News

Saturn's iconic rings will appear to disappear for a few days starting on Sunday due to Earth's orbit and the thinness of the rings, and will not be visible again until 13-15 years from now.
To spot Saturn, look just 5 degrees above the moon. The ringed planet is rising two minutes earlier each morning compared to sunrise, according to When the Curves Line Up , a skywatching website ...
Watch the waning gibbous moon, Saturn, and Neptune meet in the night sky around midnight on July 16. The trio will travel ...
The vastness of the universe has lent itself to a number of imaginative short stories and science-fiction classics. "The Saturn Above It" highlights literary works that explore unique human ...
Saturn is best-known for its rings. But, for a short time next year, you'll hardly be able to see them. Saturn’s rings will ‘disappear’ next year: Here’s why ...
Because we’re so far from Saturn, and its rings are relatively thin, we can lose sight of them by shifting just a few degrees above or below them, Simon previously told Nexstar.
Without its rings, Saturn looks really boring. Super blah. Erase those bangles—as blogger Jason Kottke did (above) from a NASA photo—and the planet is the blandest sphere in our solar system.
The spectacular Saturn-moon conjunction will happen just before sunrise in the east and can be seen from April 15 to 17.
Because we’re so far from Saturn, and its rings are relatively thin, we can lose sight of them by shifting just a few degrees above or below them, Simon previously told Nexstar.
NASA previously predicted that our crossing of Saturn’s ring-plane will be even better in 2038-39 when Earth undergoes a triple passage and gives us three chances to see a seemingly ringless ...
Because we’re so far from Saturn, and its rings are relatively thin, we can lose sight of them by shifting just a few degrees above or below them, Simon previously told Nexstar.