Tuesday, July 8, 2025

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CONNECTIONS: We shouldn’t be surprised that we still have to fight for democracy — even after 249 years

I don’t know how we arrived at a place where we thought everyone would support democracy because it was an intellectually superior form of government. All of human history contradicts that notion.

EYES TO THE SKY: Night Lights

Every year, from about July 17 through Aug. 24, planet Earth orbits through the debris field of Comet Swift-Tuttle, the parent comet of the Perseid meteor shower.

EYES TO THE SKY: Jupiter shines all night. Sun’s longest days

It will be about an hour after sunset, when the sky darkens, that unaided eyes will first observe the great planet above the southeastern skyline.

EYES TO THE SKY: Spring astronomy, skygazing wonders, Dark Sky Week begins

Stargazing brings enchantment and grounding to people of all ages around the world. The darker the sky, the deeper the experience.

EYES TO THE SKY: Mornings with the gods, and other wonders

Add a cosmic perspective to this culmination in our solar system by being outdoors 60 to 75 minutes before sunrise, when the stars of our galaxy populate the dark sky.

EYES TO THE SKY: Reach for extraterrestrial holiday lights on darkest, latest mornings

Below and left of Jupiter, relatively faint planet Mercury twinkles close above the skyline while, to the right of Mercury, red star Antares, also pale in the dawn light, rises into the winter morning sky.

EYES TO THE SKY: Four constellations, two asterisms, two summer stars, three planets and a meteor shower

The Draconids, a minor shower, sometimes rewards the sky-gazer with many shooting stars.

EYES TO THE SKY: Five planets, summer solstice, fireflies flashing

At the first sight of the clearing, I was wonderstruck by an aerial display of countless blinking golden lights and dipping, curving, white gold lines streaking all over the meadow from the ground up to the treetops.

EYES TO THE SKY: Bedazzling line-up of planets, stars; New Year’s Day supermoon

The year’s darkest days, the last of the shortest days of the year, end tomorrow, the 26th, with 9 hours, 6 minutes of daylight.

EYES TO THE SKY: New season, new moon – crescent moon cues the planets

The Autumnal Equinox occurs on Friday the 22nd at 4 p.m. Sunrise and sunset times are close to 12 hours apart for the rest of the month.

EYES TO THE SKY: Full Green Corn Moon tonight, planet Venus mornings, Perseids

We Earthlings can experience being aligned with the motions of the sun on one side of our bodies and the moon on the other.

EYES TO THE SKY: Twilight planets, summer stars, waxing moon; midnight meteors

As sunlight fades from Earth’s atmosphere and dusk deepens, the golden light of true star Arcturus, summer’s brightest, comes into view above Jupiter.

EYES TO THE SKY: Heavenly mornings; starting March 12, morning comes later

When clock time springs ahead an hour, not-so-early risers may look out a southwest-facing window at dawn to find star-like Jupiter rather low to the horizon.

EYES TO THE SKY: Darkest mornings, planets, stars, shooting stars

The Orionid meteor shower, its radiant appearing to be at the upper left of the constellation for which it is named, is forecast to be active from about the 19th through the 22nd, peaking before dawn on the 21st.

EYES TO THE SKY: Attune to planetary movements, waxing moon

On Friday and Saturday, the 7th and 8th, follow a robust crescent moon from midafternoon in the southeast until it completes its arc before midnight in the southwest.

EYES TO THE SKY: Five planets – awe-inspiring conjunctions, comings and goings

Each successive night, see Mars in a changed position, having moved in an easterly direction in relation to Saturn and Antares.

EYES TO THE SKY: Planets through the night — a picture guide

Mars and Saturn are at their brightest and visible from nightfall until before dawn. On May 30, Mars orbits closest to Earth.
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