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The Aquarids, a meteor shower famous for its speedy balls of space debris that streak across the night sky, is peaking soon.
At 300 light-years away, the interstellar cloud is the closest of its kind ever found to Earth and the largest apparent single structure in the sky.
The Aquarids – sometimes spelled as "Aquariids" – first became active April 19 and are due to peak between May 5 and May 6.
I photograph people with the Stars and Stripes and ask them what the flag means to them. Pictured here is retired Marine Robert Frazier, running across his family’s cornfield in Harrisonburg, Virginia ...
In the Northern Hemisphere, it is the different lunar seas which make up the ‘Man in the Moon’s’ face. The Seas of Serenity ...
It is rare when we highlight a celestial event (or events) that involves the zodiacal constellation of Cancer the Crab. In ...