Milky Way over Joshua Tree National Park, California
© Schroptschop/Getty Image
An ocean of stars above the desert. Astronomy Day
Get your telescope and star map app ready, because it's Astronomy Day! Doug Berger created Astronomy Day in 1973 to get more people interested in the wonders of space. He set up telescopes on street corners, malls and parks to give people a chance to see the stars first hand.
Early astronomers lacked the means to view celestial objects beyond the human eye, yet they still made major discoveries such as calculating the size and distance of the moon, affirming the sun as the centre of our solar system, and predicting the movement of stars relative to the seasons. Today we have sophisticated telescopes, from the orbiting James Webb Space Telescope to portable ones you’ll find in use at International Dark Sky Parks, including Joshua Tree State Park, seen in our photo.
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Bing Today Images
Milky Way over Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California, United States
Young stars forming in the Tarantula Nebula, James Webb Space Telescope
Cosmic Cliffs in the Carina Nebula
Dartmoor's Scorhill Stone Circle under a starry night sky, Devon.
Andromeda galaxy
The Large Magellanic Cloud, photographed by the Hubble Space Telescope
The Pillars of Creation viewed by the James Webb Space Telescope