On Saturday (28 February), observers will be able to see Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune positioned near one another across the sky, creating a rare planetary display, reports The ...
On Saturday, Feb. 28, six planets are expected to align in the night sky, with four of them visible to the naked eye.
NEW YORK (AP) — Six planets are linking up in the sky at the end of February, and most will be visible to the naked eye. It’s ...
If you think auroras on Earth are a strange and mesmerizing sight, that's nothing like what occurs on the perplexing world of Uranus.
You can build a telescope, a microscope and a UFO with the Lego Creator 3-in-1 Space Exploration Telescope review, but I'd only bother with the former.
Six planets will align on Feb. 28, but not all will be seen with the naked eye. Here's how to watch the cosmic parade.
Fresh observations from the James Webb Space Telescope show how vivid auroras surge through Uranus’s tilted magnetic field ...
Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, may have been even more instrumental to the system’s evolution than we thought, forming ...
Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, might have formed after a collision with a lost moon, according to new research.
Our solar system hosts almost 900 known moons; more than 400 orbit the eight planets while the remaining orbit dwarf planets, ...
A rare planetary parade of six planets will light up the night sky at the end of February, with four visible to the naked eye ...