From theories of hair as a tool of alien communication to the lunar eclipse meaning extraterrestrial invasion, “Bugonia” depicts conspiracists’ acting out their intrusive thoughts.  Directed by Yorgos ...
The Fermi Paradox asks a simple but unsettling question: if the universe is so vast, why haven’t we found evidence of alien civilizations? Scientists have proposed many explanations, but some of the ...
Space contains objects far more extreme than our Sun, including neutron stars, pulsars, quasars, white dwarfs, and black holes. Each produces radically different environments shaped by intense gravity ...
The March 3, 2026 total lunar eclipse amazed skywatchers worldwide. Scientists and amateur astronomers share reactions and photos from the dramatic blood moon event.
On 12 August 2026, a total solar eclipse will be visible from Greenland, Iceland and northern Spain, making it the first to pass over mainland Europe since 1999. Our stories cover all you need to know ...
On the opening night of Paris Fashion Week, the Louvre welcomed luxury’s leading houses — and raised 1.6 million euros for ...
Kim took these pics over Midland, Penetanguishene and Port McNichol. Add to the collection by sending your pics to the Barrie 360 Text Line 705-797-1111. From breaking news to the best slice of pizza ...
The total lunar eclipse will be visible over North America, parts of South America, East Asia, Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific. If you live in the western United States, including Alaska, ...
Here are some tips for capturing the striking reddish moon on March 3. But if you don't get the perfect picture, don't worry.
The spectacle will be visible Tuesday morning from North America, Central America and the western part of South America.
A blood-red moon will soon grace the skies for a total lunar eclipse — and there won't be another until late 2028.
Just days ago the moon traveled directly between Earth and the sun in what was the first solar eclipse of the year, producing a striking “ring of fire” effect in the sky. Unluckily for many sky-gazers ...