Tonight - from the right part of Earth, at the right time - you might catch a rich burst of meteors from the constellation of the Unicorn. At its peak - centered on 04:50 UTC on November 22 (11:50 p.m. EST on November 21; translate UTC to your time) the shower might produce a burst of 100 meteors in just 15 minutes. Memorable and fun! Read more.
The 1st-ever map showing the global geology of Saturn's moon Titan reveals a dynamic world of dunes, lakes, plains, craters and other terrains. See the map and read more.
Masting is what biologists call the pattern of trees for miles around all synchronizing to produce lots of seeds - or very few. In US New England, naturalists have declared this fall a mast year for oaks: All the trees are making tons of acorns all at the same time. Why and how do they get on schedule?
Are you an early morning person, up and about before sunup? If so, let the old moon guide you to a morning line-up of 3 objects: the star Spica in Virgo, plus the planets Mars and Mercury. On Friday morning, the lighted portion of the crescent moon will be pointing toward them. Read more.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | April Singer was in Tesuque, New Mexico, on the morning of November 19 - the day after the peak of 2019's Leonid meteor shower - when she captured this beautiful photo. She wrote: "Finally! For all the meteor pictures I've gotten, this year hasn't been good for me and meteors. Cloudy, too much moon, other reasons. I kind of stopped watching for awhile. This morning on my way to work I tried again (yesterday was cloudy), and this beauty dropped out of the sky and just made it into my frame. Saw several others too." Thank you, April!
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