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    • What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade

      Rapid City Journal· 7 days ago

      How common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...

    • JWST breaks its own record again for most distant galaxy

      Cosmos· 5 days ago

      Within the first 6 months of its operation, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) broke the record for the most distant galaxy we have observed. Two galaxies, dubbed JADES-GS-z14-0 and JADES-GS-z14 ...

    • What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade

      Elko Daily Free Press· 7 days ago

      How common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...

    • What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade

      St. Louis Post-Dispatch· 7 days ago

      How common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...

    • What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade

      Winston-Salem Journal· 7 days ago

      Here's what to know about this fairly common celestial event. The summer offers great weather to explore the night sky with a star or planet-viewing app, said Michelle Nichols at Chicago's Adler Planetarium.

    • What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade

      The Globe Gazette· 7 days ago

      How common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...

    • What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade

      Southwest Iowa's daily newspaper· 7 days ago

      Here's what to know about this fairly common celestial event. The summer offers great weather to explore the night sky with a star or planet-viewing app, said Michelle Nichols at Chicago's Adler Planetarium.