Through the end of February, all the planets in our solar system will visibly align in the sky, like a trope taken straight ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot storm, which usually appears dark-red, can be seen shining a lurid blue color in an ultraviolet ...
Venus and Saturn will be in conjunction this weekend, appearing side by side in the night sky during January's post-sunset ...
Both Venus and Saturn will be in the Aquarius constellation, the water bearer, during their close approach. To help spot it, ...
But later – hundreds of millions of years in the future – a permanent, virtually ringless Saturn will become real, thanks to another process called ring rain in which gravity pulls the rings apart and ...
Ice moons such as Jupiter’s Europa and Saturn’s Enceladus are currently at the forefront of the search for extraterrestrial life, as it is believed that beneath their thick icy shells there ...
The alignment of six planets - Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune - will be visible through to mid-February, ...
Saturn, always a favorite for viewers with telescopes ... separated by only a couple of degrees — on Jan. 18. Brilliant Jupiter is in our sky for practically the entire night, adding to the ...
Plus: Saturn’s moon Iapetus is visible, our Moon passes the bright star Spica, and Mars skims south of Pollux in Gemini in ...
The data used to create the image is from a Hubble Space Telescope project to capture and map Jupiter's superstorm system.
All month, four planets — Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars — will appear to line up and be bright enough to see with the naked eye in the first few hours after dark, according to NASA.