News

Venus continues to be the brilliant “Morning Star” in the East before dawn, albeit dimming just a bit as it moves away from ...
If you’re a night owl, this is the perfect time of year for you, as stargazing has now become a late-night delight! Catch an ...
A near-complete census of our interstellar neighborhood hopes to answer how stars, brown dwarfs and rogue planets form ...
Four out of the five brightest stars we can see are now readily visible in the early evening Shamokin celestial dome. Of ...
Now three months past its conjunction with the sun in March, Saturn is currently well separated from the dawn glow. On June 1 ...
Triangle asterism is rising earlier as we approach Northern Hemisphere summer. Catch it in the east this evening.
Greetings everyone! Venus is still shining like a bright beacon in your early morning eastern sky at an amazing magnitude of ...
Moon marks the halfway point between the New Moon and the Full Moon. It appears as a half-illuminated disk with the right ...
Greetings everyone! There are two planets in your early morning sky and one of them is impossible to miss unless the clouds ...
Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Saturn—offer prime visibility during dawn and dusk hours. Mercury, typically elusive, becomes visible in the northwest about an hour after sunset by mid-month, while Mars ...
Our star, the Sun, rises at 5:17 a.m. E.D.T. (Eastern Daylight Time) from June 8 through June 22. Sunset is at 8:27 p.m.