A NASA researcher in planetary sciences explains how he discovered a new meteor shower linked to a disintegrating asteroid.
The best time to look for the meteor shower is in a dark sky with no moon, where one might see 10-15 Lyrids per hour.
Astronomer Patrick M. Shober found a new meteor shower—and it comes from an asteroid getting broken down by the Sun.
A newly identified meteor shower reveals that intense heat is fragmenting a previously unknown asteroid as it passes too ...
Morning Overview on MSN
30,000-mph meteor streaks over East Coast skies before burning up
A meteor tore across the skies above the northeastern United States at roughly 30,100 miles per hour on the afternoon of ...
He got impressive stops on the MVP favorite Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and first-time All-Star Chet Holmgren during the contest.
The Lyrid meteor shower peaks overnight on April 21-22.
Witnesses reported seeing a bright flash in the sky between 2:35 p.m. and 2:40 p.m., and some said they heard a loud boom.
Iran mocks Donald Trump’s claims of destroying its military after missile alerts sound across Israel, highlighting ...
Eyes to the sky for the month of April, as two comets may become bright enough to spot in the sky, and fragments of another ...
Exciting planetary action takes place this month. Venus and Uranus vie for attention and lie close to each other in late ...
The Lyrid meteor shower lights up the April sky but we cannot see the new supermoon. The Sun leaves Pisces (The Fishes) on 18 ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results