November has more than turkey and stuffing in store -- keep your eyes on the skies for two meteor showers and a lunar eclipse! First, the Northern Taurid meteor shower graces the sky on the night of ...
Leonid meteors may appear whenever the constellation Leo is above the horizon. Heads up stargazers! The Leonid meteor shower ...
The Orionid meteor shower peaked on Tuesday night, between midnight and dawn. Named after the constellation of Orion, where the meteors appear to originate from, they are actually debris left behind ...
Meteors from the Leonids can be spotted in the constellation Leo, and will be visible from both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. This year, the moon will be 9 percent full, which is good news ...
The bright Perseids are perhaps the most popular meteor shower of the year. But if the last-quarter moon that will appear during the shower this year is especially bright, they'll be washed out.
The Leonids meteor shower tends to look like it's coming from the constellation Leo the Lion and the eastern part of the sky.
If the next few nights are going to be clear enough for us to get some frost, then the lack of cloud cover means we should all have a good shot at seeing the first of two meteor showers that will be ...
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