A big step in the exploration of other planets in our solar system is within reach. Scientists and engineers at NASA have ...
Stargazers will soon have an opportunity to view six planets in alignment in the night sky, according to NASA. Mercury, Venus ...
During the "planetary parade," six planets will appear to align in the evening sky, according to NASA.
Despite the dramatic name, these alignments aren’t exceptionally rare. The last six-planet parade occurred in January 2025, ...
Most planets will be visible to the naked eye, but two will require binoculars or a telescope.
Six planets are set to align on Saturday, creating a planetary parade that will be visible to sky-gazers across the globe.
The largest moon of Saturn is bigger than Mercury, yet for all its conspicuousness, scientists don't know exactly how it came ...
Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, may have been born in a colossal cosmic crash. New research suggests Titan formed when two older moons slammed together hundreds of millions of years ago—an event so ...
Mercury, Venus, Saturn and Jupiter can be seen with the naked eye; Uranus and Neptune with binoculars or a telecscope.
A crash involving the planet’s largest moon, Titan, and a hypothetical moon may have triggered a curious sequence of events ...
Uranus and Neptune orbit in the dim, cold depths of the outer solar system. Neptune absolutely requires a telescope to ...
Who’s ready for a “planet parade”? The last planetary alignment was in August 2025, when six planets aligned and four were ...