Six planets are lining up in a row from our Earthly view of the cosmos, in a spectacle that'll be visible in January through ...
The six planets were visible in the days immediately leading up to Jan. 21, and for about four weeks afterward. Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn should be visible to the naked eye. You'll need a ...
Planets outside our solar system can be wild, weird places. Astronomers have discovered exoplanets shaped like a rugby ball, or where it rains gems, or which have one hemisphere covered in lava. And ...
Venus and Saturn are currently in conjunction, meaning the planets appear close together in the night sky from Earth. These ...
It will be "a celestial event where multiple planets in our solar system appear close together in the night sky." ...
Astronomers have discovered extremely powerful winds pummeling the equator of WASP-127b, a giant exoplanet. Reaching speeds ...
Because planets always appear in a line, the alignment isn't anything out of the norm. What's less common is seeing so many ...
A parade of planets will be visible to skywatchers around the globe through the rest of this month and into February.
In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and watch a close pairing of two naked-eye planets: Venus and Saturn. The ...
Throughout January, six planets will line up in the night sky, with tonight offering the best chance of viewing the ‘planet ...
On Tuesday evening, six planets will line up in the night's sky - Mars, Jupiter, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and Venus. Best ...
Look up towards the sky in the evening and you may be able to see six of our solar system's eight planets at once – four of ...