Unlike a solar eclipse, a lunar eclipse is safe to watch with the naked eye. You also don't need binoculars or a telescope, but those can also be used safely to pick out details on the moon's surface.
A total lunar eclipse will turn the moon red this Thursday. It will be best seen in North and South America. No special equipment is needed.
A new astronaut crew's arrival at the International Space Station will kick off the process of bringing Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore back to Earth.
Astronomers are ready to search for the fingerprints of life in faraway planetary atmospheres. But first, they need to know ...
NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore are expected to return home after spending nine months in orbit.
Late Thursday into the wee hours of Friday, skywatchers across North America can see the moon turn red for the first time ...
The trail is busy looking from the Salt Museum at Onondaga Lake Park with temperatures surging into the upper 60s Tuesday, ...
Several U.S. states from New Mexico through West Virginia will have a good chance at viewing the lunar eclipse on Thursday.
Arctic temperatures spiked 36 degrees Fahrenheit, or 20 Celsius, above normal. By the end of the month, sea ice was at its ...
During a lunar eclipse, which is when the Earth lines up exactly between the moon and the sun, the moon appears darker because the Earth obscures the sun with its shadow. Only light from Earth’s ...
From start to finish, a total lunar eclipse is a magnificent sight to behold. Here's what New Yorkers will see during the ...
A total lunar eclipse will flush the moon red Thursday night into Friday morning across the Western Hemisphere.