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Exploding stars V462 Lupi and V572 Velorum are best seen from the Southern Hemisphere. One has been spotted from the United States.
In an extraordinary celestial coincidence, two "new stars" -scientifically known as novae -are currently visible to the naked ...
Venus moves east as July progresses and stands 3° due north of Aldebaran on the 14th, after skirting the northern regions of ...
A rare nova, V462 Lupi, is making a bright appearance in the night sky in the Lupus constellation. Here's what to know.
This spectacular star-forming region is one of the first images from the new Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile.
Meanwhile, Venus and Saturn — both beaming in the morning sky — welcome Jupiter into the fold. The gas giant makes its first appearance at mid-month in Gemini, low in the northeast about an hour ...
The LSST camera at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory has released its jaw-dropping first images, each capturing 45 times the area ...
Rubin Observatory debuts with vivid images of the Lagoon The new telescope will scan the southern sky every three to four ...
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