tenth Starship flight test lifts off Sunday, August 24"

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Before spacecraft, how did astronomers determine the mass, size, and composition of the giant planets?

Before spacecraft missions, how did astronomers determine the mass, size, and composition of the giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune)? K. QureshiCalgary, Alberta Excellent question. Astronomers are often faced with seeking information about objects they cannot visit to examine. Instead, they use mathematical laws and observation to determine the characteristics of the planets. DeterminingContinue reading "Before spacecraft, how did astronomers determine the mass, size, and composition of the giant planets?"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The August 19 Morning Sky

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out as twilight begins on the morning of August 19 to see a thin crescent Moon. Below the Moon, you’ll easily spot Jupiter and Venus. And still lower, if your sky conditions are good, you’ll be able to see Mercury, the innermost planet. Good luck!

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Aug. 18, 1868: Helium is discovered

During the total solar eclipse of Aug. 18, 1868, two astronomers, Pierre Jules César Janssen of France and J. Norman Lockyer of England, each independently discovered a new line in the Sun’s spectrum. Lockyer thought it showed an undiscovered element, which he named helium. (In Greek mythology, Helios was the Sun god.) Although scientists wouldContinue reading "Aug. 18, 1868: Helium is discovered"

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The Sky Today on Monday, August 18: Titan’s shadow transits Saturn

The second Titan shadow transit of the month occurs overnight tonight, so set your sights on Saturn late this evening. The ringed planet rises in the east around 9:30 P.M. local daylight time, gaining altitude hour by hour. Shining at magnitude 0.7, Saturn is easy to find as the brightest point of light in southwesternContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, August 18: Titan’s shadow transits Saturn"

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Aug. 17, 1877: Asaph Hall discovers Phobos

Astronomer Asaph Hall met Angeline Stickney at New York Central College in 1855. Two years his elder, she instructed him in geometry and German, and was reputedly so strong a mathematician that Hall and his classmate made a game of trying to stump her, yet never could. The pair were married the following year. ForContinue reading "Aug. 17, 1877: Asaph Hall discovers Phobos"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, August 17: Open cluster NGC 6910 shines near Gamma Cygni

Nights are slowly shortening, but even as summer begins to wind down, the Summer Triangle still flies high in the sky overnight. Formed by three bright stars, this large asterism is highest around local midnight, when its center — through which the plane of the Milky Way flows — is some 70° high above theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, August 17: Open cluster NGC 6910 shines near Gamma Cygni"

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Aug. 16, 1898: Phoebe makes an appearance

In March of 1899, William Pickering discovered Phoebe, a moon of Saturn, on photographic plates taken on Aug. 16, 1898, by DeLisle Stewart. It was the first moon to be discovered photographically, rather than observationally, and over a hundred years later, it would be the first target of the Cassini spacecraft. Phoebe orbits at aContinue reading "Aug. 16, 1898: Phoebe makes an appearance"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, August 16: The Moon reaches Last Quarter

Last Quarter Moon occurs at 1:12 A.M. EDT as sunset sweeps across the lunar nearside following the Full phase last week. Visible in the early-morning sky, the Moon lies just under 4° west of the Pleiades in Taurus some two hours before sunrise, rising in the east. (The Moon will continue to creep closer toContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, August 16: The Moon reaches Last Quarter"

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Commercial spaceflight receives boost with Trump order

President Donald Trump on Wednesday directed federal agencies to relax requirements for commercial launch and reentry licenses in a bid to jump-start competition in the U.S. space sector. The White House issued an executive order that calls for the elimination of environmental reviews and portions of Part 450 — a set of launch safety-related measures that tookContinue reading "Commercial spaceflight receives boost with Trump order"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Sidereal Time

The basic unit of astronomical time measurement is the day, one rotation of Earth on its axis. But there is more than one way to define day. We can define it based on the Sun. One solar day is the time for the Sun to leave and return to your local meridian, the imaginary line that joins theContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Sidereal Time"

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Aug. 15, 1977: The Wow! Signal arrives

On Aug. 15, 1977, a narrowband radio signal was detected by the Big Ear Radio Telescope at Ohio State. The signal was powerful, lasted for 72 seconds, and was picked up on only 1 of 50 possible channels. It also showed a distinct pattern – starting low, growing, and then decreasing again — suggesting itContinue reading "Aug. 15, 1977: The Wow! Signal arrives"

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The Sky Today on Friday, August 15: Ceres stands stationary

Dwarf planet 1 Ceres is stationary at 9 P.M. EDT, though to spot it you’ll have to get up early, as it’s only visible in the morning sky. Around 4 A.M. local daylight time, Ceres is just over 40° high in the southern sky. The main belt’s largest body is currently making its way throughContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, August 15: Ceres stands stationary"

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The Sky This Week from August 15 to 22: The Moon hangs with the morning planets

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, August 15Dwarf planet 1 Ceres reaches its stationary point in Cetus the Whale at 9 P.M. EDT. Previously it was moving eastward relative to the background stars. Now it will begin to move westward, or retrograde. Ceres is only visible in the morningContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 15 to 22: The Moon hangs with the morning planets"

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Michael’s Miscellany: 10 More Cool Things About the Sun

If you missed my first 10 cool things about the Sun, you can read them here. Now you’re ready for 10 more. 11. Astronomers call the Sun’s visible surface the photosphere. Its thickness ranges from tens of miles to a few hundred miles. 12. The chromosphere is a layer about 1,200 miles thick that lies aboveContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: 10 More Cool Things About the Sun"

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Aug. 14, 1959: Explorer 6 images Earth

NASA’s Explorer 6 satellite was launched Aug. 7, 1959, from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The spacecraft’s mission was to study Earth’s magnetic fields and radiation, as well as cosmic rays, geomagnetism, and micrometeorites. It also carried a photocell scanner, an instrument intended to photograph Earth’s cloud cover. A complication with one of its solar cells leftContinue reading "Aug. 14, 1959: Explorer 6 images Earth"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, August 14: Mercury reappears

The Moon reaches perigee at 1:59 P.M. EDT. Perigee is the point in the Moon’s orbit when it is closest to Earth; this afternoon, our satellite will sit 229,456 miles (369,274 km) away.  Mercury is just starting to emerge from the Sun’s glare, presenting a challenging but reachable target. Now shining at magnitude 1, theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, August 14: Mercury reappears"

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ULA Vulcan makes successful Space Force debut

After years of certification snags, the U.S. Space Force finally has its latest National Security Space Launch (NSSL) rocket. The newest branch of the U.S. armed forces on Tuesday launched United Launch Alliance’s (ULA) Vulcan Centaur to geosynchronous Earth orbit (GEO), marking the two-stage, heavy-lift launch vehicle’s debut national security mission. The NSSL program isContinue reading "ULA Vulcan makes successful Space Force debut"

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How AI helped uncover a new type of supernova

Using an AI algorithm, astronomers have discovered a new type of supernova likely resulting from the merger of a dying star and its black hole companion. In July 2023, the Zwicky Transient Facility discovered supernova SN 2023zkd, located 730 million light-years from Earth. Six months later, in January 2024, an artificial intelligence algorithm known asContinue reading "How AI helped uncover a new type of supernova"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Observe the Ring Nebula

If you own a telescope with an aperture (the size of the lens or mirror) of 4 inches or more, there’s a wonderful object now high in the sky as darkness falls. It’s called the Ring Nebula, also known as M57 — the 57th object on French comet hunter Charles Messier’s famous list. He discovered the RingContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Observe the Ring Nebula"

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Aug. 13, 2011: Perseids from space

Likely the best-known meteor shower of the year, the Perseids occur from late July through late August annually, typically peaking around Aug. 12-13. Meteor showers occur when the Earth passes through the debris field left behind as a comet orbits the Sun. In the case of the Perseids, that comet is Comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle, discovered inContinue reading "Aug. 13, 2011: Perseids from space"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 13: The Wild Duck Cluster flies overhead

The Wild Duck Cluster, also cataloged as M11, flies high in Scutum this evening about two hours after sunset. Around 10 P.M. local daylight time, you can find it some 40° high in the south, some 3° west-southwest of the tail feathers of Aquila the Eagle. As an open cluster, M11’s stars are young, estimatedContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 13: The Wild Duck Cluster flies overhead"

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Hubble estimates the size of a comet from deep space

Using the Hubble Space Telescope, a team of astronomers has imaged an interstellar comet. This icy body was discovered by NASA’s Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) on July 1, 2025, when it was 420 million miles (676 million kilometers) from the Sun. ATLAS is an asteroid impact early warning system developed by the University of Hawai’i. AfterContinue reading "Hubble estimates the size of a comet from deep space"

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NASA, SpaceX Crew-10 astronauts splash down

The latest astronaut crew conducting research on the International Space Station (ISS) returned to Earth on Saturday, marking the successful completion of NASA’s 10th Commercial Crew mission to the orbital laboratory. The crew of NASA and SpaceX’s Crew-10 mission splashed down off the coast of California on Friday morning, ending its nearly five-month mission. DuringContinue reading "NASA, SpaceX Crew-10 astronauts splash down"

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Aug. 12, 1946: President Truman establishes the National Air Museum

The Smithsonian Institution began collecting aeronautical artifacts in 1876, when it acquired 20 Chinese Imperial kites. By the end of World War I, a Section of Aeronatics had been established within the Division of Engineering, and Smithsonian Secretary Charles Walcott had mandated that the institution collect aircraft of historical significance. In particular, Charles Lindbergh’s SpiritContinue reading "Aug. 12, 1946: President Truman establishes the National Air Museum"

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Dusty inkblots

Katelyn Beecroft from London, Ontario, Canada The dark nebula LDN 673 in Aquila is a dusty complex that blots out the light of background stars behind it — to this imager, visually resembling a Rorschach test. The image represents 18.8 hours of LRGB exposure with a 2.8-inch f/5.6 refractor.

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 12: Venus and Jupiter meet, the Perseid meter shower peaks

This morning is a busy one: Venus passes 0.9° south of Jupiter at 4 A.M. EDT, the two planets officially meeting in a conjunction as the Perseid meteor shower peaks. Step outside at 4 A.M. local time to catch the show. At that time, Venus and Jupiter are some 7° high in the east, locatedContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 12: Venus and Jupiter meet, the Perseid meter shower peaks"

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Historic ULA Vulcan launch slated for Tuesday, August 12

Mission highlight: USSF-106’s historic flight scheduled for Tuesday In last week’s edition, we mistakenly reported that the USSF-106 mission was scheduled for August 10. On August 5, United Launch Alliance announced the official launch date. The historic flight is now set to lift off on Tuesday, August 12, at 7:59 p.m. EDT from Cape Canaveral’sContinue reading "Historic ULA Vulcan launch slated for Tuesday, August 12"

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Stellar jet pressures planet-forming disk

By reanalyzing archival data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), scientists have discovered a giant, expanding bubble that is pushing against and distorting the protoplanetary disk surrounding a young star, WSB 52. You can see an animation of this event here: Stars and their planets form when large molecular clouds collapse in on themselves.Continue reading "Stellar jet pressures planet-forming disk"

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Yerkes Observatory acquires historic glass plate collection

On June 28, the Yerkes Future Foundation (YFF), the nonprofit that has operated Yerkes Observatory since 2020, finalized the legal transfer of the site’s massive astronomical glass plate collection from the University of Chicago, according to an Aug. 7 press release. The foundation is now the official owner and steward of all 180,000 plates. BeforeContinue reading "Yerkes Observatory acquires historic glass plate collection"

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Will Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 be damaged when they pass through the Oort Cloud?

Will the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 spacecraft be damaged when they finally pass through the Oort Cloud? Terry WilsonNorth Prince George, Virginia The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 spacecraft were launched in 1977. Both passed Jupiter in 1979 and went on to Saturn a few years later, after which Voyager 2 also continued onContinue reading "Will Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 be damaged when they pass through the Oort Cloud?"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Perseid meteor shower

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the evenings of August 12th and 13th to watch for rapid streaks of light crossing the sky. Those streaks occur when Earth passes through a stream of particles left behind by a comet. Because they all appear to originate from the constellation Perseus,Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Perseid meteor shower"

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Aug. 11, 1877: Asaph Hall discovers Deimos

After spending the 1850s at Harvard Observatory calculating orbits, Asaph Hall became an assistant at the U.S. Naval Observatory at Washington, D.C., in 1862. He was quickly promoted, and by 1873 had not only held several scientific discussions with Abraham Lincoln during the president’s visits to the observatory, but had also been put in chargeContinue reading "Aug. 11, 1877: Asaph Hall discovers Deimos"

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Bear territory

Ron Brecher The Bear Claw Nebula — also catalogued as Hartl-Dengl-Weinberger 2 and Sharpless 2–200 — is a planetary nebula in Cassiopeia filled with thin, dense filaments. The imager took 55⅔ hours of Hα/OIII/RGB data with a 14-inch f/11 scope.

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The Sky Today on Monday, August 11: Asteroid Julia reaches opposition

Asteroid 89 Julia reaches opposition at 5 A.M. EDT. Shining at magnitude 8.5, it’s easily reachable with binoculars or any telescope. This evening Julia rises around sunset and is visible all night, reaching its highest point around 1 A.M. local daylight time. A few hours earlier, though, around 11 P.M. local daylight time, Julia isContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, August 11: Asteroid Julia reaches opposition"

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Aug. 10, 1990: Magellan enters venusian orbit

On Aug. 10, 1990, the Magellan orbiter arrived at Venus and was inserted into orbit. Its goal was to map the surface of the planet, using radar to peer beneath the cloudy atmosphere. Launched aboard the space shuttle Atlantis in May 1989, Magellan was the first deep space probe launched from a shuttle. Budget constraintsContinue reading "Aug. 10, 1990: Magellan enters venusian orbit"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, August 10: Iapetus stands north of Saturn

Saturn’s two-toned moon Iapetus stands 1.5′ north of the ringed planet early this morning, shining around 11th magnitude. Spending much of its time far from Saturn, Iapetus rotates in lockstep with its orbit, so that its magnitude changes throughout its orbit as its brighter or darker hemisphere faces us. When it is north or southContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, August 10: Iapetus stands north of Saturn"

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Aug. 9, 1976: Luna 24 blasts off

The Soviet Luna program, designed for lunar research and mission planning, ran from 1959 to 1976. On Aug. 9, 1976, Luna 24, the final mission of the program, launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in present-day Kazakhstan. The probe landed on the Moon’s surface nine days later, in the Mare Crisium (Sea of Crises), a previouslyContinue reading "Aug. 9, 1976: Luna 24 blasts off"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, August 9: A Full Sturgeon Moon rises

Full Moon occurs at 3:55 A.M. EDT this morning. August’s Full Moon is also called the Sturgeon Moon, so named by Native Americans for the prevalence of these fish in late summer.  You might think it’s quite easy to observe the Full Moon, but there are a few complicating factors. First, the Full Moon isContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, August 9: A Full Sturgeon Moon rises"

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Jim Lovell in his own words

Editor’s note: The following story ran in our June 2015 issue. In today’s celebrity-obsessed culture, the word hero gets bandied about far too often. But what other term would you use to describe astronaut James Lovell? A veteran of four spaceflights, his accomplishments paved the way for the first Moon landing and helped define NASA’sContinue reading "Jim Lovell in his own words"

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Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell dies at 97

Legendary astronaut James “Jim” Lovell, whose steady command during the harrowing Apollo 13 mission captivated the world, died Friday in Lake Forest, Illinois. He was 97. A veteran of four spaceflights, his career was defined by an extraordinary composure and leadership in the face of unprecedented danger. Born in 1928, Lovell was a proud U.S.Continue reading "Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell dies at 97"

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Webb telescope discovers potential new world in neighboring star system

A whole new world next door A team of astronomers has found evidence of a candidate gas giant planet orbiting Alpha Centauri A, a Sun-like star in the closest stellar system to our own. Initial observations hinting at the planet’s existence were made in August 2024 using data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).Continue reading "Webb telescope discovers potential new world in neighboring star system"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Tips for Observing the Moon, Part 2

Recently, I posted the first part of this list, which you can find here. This is part 2. 6. Cut down the moonlight Many observers use either neutral density filters or variable polarizing filters to reduce the Moon’s light. I prefer the latter because an observer can change how much light the filter transmits. TwoContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Tips for Observing the Moon, Part 2"

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Aug. 8, 1989: The Hipparcos satellite launches

A pioneer mission in astrometry – the measurement of the position, distance, motion, brightness, and color of stars – the European Space Agency’s (ESA) High Precision Parallax Collecting Satellite, or Hipparcos, launched on Aug. 8, 1989. There were immediately problems when a rocket-engine failure kept Hipparcos from reaching its planned orbit. However, the satellite wasContinue reading "Aug. 8, 1989: The Hipparcos satellite launches"

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Coffee and milk

Pablo Javier Lucero, taken from Val-d’Oronaye, France In this self-portrait, the photographer (and specialty coffee enthusiast) is serving coffee in the foreground of a carefully planned nightscape encompassing both the winter and summer arches of the Milky Way. The panoramas were taken on successive nights at the end of March with a Sony mirrorless cameraContinue reading "Coffee and milk"

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The Sky This Week from August 8 to 15: Venus and Jupiter meet amid Perseid meteors

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, August 8The Moon passes just 0.0009° north of Pluto at 1 A.M. EDT, although our satellite’s bright light will hide the tiny dwarf planet’s dim glow from view. Tonight, we’re visiting a summertime favorite: the double star Albireo in Cygnus the Swan. AlreadyContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 8 to 15: Venus and Jupiter meet amid Perseid meteors"

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The Sky Today on Friday, August 8: View Cygnus’ colorful double star, Albireo

Tonight, we’re visiting a summertime favorite: the double star Albireo in Cygnus the Swan. Already 60° high in the east an hour after sunset, Albireo — also cataloged as Beta (β) Cygni — marks the head of Cygnus, sitting opposite the brighter star Deneb (Alpha [α] Cyg) at the Swan’s tail. Around 9 P.M. localContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, August 8: View Cygnus’ colorful double star, Albireo"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Tips for Observing the Moon, Part 1

The Moon offers something for every amateur astronomer. It’s visible somewhere in the sky most nights, its changing face presents features one night not seen the previous night, and it doesn’t take an expensive setup to enjoy it. To help you get the most out of viewing the Moon, I’ve developed some simple tips. FollowContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Tips for Observing the Moon, Part 1"

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2 spacecraft flew exactly in line to imitate a solar eclipse, capture a stunning image, and test new tech

During a solar eclipse, astronomers who study heliophysics are able to study the Sun’s corona – its outer atmosphere – in ways they are unable to do at any other time. The brightest part of the Sun is so bright that it blocks the faint light from the corona, so it is invisible to mostContinue reading "2 spacecraft flew exactly in line to imitate a solar eclipse, capture a stunning image, and test new tech"

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Aug. 7, 1996: NASA announces martian life

Meterorite ALH 84001 fell to Earth from Mars about 13,000 years ago, landing in the Allan Hills region of Antarctica. It was discovered in 1984 and taken to the Johnson Space Center, where in 1994 researchers saw possible signs of life: carbonate minerals and microscopic structures that resembled nanobacteria. Further research commenced, and on Aug.Continue reading "Aug. 7, 1996: NASA announces martian life"

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Our star in Hα

Rich Ruffini from Wasilla, Alaska Solar prominences and intricate surface texture dot this view of the Sun, highlighting the dynamic activity of our nearest star in hydrogen-alpha light. The image was captured on June 28, 2025, with a Lunt 50mm solar telescope and monochrome camera.

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The Sky Today on Thursday, August 7: Feast on the Wargentin Pancake

If you’re up in the very early hours on Thursday, turn southwest to catch the waxing Moon before it sets. Most of the nearside is on display, and we’re looking specifically toward the southwestern limb for the large, flat crater Schickard and a nearby feature called the Wargentin pancake. They lie just northwest of theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, August 7: Feast on the Wargentin Pancake"

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Starlink interference threatens radio astronomy’s golden age

In what researchers are calling the most comprehensive survey of its kind, scientists at Curtin University in Australia have cataloged more than 112,000 unintended radio emissions from Starlink satellites. These emissions now regularly disrupt astronomical observations and may jeopardize the future of radio astronomy. New study reveals high level of Starlink interference The study, conductedContinue reading "Starlink interference threatens radio astronomy’s golden age"

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Michael’s Miscellany: 10 Cool Things About the Sun

Everyone loves lists, it seems. My three “10 Cool Facts About the Moon” lists proved popular, so I’m following up with three lists about the Sun. Here’s the first one. 1. The Sun is a star. It’s similar to all the stars we see at night. Of course, some of them are hotter, and someContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: 10 Cool Things About the Sun"

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Gilmour TestFlight1 fails with sideways hop

On Wednesday, July 30, 2025, Gilmour Space Technologies completed the first test launch of its 23-meter, 30-ton hybrid Eris rocket from the Bowen Orbital Spaceport in North Queensland, Australia. Aiming to reach low Earth orbit, the rocket instead flew for just 14 seconds, arcing up and away from the launch pad and strafing sideways beforeContinue reading "Gilmour TestFlight1 fails with sideways hop"

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Aug. 6, 2012: Curiosity lands on Mars

NASA launched its Mars rover Curiosity inside the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) on Nov. 26, 2011. Complete with 10 science instruments and 17 cameras, the robot can analyze mineral types, search for signs of microbial life, and take color panoramas of the Red Planet’s surface. Curiosity’s landing on Mars was a new process, nicknamed theContinue reading "Aug. 6, 2012: Curiosity lands on Mars"

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Cue the organ

Pete Fleurant, taken from the Okie-Tex Star Party in Kenton, OK Sharpless 2–173 — also known as the Phantom of the Opera Nebula — is an emission nebula around 10,000 light-years from Earth in Cassiopeia. The image comprises 8.2 hours of exposure with a 5-inch scope in the Hubble palette.

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 6: Neptune stands north of Saturn

Saturn passes 1.1° due south of Neptune at 6 A.M. EDT. The pair of planets is visible overnight, rising around 10 P.M. local daylight time and setting after sunrise. They stand highest in the sky around 4 A.M. local daylight time, when they are 50° above the southern horizon. Saturn stands out in southwestern PiscesContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, August 6: Neptune stands north of Saturn"

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Sean Duffy accelerates plan for lunar nuclear reactor

In a recent development revealed through documents obtained by Politico, NASA’s interim administrator, Sean Duffy, has accelerated plans to deploy a 100-kilowatt (100kW) nuclear reactor on the Moon. The directive orders the agency to solicit industry proposals for the reactor and sets an aggressive 2030 launch timeline, aiming to establish a sustainable human presence onContinue reading "Sean Duffy accelerates plan for lunar nuclear reactor"

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Venus and Jupiter dance in the morning sky

If you head out before sunrise (say, about 5 a.m. local time) and look eastward during the next few days, you’ll see planetary motion in action. Venus, blazing at magnitude –4.0, and Jupiter, no slouch itself shining at magnitude –2.0, are getting closer each day. Tomorrow morning (which is Wednesday, August 6 as I write this), theContinue reading "Venus and Jupiter dance in the morning sky"

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Aug 5, 1930: The birth of Neil Armstrong

Neil Alden Armstrong was born on Aug. 5, 1930, in Ohio. A naval pilot from 1949 to 1952, Armstrong flew 78 missions in Korea. After leaving active duty, he enrolled at Purdue University and earned a bachelor’s degree in aeronautical engineering in 1955, and then joined the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). During hisContinue reading "Aug 5, 1930: The birth of Neil Armstrong"

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A stellar stream

Alessandro Carrozzi The edge-on Splinter Galaxy (NGC 5907) hosts a faint stream of stars, captured in this deep LRGB image consisting of around 12.5 hours of exposure taken with 20- and 12-inch remote scopes in Spain. The stream is what remains of a dwarf satellite galaxy that merged with the Splinter at least 2.5 billionContinue reading "A stellar stream"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 5: Vesta lines up with two stars

Asteroid 4 Vesta is making its way through northwestern Libra, visible in the evening hours as the region slowly sets. Tonight it is passing near the star Xi1 (ξ1) Librae, making it a bit easier to identify. It is also not far from Xi2 Lib. The best time to look for Vesta is earlier inContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, August 5: Vesta lines up with two stars"

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Science retracts controversial ‘arsenic life’ paper

In a major editorial decision, the journal Science has officially retracted a famous and fiercely debated 2011 paper that proposed the existence of an “arsenic-based” life-form.  The original study claimed that a microbe, GFAJ-1, isolated from California’s arsenic-rich Mono Lake, could grow by substituting the toxic element arsenic for phosphorus. The provocative claim challenged aContinue reading "Science retracts controversial ‘arsenic life’ paper"

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ULA Vulcan to launch historic navigation satellite

Mission highlight: USSF-106 prepares for flight  On Sunday, August 10, at 8:07 p.m. EDT, a United Launch Alliance Vulcan VC4S rocket will lift off from Cape Canaveral’s SLC-41 carrying the USSF-106 mission for the U.S. Space Force. The flight is doubly historic: it marks the first U.S. national security launch aboard a Vulcan rocket, andContinue reading "ULA Vulcan to launch historic navigation satellite"

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Why are there so  many different types of stars?

What are the factors that result in so many different sizes and classes of stars? Kenton BowersPahrump, Nevada To understand how we classify and differentiate the stars we see in the sky, we first need to understand how they are born and change throughout their lives.  Star formation begins with a massive cloud of coldContinue reading "Why are there so  many different types of stars?"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus and Jupiter pair up

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the morning of August 13 to see the bright planets Venus and Jupiter close together low in the eastern sky. This dramatic duo are both in the constellation Gemini the Twins, and its beautiful stars make this a scene that you don’t wantContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus and Jupiter pair up"

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Aug. 4, 1972: Extreme space weather detonates mines

In early August 1972, a series of flares and other solar-storm phenomena generated extreme space weather events in what is considered a Carrington-class event. By the 4th, a coronal mass ejection had reached Earth, arriving in just 14.6 hours – a record. Electrical, telephone, and other communication-grid problems hit North America while bright aurora dancedContinue reading "Aug. 4, 1972: Extreme space weather detonates mines"

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The Sky Today on Monday, August 4: The summer sky’s standout glob, M13

The northern sky’s standout globular, M13 in Hercules, is placed just right to give it a try tonight. Around 10 P.M. local daylight time, M13 is some 70° high in the west and won’t fully set until an hour before sunrise. Glowing at magnitude 5.8, it will show up well in binoculars or any telescope.Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, August 4: The summer sky’s standout glob, M13"

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Aug 3, 1596: David Fabricius discovers Mira

David Fabricius was born in modern-day Germany in 1564. He became a Lutheran pastor, but maintained a strong interest science throughout his life, also working as a cartographer and even corresponding with Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler. It’s his discovery of Aug. 3, 1596, that he’s best known for, though: When he saw an unusuallyContinue reading "Aug 3, 1596: David Fabricius discovers Mira"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, August 3: August’s first Titan shadow transit

U.S. observers can catch the first of two transits of Titan’s shadow across Saturn this month — and one of the last few of the year, before cosmic alignment that allows the shadow to cross the cloud tops comes to an end. Saturn now rises shortly after 10 P.M. local daylight time and is locatedContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, August 3: August’s first Titan shadow transit"

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Aug. 2, 1133: A total eclipse is misremembered

Visible in Scotland, the total solar eclipse of Aug. 2, 1133, featured nearly 4½ minutes of totality. This eclipse provides just one of many historical examples of people wrongly associating a celestial spectacle with an earthly event: In his Historia Novella, written between 1140 and 1143, English historian William of Malmesbury linked the eclipse withContinue reading "Aug. 2, 1133: A total eclipse is misremembered"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, August 2: Mars slips past Beta Virginis

Mars is now moving through Virgo, sitting low in the western sky after sunset. Shining at magnitude 1.6, the planet is at its faintest for the year; in the coming months, it will slowly start brightening again, but with a price. It’s now closing in on the Sun from our point of view, heading forContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, August 2: Mars slips past Beta Virginis"

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‘Skyfall’ concept could deploy a helicopter swarm on Mars

In a bold new proposal for exploring the Red Planet, aerospace firm AeroVironment has unveiled “Skyfall,” a mission concept that would ditch the traditional rover and lander in favor of a swarm of six autonomous helicopters. Developed with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), the concept aims to dramatically lower the cost and complexity of landingContinue reading "‘Skyfall’ concept could deploy a helicopter swarm on Mars"

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The search for biosignatures in the Milky Way

The next time you look at a star, imagine a rocky planet orbiting at just the right distance for a climate that supports liquid water on its surface. Picture thick forests upon vast landscapes teeming with wildlife. Or consider a water world devoid of land where strange marine life swims beneath a hydrogen sky. MaybeContinue reading "The search for biosignatures in the Milky Way"

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Michael’s Miscellany: The Observer’s Eye

When you set up your telescope, you want to give yourself the best chance to make successful observations. Top-notch equipment will certainly help, but another key is knowledge. Here are a few things about the eye that I’ve learned through the years. OK, decades. Astigmatism The best corrective device for astigmatism seems to be hardContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: The Observer’s Eye"

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Aug 1, 1818: The birth of Maria Mitchell

Born Aug. 1, 1818, Maria Mitchell was raised in the Quaker tradition, which allowed equal education for boys and girls. This, plus lessons from her father, afforded her the opportunity to become skilled in astronomy, mathematics, and navigation. After a brief stint as a teacher, she became the first librarian of the Nantucket Antheneum. SheContinue reading "Aug 1, 1818: The birth of Maria Mitchell"

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A colorful tapestry

Gerald Rhemann, taken from Farm Tivoli, Namibia IC 4603/4 are a pair of nebulae located in the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex — a region known for its vivid colors in deep-sky photography. Among the typical blues of reflection nebulae are yellows caused by dust reflecting light from Antares, as well as the reds and magentasContinue reading "A colorful tapestry"

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August 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Two planetary conjunctions, two Titan shadow transits, and the Perseids’ peak

The longer nights of August beckon with several treats this month. Saturn and Neptune undergo their second conjunction of the year, appearing together in a low-power telescope eyepiece. Telescopic observers also get two shadow transits of Titan across Saturn. Early risers enjoy a spectacular conjunction of the two brightest planets in the sky, Venus andContinue reading "August 2025: What’s in the sky this month? Two planetary conjunctions, two Titan shadow transits, and the Perseids’ peak"

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

Although Mars reached opposition in January, it remains a fixture on August evenings. In fact, it’s the only planet visible as twilight fades to darkness. The planet moves eastward against the background stars of Virgo, approaching that constellation’s luminary, 1st-magnitude Spica. The magnitude 1.6 Red Planet makes a nice color contrast with the blue-white star.Continue reading "August 2025: What’s in the Southern Hemisphere sky this month?"

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The Sky Today on Friday, August 1: August brings the First Quarter Moon

First Quarter Moon occurs at 8:41 A.M. EDT. Rising early in the afternoon, the Moon then reaches apogee — the farthest point from Earth in its orbit — at 4:36 P.M. EDT, when it will be 251,134 miles (4041,61 km) away. Readily visible in the south at sunset, our satellite is now half-lit and showsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, August 1: August brings the First Quarter Moon"

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The Sky This Week from August 1 to 8: A conjunction of Saturn and Neptune

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, August 1First Quarter Moon occurs at 8:41 A.M. EDT. The Moon then reaches apogee — the farthest point from Earth in its orbit — at 4:36 P.M. EDT, when it will be 251,134 miles (4041,61 km) away. Corona Borealis the Northern Crown isContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 1 to 8: A conjunction of Saturn and Neptune"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, July 31: The Southern Delta Aquariid meteor shower peaks

The Southern Delta Aquariid meteor shower peaks this morning with no moonlight to interfere with your view of shower meteors.  These meteors appear to radiate from a point in the sky to the lower right of the star Skat (magnitude 3.3) in Aquarius as the constellation sets in the early-morning sky. An hour before sunrise,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, July 31: The Southern Delta Aquariid meteor shower peaks"

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Hot crustacean bands

Fernando Oliveira de Menezes, taken from Munhoz, Brazil The Prawn Nebula (IC 4628) lies around 6,000 light-years away in Scorpius. This star-forming region displays striking striations of ionized gas sculpted by stellar winds and radiation. The photographer took 83 hours of exposure in the Hubble palette with a 6-inch f/7 refractor.

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Michael’s Miscellany: 10 More Cool Things About the Moon

Recently, I posted two lists of Moon facts, each containing 10 that were pretty cool. They’ll also help you answer questions about our lone natural satellite. You’ll find them here and here. Well, here are 10 more … #21. A total of 12 American astronauts have walked on the Moon. They traveled there as partContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: 10 More Cool Things About the Moon"

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July 31, 1964: Ranger 7 returns the first close pictures of the Moon

With the Space Race heating up, the Ranger program was developed as an answer to Sputnik: The U.S. would land spacecraft on the Moon. When President John F. Kennedy vowed in 1961 to put a man on the lunar surface, the project evolved. Instead of being purely scientific or exploratory, Ranger spacecraft would also beContinue reading "July 31, 1964: Ranger 7 returns the first close pictures of the Moon"

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Discover great star clusters of the New General Catalogue

This is a tale of rediscovery. I have been an astronomer for more than half a century. My current observing concentrates on showcase nebulae and galaxies or the pursuit of fine lunar detail. But recently, I had a reawakening that transported me back to when I received my first “serious” telescope, a 4-inch reflector, atContinue reading "Discover great star clusters of the New General Catalogue"

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JWST spies the aftermath of a famous supernova

Roughly 11,000 years ago, a massive star in the constellation Cassiopeia reached the end of its all-too-brief life. When the star’s iron core collapsed, it triggered a shock wave that ripped the rest of the star apart and lit up its small corner of the galaxy. Unfortunately for earthbound observers, thick dust clouds in theContinue reading "JWST spies the aftermath of a famous supernova"

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Watch a film on Sir Patrick Moore online

When you think of the great popularizers of astronomy in the past, two names stand out in particular — Carl Sagan and Sir Patrick Moore. Patrick (1923–2012) holds the world’s record for popularizing the subject; his BBC TV program The Sky at Night, the staple for those learning about the universe in the UK, wasContinue reading "Watch a film on Sir Patrick Moore online"

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New study revisits signs of life on K2-18 b

Astronomers have long sought signs of life beyond Earth, with exoplanets like K2-18 b — a world about 124 light-years away — offering tantalizing possibilities. In 2023 and again in April 2025, a team using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) detected molecules in K2-18 b’s atmosphere they claimed could be a biosignature: dimethyl sulfideContinue reading "New study revisits signs of life on K2-18 b"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Dwingeloo 1

Quite a number of small galaxies lie near us in the universe but are obscured by dust in our own galaxy and so are hard to see. Such is the case with Dwingeloo 1, a nearby barred spiral in Cassiopeia. So obscured is this galaxy that it remained undiscovered until 1994, when it was uncoveredContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Dwingeloo 1"

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July 30, 1610: Galileo sees Saturn’s rings

In 1610, Galileo Galilei became the first person to observe Saturn with a telescope. However, he was puzzled by what he saw: At first, he thought the planet had two moons, like lobes on either side of it, almost making it look like Saturn had ears. Two years later, when he observed the planet again,Continue reading "July 30, 1610: Galileo sees Saturn’s rings"

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Explore the wonders of the constellation Andromeda

The constellation Andromeda the Princess is part of the largest mythologically connected group in the sky. Her parents are Cepheus the King and Cassiopeia the Queen. Perseus the Hero saved her from being sacrificed to Cetus the Whale (a sea monster in the tale). And Pegasus the Winged Horse was born when Perseus cut offContinue reading "Explore the wonders of the constellation Andromeda"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 30: Vesta passes a field star

Asteroid 4 Vesta remains an easy-to-spot target in western Libra, just 5° north of Zubenelgenubi, the Balance’s double alpha star. Tonight and tomorrow offer an excellent opportunity to see the 7th-magnitude space rock move relative to the background of stars, as it currently lies less than 0.5° from a slightly fainter 8th-magnitude background star (HDContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 30: Vesta passes a field star"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Image contrast

All amateur astronomers, both visual observers and imagers, want their views to display great contrast. Contrast is the difference in brightness between various parts of a telescopic image. When light is scattered in the field of view, for whatever reason, it reduces the difference between the dark and bright areas of the image. Contrast isContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Image contrast"

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Heat up your observing with these new products

Mobile Porta Mount VixenSaitama, JapanThe Mobile Porta Mount is the new, easily portable piece in the popular Porta line. The alt-azimuth accessory has friction stop motion to locate objects quickly. Telescopes weighing up to 7.7 pounds (3.5 kilograms) can be attached. The mount head can be detached and the multiarm can be folded, both forContinue reading "Heat up your observing with these new products"

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July 29, 1958: NASA is founded

When the Soviet Union launched Sputnik in 1957, the Space Race exploded as the U.S. and Soviet Union competed to show their dominance in the technology and military spheres. Sputnik 2 and then 3 followed, and real concerns about the U.S. falling behind were raised. Congressional hearings began in 1957, and President Dwight D. EisenhowerContinue reading "July 29, 1958: NASA is founded"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 29: Saturn and its moons

Saturn still stands out in the early-morning sky as a bright, 1st-magnitude point of light in southwestern Pisces. Two hours before sunrise, the ringed planet is roughly 50° high in the south and offers an easy stepping-stone to Neptune, which lies 1° north of Saturn — close enough to catch both worlds in a singleContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 29: Saturn and its moons"

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Observe the sky’s colorful stars

Professional and amateur astronomers post amazing photos of the sky. A colorful, star-filled Milky Way is often shown rising above a landscape, and photos from the Hubble Space Telescope reveal amazing and vivid colors in galaxies and nebulae. As beautiful as these pictures are, they also can be misleading because they don’t truly represent whatContinue reading "Observe the sky’s colorful stars"

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NISAR and ISS crew exchange headline a busy week of launches

Mission highlight: NISAR and SpaceX Crew-11 prepare for takeoff On Wednesday, July 30, at 8:10 a.m. EDT, India’s GSLV Mk II will launch from the Second Launch Pad at Satish Dhawan Space Centre carrying NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar). NISAR is designed to chronicle changes in Earth’s land and ice in unprecedented detail. The satellite’s dual-radar system willContinue reading "NISAR and ISS crew exchange headline a busy week of launches"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Crescent Moon meets Mars

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the evening of July 28 and observe a close grouping of the thin crescent Moon and Mars. Be sure to look for these objects on the 28th because each night after that the Moon will move farther to the east, away from theContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Crescent Moon meets Mars"

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July 28, 1851: The first photo of a total eclipse

The total solar eclipse of July 28, 1851 is important for two reasons. First, English amateur astronomer and author George F. Chambers wrote that it was the first that spawned dedicated eclipse expeditions. The path of totality stretched from what is today western Canada to Ukraine. European astronomers, however, targeted Norway and Sweden. Bergen, Norway,Continue reading "July 28, 1851: The first photo of a total eclipse"

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The Sky Today on Monday, July 28: The Maiden hosts the Moon and Mars

The Moon passes 1.3° south of Mars at 4 P.M. EDT and sits horizontally in line with the Red Planet after sunset this evening. By 9 P.M. local daylight time, the pair is 15° high in the west, both now in Virgo the Maiden. They are visible for about two hours, setting shortly before 10:30Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, July 28: The Maiden hosts the Moon and Mars"

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July 27, 2005: NASA grounds the space shuttles

During its July 26, 2005, launch, cameras captured a large piece of foam falling from space shuttle Discovery’s fuel tank. Since the Columbia disaster two years prior – the break-up of the shuttle on entry and the deaths of the seven crewmembers – had been caused by foam hitting the wing and rupturing a heatContinue reading "July 27, 2005: NASA grounds the space shuttles"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, July 27: An open cluster in the Eagle

This evening, look high in the southeast a few hours after sunset to find the stately constellation Aquila the Eagle, anchored by its brightest star, magnitude 0.8 Altair. In the northwestern regions of this constellation, near where it borders Ophiuchus, the bright open cluster NGC 6709 is our target for study tonight. Shining at magnitudeContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, July 27: An open cluster in the Eagle"

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July 26, 2000: Comet LINEAR disintegrates

In September 1999, the Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) project discovered a comet – Comet C/1999 S4, or Comet LINEAR – on a course for the Sun. Its unusual behavior drew attention: By July 5-7 of the following year, the Hubble Space Telescope had watched a piece of its crust blow off as ifContinue reading "July 26, 2000: Comet LINEAR disintegrates"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, July 26: Venus recreates the Crab Nebula’s supernova

The Crab Nebula (M1) has one of the most famous origin stories around: The light from the supernova that created the nebula was recorded by ancient astronomers when it appeared as a “guest star” in July 1054. The new star, which sat near Zeta (ζ) Tauri, one of the horns of Taurus the Bull, wasContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, July 26: Venus recreates the Crab Nebula’s supernova"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Pazmino’s Cluster   

The far-northern constellation Camelopardalis the Giraffe rarely garners significant attention from sky observers. But this faint grouping of naked-eye stars does hold a number of unusual treats, and one of them is known as Pazmino’s Cluster. Catalogued in the 1950s by German astronomer Jürgen Stock, and given the designation Stock 23, the small group ofContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Pazmino’s Cluster   "

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NASA’s TRACERS mission launches to study space weather

NASA’s TRACERS (Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites) mission is officially underway following a successful launch Wednesday at 2:13 p.m. EDT. The twin satellites rode a SpaceX Falcon 9 from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Ground controllers confirmed contact with both satellites three hours after separation, marking the beginning of a four-week commissioningContinue reading "NASA’s TRACERS mission launches to study space weather"

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July 25, 1920: The birth of Chushiro Hayashi

Born on July 25, 1920, Chushiro Hayashi graduated from the University of Tokyo with a degree in physics in 1942. After World War II service in the navy, he returned to school, finishing his doctorate in 1954 and becoming a professor at Kyoto University in 1957. An innovator, he applied fundamental physics to astronomy andContinue reading "July 25, 1920: The birth of Chushiro Hayashi"

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Lady Liberty

Bob Fera/Steve Mandel, taken from El Sauce Observatory, Chile The Statue of Liberty Nebula (NGC 3576) in Carina glows with intricate ribbons and pillars of gas and dust shaped by powerful stellar winds and radiation from young, massive stars. The imagers used a 17-inch f/6.8 scope to take Hα/OIII/RGB exposures of 600, 600, 120, 120,Continue reading "Lady Liberty"

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The Sky This Week from July 25 to August 1: See the Southern Delta Aquariids peak

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, July 25Pluto reaches opposition at 3 A.M. EDT. Opposition is when objects typically appear at their best, and with no Moon in the sky, observers with large scopes and little light pollution may be able to visually snag the dwarf planet. Pluto mayContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 25 to August 1: See the Southern Delta Aquariids peak"

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The Sky Today on Friday, July 25: Pluto reaches opposition

Pluto reaches opposition at 3 A.M. EDT. Opposition is when objects typically appear at their best, and with no Moon in the sky, observers with large scopes and little light pollution may be able to visually snag the dwarf planet. Pluto may be at its best, but it is still magnitude 14.4. According to AstronomyContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, July 25: Pluto reaches opposition"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Perseus Moving Group 

Our Milky Way Galaxy is filled with stars — perhaps as many as 400 billion — although it’s hard to estimate the number because the faintest stars, M dwarfs, are very hard to see over long distances. In any case, stars are being born and dying all around us, and we only see “snapshots” of theseContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Perseus Moving Group "

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Betelgeuse’s long-lost companion emerges from the shadows

On July 21, 2025, NSF NOIRLab issued a press release stating that astronomers had detected a long-anticipated companion star to the red supergiant Betelgeuse. The team of astrophysicists, led by Steve Howell, senior research scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center, observed Betelgeuse’s companion using ‘Alopeke, a speckle imager mounted on the Gemini North Telescope locatedContinue reading "Betelgeuse’s long-lost companion emerges from the shadows"

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Artificial clouds

Pascal Fouquet The rocket contrail from an early-morning SpaceX Starlink launch on July 8 formed high-altitude noctilucent clouds stretching across the Florida sky, seen in this image near Venus and the Pleiades (M45). The photographer took an 8-second exposure with a Nikon DSLR at ISO 160 and 50mm lens at f/4.

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New sednoid “Ammonite” discovery deepens Planet Nine mystery

Astronomers have discovered a new member of a rare and mysterious class of solar system objects known as sednoids — a subset of extreme trans-Neptunian objects (ETNOs) with exceptionally distant, elongated orbits. Even at their closest approach to the Sun, these icy bodies remain far beyond Neptune’s gravitational influence, traveling on paths that defy easyContinue reading "New sednoid “Ammonite” discovery deepens Planet Nine mystery"

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July 24, 1969: Apollo 11 returns home

Having launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon on July 20, the Apollo 11 astronauts returned home and splashed down in the Pacific on July 24, 1969. In a historically momentous trip, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin had become the first people to step onto the Moon. (The third member of theirContinue reading "July 24, 1969: Apollo 11 returns home"

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The basics of astroimaging filters

Astrophotography is a hobby with a huge learning curve, and one aspect that can muddy the waters is the dizzying array of filters on the market. What is narrowband? What size do I need? Which are good for monochrome and one-shot color? Let’s cover some of the basics. There are two types of filters forContinue reading "The basics of astroimaging filters"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, July 24: Can you photograph 3I/ATLAS?

New Moon occurs at 3:11 P.M. EDT, leaving the sky dark and perfect for observing faint objects such as 3I/ATLAS, our newest interstellar interloper. Currently around 17th magnitude and gliding through Ophiuchus, you’ll want a scope that’s on the larger side (at least 6 inches, preferably more) to nab your own photograph of this ancientContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, July 24: Can you photograph 3I/ATLAS?"

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What are your top five revolutions in planetary science?

In our September 2025 issue, astronomer and Pluto mission leader S. Alan Stern explores how the field of planetary science has transformed during his decades-long career. From the discovery of exoplanets to finding hidden oceans throughout the solar system to the rise of commercial spaceflight, he lists his top five revolutions in planetary science inContinue reading "What are your top five revolutions in planetary science?"

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July 23, 1999: Chandra X-Ray Observatory launches

On July 23, 1999, the Chandra X-Ray Observatory launched aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia; it would see first light a few weeks later, on Aug. 26. With resolution eight times greater than any previous scope, Chandra is the most powerful X-ray telescope ever built. The observatory is intended to help scientists understand the universe’s evolutionContinue reading "July 23, 1999: Chandra X-Ray Observatory launches"

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The quest for the ultimate catalog of dark nebulae

If you are a frequent reader of Astronomy, then you likely have seen images on its pages of objects from the famous Lynds’ Catalogue of Dark Nebulae. These mysterious dark clouds of interstellar dust are denoted by the letters LDN followed by a catalog number, such as LDN 881. I have contributed some of thoseContinue reading "The quest for the ultimate catalog of dark nebulae"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 23: Jupiter shares the morning sky with the Moon

The Moon and Jupiter share the morning sky as they rise together in Gemini the Twins. The pair is about 3° high in the northeast an hour and a half before sunrise, forming an elongated triangle with 3rd-magnitude Epsilon (ε) Geminorum between and slightly above them.  The Moon is a delicate crescent that is justContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 23: Jupiter shares the morning sky with the Moon"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: The Soul Nebula   

The Soul Nebula, catalogued as IC 1848 and Westerhout 5, is a sprawling emission nebula lying very close in the sky to another mammoth star forming region, its neighbor IC 1805, the Heart Nebula. Both lie in Cassiopeia and are so large they are quite faint to see visually, but make for great astroimaging targets. Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Soul Nebula   "

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Milky Way over the Tua Valley

José Rodrigues The Milky Way arcs above the Tua River in northern Portugal in this tracked panorama. The photographer used an astromodified Canon mirrorless camera at ISO 6400 and a 28mm lens at f/2.2 to blend exposures of the ground (fourteen panels of 120-second exposures), sky (nine panels of ten 30-second exposures), and the MilkyContinue reading "Milky Way over the Tua Valley"

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Webb Telescope discovers possible direct collapse black hole in galaxy collision

Researchers Pieter van Dokkum of Yale University and Gabriel Brammer of the University of Copenhagen have uncovered a remarkable cosmic system in archival data from the James Webb Space Telescope’s COSMOS-Web survey: a pair of colliding disk galaxies whose overlapping rings create a glowing figure-eight, dubbed the “Infinity Galaxy.”  But it’s not just the shapeContinue reading "Webb Telescope discovers possible direct collapse black hole in galaxy collision"

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HST captures the Veil Nebula in prismatic color

About 10,000 years ago, a new star appeared in what we now recognize as Cygnus the Swan. It was the light from a supernova explosion that occurred about 2,400 years earlier, when a star with roughly 20 times the Sun’s mass had exhausted its nuclear fuel. This caused the core to collapse, triggering a shockContinue reading "HST captures the Veil Nebula in prismatic color"

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July 22, 1826: Fr. Giuseppe Piazzi dies

Born in 1746 in Ponte, Italy, Giuseppe Piazzi was ordained as a priest in 1769. He taught theology, philosophy, and mathematics at various points in his career, but in 1787 became a professor of astronomy, and King Ferdinand of Sicily appointed him as the director of the Palermo Astronomical Observatory. On New Year’s Day 1801,Continue reading "July 22, 1826: Fr. Giuseppe Piazzi dies"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 22: NGC 7243, Lacerta’s open cluster

Can you find Lacerta the Lizard? This small, dim constellation is visible in the northeast after sunset, sitting below the flying form of Cygnus and to the lower right of house-shaped Cepheus.  Lacerta’s alpha star shines at magnitude 3.8; you can find it about 19° east of bright Deneb in Cygnus. This luminary may seemContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 22: NGC 7243, Lacerta’s open cluster"

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NASA personnel warn of ‘dire’ consequences of proposed cuts

More than 280 current and former NASA employees have warned that “rapid and wasteful changes” dictated by the White House will have “dire” consequences for the space agency. On Monday, the 56th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, personnel from every NASA center and mission directorate addressed a letter to the agency’s interim administrator,Continue reading "NASA personnel warn of ‘dire’ consequences of proposed cuts"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: The Heart Nebula

One of the most interesting areas to explore with a wide-field scope exists in the rich Milky Way of Cassiopeia. You might think of Orion, Taurus, Scorpius, or Sagittarius. But Cassiopeia is loaded with small, interesting deep-sky objects, mostly clusters and nebulae, and has a few big nebulae too. One of them is IC 1805,Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Heart Nebula"

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NASA’s TRACERS leads busy spaceflight schedule

Mission highlight: NASA TRACERS on the cusp of launching NASA’s TRACERS mission (Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites) headlines a July 22, 2:13 p.m. EDT Falcon 9 rideshare launch, flying alongside several secondary payloads from Vandenberg. TRACERS consists of two identical spacecraft designed to study magnetic reconnection — the explosive process that drives spaceContinue reading "NASA’s TRACERS leads busy spaceflight schedule"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Open cluster NGC 6231

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and observe the sky’s sixth-brightest open cluster, NGC 6231, in the constellation Scorpius the Scorpion. This object has been dubbed by amateur astronomers the “Northern Jewel Box.” Although sharp-eyed observers may pick this up with their naked eyes, its swarms of stars look bestContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Open cluster NGC 6231"

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July 21, 1998: Alan Shepard dies

Born in New Hampshire in 1923, Alan Shepard served in the Navy during World War II, subsequently entering flight training and graduating from the Navy Test Pilot School in 1951. In 1959, he was selected for Project Mercury as one of America’s first seven astronauts, alongside Gil Grissom, Deke Slayton, and John Glenn. On MayContinue reading "July 21, 1998: Alan Shepard dies"

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The Sky Today on Monday, July 21: Iapetus reaches eastern elongation

Saturn’s tidally locked, two-toned moon Iapetus reaches eastern elongation today, standing a full 9′ east of Saturn. The moon appears faintest at eastern elongation, when its darker hemisphere is turned toward us and it glows a faint 12th magnitude. However, without our Moon lighting the early-morning sky, you might try to spot faint Iapetus —Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, July 21: Iapetus reaches eastern elongation"

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July 20, 1976: Viking 1 lands on Mars

Viking 1 landed on Mars on July 20, 1976, the first spacecraft to do so and successfully return data. (The Soviet Mars 3 lander had touched down in 1971, but contact was cut off before any data could be received.) The two Viking spacecrafts were designed to be both orbiters and landers; the orbiter’s primaryContinue reading "July 20, 1976: Viking 1 lands on Mars"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, July 20: The Moon occults the Pleiades

The Moon passes in front of several stars in the Pleiades cluster in an occultation this morning, best seen from North and Central America. Both the view and its timing are heavily location dependent — you can check this International Occultation Timing Association’s page to find when Electra (17 Tauri), the first star to vanish behindContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, July 20: The Moon occults the Pleiades"

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July 19, 418: A solar eclipse/comet combo

July 19, 418 C.E., marks the first total solar eclipse (of which we have a record) during which a comet was seen. Turkish-born Church historian Philostorgius wrote in Book XII of the Epitome Historiae Ecclesiasticae: “When Theodosius had reached adolescence, on the nineteenth of July at about the eighth hour, the sun was so completelyContinue reading "July 19, 418: A solar eclipse/comet combo"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, July 19: Vesta forms a double star

Seventh-magnitude 4 Vesta is an easy catch from any location and with any equipment: binoculars or a telescope. Tonight, it’s just 5’ from a magnitude 7.5 field star, creating a temporary artificial double star to enjoy.  You’ll find Vesta in the northwestern corner of Libra, near that constellation’s border with Virgo. It now sits aboutContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, July 19: Vesta forms a double star"

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Axiom Mission 4 crew returns to Earth after historic ISS stay

At 7:15 a.m. EDT on July 14, the crew of Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4) undocked from the International Space Station, wrapping up an 18-day stay that marked new milestones in commercial and international spaceflight.  The team — led by veteran NASA astronaut and current Axiom Space human spaceflight director Peggy Whitson — splashed down safelyContinue reading "Axiom Mission 4 crew returns to Earth after historic ISS stay"

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Glorious resolution

Fernando Oliveira de Menezes from São Paulo, Brazil Globular cluster M4 lies just west of Antares (Alpha [α] Scorpii). To a visual observer, a 6-inch scope reveals dozens of stars; this image comprising 2.6 hours resolves nearly the entire cluster, yielding a star field that feels like you could fall into it. Click to seeContinue reading "Glorious resolution"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: PuWe 1   

Many faint planetary nebulae went undiscovered for surprisingly long times after Charles Messier and the Herschels stopped cataloguing nebulous objects lying around parts of the sky. It wasn’t until 1980 that two Austrian astronomers, Alois Purgathofer and Ronald Weinberger, found a large, faint planetary nebulae as they searched plates of the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey. Continue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: PuWe 1   "

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Michael’s Miscellany: 25 Questions About Astronomy

You’ve set your telescope up and are showing people some of the wonders in the sky. Of course, they’re going to ask you questions. Here are some you might be asked. How many do you know the answers to? Question 1: Approximately how old is the universe? Question 2: Which planet in our solar system has theContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: 25 Questions About Astronomy"

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July 18, 1915: The birth of John Glenn

Born on July 18, 1921, John Glenn grew up in Ohio and joined the Marine Corps in 1943. He flew 59 combat missions in World War II and 63 in the Korean War before being selected by NASA for the Mercury program. In 1962, he spent five hours orbiting the Earth in the Friendship 7Continue reading "July 18, 1915: The birth of John Glenn"

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The Sky Today on Friday, July 18: Titan’s shadow transits

Titan’s shadow transits the cloud tops of Saturn this morning, beginning around 2:50 A.M. EDT. At that time, Saturn (in the constellation Pisces) should be above the horizon for most of the U.S., with the Last Quarter Moon a good distance away, straddling the border of Pisces and Aries.  Saturn, at magnitude 0.9, is theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, July 18: Titan’s shadow transits"

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The Sky This Week from July 18 to 25: Have you seen our interstellar visitor?

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, July 18Mars remains close to Sigma (σ) Leonis, Leo the Lion’s back foot, in the evening sky for several days. Shining at magnitude 1.5, the Red Planet is just over 1° southwest of the 4th-magnitude star tonight.  An hour after sunset, Mars isContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 18 to 25: Have you seen our interstellar visitor?"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Jones-Emberson 1  

The sky is filled with interesting and unusual planetary nebulae, which give us a forward look at the end state of our own star and solar system. Some of the faintest and most unusual planetaries were discovered long after the NGC and IC catalogs, and so bear strange designations. Such is the case with aContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Jones-Emberson 1  "

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Celebrate International Moon Day with Starmus

In 2021, the United Nations General Assembly declared July 20 International Moon Day, a celebration of our nearest celestial neighbor on the anniversary of the day Apollo 11 landed on the Moon in 1969. The Starmus Festival, founded by astronomer Garik Israelian and astronomer and musician Brian May, is involved with many astronauts and hasContinue reading "Celebrate International Moon Day with Starmus"

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What we know so far about 3I/ATLAS, the interstellar visitor

Astronomers are continuing to gather data on 3I/ATLAS, the third confirmed interstellar object (ISO) to pass through our solar system — and possibly the most intriguing yet. Since its discovery on July 1, 2025, new analyses have revealed clues about its origins, composition, age, and potential for future observation. Here’s what the latest research tellsContinue reading "What we know so far about 3I/ATLAS, the interstellar visitor"

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50 years since the ‘Handshake in Space’: The legacy of Apollo-Soyuz

The Apollo-Soyuz mission, which occurred 50 years ago this month, was the culmination of a series of fitful attempts at possible international cooperation on human spaceflight. But before one astronaut and one cosmonaut met in an airlock in orbit over the Earth, there were wiretaps and hot dogs, language lessons and vodka toasts. And thoughContinue reading "50 years since the ‘Handshake in Space’: The legacy of Apollo-Soyuz"

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July 17, 1975: The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project link-up

After years of planning, training, and international negotiation, the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project mission culminated in 1975 when spacecraft from the U.S. and the Soviet Union docked in space. On July 17, the Apollo and Soyuz capsules locked together, utilizing an “androgynous” system of petal-shaped plates, and their commanders, Thomas Stafford and Aleksey Leonov, shook hands.Continue reading "July 17, 1975: The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project link-up"

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Starbirth in the Keel

Gerardo N. Rigiroli from Buenos Aires, Argentina The nebula NGC 3503 in Carina is a stellar nursery that glows brightly at the center of this image, surrounded by ghostly tendrils of gas and dust. At bottom left is the open cluster NGC 3532. The image comprises just over 17 hours of SHORGB data taken withContinue reading "Starbirth in the Keel"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, July 17: Mercury stands still

Mercury stands stationary at 3 A.M. EDT amid the stars of Cancer. The solar system’s smallest planet will now start sliding westward, or retrograde, appearing to “fall” back toward the Sun as it moves through its tight, 88-day orbit.  You can catch Mercury in the evening sky, but only if you’re quick — it’s justContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, July 17: Mercury stands still"

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Astronomers detect the most massive black hole merger ever

On November 23, 2023, a groundbreaking astronomical event unfolded as scientists from the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration detected the most massive black hole merger ever observed. The finding was detailed in a July 13, 2025, press release shared by the University of Birmingham. This cosmic collision occurred when two colossal black holes, approximately 100 and 140 timesContinue reading "Astronomers detect the most massive black hole merger ever"

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Astronomers see a new solar system forming for the first time

A newborn planetary system is forming around HOPS-315, a protostar (one that recently formed) that sits some 1,300 light-years away in the constellation Orion the Hunter. This star isn’t in the star-forming region known as the Orion Nebula, however. It lies in a region of space known as the L1630 molecular cloud. Astronomers often seeContinue reading "Astronomers see a new solar system forming for the first time"

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What is Planck’s constant?

Planck’s constant is one of the most important numbers in all of physics. It is, essentially, the ultimate guide to the quantum world. It tells us where quantum effects are important, the fundamental energy carried by light and matter, and more. And it all started as an ugly hack. The black body In the lateContinue reading "What is Planck’s constant?"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: The Broken Engagement Ring

The sky is full of interesting and unusual asterisms. If you look around hard enough, or are tired enough, you can convince yourself that you see patterns of stars that resemble practically anything.  But certain asterisms, simply patterns of stars that are composed of members not physically associated with each other, stand out more thanContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Broken Engagement Ring"

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July 16, 1850: Bond and Whipple photograph Vega

In 1839, the president of Harvard University invited William Bond to move into a house on campus and, by virtue of bringing along his own astronomical equipment, become the university’s first astronomer in residence. With public interest spurred by the 1835 passage of Halley’s Comet and the Comet of 1843, Harvard soon had enough moneyContinue reading "July 16, 1850: Bond and Whipple photograph Vega"

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Interstellar visitor

Chris Schur, taken from Payson, Arizona The interstellar object 3I/ATLAS — just the third to be discovered — is captured in this amateur shot (click and zoom in to see inset) next to the open cluster M23 (at right). The imager used a 10-inch f/3.9 scope to take 30 minutes of LRGB exposure.

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 16: The Moon hangs with Neptune and Saturn

The now-waning Moon is passing through Pisces in the early-morning sky. Our satellite slides 3° north of Neptune at 6 A.M. EDT, then passes 4° north of Saturn at 7 A.M. EDT. It’s a lovely view for early risers, who can catch the scene in the few hours before dawn. Two hours before sunrise, theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 16: The Moon hangs with Neptune and Saturn"

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The biggest piece of Mars on Earth is up for auction

Sotheby’s in New York will be auctioning the largest martian meteorite ever found on Earth on Wednesday as part of a natural history-themed sale. Known as NWA 16788, it was found in Niger in November 2023 by a meteorite hunter. The meteorite, which is red, brown, and gray in color, measures 15 by 11 byContinue reading "The biggest piece of Mars on Earth is up for auction"

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A knotty galaxy

Ron Brecher from Guelph, Ontario, Canada The dwarf galaxy IC 2574 is also known as Coddington’s Nebula, having been discovered by American astronomer Edwin Foster Coddington in 1898, when the nature of galaxies was not yet known. In Hydrogen-alpha light, bright knotty clumps indicate prodigious amounts of star formation. This image comprises just over 17Continue reading "A knotty galaxy"

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July 15, 1943: Birth of Jocelyn Bell Burnell

Born July 15, 1943, Jocelyn Bell Burnell is a British astrophysicist best known for her discovery of pulsars. In 1967, when she was a graduate student in radio astronomy at the University of Cambridge, Bell Burnell noticed “scruff” in the data she was reviewing from the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory. Bell Burnell jokingly called thisContinue reading "July 15, 1943: Birth of Jocelyn Bell Burnell"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 15: Great views of the galactic center

The center of the Milky Way is on display during summer evenings, arcing slowly through the southern sky. The galactic center is located near the magnitude 4.5 star 3 Sagittarii, which sits just 4.7° northwest (to the upper right, late this evening if you’re facing south) of Gamma (γ) Sgr, the star at the tipContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 15: Great views of the galactic center"

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Astronomers discover a perfectly spherical supernova remnant

In a universe governed by turbulence and chaos, perfection is rarely more than a mathematical ideal. Yet astronomers are puzzling over a newfound object that seems to defy that rule: a glowing, nearly flawless circular shell of gas and dust, likely the remnant of a long-dead star, that has remarkably preserved its shape in aContinue reading "Astronomers discover a perfectly spherical supernova remnant"

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Gilmour aims for orbit again as Starlink surges continue

Mission Highlight: Gilmour Eris Testflight 1 After weeks of delays, Australia is finally poised to join the orbital launch club. Gilmour Space Technologies is expected to debut its Eris rocket with a test launch from Queensland’s Bowen Orbital Spaceport no earlier than (NET) July 16. The three-stage rocket, powered by hybrid engines fueled by aContinue reading "Gilmour aims for orbit again as Starlink surges continue"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Globular cluster M4

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out and observe M4, the wonderful globular cluster in the constellation Scorpius the Scorpion. You can use the Scorpion’s brightest star, 1st-magnitude Antares, as your guide. Although sharp-eyed observers may pick this up with their naked eyes, its swarms of stars look best through aContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Globular cluster M4"

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Senate appropriations committee pushes back on 2026 NASA budget cuts

In a July 10 markup meeting, the Senate Appropriations Committee, responsible for crafting the specific spending bills that allocate federal funds across the government, pushed back against President Trump’s proposed FY2026 budget. The comments signaled bipartisan resistance in the Senate to steep cuts in federal science funding. The president’s proposed budget, released in May, aimedContinue reading "Senate appropriations committee pushes back on 2026 NASA budget cuts"

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Why will our Sun expel its outer layers as it dies? 

Why will our Sun expel its outer layers as it dies? Daniel StanyerAugusta, Kansas First, let’s discriminate between expansion and expulsion. Expansion happens because the thermal pressure from the increased energy production in the Sun’s interior exceeds the gravitational force keeping the Sun’s matter close to its core. The Sun will expand until a newContinue reading "Why will our Sun expel its outer layers as it dies? "

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July 14, 2015: New Horizon arrives at Pluto

New Horizons launched in January 2006, and by July 14, 2015, it had reached its primary goal: Pluto. The first spacecraft to study Pluto up close, it conducted measurements of Pluto’s atmosphere, mapped the surface geology, observed Pluto’s moons. New Horizons also investigated the dwarf planet’s interior structure, adding support to the theory that PlutoContinue reading "July 14, 2015: New Horizon arrives at Pluto"

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The Sky Today on Monday, July 14: Saturn and Juno are stationary

Saturn stands stationary amid the stars of Pisces at 4 A.M. EDT. It is followed two hours later by asteroid 3 Juno, which reaches its stationary point in Libra at 6 A.M. EDT.  Only Saturn is visible in the morning sky, while Juno is up after sunset. Starting in the morning, look for magnitude 0.9Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, July 14: Saturn and Juno are stationary"

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July 13, 1969: Luna 15 launches

On July 13, 1969, the Soviet Union launched Luna 15, an unmanned spacecraft seen as a rival to the American Apollo 11 mission, which launched just three days later. Luna 15’s goal was to land on the Moon, collect rock samples, and return to Earth before the Apollo astronauts. But the heightened moment of competitionContinue reading "July 13, 1969: Luna 15 launches"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, July 13: The Bull has two eyes

Venus passes 3° north of Aldebaran in Taurus at midnight EDT; the pair is visible in the early-morning sky, well positioned in the east for two hours before sunrise.  Venus is notably brighter — magnitude –4.1, far outshining magnitude 0.9 Aldebaran, the brightest star in the Taurus and cataloged as Alpha (α) Tauri. Together, theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, July 13: The Bull has two eyes"

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July 12, 1988: Phobos 2 launches

The Soviet Union launched Phobos 2 on July 12, 1988, the second of two uncrewed probes designed to study Mars, moons Phobos and Deimos, the Sun, and the interplanetary environment. Each probe was equipped with 25 instruments including high-energy detectors; X-ray and solar photometers; infrared, ultrasound, and gamma-ray spectrometers; and more. Phobos 1 was lostContinue reading "July 12, 1988: Phobos 2 launches"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, July 12: M56 in Lyra

Already high in the east an hour after sunset is the constellation Lyra the Lyre, easy to locate thanks to its brightest star, magnitude 0 Vega. Tonight, we’re looking southeast of this star at M56, an 8th-magnitude globular cluster in near the border of Lyra and Cygnus. In fact, one of the easiest ways toContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, July 12: M56 in Lyra"

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High-altitude shower

Xiaofeng Qu, taken from Lijiang, Yunnan, China The Geminid meteor shower appears to rain down upon the Gaomeigu Astronomical Observatory (altitude: 10,500 feet [3,200 meters]) in this carefully composed 10-panel panorama. Also visible are numerous Hα features glowing across the sky, like the Orion Loop just above the observatory dome. The imager used 4 NikonContinue reading "High-altitude shower"

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Michael’s Miscellany: The Eyes Have It

I thought I’d write a bit about several eye-related topics. First up is resolution, which is the ability to see details in objects. We have decreased resolution at night, and little color vision as well, for multiple reasons: reduced numbers of retinal cells firing, the color shift in sensitivity vs. the focus ability of theContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: The Eyes Have It"

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Smithsonian pushing back on plans to relocate space shuttle

There is a battle brewing over ownership of a retired NASA space shuttle. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law by President Donald Trump at the White House last week, sets aside $85 million to relocate the space shuttle Discovery from its current home at the National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in northernContinue reading "Smithsonian pushing back on plans to relocate space shuttle"

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July 11, 1801: Jean-Louis Pons finds his first comet

On July 11, 1801, French astronomer Jean-Louis Pons made his first comet discovery, c/1801 N1. When he’d began his career in 1789 as a doorkeeper (essentially, a concierge) at Marseille Observatory, the directors had recognized his talents and taught him more about astronomy. That background, combined with his exceptional observational skills and the ability toContinue reading "July 11, 1801: Jean-Louis Pons finds his first comet"

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The Sky Today on Friday, July 11: The demon in the morning sky

There’s a demon in the early-morning sky, amid the stars of Perseus the Hero. Second-magnitude Algol (Beta Persei) is also famously known as the Demon Star, and you can spot it two hours before sunrise, standing 30° high in the east, to the upper left of the Pleiades.  Algol is dubbed a demon because everyContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, July 11: The demon in the morning sky"

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The Sky This Week from July 11 to 18: The Moon hangs with Saturn and Neptune

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, July 11The Moon passes just 0.02° north of the dim, distant dwarf planet Pluto at 7 P.M. EDT. However, the bright light from our satellite will make Pluto — already a challenging object requiring the largest amateur instruments — even more difficult toContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 11 to 18: The Moon hangs with Saturn and Neptune"

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Trump taps Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy as ‘interim’ NASA head

President Donald Trump announced Wednesday evening that U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy would serve as an “interim administrator” of NASA. “He will be a fantastic leader of the ever more important Space Agency, even if only for a short period of time,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social, his social media platform.Continue reading "Trump taps Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy as ‘interim’ NASA head"

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An ancient pair

Chuck Ayoub from Redford, MI Globular cluster M53 in Coma Berenices (at right) is accompanied by fainter NGC 5053 (at left). Astronomers have reported evidence for a tidal tail, suggesting the pair have interacted in the past. The imager took 2.5 hours of exposure with a Celestron RASA 8-inch f/2 scope and a one-shot colorContinue reading "An ancient pair"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 3079 and Quasar 0957+561   

Quasars were a mystery when first discovered in the early 1960s. They are extremely distant, starlike objects that emit enormous amounts of energy. Years later, astronomers understood that quasars are the extremely energetic centers of young galaxies, powered by supermassive black holes. The fact that they are mostly young (the black holes generally quiet downContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 3079 and Quasar 0957+561   "

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Behind the scenes of NASA’s Project Gemini: Astronomy chats with Jeffrey Kluger

Few authors have had as big an impact on space journalism as Jeffrey Kluger. His 1994 book Lost Moon, co-authored with Astronaut James Lovell, was the basis for the 1995 film Apollo 13, which starred Tom Hanks and was directed by Ron Howard. Other books by Kluger have focused on the flight of Apollo 8 and NASA’s unmannedContinue reading "Behind the scenes of NASA’s Project Gemini: Astronomy chats with Jeffrey Kluger"

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July 10, 1856: The birth of Nicola Tesla

Inventor Nikola Tesla was born July 10, 1856, in what is now Croatia (then part of the Austrian Empire). In 1899, Tesla recorded cosmic radio waves in his Colorado Springs, Colorado, laboratory. Though he believed the waves were extraterrestrial signals from another planet, today we know that they are part of the spectrum of anContinue reading "July 10, 1856: The birth of Nicola Tesla"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, July 10: The Full Buck Moon swings low

Full Moon occurs at 4:37 P.M. EDT this afternoon and will rise in the southeast around the time the Sun is setting in the northwest. The July Full Moon is also called the Buck Moon, and this month our satellite also rises at its farthest point south in 18.6 years: some 7° more southerly thanContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, July 10: The Full Buck Moon swings low"

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Congress adds Artemis funding to Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” backing NASA’s Moon return plans

When President Donald Trump signed the “One Big Beautiful Bill” into law on July 4, an amendment to the legislation introduced by Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) provided NASA with additional funding beyond the standard fiscal year 2025 budget. This extra money — around $9.9 billion — is intended to support key programs like Artemis, theContinue reading "Congress adds Artemis funding to Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” backing NASA’s Moon return plans"

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July 9, 1979: Voyager 2’s Jupiter visit

On July 9, 1979, NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft came within 404,003 miles (650,180 kilometers) of Jupiter. Launched in August 1977, the Voyager probes were originally planned to study Jupiter and Saturn. Voyager 1 arrived at Jupiter in March 1979, and Voyager 2 followed a few months later. Equipped with narrow- and wide-angle cameras, an interferometer,Continue reading "July 9, 1979: Voyager 2’s Jupiter visit"

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Shells of its former self

Adriano Anfuso/Vikas Chander The elliptical galaxy NGC 474 (lower right) contains multiple shell-like structures and tidal tails as a result of past interactions with other galaxies. The galaxy is currently interacting with a neighboring spiral galaxy, NGC 470 (just to its left). The lenticular galaxy NGC 467 (at left) is a background galaxy, more thanContinue reading "Shells of its former self"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 9: Venus and the Pleiades

Venus hangs below the Pleiades in the early-morning sky today. The bright planet is quickly closing in on Taurus’ brightest star, Aldebaran, which it will pass closely next week. Step outside 90 minutes before sunrise to spot blazing Venus (magnitude –4.1) about 8.4° below the Pleiades open cluster (M45) in the east. The planet isContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, July 9: Venus and the Pleiades"

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July 8, 1992: Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 breaks up

In July 1992, Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 made its closest approach to Jupiter, skimming 25,000 miles (40,000 km) above Jupiter’s cloud tops. That put Shoemaker-Levy 9 within the gas giant’s Roche limit; the planet’s tidal forces broke the comet into more than 20 pieces, giving it a “string of pearls” appearance and setting the stage forContinue reading "July 8, 1992: Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 breaks up"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 8: Catch NGC 7686 in Andromeda

Climbing to 60° high in the east two hours before sunrise, the constellation Andromeda lies just to the upper right of the easy-to-spot W-shaped constellation Cassiopeia. This morning, let’s enjoy a view of the star cluster NGC 7686 in northwestern Andromeda, about 3° northwest of 4th-magnitude Lambda (λ) Andromedae.  This bright group of stars shinesContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, July 8: Catch NGC 7686 in Andromeda"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: The Helix Galaxy   

NGC 2685, often called the Helix Galaxy, is quite an unusual object. It is a lenticular (lens-shaped) galaxy that is also a polar ring galaxy, showing a ring of material at 90° orientation to its main axis, resulting from an interaction with a nearby galaxy. It is also a Seyfert Galaxy, its active nucleus powered byContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: The Helix Galaxy   "

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Gilmour delays debut launch, Starlink flies into the week solo

Gilmour Space Technologies has officially announced that the earliest available launch window for its Eris rocket is no earlier than (NET) July 16. The launch was postponed on July 2 due to adverse weather conditions. The company confirmed the updated launch window on July 3, citing Australia’s regulatory requirement for a two-week notice to theContinue reading "Gilmour delays debut launch, Starlink flies into the week solo"

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Fireworks display

Greg Meyer from Phoenix, Arizona Three objects fill this vista on the border of Cepheus and Cygnus: the Seahorse Nebula (Barnard 150) at left and the Fireworks Galaxy (NGC 6956) and open cluster NGC 6939 at right. The imager captured over 17 hours of exposure in LRGB filters with a 3.2-inch scope.

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Moon passes Antares

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out during the evening of July 7 and observe the pretty bright Moon passing Antares, also known as Alpha Scorpii. Look sharp, because the Moon’s light may hinder your view of the star, especially if your location has high clouds or smoke overhead. Good luck!

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How did Edwin Hubble prove Andromeda was a galaxy?

How did a Cepheid variable star help Edwin Hubble prove the Andromeda Nebula was a galaxy?  Roger BradySan Quentin, California Cepheids are rare variable stars with periods ranging from about 1 to 120 days. Their light curve — a chart showing brightness over time — is characterized by rapid brightening followed by slow dimming inContinue reading "How did Edwin Hubble prove Andromeda was a galaxy?"

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‘Strange binary’: Astronomers discover a pulsar and a helium star orbiting each other

Astronomers have spotted a rare cosmic duo: a neutron star that rotates nearly a hundred times every second locked in an ultra-tight orbit with a semi-shredded star. The scientists who found the pair say one of these stars swallowed the other whole and then spat it back out. It’s the first discovery of a millisecondContinue reading "‘Strange binary’: Astronomers discover a pulsar and a helium star orbiting each other"

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Above the clouds

Vikas Chander from New Delhi, India The 10.4-meter Gran Telescopio Canarias lies beneath the stars and Venus atop Roque de los Muchachos on La Palma in the Canary Islands. The imager used a Sony mirrorless camera and 85mm lens at f/4 to take two hundred 30-second exposures at ISO 100. Above the clouds

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Edge-on galaxy NGC 5907

Perhaps 100 billion galaxies exist in the universe at this time, although the cosmos could be infinite and the number even larger. Of the huge number of galaxies, several thousand are bright enough to be viewed nicely with a small or medium-sized backyard telescope. And of course the orientations of galaxies in space are allContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Edge-on galaxy NGC 5907"

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Axiom 4 launch delayed again as Starlink and Blue Origin missions prepare for liftoff

Mission Highlights: Axiom 4 Delayed The launch of Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4) has been postponed for a second time. This delay stems from a pressure leak in the Russian Zvezda service module aboard the International Space Station (ISS), following previous weather-related issues and a liquid oxygen leak in the Falcon 9 rocket. As of JuneContinue reading "Axiom 4 launch delayed again as Starlink and Blue Origin missions prepare for liftoff"

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This graphic shows what’s at stake in the proposed 2026 NASA budget

The White House’s proposed 2026 NASA budget calls for a dramatic 24 percent cut to funding, reducing NASA’s budget from $24.8 billion to $18.8 billion. If enacted, this would mark the agency’s smallest budget since 1961, when adjusted for inflation. The most severe reductions target NASA’s Science Mission Directorate (SMD), which faces a 47 percentContinue reading "This graphic shows what’s at stake in the proposed 2026 NASA budget"

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When the Sun becomes a red giant, will the outer planets and moons become more temperate?

When the Sun becomes a red giant, will the outer planets and moons become more temperate and conducive to Earth-like life? Terrence A. MurrayCincinnati, Ohio When the Sun runs out of hydrogen fuel and expands into a red giant, it will eventually encompass the innermost planets of the solar system, out to about Earth’s orbit.Continue reading "When the Sun becomes a red giant, will the outer planets and moons become more temperate?"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars passes the star Regulus

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out on the evening of June 16 to observe a close passage of the star Regulus by Mars. Regulus is the brightest star in the constellation Leo the Lion and sits at the bottom of that figure’s “backward question mark,” which is the Lion’s head,Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Mars passes the star Regulus"

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June 16, 1963: Valentina Tereshkova is the first woman in space

On June 16, 1963, 26-year-old Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova made history by becoming the first woman to travel into space. A former factory seamstress, Tereshkova was an accomplished amateur parachutist with over 100 jumps — a vital skill, since Vostok cosmonauts ejected before landing. Selected from over 400 applicants in 1962, she underwent months ofContinue reading "June 16, 1963: Valentina Tereshkova is the first woman in space"

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The Sky Today on Monday, June 16: Mars and Regulus shine together

Mars will pass 0.8° north of Regulus at midnight EDT, and both are visible for several hours after sunset for evening observers to enjoy.  In the post-sunset sky, look west to find the two standing close together, with Mars just to the upper right of Regulus. Both star and planet are the same magnitude (1.4)Continue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, June 16: Mars and Regulus shine together"

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June 15, 763 BCE: Assyrians record a solar eclipse

On June 15, 763 BCE, a near-total solar eclipse occurred over northern Assyria and was recorded by observers in Nineveh, the capital city. This event is preserved in the Eponym Canon, a list of historical events made by the Assyrians on clay tablets, following a specialized calendar system. The text notes: “Insurrection in the CityContinue reading "June 15, 763 BCE: Assyrians record a solar eclipse"

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James Webb, Hubble space telescopes face reduction in operations over funding shortfalls

The teams operating the Hubble Space Telescope and James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) — NASA’s two most in-demand observatories and among its most scientifically productive missions — are preparing to reduce operations due to funding shortfalls, officials said last week at the summer meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) in Anchorage, Alaska. The comments came atContinue reading "James Webb, Hubble space telescopes face reduction in operations over funding shortfalls"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, June 15: View the Whirlpool and its companion

Two hours after sunset, the sky is dark and the constellation Canes Venatici is high in the west, nestled beneath the curve of Ursa Major’s long tail, which also creates the handle of the Big Dipper asterism.  Located in northern Canes Venatici is M51, famously known as the Whirlpool Galaxy. It’s easy to find justContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, June 15: View the Whirlpool and its companion"

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June 14, 1949: The first mammal in space

On June 14, 1949, a rhesus monkey named Albert II was launched into space aboard a V-2 rocket from White Sands, New Mexico. Prior to Albert II, animals including fruit flies, mice, and another monkey (Albert I) had been launched in rocket and balloon flights as part of American space biology research, but Albert II’sContinue reading "June 14, 1949: The first mammal in space"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, June 14: Comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 sits at Leo’s feet

The Moon doesn’t rise until late tonight, leaving a dark window after sunset to explore the sky. Back in Leo in the west this evening, you might try your luck with Comet 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann, also known as Schwassmann-Wachmann 1. Now around 13th magnitude, the comet is sliding through southwestern Leo. Today, Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 is roughly 2°Continue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, June 14: Comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 sits at Leo’s feet"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7008

The sky is filled with great planetary nebulae for backyard observers. Their small size and relatively high surface brightnesses make them easy to observe in most telescopes — and decent targets on less than perfect nights. The constellation Cygnus is filled with bright planetaries, lying as it does smack dab on the center of theContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7008"

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New documentary ‘Sally’ tells the full life story of America’s first female astronaut

At one point, Sally Ride was arguably the most famous woman in the world. She flew two missions for NASA, including the one that made her the first American woman in space. She gave hundreds of interviews, and has appeared in countless books, on commemorative stamps, even on Sesame Street. She has a Barbie dollContinue reading "New documentary ‘Sally’ tells the full life story of America’s first female astronaut"

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A world in motion

Greg Meyer from Phoenix, Arizona Star trails encircle the landscape of northern Arizona in this 360° image that uses a stereographic projection. In the “foreground” of the scene lies the photographer’s Starpoint Australis portable tent observatory. The photographer captured the star trails with an Insta360 X4 camera, stacking around five hundred 30-second images taken atContinue reading "A world in motion"

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How I learned to love the Northern Lights

This is my open letter to all aurora chasers. After returning home from a successful trip to the 2024 Okie-Tex Star Party in early October, I received alerts from SpaceWeather.com indicating increased activity on the Sun. Predictions called for a severe geomagnetic storm, with a chance of auroral activity as far south as Alabama. IContinue reading "How I learned to love the Northern Lights"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Take a Look at the Sun

Every 11 years, activity on the Sun peaks. More sunspots, prominences, flares, and other phenomena are seen on our star’s face, plus, there’s an uptick in visible aurorae here on Earth. This time period is called the solar cycle, and we’re in the middle of the peak of the current one, solar cycle 25. TheseContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Take a Look at the Sun"

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June 13, 1983: Pioneer 10 leaves solar system

Pioneer 10 holds the titles for many “firsts”: It was NASA’s first mission to the outer planets, the first spacecraft to fly beyond Mars, the first to traverse the asteroid belt, and the first to fly past Jupiter. It was also the first spacecraft placed on a trajectory to escape the solar system into interstellarContinue reading "June 13, 1983: Pioneer 10 leaves solar system"

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The Sky Today on Friday, June 13: Mercury meets Mebsuta

Mercury now shines at magnitude –0.8 in the evening sky, lingering above the horizon some 80 minutes after the Sun disappears. Tonight, the solar system’s smallest planet stands just 20′ from the 3rd-magnitude star Mebsuta (Epsilon [ε] Geminorum), near the middle of the constellation Gemini.  You can catch the pairing with binoculars or a smallContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, June 13: Mercury meets Mebsuta"

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The Sky This Week from June 13 to 20: The Red Planet visits Regulus

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, June 13Mercury is making its way through Gemini, passing close to the star Mebsuta (Epsilon [ε] Geminorum) this evening. Visible for more than an hour after sunset, the magnitude –0.8 planet shines brightly in the west. Through binoculars or a telescope, you’ll beContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 13 to 20: The Red Planet visits Regulus"

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Hubble spots a cosmic bullseye

Sometimes even scientists get lucky. Yale University astronomer Imad Pasha was scanning some ground-based images when he stumbled across a galaxy boasting several rings. Because the object’s name, LEDA 1313424, doesn’t roll off the tongue, his team nicknamed it the Bullseye. This Hubble image reveals why it’s an apt moniker: The galaxy boasts nine rings,Continue reading "Hubble spots a cosmic bullseye"

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From the Flame to Orion

Francisco Javier Pérez Olvera, taken from Mixquiahuala, Hidalgo, Mexico This wide-field view captures a broad swath of the star-forming Orion Molecular Cloud Complex, spanning the Flame Nebula (NGC 2024) to the Orion Nebula (M42). The imager used a 54mm f/4.5 astrograph and dual-band Hα/OIII filter with a one-shot color camera to take 16 hours 40Continue reading "From the Flame to Orion"

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June 12, 2021: Seiji Ueda discovers Nova Herculis 2021

On June 12, 2021, Nova Herculis 2021 (V1674 Herculis) erupted, and was discovered by amateur astronomer Seiji Ueda of Japan. The white dwarf quickly became visible to the naked eye, surging to 10,000 times brighter than it originally had been. Its speed was unprecedented: V1674 Herculis faded from that peak brightness in just over oneContinue reading "June 12, 2021: Seiji Ueda discovers Nova Herculis 2021"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, June 12: Iapetus at its best

Saturn’s two-faced moon Iapetus reaches its greatest western elongation today. At western elongation, the moon’s lighter hemisphere is turned toward Earth, making it brightest and easiest to view through a telescope.  First, locate Saturn above the eastern horizon around 4 A.M. local daylight time, roughly 90 minutes before sunrise. At this time, the planet shouldContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, June 12: Iapetus at its best"

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In hiding

Andrei Pleskatsevich, taken from Minsk, Belarus The reflection nebula IC 63 lies near the star Navi (Gamma [γ] Cassiopeiae). Through a telescope, the object often appears to be concealed by the star’s glare, inspiring its common nickname, the Ghost of Cassiopeia. This imager took 5 hours of exposure with a 3-inch scope.

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ESA’s Solar Orbiter reveals the Sun’s poles for the first time

Launched in February 2020, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Solar Orbiter probe has been looping around the Sun with a special purpose in mind: Studying the poles of our star.  The planets orbit the Sun in a single plane, called the ecliptic. This means we’re roughly even with the Sun’s equator and don’t see itsContinue reading "ESA’s Solar Orbiter reveals the Sun’s poles for the first time"

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New astronomy products to kick off your summer observing

Forty Ways to Know a Star: Using Stars to Understand Astronomy Princeton Architectural PressNew York, NY In Forty Ways to Know a Star: Using Stars to Understand Astronomy, Jillian Scudder explores stars’ greatest mysteries through 40 short essays accompanied by photos and illustrations. An astrophysicist, science blogger, and Oberlin College associate professor, Scudder details theContinue reading "New astronomy products to kick off your summer observing"

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June 11, 1986: Chesley Bonestell dies

Born in 1888, artist and illustrator Chesley Bonestell became famous for his realistic paintings of space. His work spanned decades and many formats and publications; perhaps most influential was his collaboration with Wernher von Brain on the 1952–54 Collier’s series, “Man Will Conquer Space Soon!” By making the stuff of science fiction seem achievable, his artwork helpedContinue reading "June 11, 1986: Chesley Bonestell dies"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 11: The June Strawberry Moon

Full Moon occurs this morning at 3:44 A.M. EDT. Early risers can catch the Moon setting in the southwest shortly before sunrise, while anyone out in the evening will see the Full Moon rising again in the southeast not long after the Sun has set. That’s because the Full Moon is always located opposite theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 11: The June Strawberry Moon"

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Galaxy cluster pileup sets record for the size of its glow

When galaxies run into each other, they often appear to merge gracefully, their cores pirouetting around one another, drawn by their mutual gravitational attraction as their spiral arms extend outward in repose and their disks dissolve into an eternal embrace. But not in galaxy cluster PLCKG 287.0+32.9. Like a high-speed multi-car pileup in a HollywoodContinue reading "Galaxy cluster pileup sets record for the size of its glow"

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Axiom 4 makes history while SpaceX Starlink launches dominate the week

Mission Highlight: Axiom 4 — A historic multinational endeavor The Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4), launching on June 11 at 8:00 a.m. EDT from Kennedy Space Center, will carry crew members from India, Poland, and Hungary—representing each nation’s first mission to the International Space Station. The historic flight will be commanded by NASA veteran Peggy WhitsonContinue reading "Axiom 4 makes history while SpaceX Starlink launches dominate the week"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Pismis-Moreno 1

Here’s an oddball open star cluster I bet you’ve never seen — it’s catalogued as Pismis-Moreno 1. Lying at a high declination in the northern constellation Cepheus, it was discovered by Armenian-Mexican astronomer Paris Pismis and Mexican astronomer Marco Moreno-Corral.  Little data has been collected on this small group, which measures 9’ across and isContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Pismis-Moreno 1"

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Michael’s Miscellany: The Spring Sky

Ah, spring. Finally, it’s warm enough for even thin-blooded observers (like me) to break out their binoculars and telescopes. If you’re new to astronomy, however, you’ll want to become familiar with the constellations and bright stars that populate this season’s night sky before looking through the eyepiece. Then, when you read that a sky treatContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: The Spring Sky"

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How tracking the Moon helped astronomers unlock our understanding of celestial motion

Humanity’s need to track the Moon’s changing phases and motions is ancient. Mammoth hunters used the Moon as a timekeeper, carving crescent-shaped notches into bone and tusk. Sumerian astronomers recorded the Moon’s motion on clay tablets more than 3,000 years ago.  But as reliable and trustworthy as the Moon may seem, its dance around EarthContinue reading "How tracking the Moon helped astronomers unlock our understanding of celestial motion"

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June 10, 1927: The birth of Eugene Parker

Eugene Parker, pioneer of theoretical solar and plasma astrophysics, was born June 10, 1927. Parker revolutionized the field of heliophysics, notably by first proposing the existence of the solar wind — a stream of charged particles ejected from the Sun — in 1958. His theory was confirmed by Mariner II in 1962. Among many otherContinue reading "June 10, 1927: The birth of Eugene Parker"

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Smokey aurorae

Marty Weintraub from Duluth, Minnesota An auroral display shimmers on the night of May 28/9 over Lake Saganaga in Minnesota, near the Canadian border. The photographer notes that wildfire smoke caused the aurora to take on a “fuzzy, diffuse” appearance — even though the image itself is sharp with pinpoint stars. A Sony mirrorless camera andContinue reading "Smokey aurorae"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, June 10: The Moon meets Antares

The Moon passes 0.3° south of Antares at 7 A.M. EDT. You can catch them early this morning, when they are highest in the south just after midnight on the 9th. The Moon’s bright light dominates the southern sky as our satellite quickly waxes toward the Full phase, which it will reach in just overContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, June 10: The Moon meets Antares"

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Lowell Observatory faces big challenges

I spent part of last week in one of my favorite places, Flagstaff, Arizona, at Lowell Observatory. This storied institution is well known, and as I have written about previously, holds a unique place in the history of American science. Founded in 1894 by the Boston explorer and scientist Percival Lowell, the institution presents aContinue reading "Lowell Observatory faces big challenges"

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350 years of astronomers royal: Astronomical advisors to the British monarchs

Near the Moon’s western limb lies Oceanus Procellarum, the Ocean of Storms — a vast swath of terrain spanning 1,600 miles (2,500 kilometers) north to south, and covering 10.5 percent of the lunar surface. Its hinterland is peppered with a teeming sea of craters. One of them, at its southeastern extremity, honors Britain’s first AstronomerContinue reading "350 years of astronomers royal: Astronomical advisors to the British monarchs"

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NASA to discuss proposed science budget cuts Thursday

The White House’s proposed 2026 budget includes sweeping cuts to NASA’s Science Mission Directorate (SMD), slashing its funding by approximately 47 percent, as reported by the American Astronomical Society (AAS). The NASA science budget reductions would significantly impact programs across astrophysics, heliophysics, Earth science, and planetary science, raising concerns throughout the scientific community. NASA willContinue reading "NASA to discuss proposed science budget cuts Thursday"

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Can either Voyager image our solar system from their current location?

Are either of the Voyager spacecraft capable of taking a picture of our solar system from their current interstellar locations? Jake CunninghamEugene, Oregon No, but let’s talk about how the spacecraft that once dazzled scientists and the public alike with images of our solar system came to this state. To preserve power and memory, missionContinue reading "Can either Voyager image our solar system from their current location?"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Rho Ophiuchi Region

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out later in the evening to observe what most observers think is the sky’s most colorful area. Named for the nearby star Rho Ophiuchi, this region in the constellations Ophiuchus and Scorpius boasts emission, reflection, and dark nebulae, star clusters, and a red 1st-magnitude star,Continue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Rho Ophiuchi Region"

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June 9, 1988: First image of an Einstein ring

In early 1987, a team led by MIT’s Jacqueline Hewitt was imaging radio-emitting objects with the Very Large Array radio telescope as part of a gravitational lens survey. The unusual appearance of object MG1131+0456 – an oval with elongated bright spots at the ends – led to further investigation, and the researchers eventually concluded itContinue reading "June 9, 1988: First image of an Einstein ring"

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The Sky Today on Monday, June 9: Hercules’ other globular

The constellation Hercules is high in the east after dark this evening. Rich with deep-sky objects, we’re passing by the Strongman’s most famous (M13) for its second-brightest globular cluster: M92.  But don’t feel like you’re settling for second best: This cluster is only a little fainter and smaller than M13, so it’s a stunning sightContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, June 9: Hercules’ other globular"

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June 8, 1625: The birth of Giovanni Cassini

Giovanni Cassini was born in Perinaldo, in what is now Italy, on June 8, 1625. Early work on Jupiter and Mars’ rotational periods and the positions of Jupiter’s satellites led to an invitation to Paris and the Academie des Sciences by King Louis XIV; he became director of the Observatorie de Paris in 1671, andContinue reading "June 8, 1625: The birth of Giovanni Cassini"

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The Sky Today on Sunday, June 8: A conjunction of Mercury and Jupiter

Today, Mercury passes 2° north of Jupiter at 4 P.M. EDT. You can catch them together in the evening twilight, sinking in the west after sunset. But be quick: They are just a few degrees above the horizon half an hour after sunset. If you can get to a location with a clear western horizon,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, June 8: A conjunction of Mercury and Jupiter"

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June 7, 1992: The Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer launches

NASA launched the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer satellite, or EUVE, on June 7, 1992, to conduct an all-sky survey at wavelengths inaccessible from the ground. The first satellite designed to operate in the short-wave ultraviolet range, its “objectives included discovering and studying UV sources radiating in this spectral region, and analyzing effects of the interstellar mediumContinue reading "June 7, 1992: The Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer launches"

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The Sky Today on Saturday, June 7: The Dumbbell Nebula

There’s a short dark window of about an hour after the Moon sets and before twilight begins to brighten the sky this morning. Use it to track down one of the most famous planetary nebulae in the sky: M27, the Dumbbell Nebula. Shining at magnitude 7.4 and stretching some 8’ by 6’, this was theContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, June 7: The Dumbbell Nebula"

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June 6, 1980: The asteroid impact theory

“Extraterrestrial Cause for the Cretaceous-Tertiary Extinction,” by physicist Luis Alvarez, geologist Walter Alvarez, Frank Asaro, and Helen Michel, was published in Science June 6, 1980. In it, the authors propose that an asteroid crashing to Earth was responsible for the death of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. (The timeline was later amended to 66Continue reading "June 6, 1980: The asteroid impact theory"

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Observing with a 4-meter telescope

When you become a young observer of the skies, happy to be out in a dark field at night with a 6-inch or 8-inch scope, you never dream of the kind of night of observing I experienced on Thursday, June 5. I am in Flagstaff, Arizona, during part of this week, spending some time atContinue reading "Observing with a 4-meter telescope"

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Isaacman blames withdrawal of NASA Chief nomination on retribution

Shift4 Payments founder and private astronaut Jared Isaacman believes “some people” within the White House “that had some axes to grind” are behind the surprising withdrawal of his nomination to lead NASA. In April, the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation voted 19-9 to send Isaacman’s nomination to the full chamber. His confirmation voteContinue reading "Isaacman blames withdrawal of NASA Chief nomination on retribution"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Tube Currents

One of the most important factors to amateur astronomers is seeing, which is defined as the steadiness of the atmosphere at your observing site. You can tell how good (or bad) the seeing is by viewing a reasonably bright (2nd magnitude) star near the zenith. If it’s twinkling wildly, the seeing is bad. But if theContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Tube Currents"

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Smokey Sun

Philippe Moussette, taken from Cap-Rouge, Quebec, Canada Smoke from wildfires burning across northern Canada gives the Sun an otherworldly glow in this 1/2000-second exposure taken with a Canon DSLR and 300mm lens with 2x teleconverter at f/10 and ISO 100.

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The Sky Today on Friday, June 6: The Moon and Spica

The Moon passes 0.5° south of Spica at 11 A.M. EDT. The pair hangs in the evening sky, located in the south an hour after sunset.  By this evening, the Moon has moved some 6.3° southeast of Spica, the star that anchors Virgo the Maiden as its alpha luminary. Spica is magnitude 1 and sitsContinue reading "The Sky Today on Friday, June 6: The Moon and Spica"

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The Sky This Week from June 6 to 13: Jupiter and Mercury meet

Sky This Week is brought to you in part by Celestron. Friday, June 6The Moon passes 0.5° south of the magnitude 1.0 star Spica at 11 A.M. EDT. The pair hangs in the evening sky, located in the south two hours after sunset. They are now some 6.3° apart, with the waxing Moon to Spica’sContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 6 to 13: Jupiter and Mercury meet"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 6946

NGC 6946 is a bright galaxy sometimes called the Fireworks Galaxy due to its high rate of supernovae. It lies in a very rich star field right on the border of Cepheus and Cygnus.  This object is an intermediate spiral, meaning it structurally leans a little toward being a barred spiral. It was discovered byContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 6946"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Observing tips

There have been times through the years when I’ve gone observing and have been unprepared. Whether it was an action I should have taken, an item that I forgot, or some bit of observing wisdom that would have made my session better. Hopefully, the following list will better prepare you for when you next headContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: Observing tips"

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June 5, 1819: The birth of John C. Adams

On June 5, 1819, British mathematician and astronomer John C. Adams was born in in Cornwall. The first to predict the existence of Neptune, he wrote in his journal on July 3, 1841: “Formed a design in the beginning of this week of investigating, as soon as possible after taking my degree, the irregularities inContinue reading "June 5, 1819: The birth of John C. Adams"

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The Sky Today on Thursday, June 5: Summer Triangle rising

Now rising in the east after sunset is the famous Summer Triangle, so called because it sits high overhead on summer nights. As we head for the Northern Hemisphere summer solstice later this month, the three stars that make up this asterism will rise earlier and earlier each night.  Tonight around 11 P.M. local daylightContinue reading "The Sky Today on Thursday, June 5: Summer Triangle rising"

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A pond of stars

Emmanuel Delgadillo from Jalisco, Mexico The Tadpoles, lying in the emission nebula IC 410, are stellar nurseries that will birth infant stars. Their “tails” of gas and dust are blown outward by winds and radiation from the open star cluster NGC 1893, which lies within the nebula. The imager used a 10-inch f/5 scope to takeContinue reading "A pond of stars"

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Michael’s Miscellany: All About Orion

It’s difficult for amateur astronomers to fully share the wonders of the night sky with a visually impaired child. Well, that task has gotten a bit easier thanks to All About Orion, the new book by Dean Regas. This large (8½” by 11″) book contains 24 pages full of information about most people’s favorite constellation. It’s publishedContinue reading "Michael’s Miscellany: All About Orion"

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June 4, 781 B.C.E: A great eclipse in China

One of the earliest recorded eclipses is found in in the Shijing, a collection of ancient poetry whose compilation is also credited to Confucius. The eclipse in question occurred during the Zhou dynasty. Though the exact date is uncertain, some astronomers have pointed to the total eclipse of June 4, 781 B.C.E. (though this would have onlyContinue reading "June 4, 781 B.C.E: A great eclipse in China"

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The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 4: Pallas swims with the Dolphin

Asteroid 2 Pallas is visible in the late evening and overnight into the early morning. Around local midnight, you’ll find this main-belt world some 16° high in the eastern sky, a few degrees east of the four-star lozenge in Delphinus also called Job’s Coffin.  This small, diamond-shaped asterism is made from four 4th-magnitude stars: Alpha,Continue reading "The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 4: Pallas swims with the Dolphin"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Emission nebula IC 1396

One of the largest emission nebulae in the far northern sky can be found in IC 1396, a bright glow in Cepheus that contains several complex objects. Among them are the red supergiant star Mu Cephei; the double stars Struve 2816 and Struve 2819; the dark nebula van den Bergh 142, known as the ElephantContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Emission nebula IC 1396"

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This light shall pass

Emmanuel Joly from Le Cannet-des-Maures, France Narrowband Hα, SII, and OIII filters were used to collect 31.6 hours of data with an 8-inch scope for this portrait of the Wizard Nebula, which surrounds the open cluster NGC 7380 in Cepheus. The star field comprises RGB exposure times of 45 minutes each.

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Live long and prosper: JWST images NGC 346

How did we get here? Few topics in astronomy intrigue us more than this simple five-word query. Yet the simplicity hides multiple layers of complexity. How did the universe come into existence? How did stars form out of an initial mix of mostly hydrogen and helium gas? How did planets grow in the dusty disksContinue reading "Live long and prosper: JWST images NGC 346"

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June 3, 1948: Hale Telescope dedicated

The brainchild of George Ellery Hale, the 200-inch Hale Telescope was dedicated June 3, 1948, at Palomar Observatory in California. In promoting and fundraising for the project, Hale had a firm science agenda for the scope, but also wrote more fancifully of “the lure of the uncharted seas of space”; though he died in 1938,Continue reading "June 3, 1948: Hale Telescope dedicated"

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The Sky Today on Tuesday, June 3: A trio of craters

Already high in the sky at sunset, the Moon is some 45° high in the southwest an hour after the Sun disappears. Fix your telescope on the center of the Moon, near the terminator dividing lunar night and day. Just south of the lunar equator is a series of three craters, starting with Ptolemaeus. AboutContinue reading "The Sky Today on Tuesday, June 3: A trio of craters"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Open cluster NGC 225

If you have the time and clear sky to the north, you might want to check out an open cluster that is seldom observed. An “average joe” open cluster in Cassiopeia nonetheless appears fairly bright and presents an almost circular pattern of stars.  This is NGC 225, sometimes called the Sailboat Cluster, or more recently theContinue reading "Deep-Sky Dreams: Open cluster NGC 225"

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JWST gazes into the distant past through gravitational lens

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has captured a breathtaking new deep field image of the galaxy cluster Abell S1063, surpassing Hubble’s previous view in both depth and detail. Abell S1063, located 4.5 billion light-years away in the constellation Grus the Crane, acts as a gravitational lens. This massive cluster bends and focuses the lightContinue reading "JWST gazes into the distant past through gravitational lens"

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Here’s how Trump’s Golden Dome would work — and why some call it “a fantasy”

On May 20, 2025, President Donald Trump announced plans to construct the “Golden Dome,” a multibillion-dollar missile defense system that would utilize space-based weapons and satellites to intercept ballistic attacks against the United States. This announcement stems from Trump’s Jan. 27 executive order titled “Iron Dome for America.” Inspired by Israel’s Iron Dome and PresidentContinue reading "Here’s how Trump’s Golden Dome would work — and why some call it “a fantasy”"

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When was the last supernova seen in the Milky Way?

Astronomers say our galaxy hasn’t seen a supernova in 400 years. Why don’t they count the 1987 supernova?  Judy PearceBelton, Texas The 1987 supernova (SN 1987A) occurred in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), not the Milky Way. The LMC is a smaller satellite of the Milky Way, but astronomers still consider it to be outsideContinue reading "When was the last supernova seen in the Milky Way?"

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Farewell, Mr. Eclipse: Fred Espenak dies at 71

On April 15, many of us in the eclipse community received this message from Fred Espenak, the man who for years was affectionately referred to as Mr. Eclipse: Dear Friends.  I want to share some sad news. I was diagnosed with Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) five years ago. I did not have any significant symptomsContinue reading "Farewell, Mr. Eclipse: Fred Espenak dies at 71"

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

In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher invites you to head out before sunrise and face east. There, you’ll spot Venus, sometimes called Earth’s sister planet. You won’t have any trouble finding it because only the Sun and the Moon shine more brightly. In fact, if your location is dark enough, the light from Venus mightContinue reading "This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: Venus in the Morning Sky"

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A distant star cloud

Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia Unlike a star cluster, whose members are bound by their own gravity, a star cloud is simply a dense concentration of stars, appearing exactly as it sounds. NGC 206 (at center) is the brightest star cloud in the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), captured here with a 24-inch scope atContinue reading "A distant star cloud"

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‘Astronomical Dream’: Johannes Kepler wrote the first science-fiction story

Four centuries ago, Johannes Kepler established three laws of planetary motion that accurately describe how planets in the solar system orbit the Sun. That might be enough for most; however, befitting the Renaissance period in which he lived, Kepler also revised the field of astrology, wrote a treatise on optics, established the field of crystallography withContinue reading "‘Astronomical Dream’: Johannes Kepler wrote the first science-fiction story"

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June 2, 1966: Surveyor 1 lands on the Moon

About 63 hours after its launch, Surveyor 1 landed on the Moon on June 2, 1966. The 2,200-pound (998 kilograms) craft touched down inside a 62-mile (100 kilometers) crater north of Flamsteed Crater in Oceanus Procellarum, or the Ocean of Storms. Surveyor 1 took more than 11,000 photos, and measured the Moon’s temperature and theContinue reading "June 2, 1966: Surveyor 1 lands on the Moon"

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

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"

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

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"

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

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?"

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

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"

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Trump withdraws nomination of Jared Isaacman to lead NASA

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"

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

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"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: NGC 7789

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"

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The hidden bridge of Markarian’s Chain

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"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Universal Time

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"

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

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"

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

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"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: The Owl Cluster

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"

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A planetary in the Hare

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"

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Review: DwarfLab’s DWARF 3 Smart Telescope

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"

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

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"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Sharpless 2–157

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"

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SpaceX Starship reaches orbit but misses key targets

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"

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The cave and the galaxy

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"

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

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"

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Tianwen-2 is voyaging to an asteroid and a comet

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"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: The Bubble Nebula

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"

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SpaceX Starship set for ninth test flight

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"

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This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Milky Way

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"

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

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"

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

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"

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

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"

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

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"

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

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 in

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"

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Cosmic continent

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 Venus

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"

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Deep-Sky Dreams: Kemble’s Cascade

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"

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Asteroids hitting the Moon may have spiked its magnetic field

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"

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Does our solar system have a new dwarf planet?

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?"

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

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 Leo

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 342

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"

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Michael’s Miscellany: Mosquitoes

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"

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

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"

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