The annual fall phenomena the Orionid meteor shower is back again. Here is everything to know about when, where and how to ...
Skywatchers may be able to catch the beginning of a modest meteor shower Monday night, before high clouds roll in. There will ...
The Leonids once produced "one of the greatest meteor storms in living memory. Rates were as high as thousands of meteors per ...
The shower is produced by Halley’s comet’s debris, and could offer strong viewing opportunities because the moon is new this week.
The month of October is hosting multiple celestial events and one of them is a double-comet spectacle. Here's how to see the ...
“Full beaver supermoon” is not a combination of words that one encounters often, but this month brings the second of three consecutive supermoons. November’s moon also brings our orbital friend ...
Grab a blanket, but forget the telescope — without a lens you should be able to see the Perseid meteor shower when it peaks between 2 and 5 a.m., Friday morning. As with any meteor shower, the show is ...
Dozens of shooting stars will dash across the California night sky as a radiant meteor show reaches its peak. During the height of the Orionid meteor shower, up to 20 meteors an hour are expected to ...
The Taurids will be the next meteor shower, peaking during the first week of November. Here's when to catch fireballs ...
Viewing conditions for the Taurids are good for the Southern Taurids but may wash out the Northern Taurids this year.
The Orionid meteor shower, caused by debris from Halley's Comet, is visible in the sky this week. Optimal viewing is in the early morning hours of October 21 and 22, between 1 a.m. and dawn. A new ...