Southern Living on MSN
You Can Check Out A Telescope From The Library—Here's How
The Library Telescope Program began in 2008 and was launched by the New Hampshire Astronomical Society (NHAS) in an effort to make telescopes more accessible to the public.
Use telescopes and binoculars to observe a crescent moon, Jupiter as a 'Christmas star', star clusters and more — now is a great time to go night sky viewing.
I put the Oppo Find X9 Pro’s Hasselblad telephoto lens to the test on moon shots and star clusters. Here’s what worked and ...
Live Science on MSN
Stunning array of 400 rings in a 'reflection' nebula solves a 30-year-old star-formation mystery — Space photo of the week
The discovery is the first direct observational confirmation of a theory for how young stars feed on, and then explosively ...
Digital Camera World on MSN
How to photograph the 'Wolf Moon' full moon
The answer is either to photograph the Moon just before sunset when the light levels are higher (they drop-off so quickly at ...
Fourth anniversaries aren’t often causes for celebration. But in the case of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which ...
The universe doesn’t revolve around Kitt Peak, but the observatory southwest of Tucson is at the center of what could be the biggest breakthrough in the study of the cosmos in decades. Using an ...
From up-close insect duets to cosmic wonders and dramatic wildlife encounters, these prize-winning images capture this year's ...
Follow Orion’s three belt stars southeast (down and to the left) to Sirius in Canis Major, the brightest star in the sky.
Live Science on MSN
Science history: James Webb Space Telescope launches — and promptly cracks our view of the universe — Dec. 25, 2021
The James Webb Space Telescope blasted off from a launchpad in French Guiana in 2021, before reaching a spot in orbit a million miles away. It soon began breaking cosmology.
The Needle hustled rubes and went on tour with the Harlem Globetrotters — by playing with a frying pan instead of a paddle.
With a new moon on 18th January, this is the best time to look at faint deep sky objects, as there will be no moonlight ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results