Mercury, the first planet from the sun, is about to be really easy to spot for a short snippet of time in the night sky next ...
The astronomical linkup is fairly common and can happen at least every year depending on the number of planets.
Although NASA says these types of events are not especially rare, they’re still an excellent reason to go outside and do a ...
If last year whet your eclipse appetite, get excited for the night skies this month. Mid-March will bring a total lunar ...
This Friday, all seven planets will be in the night sky for a brief period. Join the cosmic spectacle and learn where to look ...
February ends with a treat for sky-gazers: a parade of seven planets across the night sky, including Mercury, Uranus and Neptune alongside typically bright planets such as Mars, Venus, Jupiter and ...
A stunning planet parade is now visible in the night sky. A planet parade is when several of our solar system's planets are ...
The seven other planets in our solar system will line up in the night sky on Friday evening for a rare alignment called a ...
After dusk on Friday night, seven planets are expected to align in the night sky. But you'll need binoculars or a telescope ...
"It is a really rare thing to have all seven of the planets there on the same kind of side of the sky," said local astronomer ...
According to NASA, multi-planet lineups are visible "every few years," but a seven-planet alignment is particularly uncommon, as each planet's orbit varies, with some moving more quickly and Mercury, ...
A stunning photo of a "parade of planets", shows Mars, Jupiter, Uranus, Saturn, Venus, Neptune, and Mercury in alignment from ...