With so many things flying around in the sky, it’s hard to tell what you’re seeing sometimes as stars, satellites and aircraft take up the night sky.
Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn should be visible to the naked eye, but with a telescope you can spot Neptune and Uranus.
Valentine's Day could bring a dazzling display of the northern lights for stargazers in some parts of the U.S.
The four planet-strong "planet parade" currently visible to the naked eye in the night sky for a short time after sunset will ...
Transfer news continues to roll in from across the footballing world despite the January window having been shut for weeks ...
In 1920, astronomers Harlow Shapley and Heber Curtis held a Great Debate. Shapley argued that the spiral nebulae were small and in the Milky Way, while Curtis took a more radical position that they ...
The zodiacal light shines in the evening as the Moon reaches Last Quarter and skims past Spica and Antares in the sky this ...
All roads now lead to West Yorkshire for Régis Le Bris and the Lads, and a Monday night showdown that has all the makings of ...
Thousands in Taiwan and China celebrated the Lantern Festival by releasing paper lanterns into the night sky, visiting light ...
From supermoons to a total eclipse to the national park’s biggest and best-attended star parties, these are the must-see celestial shows of the year ...
The European Southern Observatory (ESO) has released a stunning 80 million-pixel image of the star cluster RCW 38, as captured by ESO's Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA), ...
Some visitors came from as far as Europe and Latin America to witness in person the iconic images of paper lanterns filling ...