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Our STARLAB® page is to keep you up to date with the latest in astronomy and STARLAB® planet Explore everywhere. Learn anywhere with StarLab®.

May the Fourth Bring You Clear Skies, an X Marks the Moon, May Day, Shooting Stars, and Mars Buzzes the Bees! – AstroGeo 05/04/2025

for this week, with worldwide content from our astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Cassini JPL)

May the Fourth Bring You Clear Skies, an X Marks the Moon, May Day, Shooting Stars, and Mars Buzzes the Bees! – AstroGeo This image of Saturn’s small moon Mimas was captured by the Cassini spacecraft during its closest pass in 2010. the large crater Herschel and its central mountain peak evokes the Death Star.

04/20/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from our Astronomer trainer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Starry Night) https://astrogeo.ca/an-extra-low-morning-moon-smiles-with-planets-leaving-evenings-for-galaxy-gazing-lyrids-looking-and-the-arch-of-spring/

Venus in Morning, New Luna Partly Eclipses Sol, Leo Leads to Galaxies, and Messier Marathon Attempt Two! – AstroGeo 03/23/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from Digital starlab user chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by Kerry-Ann Lecky Hepburn)

Venus in Morning, New Luna Partly Eclipses Sol, Leo Leads to Galaxies, and Messier Marathon Attempt Two! – AstroGeo Meteorologist, pilot, and astro-imager Kerry-Ann Lecky Hepburn captured this amazing shot of the August, 2017 partial solar eclipse behind Toronto’s CN Tower from Saint Catharine’s, Ontario. See more of her work at www.weatherandsky.com

Clocks Spring Forward, Mercury at Maximum Under Venus, and the Moon Manifests an X and Much More in Evening! – AstroGeo 03/03/2025

for this week, with worldwide content, from our in-house astronomer Chris Vaughan. Clear skies! (image by LRO)

Clocks Spring Forward, Mercury at Maximum Under Venus, and the Moon Manifests an X and Much More in Evening! – AstroGeo This image of the Lunar Straight Wall or Rupes Recta in Mare Nubium was captured by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. While the feature can be seen through binoculars, a backyard telescope will reveal more detail. (Adapted from NASA LRO)

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