The Wolf Moon will reach its peak fullness at 5:27 p.m. Eastern Time on January 13. It will rise in the sky about an hour ...
The full snow moon will illuminate skies next month. Here’s when to catch it - The full moon rises in typically chilly ...
Skywatchers are in for a rare treat as January’s Full Wolf Moon aligns with Mars in a celestial event called a lunar occultation. On the evening of Monday, Jan. 13, the Moon will pass directly in ...
In Boston and surrounding towns, this phenomenon will occur between 9:26 p.m. and 10:42 p.m. (disappearance and reappearance ...
Mars will disappear behind the bottom of the moon around 9:16 p.m. ET and reappear behind the upper right of the moon at 10:31 p.m. ET. January’s full moon is commonly called the wolf moon ...
Traditionally, the January full moon is known as the "Wolf Moon." At the moment it officially ... By sheer coincidence, Mars is also opposite to the sun, though its actual moment of "opposition ...
The moon will be full during the Mars occultation. January's full moon is popularly known as the Wolf Moon, so you can imagine the Wolf Moon gobbling up Mars and then spitting it out again.
Helen Willetts takes a look at what's going on in the night sky and the chances of seeing this month's Wolf Moon.
Mars will be hidden during an event known as the lunar occultation, which is rare, but will happen Monday night. The year's first full moon is best known as the wolf moon since the howls of wolves ...
Orbital dynamics show that President Trump’s pledge to land astronauts on Mars couldn’t happen until 2029 at the earliest.
Tonight (Jan. 13), bright Mars will disappear behind the full Wolf Moon for several hours before reappearing on the other side. It's the only lunar occultation of Mars visible from the U.S. this year.
Mars still is spectacularly brilliant, as brilliant as it will be for another 26 months. When the Red Planet again falls into an orbit opposite the sun - called “opposition.” It is so bright that with ...