Venus and Saturn will be in conjunction this weekend, appearing side by side in the night sky during January's post-sunset ...
FOUR planets are visible in the night sky. You will have to battle January clouds, but here is how to find them.
Venus and Saturn will appear extraordinarily close together in the night sky overnight on Jan. 17 during a celestial event ...
In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to go out and watch a close pairing of two naked-eye planets: Venus and Saturn. The ...
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.
Astrophotographers will be able to capture Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune tonight. However, Mercury will ...
On the evenings of Jan. 17 and 18, the planets will appear virtually side by side, in what's called a “planetary conjunction.
Within the first hour and a half hour after sunset, you can see four planets without a telescope. Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and ...
Planetary alignments aren't rare, but they can be when they involve six of the eight planets in our solar system.
There are six planets in the night sky all week, four of them visible to the naked eye and two of them getting very close ...
A planetary parade takes place when multiple planets align along the same region of the sky, visible from Earth ...
Venus and Saturn will appear extraordinarily close together in the night sky tonight during a celestial event known as a conjunction. To see Venus and Saturn, look to the southwest immediately as ...