Night Sky Update: May 21 – May 29, 2021

This is the Saint Louis Science Center’s NIGHT SKY UPDATE for the week of Friday, May 21, 2021. Information updated weekly or as needed. Times given as local St. Louis time, which is Central Daylight Time (CDT). For definitions of terminology used in the night sky update, click the highlighted text. If relying on times… Continue reading

Astronomy Fact of the Day: May 22, 2021

Tonight at 10:00pm, the constellation Hercules will be easy to find in the east. Those with binoculars can find the famous star cluster Messier 13 (M13) between the stars 40Her and 44Her. M13 is a globular star cluster that is roughly 22,000 light years from Earth. Through binoculars, M13 will appear as a fuzzy cotton… Continue reading

Astronomy Fact of the Day: May 19, 2021

On this day in 1917, Robert H. Goddard (now called the ‘Father of American Rocketry’) proposes the use of sonar to the US Navy. The Navy advises him they are ‘not at all interested’ in the new device.

Astronomy Fact of the Day: May 18, 2021

Tonight the Moon will exhibit a waxing crescent phase with about 43% disk illumination. Tomorrow, the Moon will reach first quarter phase, putting us about one week into the lunar cycle.

Night Sky Update: May 14 – May 22, 2021

This is the Saint Louis Science Center’s NIGHT SKY UPDATE for the week of Friday, May 14, 2021. Information updated weekly or as needed. Times given as local St. Louis time, which is Central Daylight Time (CDT). For definitions of terminology used in the night sky update, click the highlighted text. If relying on times… Continue reading

Astronomy Fact of the Day: May 17, 2021

In 1969 on this day, the Soviet Union’s unmanned probe Venera 6 successfully lands on Venus.  Today, historians mark this as a triumph of the USSR in space, but it ‘pales in comparison’ to the American launch of Apollo 10, which launched on the next day. At the time, there was no mention of the… Continue reading

Astronomy Fact of the Day: May 16, 2021

Today, Mercury reaches maximum eastern elongation. You will also find the Moon and Mars paired together in the west. You can look for Mercury, Mars and the Moon tonight 45 minutes after sunset.