All you need to know: September equinox | | The Northern Hemisphere's autumn equinox - and Southern Hemisphere's spring equinox - is today or tomorrow, depending on your time zone. It falls on September 23 at 07:50 UTC; translate UTC to your time. Our ancestors knew that the sun's path shifts across the sky. They knew that the length of daylight and location on the horizon of the sunrise and sunset also shift in a regular way throughout the year. They built the first observatories - like those at Machu Picchu in Peru - to track the sun's progress. Today, we know each equinox and solstice is an astronomical event, caused by Earth's tilt on its axis and orbit around the sun. Happy fall or spring, y'all. Here's all you need to know. | | |
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The 2nd-fastest pulsar, now with gamma rays | | Pulsars are the compact remnants of supernovae. They have strong magnetic fields and rotate rapidly. This one is spinning 707 times a second! Astronomers just discovered this pulsar is emitting high-energy gamma rays. Read more. | | |