Alignments of five or more planets are rare—there will be two more featuring five or more planets this year, but after that ...
Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars will appear to line up and be bright enough to see with the naked eye in the first few hours ...
According to the most widely held astronomical model (the nebular hypothesis), new stars are born from massive clouds of dust ...
Stargazers have a treat this month with a good view of some of the planets that they will be able to see clearly after sunset ...
Worlds will align for a "planetary parade" in January, with four bright and easily visible to the naked eye. But an even ...
Mars, Jupiter, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and Venus will appear together in a row, although Neptune and Uranus will only be ...
The Red Planet will be at its closest point to Earth, also known as perigee, on Jan. 12 and will be exactly opposite the sun ...
You won't see a majestic line of planets on Jan. 25 the way people on social media promise, but you will see four bright planets starting Jan. 16.
Tucked away in a star-forming region in the Taurus constellation, a pair of circling stars are displaying some unexpected ...
A planetary parade is a colloquial term that means four or more planets line up in the night sky at once. It's not a technical astronomy term, according to NASA, although the space agency has been ...
Throughout January, four planets will line up in the night sky and be simultaneously visible to the naked eye in the Northern Hemisphere. Our celestial neighbours Venus and Mars as well as big ...