As the countdown to the year's first total lunar eclipse begins, here's what to know about the difference between a lunar eclipse and a solar eclipse.
The total lunar eclipse will unfold overnight between March 13 and March 14, 2025. Observers in North and South America will have the best view, while those in parts of Western Europe may catch a ...
In research highlighted in a new paper, published today in The Astrophysical Journal, Scientia Senior Lecturer Ben Montet and PhD candidate Brendan McKee analysed changes in the timing of a known ...
Partial solar eclipses occur when the Sun, Moon, and Earth are not perfectly lined up, making it appear that only part of the ...
On the night between March 13 and 14, skywatchers in North and South America—as well as parts of Europe, Africa and ...
Wondering what the stars have in store for you this month? A professional astrologer shares her March 2025 horoscope ...
The month also begins with Venus—the planet of love, connection, and values—going retrograde in Aries on March 1. The lengthy ...
March is all about YOU, Aries! With Venus, the planet of love and pleasure, retrograde in your sign, you’re rethinking what ...
The parade of planets, when all seven of earth's solar system neighbors can be seen in the night sky, starts Friday and continues through next week.
After Friday's spectacle, a "planet parade" of this size won't appear in the night sky for several years, experts say.
Stark residents will be able to view a total lunar eclipse March 13-14, but won't see the solar one a few weeks later.
In March, California and the rest of North America will experience a total lunar eclipse nearly one year after millions of people were treated to a different spectacular, a total solar eclipse.