Skywatchers can spot Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars in the night sky with the naked eye, but two other planets might need a telescope to be seen.
FOUR planets are visible in the night sky. You will have to battle January clouds, but here is how to find them.
NASA’s Cassini mission provided the world with unparalleled views of Saturn and its rings. After 13 years, its final images ...
A famous illustration of Saturn's moon Titan got it all wrong. Never mind -- what we imagine space to be, and what we know it ...
While claims of a “rare alignment” are overblown, you can still see up to six planets in the night sky this weekend. Here's ...
Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars will appear to line up and be bright enough to see with the naked eye in the first few hours ...
Within the first hour and a half hour after sunset, you can see four planets without a telescope. Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and ...
James Webb Space Telescope and the W.M. Keck Observatory captured new images of Saturn's moon Titan. Credit: NASA/STScI/W. M.
An international team of astronomers has reported the detection of a new exoplanet orbiting a bright late F-type star. The ...
A famous illustration of Saturn's moon Titan got it all wrong. Never mind -- what we imagine space to be, and what we know it ...
Twenty years ago, the Huygens probe achieved humanity's first landing on a moon in the outer solar system when it touched down on Titan.
Venus and Saturn are currently in conjunction, meaning the planets appear close together in the night sky from Earth. These ...