Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, and Uranus have decided to queue up for a meet and Mercury will grace the occasion for a while. This planet parade happens on January 25. While the first four might be visible to a naked eye even today onwards,
Six planets grace the sky this month in what's known as a planetary parade, and most can be seen with the naked eye
Mars, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn can be spotted without special equipment, with Uranus and Neptune requiring a telescope.
This outdoor event, led by volunteer garden steward Jan Lochner, will include removing invasive plants, mulching, pruning and more. Bring work gloves, lunch, snacks and plenty of water. There are no bathrooms and no water filling stations on the property.
The "rapid unscheduled disassembly" was likely caused by a propellant leak, Elon Musk said, and was captured on video by spectators on the ground.
Learn all about astrology's third house of communication, which rules your mind and how you understand, interpret, and share information.
A six-planetary alignment will occur around Jan. 21. Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune will appear in one ecliptic plane in the southern and eastern sky after sunset; however, only Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn will be visible to the naked eye. You will need a telescope to see Uranus and Neptune.
Formations that look like jumbo-sized kidney beans (or blobs of chocolate syrup, depending on your palette) may be indicators of whether Mars was habitable in the distant past.
Dominion Energy is gearing up to submit an application for the next phase of its eastern Loudoun transmission line loop that will connect new 230 kilovolt and 500 kV lines
In January, stargazers will be able to see four bright planets, the close dance of Venus and Saturn, Mars at opposition, and celestial views.
According to a Live Science report, Roman graves were discovered during the excavation of the site of an eighteenth-century hospital in northwestern France by researchers from the Orléans Archaeology Service.
ROSÉ and Bruno Mars ’ “APT.” is now solely the highest charted song by an act prominent in K-pop (Korean pop) on Billboard ’s Pop Airplay chart, as it ascends a spot to No. 4 on the latest, Jan. 25-dated ranking.