Jupiter, the biggest planet in our solar system, is not as big as we thought. For more than half-a-century, astronomers thought they had a good idea of the gas giant's shape and size. Now, a fresh ...
Ganymede's auroras splinter into small, bright patches — structures that mirror features seen in Earth's own auroral displays ...
Stargazers will soon have an opportunity to view six planets in alignment in the night sky, according to NASA. Mercury, Venus ...
Many of us know Jupiter as the solar system’s largest planet, and while it still is, recent findings from NASA’s Juno mission reveal data that the planet is a little smaller and more "squashed" than ...
Six planets are set to align on Saturday, creating a planetary parade that will be visible to sky-gazers across the globe.
An international team of scientists, led by a PhD researcher from Northumbria University, has made groundbreaking discoveries ...
Who’s ready for a “planet parade”? The last planetary alignment was in August 2025, when six planets aligned and four were ...
Mercury, Venus, Saturn and Jupiter can be seen with the naked eye; Uranus and Neptune with binoculars or a telecscope.
New research suggests that Jupiter’s icy moons may have formed with complex organic molecules already embedded in their building blocks.
Washington — Jupiter, without a doubt, is the biggest planet in our solar system. But it turns out that it is not quite as large - by ever so small an amount - as scientists had previously thought.
The measurements from NASA's Juno orbiter mark the first time that the size and shape of Jupiter has been evaluated in more than fifty years. NASA's Pioneer and Voyager missions made observations of ...
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