Looking for a sky event this week? Check out our full Sky This Week column. November 1: Dip into the Bay of Rainbows Daylight ...
Stargazers using telescopes should be able to see the object in the predawn sky beginning Nov. 11, according to EarthSky.
The Wow! Signal, a mysterious 1977 radio burst, is being revisited by scientists who explore a potential link to the ...
Nov. 6: The full beaver supermoon is at 11:47 p.m. Eastern Time and rises at sunset in the East. This is the first full supermoon of 2025 and the largest and brightest full moon of 2025. Should be a ...
A class of University of Texas astronomy students has discovered that nearby dwarf galaxy Segue-1 seems to host a ...
Astronomers have captured a haunting image of a “cosmic bat” spreading its wings across deep space. This nebula, 10,000 light-years away, glows crimson as newborn stars ignite clouds of gas and dust.
The scientists said the presumed area where the fragments had landed is hard to access, because of bogs, lakes and forests around ...
The most prominent clouds here are RCW 94, which represents the right wing of the bat, and RCW 95, which forms the body, while the other parts of the bat have no official designation. Credit: ...
Halloween is upon us and the 2025 spooky season is abuzz with talk of three cosmic visitors — Comet Lemmon, Comet SWAN and the interstellar traveler 3I ATLAS — said to be haunting the night sky. But ...
Learn more about the Society of Physics Students with SPS Director and AIP Student Engagement Officer Alejandro de la Puente ...
When the rings are close to edgewise, they appear less bright, presenting a fine opportunity to observe Saturn’s moons. The brightest, Titan, has a 16-day orbit, and appears farthest east of the ...
The gas giant WASP-18b belongs to a class known as ultra-hot Jupiters — giant, searing, gaseous planets that orbit perilously close to their stars. Researchers used a new technique called ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results