When a common year of 365 days starts on a Sunday, as it did this year, 2 Friday the 13ths are inevitable. The 1st one was in January and the 2nd in October.
Astronomers use parallax to directly measure the distance to a star-forming region on the opposite side of our Milky Way galaxy, nearly doubling the previous distance record.
Watch for the bright star Regulus near the moon in the next few mornings. And notice on this chart ... we're not showing a moon for October 15. That’s because, if we did, it’d hide the star Regulus from view. In fact, the moon will hide Regulus from view - seen from much of the U.S., Mexico, the Caribbean and southeast Canada - on Sunday morning. Read more.
Karl Diefenderfer must have been looking east at sunset on October 9, in order to photograph this rainbow with anticrepuscular rays, caught "as the remnants of hurricane Nate left southeastern Pennsylvania."
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