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Looking for a sky event this week? Check out our full Sky This Week column. March 15: Uranus meets 13 Tau High in the south this evening is Canis Minor the Little Dog, shining above the bright star Sirius, which lies closer to the horizon. True to its name, the Little Dog is a little constellation, beatingContinue reading "The Sky Today on Monday, March 16: Canis Minor the Little Dog"
The post The Sky Today on Monday, March 16: Canis Minor the Little Dog appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
After training in theology and becoming a deacon, Nicolas-Louis de La Caille (born March 15, 1713) turned his focus to geometry and astronomy. He studied at the Paris Observatory, and by 1739 had become professor of mathematics at Paris’ College Marzarin. Though he constructed a rooftop observatory, published multiple textbooks, and took part in aContinue reading "March 15, 1713: The birth of Nicolas-Louis de La Caille"
The post March 15, 1713: The birth of Nicolas-Louis de La Caille appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
Looking for a sky event this week? Check out our full Sky This Week column. March 14: Io rounds Jupiter The distant ice giant Uranus is located in Taurus right now, not far from the famous (and easy-to-find) Pleiades star cluster, cataloged as M45. Tonight, the planet also sits a short distance due south of a 6th-magnitudeContinue reading "The Sky Today on Sunday, March 15: Uranus meets 13 Tau"
The post The Sky Today on Sunday, March 15: Uranus meets 13 Tau appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
On March 14, 1879, Albert Einstein was born in Germany. Early in his life, he demonstrated passion for music and science; in 1896, he began studying physics and mathematics at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich. When his degree was completed, he was unable to find a position as a teacher, and instead beganContinue reading "March 14, 1879: The birth of a genius"
The post March 14, 1879: The birth of a genius appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
Looking for a sky event this week? Check out our full Sky This Week column. March 13: Look into the eyes of the Owl A transit of Io and its shadow occurs early this morning, after which Io reaches the western extent of its orbit and comes back around, passing behind Jupiter in an occultation visible lateContinue reading "The Sky Today on Saturday, March 14: Io rounds Jupiter"
The post The Sky Today on Saturday, March 14: Io rounds Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
Planning to run this year’s Messier marathon? March 14/15 and 21/22 are the best nights to give it a go. Your ideal order will differ with latitude, but this is a good place to start. Be sure to set up well before dark, and try to log the first few objects while there’s still someContinue reading "Running the Messier marathon? Use this target order"
The post Running the Messier marathon? Use this target order appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
French astronomer Charles Messier did not intend to be remembered for his discoveries of galaxies, nebulae, and stars clusters when he looked to the sky in the 1750s. Dubbed the “Ferret of Comets” by French King Louis XV after Messier’s acceptance into the French Academy of Sciences in 1770, he discovered 13 comets and observedContinue reading "Get ready to run this year’s Messier marathon"
The post Get ready to run this year’s Messier marathon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
In March of 1989, a highly active sunspot region released multiple extreme solar flares, including an X4.5 flare on March 10 and a M7.3 flare on March 12. Solar flares are ranked as B, C, M, and X class, with B being the weakest and X the strongest. Within B, C, and M classes, flareContinue reading "March 13, 1989: Quebec goes dark"
The post March 13, 1989: Quebec goes dark appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2026 Full Moon calendar: When to see the Full Moon and phases"
The post 2026 Full Moon calendar: When to see the Full Moon and phases appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
Imran Badr, taken from San Jose, California Our nearest major galactic neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), shows off its star-forming regions, glowing in hydrogen gas and tracing out its dense spiral arms. This image represents 400 hours of total exposure, including exposures in Hα, SII, and OIII filters of 215.6, 46.6, and 132.8 hours, respectively,Continue reading "Andromeda’s knotty arms"
The post Andromeda’s knotty arms appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
Just 35 light-years away, in the southern constellation Volans, the Flying Fish, is a world unlike any other. The weird, low-density planet, known as L98-59 d, appears tohave a deep […]
The post Molten Sulfurous World Blurs Exoplanet Categories appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
A rare, near perfect young-Moon challenge awaits North Americans after sunset on March 19th. Jupiter rules the evening from on high in central Gemini.
The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, March 13 – 22 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
The disk of gas that spirals onto a newborn magnetar wobbles, creating "bumps" in the brightness of the supernova that accompanied this object's birth.
The post Super-Bright Supernovae Are Magnetar Birth Cries appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Astronomers have used 40 years’ worth of data to peer inside the Sun, revealing that the solar cycle can leave a distinct fingerprint beneath the visible surface.
The post The Solar Cycle Leaves Its Fingerprint on the Sun’s Interior appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Dozens on amateur astronomers helped measure the minuscule difference in Didymos’s trajectory around the Sun, after NASA’s DART mission impacted its moon.
The post Asteroid Didymos's Heliocentric Orbit Altered by Impact on its Moon appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
While small galaxies are expected to have even smaller satellite galaxies, astronomers have found a surprising number of tiny companions around one dwarf galaxy.
The post Dwarf Galaxy Has "Too Many" Satellites appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
The latest JWST images, along with archival images taken before the asteroid was even discovered, combine to refine its trajectory.
The post Lunar Impact from Asteroid 2024 YR4 Ruled Out appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Bright Jupiter highlights the Gemini stick-figure twins standing on either side of it. Down below, the Winter Triangle balances on its Sirius point.
The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, March 6 – 15 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
The Vera Rubin Observatory is seeing 800,000 astronomical alerts per night — and that number will only increase.
The post Rubin Observatory Sends 800,000 Alerts to Astronomers — Per Night appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Known as ASTERIS, the AI network removes noise from images to reveal features a full magnitude fainter than before.
The post AI Reveals New Galaxies in James Webb Space Telescope Images appeared first on Sky & Telescope.