News

Uranus will also be on show, if you fancy a more challenging target. Early risers are in for a celestial treat on July 5, ...
The bright morning star Venus, moving quickly through Taurus, hangs in the predawn sky below the Seven Sisters open cluster.
Most people have never seen the Little Dipper, because most of its stars are too dim to be seen through light-polluted skies.
The CME captured by SOHO was especially notable for passing in front of the Pleiades, a star cluster about 444 light-years from Earth ...
But wait, there's more! The ice giant Uranus is also present in the sky on July 5, positioned almost directly between Venus and the Pleiades. However, its relatively dim magnitude of +5.8 makes it ...