The “Seven Sisters” of the Pleiades are part of a much larger complex that can help reveal our galaxy’s deep history ...
On Tuesday and Wednesday nights, the waxing gibbous Moon will be separated by less than a degree from the Pleiades, an open ...
India Today on MSN
The New Year of Harappa: A Story of Earth, Stars, and Survival
In 2400 BCE, before clocks or calendars, an entire city held its breath in darkness, waiting for seven stars to signal that ...
As the year draws to a close, the night sky presents a captivating spectacle that can enhance your New Year's Eve celebrations. On December 31, 2025, a nearly full waxing gibbous Moon will closely ...
The final night of 2025 is the perfect time to watch the moon close to the Pleiades, find the brightest star in the night sky ...
It used to be said that you could test your eyesight by counting the number of stars visible to the unaided eye. The best nights to try this are around January 19 when the Moon is new ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Don't miss this rare planetary alignment on New Year's Eve, see where to look
As fireworks erupt across skylines on December 31, 2025, the real spectacle will unfold quietly overhead. A nearly full Moon, ...
From a full moon and a meteor shower to Jupiter at opposition, here’s everything that’s happening in the night sky in January ...
Jordan News Agency (Petra) on MSN
Jordan skies to witness astronomical phenomena at start of 2026
The skies of the Kingdom will witness a rare astronomical phenomenon Wednesday evening until dawn tomorrow at the start of the new year when a magnificent conjunction between the moon and a star ...
The last quarter moon is on January 10, and new moon is on January 18. The waxing crescent moon is just above Saturn on ...
As the New Year 2026 launches, only two bright planets, Saturn and Jupiter, are visible in the entire night sky.
Astronomy on MSN
January 2026: What's in the sky this month? Jupiter reaches opposition, Mercury briefly appears
Saturn is on display in the early-evening sky this month along with Uranus and Neptune, both within reach of binoculars.
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