All posts tagged: skygazing

April skygazing: An early micromoon, comet flyby, and the Lyrid meteor shower

April skygazing: An early micromoon, comet flyby, and the Lyrid meteor shower

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. April 1 Full Pink Moon April 17 Best Chance to See Comet C/2025 R3 April 19 The Moon, Venus, and Pleiades Conjunction April 22 Lyrid Meteor Shower Predicted Peak Spring has sprung, the annual hour of sleep has been stolen from us, and the days are getting longer.  But don’t fear, skygazers, there are still enough celestial sights to see this month to keep you happy. They include an early full moon, a meteor shower known for generating unexpected spectacles, and a lovely conjunction of the moon and one of our cosmic neighbors. Also, there’s a comet to see! Onwards!  April 1: Full Pink Moon A full moon on the first day of the month! As far as we know, there’s no name for this, but it doesn’t matter, because April’s moon is gifted with the most poetic of names anyway. It’s the Pink Moon, making April the best month of the year for fans of Nick Drake, Édith …

March skygazing: a full blood moon rises and new season

March skygazing: a full blood moon rises and new season

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. March 3 Total Lunar Eclipse/Full Worm Moon March 20 Vernal Equinox March 25 and 26 Conjunction of Jupiter and the Moon Assuming that the clouds actually part long enough for us to see the sky every so often, March promises at least one memorable celestial event: a full moon and full lunar eclipse on March 3. It will also bring the official beginning of spring and a couple of nights’ worth of intense discussion between the moon and Jupiter. March 3: Total Lunar Eclipse/Full Worm Moon This month’s full moon is a genuinely special one/It coincides almost exactly with a total lunar eclipse! Lunar eclipses occur when the sun, Earth and moon line up perfectly. If the moon is in the middle, then it’s a full solar eclipse, with the moon casting its shadow across the earth. If the Earth is in the middle, then it’s our shadow that gets cast across the moon. For reasons we explained during …