G3 may be hard to see due to weather patterns and the California wildfires, said Tim Brothers of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
People in the Southern Hemisphere can experience the best viewing opportunities shortly after sunset. But, in the Northern Hemisphere viewing may be more difficult.
The G3 Atlas comet has returned to our galaxy for a once-in-a-lifetime event and is now visible in the Southern Hemisphere.
G3 (ATLAS) showed off its spectacular tail plumage to NASA spacecraft when it flew close to the sun this month.
A photo taken from the International Space Station captures the brilliant comet known as C/2024 G3 ATLAS, which could be the ...
A comet that passes by the Earth once every 71 years is currently visible in the night sky using binoculars or a small ...
Perfect weather has opened up Adelaide’s skies for an event of a lifetime that won’t happen again for about 160,000 years.
The Sun-skirter comet C/2024 G3 is visible from the southern hemisphere this week as it makes its second-ever swing around ...
Jamie Carter is an award-winning reporter who covers the night sky. A family looks in awe as the Comet Tsuchinshan-Atlas, the C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-Atlas comet, the ... [+] brightest comet of the ...
The night sky is putting on a celestial show with a dazzling "planetary parade" featuring six major planets and a bonus comet ...
Every now and then, we earth-dwelling humans get the opportunity to witness something truly fascinating and beautiful.