Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


NASA Logo
NASA Logo

Suggested Searches

Skywatching

Tips, guides, activities, and videos for skywatchers.

A child gazes into the eyepiece of a small telescope set up on a grassy lawn at night as an adult woman looks on. Other observers and telescopes are nearby.
the latest in skywatching

What's Up: November 2025

What’s Up for November? Mars and Mercury get close for a conjunction, the Leonid meteor shower delights, and Saturn's rings are…disappearing?

Watch Now
A long-exposure photograph of a starry night sky seen between the silhouetted walls of a canyon or mountains. The bright object near the center is Jupiter, and a meteor/shooting star streaks across the upper left sky.
Bill Dunford

Featured Tips

  • 01

    What’s Up: Skywatching Tips from NASA

    The What's Up monthly skywatching guide is NASA's longest running web video series. Watch the video and read the article.

    Learn More

    Star trails in the sky swirl above a rugged landscape.
    NASA/Preston Dyches
  • 02

    Meteor Showers

    Several meteors per hour can usually be seen on any clear night. When there are lots more meteors, you’re watching a meteor shower.

    Learn More

    Meteors are seen as streaks of light coming from a central point in the sky. Trees are in the foreground of the image.
    The Perseids meteor shower peaks in mid-August. It is one of the most popular meteor showers of the year.
    NASA/Preston Dyches
  • 03

    What is a Planet Parade?

    On most nights, weather permitting, you can spot at least one bright planet in the night sky. While two or three planets are commonly visible in the hours around sunset, occasionally four or five bright planets can be seen simultaneously with the naked eye. These events, often called "planet parades." Though not exceedingly rare, they're worth observing since they don't happen every year.

    Join the Parade

    A chart with a dark sky and white dots representing Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Venus. Each planet is labeled.
    A sky chart showing Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Venus in a "planet parade."
    NASA/JPL-Caltech
  • 04

    NASA's Night Sky Network

    Astronomy clubs bringing the wonders of the universe to the public.

    Find a Club

  • 05

    Hubble's Night Sky Challenge

    Help celebrate Hubble’s 35th anniversary by joining our year-long stargazing challenge.

    Explore

    At night, a camera is on top of a tripod. The camera is pointing upward toward the sky. Filling the sky are stars and swaths of green aurora. Trees fill the lower background.
    A tripod stabilizes a DLSR camera while it images the night sky.
    Neil Zeller
  • 06

    Daily Moon Guide

    NASA's interactive map for observing the Moon each day of the year.

    Explore

    Short animation of the Moon cycling in phases as it appears on Earth.
    NASA/Scientific Visualization Studio
  • 07

    What are Auroras?

    What causes them, and how can you see them?

    Explore

    Curtains of brilliantly colorful light appear to curve toward each other in the sky and meet together at the top of the image.
    Photo by Gunjan Sinha, acquired on May 11, 2024, from near Saskatoon in Saskatchewan, Canada.
    Gunjan Sinha

How To...

Explore NASA's tips and guides for observing and photographing the sky.

An airline flies across the face of the Moon in this forced perspective image that makes the airplane seen big and the Moon seem small.

Photograph the Moon

Capturing the Moon with a camera is one of the most satisfying – and challenging – projects available to an outdoor photographer.

Child looking through tripod-mounted binoculars.

Use Binoculars for Skywatching

Binoculars are an excellent first instrument for skywatching because they are generally easy to use and more versatile than most telescopes.

Meteors are seen as streaks of light coming from a central point in the sky. Trees are in the foreground of the image.

Photograph a Meteor Shower

Taking photographs of meteors streaking across the sky can be challenging, but with these tips - you might be rewarded with a great photo.

A nighttime photo shows a landscape of pointy, or pinnacle-shaped, rock formations, with the Milky Way as a glowing, diagonal band in the sky.

Find Good Places to Stargaze

If you're hoping to do some skywatching, but you're not quite sure how to find a great spot, we have you covered.

More 'How To' Tips

What to Look for in the Sky

  • 01

    Planets

    Five planets in our solar system are easily observed without a telescope: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. Uranus is just barely visible for those with excellent eyesight under dark-sky conditions, provided you know where to look. The planets appear to move across the sky, against the background of the much more distant stars. Planets appear as bright or brighter than most stars, and unlike stars, they tend to glow with a steady light, where stars often flicker.

    About the Planets

  • 02

    Stars

    Most of the brightest stars are relatively nearby in space – that is, within a few hundred light years of the solar system. While there are a couple hundred billion stars in our galaxy, the Milky Way, we only see a few thousand of the nearer ones when we look into the night sky with our eyes. Stars are spread all across the canvas of the sky, but they appear denser in places. For example, there are clusters of stars, like the Pleiades, and the region of the sky where the band of the Milky Way appears is much more densely packed. And because our brains are especially good at finding patterns, we also observe groupings of stars that form constellations and asterisms. 

    What are Asterisms?

  • 03

    Earth's Moon

    Earth's Moon is a constantly changing celestial sight, from night to night. It goes through phases each month, waxing as it becomes full, and waning as the full moon shrinks back to a crescent. The Moon's changing illumination causes different features on its surface, like craters and mountain ranges, to appear more prominently as they become highlighted along the day-night dividing line, called the terminator. 

    About the Moon's Phases

  • 04

    Meteor Showers

    Meteors are tiny bits of rock and dust shed by comets and asteroids in debris trails as they orbit our Sun. Every year, at about the same time, our planet passes through the same debris trails, causing the annual named meteor showers. Some of the best known showers, like the Perseids and Geminids, and can wow spectators with dozens of meteors per hour at their peak.

    More About Meteor Showers

  • 05

    Comets

    Dusty, icy comets hail from the cold depths of the outer solar system, far from the warmth of our Sun. Some, like Comet Halley, are on relatively short orbits of decades to a couple hundred years. Others have orbits that take many thousands of years to circle the Sun. Comets are special, occasional visitors, that don't stick around. They start out faint and distant, requiring a telescope to be seen. But as they come closer to the Sun, they can brighten and form a fuzzy head, called a coma. The most spectacular comets also form long, streamer-like tails.

    More About Comets

  • 06

    Eclipses

    There are two main types of eclipses: solar and lunar. Solar eclipses are observed in the daytime when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, and covers the Sun from our point of view, either partially or totally. Lunar eclipses are observable when the Moon is above the horizon and Earth passes between the Moon and the Sun, causing our planet's shadow to fall across the Moon's surface. Lunar eclipses can also be partial, where only part of the Moon falls into shadow, or total. Importantly, solar eclipses should never be viewed with unprotected eyes, while lunar eclipses are safe to view with the naked eye.

    More About Eclipses

  • 07

    Spot the Space Station

    Watch the International Space Station pass overhead! NASA’s Spot the Station mobile app and website make it easy to find.

    Get the App

  • 08

    Satellites

    Satellites are easiest to spot around dawn and dusk. Since they orbit high above Earth, they are often bathed in sunlight, while you are sitting in twilight below. Satellites tend to be fainter than passing airplanes, and unlike aircraft, they don't have beacon lights that blink regularly (though some can brighten suddenly in what's called a flare). Satellites often can be seen to fade in brightness as their orbits carry them into darkness above the planet's night side. Alternately, they can appear from nothing, brightening as they head into day, experiencing an orbital sunrise.

    More About Satellites

  • 09

    Galaxies

    Our own galaxy, the Milky Way, appears as a band of faint light across the night sky in dark locations away from bright city lights. Our solar system lies within the disk of the Milky Way, so we are looking at it edge on. Observers in the Southern Hemisphere are able to observe the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds – two dwarf galaxies that orbit the Milky Way. Observers sometimes describe their appearance as being like faint clouds in the night sky. Our nearest large neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy, appears as a faint, fuzzy patch of light in Northern Hemisphere skies.

    More About Galaxies

  • 10

    Auroras

    Usually a treat enjoyed by those who live at higher latitudes toward the north or south, auroras are dancing curtains of light and color in the sky. They are the result of our planet's magnetic field and atmosphere interacting with those of the Sun. A wind of particles from our local star washes continuously over our planet, and sometimes becomes more intense. Some of those electrically charged particles become trapped in Earth's magnetic force field and get funneled into our upper atmosphere, where they produce glowing light displays as they crash into molecules of gases like oxygen and nitrogen.

    More About Auroras

The bright stars in the constellation Orion appear above a rocky mesa at night. The bright star Sirius is seen to the left of the mesa.
The constellation Orion.
Bill Dunford CC BY-NC 2.0

NASA's Eyes: Telescope Mode

Check out the NASA's Eyes on the Solar System Telescope mode! Click anywhere on Earth and then click "GO" in order to land at that location. Click the Big Dipper icon at bottom to turn the constellations on and off, and see what's in the sky right now above that location.

Skywatching Tools

A woman peers at the Moon through a telescope.
Observing the Moon.
NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center

Skywatching FAQ

Frequently asked questions about skywatching, answered by NASA.

Learn More
A Girl Scout gets ready to look through a telescope at the first-ever White House Campout with 50 fourth-grade Girl Scouts as part of the Let's Move! Outside initiative on June 30, 2015, in Washington, DC.
NASA/Aubrey Gemignani

NASA's Role in Skywatching

An important part of NASA's mission is to explore – to go, to discover, and to learn – for the good of all. The agency's science missions extend our human senses deep into space, from Earth's Moon to planet Mars, from our star to distant stars and galaxies, from our own planet to exoplanets orbiting other suns. NASA's fleet of scientific exploration missions bring the cosmos closer by collecting images and other data to show us distant wonders in the sky like we could never see from Earth's surface. And with missions that explore the Sun and its family of planets and other small worlds, we actually take you there.

While stargazing and marveling at the beauty of the night sky is an ancient activity, it's only in the past few centuries that humans have had an opportunity to understand what they are looking at in the heavens above. And since its founding in 1958, NASA has endeavored to contribute to that shared understanding of our planet's place in the universe, through our scientific exploration. 

For example, today we know Mars is not just a wandering, reddish point of light, but a complex world, thanks in part to the many spacecraft NASA has sent to explore the Red Planet. We know that most stars in the sky have systems of planets, with thousands of these exoplanets being added to the known worlds, in part thanks to NASA's exoplanet research. And with NASA's space telescopes, scientists have peered into the hearts of distant nebulas to reveal the stellar nurseries where baby stars are born.

NASA's skywatching resources are shared in that same spirit of exploration. We recognize that there's an explorer in each of us, and we want you to remember that the wonders of space are not something separate from our everyday lives – the universe is right above our heads, and beneath our feet. Through our skywatching resources, we hope to help you feel more connected to the astounding wonders that we're exploring in the larger world beyond Earth. And we hope that gazing at the stars above leads you to a more personal connection with our scientific quest to understand our place in the cosmos.

Keep Exploring

Discover More Topics From NASA

Asteroids, Comets & Meteors

Galaxies

Stars

Solar System Exploration


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp