Starting at 12:30 p.m. ET (1730 GMT) on Saturday (Jan. 25), astrophysicist Gianluca Masi of the Virtual Telescope Project ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot storm, which usually appears dark-red, can be seen shining a lurid blue color in an ultraviolet ...
Stargazers will be treated to a dazzling six-planet "alignment" this January.
Within the first hour and a half hour after sunset, you can see four planets without a telescope. Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and ...
Skywatchers can spot Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars in the night sky with the naked eye, but two other planets might need a telescope to be seen.
A planetary parade takes place when multiple planets align along the same region of the sky, visible from Earth ...
The data used to create the image is from a Hubble Space Telescope project to capture and map Jupiter's superstorm system.
The James Webb Space Telescope has revolutionized astronomy in just three years. A new project celebrates its impact on the ...
The picture, snapped by the Hubble Space Telescope, reveals Jupiter shining in ultraviolet light. In the image, Jupiter's famous Great Red Spot, which appears red in visible light, is a instead a ...
While claims of a “rare alignment” are overblown, you can still see up to six planets in the night sky this weekend. Here's ...
Planetary alignments aren't rare, but they can be when they involve six of the eight planets in our solar system.
The Hubble Space Telescope captured imagery of Jupiter and its Great Red Spot in 2023 and 2024. Credit: NASA, ESA, J.