T Coronae Borealis (T CrB), also known as the Blaze Star, is a binary star system located 3,000 light-years from Earth. It ...
The moon dims, the meteors fly, and the planets dance—these are the most exciting celestial events happening this month.
Plus: A solar eclipse and an occultation of the Pleiades as our satellite skims through several constellations in the sky ...
Venus remains rather low at dawn but slowly gains altitude as the month rolls along. Look for it in the east 45-60 minutes ...
The star T Coronae Borealis, located almost 3,000 light-years away, may soon explode as a nova. Astronomers eagerly await ...
On April evenings, look to the west to spot the bright winter constellations of Orion, Gemini, Taurus, Auriga, Canis Major and Canis Minor. They’ll be gone soon, so check them out while you can.
A star called T Corona Borealis may "go nova" next week, making the star briefly visible to the naked eye. It last happened ...
After boasting of her beauty to the Nereids or sea nymphs, she is punished rather harshly in my view by Poseidon and finds herself tethered to the north star Polaris to spin around it for perpetuity ...
On clear nights, you may spot these satellites as they streak across the sky, resembling a string ... who tracks the constellation on his website. Given the high numbers of regular Starlink ...
All winter long I’ve been meaning to write about the little constellation Aries the Ram, and finally on this last weekend of ...
Sauk Prairie will get a glimpse of one of the two eclipses that will occur over the next thirty days. The total solar eclipse ...