Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Feb 14 - Love

color-facebook-96.png
color-twitter-96.png
color-instagram-96.png
color-link-96.png
Top 10 reasons we fall in love
On this Valentine's Day 2018, what the world of science suggests about the mystery we call love.
The Science Love Song
Bizarrely heart-warming, from the guys at ASAPScience.
Tomorrow … Watch a spacewalk
2 International Space Station (ISS) astronauts will perform a spacewalk on February 15. Live TV coverage starts at 10:30 UTC (5:30 a.m. EST). The spacewalk begins at 12:10 UTC (7:10 a.m. EST) and lasts about 6 hours. Translate to your time zone.
Tomorrow … A partial solar eclipse
This eclipse will be visible from southern South America (Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, far-southern Brazil and far-southern Paraguay), Antarctica, and the far-southern extremities of the South Pacific and South Atlantic Oceans.
Tonight … For those at southerly latitudes, Canopus!
Speaking of devotion, northern skywatchers sometimes travel southward in winter, for a glimpse of Canopus above the southern horizon.

The EarthSky Store

Help us keep presenting your world, and cosmos, to you. Plus get some cool astronomy swag while doing so!

Tonight … For those at southerly latitudes, Canopus!
View larger. | The Southern Hemisphere has a far better view of Sirius and Canopus! Here they are with the moon (far right) over Kalgoorlie, Australia, via Oliver Floyd. See how Orion’s Belt points to Sirius? Canopus is the bright star on the left.
Jupiter's North Temperate Belt
EarthSky community member Gowrishankar Lakshminarayanan processed this image from Juno's February 7 flyby of Jupiter.
Submit your photo to EarthSky here!
Did a friend forward EarthSkyNews to you? Click here to get your own subscription!
Like us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Instagram
Website

No comments:

Post a Comment