Astronomy

Farmers’ Almanac astronomy provides the best times to view meteor showers, full moons, facts about planets and stars, plus more!

The Great Solar Eclipse of 2024: A Complete Recap

The Great Solar Eclipse of 2024: A Complete Recap featured image

Quick Reference: April 8, 2024 Total Solar Eclipse Date: Monday, April 8, 2024. Path width: 115 miles, from Mazatlan, Mexico through 15 US states to eastern Canada. Maximum totality: 4 minutes 28 seconds near Torreon, Mexico. People in path: 31 million Americans plus tens of millions more who traveled. Next US total eclipse: August 23,

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What Is A Sunspot And A Solar Flare?

What Is A Sunspot And A Solar Flare? featured image

Quick Reference Sunspot: A cooler patch on the Sun’s surface (8,000 F vs 11,000 F nearby). Looks dark only by contrast. Solar flare: A sudden geyser of hot gas from the Sun’s surface. More energy and faster than a coronal mass ejection. Cycle: 11 years from minimum to maximum to minimum again. Discovered by Schwabe

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The Next Great Daytime Comet: What It Would Take and What to Watch For

The Next Great Daytime Comet: What It Would Take and What to Watch For featured image

Quick Reference: Daytime Comets Definition: a comet bright enough to be seen during the day, brighter than magnitude -3. Frequency: 1-2 per century, on average. Most recent: Comet McNaught (C/2006 P1), January 2007. Brightest in history: the Great Comet of 1882 (estimated magnitude -17). Where they come from: usually long-period sungrazers, surviving very close perihelion

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Rare Sky Event! Parade of Planets 2023

Rare Sky Event! Parade of Planets 2023 featured image

Catch a glimpse of a rare sky event on Monday, March 27, 2023. Use binoculars and look west approximately 20 minutes after sunset to see five planets, the Moon, and a beautiful star cluster known as Messier 35 (M35). Celestial objects will appear in the following order from left to right: M35, Mars, the Moon,

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How to See the Green Comet: C/2022 E3 ZTF and What to Watch For Now

How to See the Green Comet: C/2022 E3 ZTF and What to Watch For Now featured image

Quick Reference: The Green Comet Famous example: C/2022 E3 (ZTF), visible January-February 2023. Why green: diatomic carbon (C2) in the comet’s coma fluoresces green under sunlight. Other green comets: any comet rich in C2, including some recurring short-period comets. Where to look: low northeastern sky after dark when one is active. Brightness: the 2023 green

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Parade Of Planets 2022

Parade Of Planets 2022 featured image

In case you missed the Parade of Planets with the Moon in June 2022, here is a beautiful record of the event. This photo was taken on June 24, 2022 at 4:35 am: Thank you to Scott Readman and all of our readers who shared photos of this spectacular celestial event on Facebook (and Instagram).

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