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New Zealand photographer’s dark sky timelapse of Earth’s rotation leaves thousands stunned
A New Zealand astrophotographer set up his camera in one of the world’s darkest locations and captured something most people will never see with their own eyes.
This week, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory issued its first real-time sky alerts, inaugurating a monitoring system set to transform how we study the universe.
This stunning footage of Coonabarabran, Australia's night sky shows how the sky moves differently in the Southern Hemisphere. But it's still just as majestic as our night sky up north. Alan Dyer ...
The new Vera C. Rubin Observatory now automatically sends out alerts when something changes in the night sky. In the first night, there were 800,000.
The night sky tonight and on any clear night offers an ever-changing display of fascinating objects you can see, from stars and constellations to bright planets, the moon, and sometimes special events ...
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