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As Earth spins faster than it has in decades, atomic clocks are catching the difference, and shorter days are on the horizon.
Earth, Wind & Fire teamed up with the LA Philharmonic for a three-night Fourth of July Celebration at the Hollywood Bowl.
Bluish-white Regulus in Leo is moving toward the western horizon and sets around 10 p.m. in mid-July, followed a couple of ...
NASA astronaut Nichole Ayers photographed a rare atmospheric phenomenon over the US and Mexico known as a "sprite" that's ...
Astronomers are excited about the first test images released today from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, which show the universe in unprecedented detail, from violent cosmic collisions to faraway ...
Disney's Fairy Tale Weddings & Honeymoons offers magical wedding venues at Disney destinations around the globe. PEOPLE has ...
Scenes of nebulas in the Milky Way, a cluster of galaxies and thousands of new asteroids are a teaser of how the U.S.-funded ...
Clock time is also getting shorter, kind of. Broadly speaking, Earth takes roughly 24 hours to spin around on its axis. Ocean ...
Earth, captured once a day by the EUMETSAT meteorological satellite, have been time-lapsed. (video looped) Credit: Simon ...
The mission aims to collect samples from the near-Earth asteroid 2016 HO3 and explore the main-belt comet 311P.
The full buck moon will reach its peak illumination on Thursday, July 10. It’s just one of this month’s celestial highlights.
Covering the western Pacific Ocean region, including Australia, is the Japanese Meteorology Agency's Himawari 9 satellite.