The moon dims, the meteors fly, and the planets dance—these are the most exciting celestial events happening this month.
As Firefly Aerospace prepared to close out a two-week mission on the moon, its lander had one final gift to beam home: the first high-definition images of a lunar sunset.
Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 lunar lander snapped incredible photographs of the March 13–14 total lunar eclipse, as seen from the moon ...
Those who glanced up at the sky Thursday night ... The full moon technically rose in its totality early Friday. Here's what to know about the event — and why the moon showed a new hue when ...
A lunar day lasts for two weeks, and the Blue Ghost used this time to perform its experiments on the moon’s surface and collect solar power from the sun. Then the two-week-long lunar night ...
HOUSTON – As the sun set on the Blue ... Moon danced in the lingering sunlight. Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost lander captured high-definition images of the lunar sunset March 16, as lunar ...
The first total lunar eclipse in more than two years lit up the sky last night ... the moon to shine red because sunlight must travel through the atmosphere before illuminating the moon. Blue ...
The Blue Ghost lunar lander, operated by Firefly Aerospace from Texas, was able capture the phenomenon between Thursday night and Friday morning while stationed on the moon's Earth-facing side.
On the night of March 13, as Earth’s shadow covered the moon in a total lunar eclipse, Blue Ghost turned its cameras back toward Earth. Around 4:30 a.m. EDT, the lander captured the “diamond ...