Skip to content
Vatican Observatory
  • About
    • Overview
    • Team
    • FAQ
  • Telescopes
    • Overview
    • Telescope Images
  • Tours
    • Castel Gandolfo
    • U.S.
  • Latest
    • Overview
    • Resources
    • Press
    • Audio
    • Video
    • Research
    • Authors
      • FAQs
    • Newsletter
    • Tucson Meteor Cameras
  • Podcast
  • Education
    • Overview
    • Resource Center
    • Image Gallery
    • Summer School
    • Books
    • Software
    • Additional Resources
    • ACME
  • Shop
  • Calendar
    • View our Event Calendar
  • Donate
    • Donate Now
    • Smart Ways to Give
    • Sacred Space Astronomy
      • View Content
    • Bequests / Trusts
    • The Foundation
      • Newsletters
      • Annual Reports
  • Press
    • VO in the News
    • Press Kit
  • Specola Vaticana
  • Contact
    • Contact
  • About
    • Overview
    • Team
    • FAQ
  • Telescopes
    • Overview
    • Telescope Images
  • Tours
    • Castel Gandolfo
    • U.S.
  • Latest
    • Overview
    • Resources
    • Press
    • Audio
    • Video
    • Research
    • Authors
      • FAQs
    • Newsletter
    • Tucson Meteor Cameras
  • Podcast
  • Education
    • Overview
    • Resource Center
    • Image Gallery
    • Summer School
    • Books
    • Software
    • Additional Resources
    • ACME
  • Shop
  • Calendar
    • View our Event Calendar
  • Donate
    • Donate Now
    • Smart Ways to Give
    • Sacred Space Astronomy
      • View Content
    • Bequests / Trusts
    • The Foundation
      • Newsletters
      • Annual Reports
  • Press
    • VO in the News
    • Press Kit
  • Specola Vaticana
  • Contact
    • Contact

In the Sky this Week – February 22, 2022

By Robert Trembley  |  22 Feb 2022  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Share:
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share via Email

This entry is part 223 of 253 in the series In the Sky This Week

M6
Feature|The Sky|The Moon|The Sun|Asteroids|Fireballs|The Solar System|Spacecraft News|Exoplanets|Aurora|Light Pollution|The Universe|

Here comes the Sun!

I have a lecture about the Sun that I LOVE presenting! This image from the NASA/ESA Solar Orbiter made me gasp, and my wife’s eyes bug out… so I’m showing it here in all its glory. To give you a sense of scale, the prominence reaches out more than 1.5 million kilometers into space!

This is the largest solar prominence eruption ever observed in a single image together with the full solar disc.

Sun CME
ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter spacecraft captured a giant solar eruption on 15 February 2022. Credit: Solar Orbiter/EUI Team/ESA & NASA
The Sky - In the Sky

Jupiter has vanished from the western sky at sunset.

The Moon appears near the star Antares in the southern predawn sky on Feb. 24th.

Southern predawn sky
The Moon appears near the star Antares in the southern predawn sky on Feb. 24th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Mercury, Venus and Mars continue to appear in the southeastern predawn sky all week; Mercury remains low above the horizon, while Venus and Mars appear a bit higher each morning.

Southeastern predawn sky
Mercury, Venus and Mars appear in the southeastern predawn sky all week. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

The Moon, Mars and Venus form an in-line conjunction in the southeastern predawn sky on Feb. 27th.

Southeastern predawn sky
The Moon appears in line with Venus and Mars in the southeastern predawn sky on Feb. 27th. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Saturn makes a return to the southeastern predawn sky in early March; Saturn and Mercury appear in a very close conjunction with each other from March 1st-3rd, but they may be difficult to see in dawn’s light.

Conjunction of Saturn and Mercury
Saturn and Mercury appear very close to each other from March 1st-3rd,. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.

Several bright stars appear nearly overhead in the sky at 8:00 PM this week.

Sky overhead
The sky overhead on Feb. 22nd at 8:00 PM. Credit: Bob Trembley / Stellarium.
The Moon - In the Sky
  • The Moon is a Waning Gibbous – rising after sunset, visible high in the sky after midnight, and visible to the southwest after sunrise.
  • The Third Quarter Moon occurs on Feb. 23rd – rising around midnight, and visible to the south after sunrise
  • After Feb. 23rd the Moon will be a Waning Crescent – visible low to the east before sunrise.
Moon
The Moon from Feb. 22-28, 2022. Visualizations by Ernie Wright / NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio.

If you click on the Moon image above, or click this link, you will go to NASA’s Moon Phase and Libration, 2022 page – it will show you what the Moon looks like right now. If you click the image on that page, you will download a high-rez TIFF image annotated with the names of prominent features – helpful for logging your lunar observations!

Moon News

💦Astronomers of long ago interpreted the Moon’s dark patches as oceans. These patches are actually cooled lava, but water *does* exist on the Moon, just not as flowing seas.

Explore the history of discovering water on the Moon. https://t.co/DGNZs16MhL pic.twitter.com/prA9Ltjrl9

— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) February 17, 2022

The Sun - In the Sky

The Sun has four named sunspots, with a large plage regions both rotating out of view (right side) and into view (left side).

Spaceweather.com says “The long-awaited farside active region has arrived, and it’s not what we expected. AR2954 and AR2955 are just two innocent-looking sunspots, neither one apparently capable of strong flares. The pair must have decayed from a more menacing configuration last week.”

The Sun on February 22, 2022. Credit: SDO/HMI

The Sun seen in 193 angstroms on February 21st.

Several coronal holes on the face of the Sun, with the south pole open wide as well. Something with wild coronal loops is rotating into view in the northern hemisphere.

 

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2022/02/21/20220221_1024_0193.mp4

The Sun seen in 304 angstroms on February 21st.

Several prominences on the Sun’s limb. A long-lived triangular “flame” prominence appears in the northern hemisphere.

https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/dailymov/2022/02/21/20220221_1024_0304.mp4

Videos courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams.
You can view the Sun in near real-time, in multiple frequencies here: SDO-The Sun Now.
You can create your own time-lapse movies of the Sun here: AIA/HMI Browse Data.
You can browse all the SDO images of the Sun from 2010 to the present here: Browse SDO archive.


Amateur Solar Astrophotography

Sun
Sun on Feb. 22, 2022. Credit: Michael Teoh

Details: LUNT LS 152, 3X BARLOW, QHY5L-II-M.

Solar Corona

Solar wind speed is 526.2 km/sec ▲ with a density of 8.2 protons/cm3 ▲ at 1637 UT.

Sun
SOHO LASCO C2 Latest Image

Click here to see a near real-time animation of the corona and solar wind from the Solar & Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).

Sun News:

Ka-Boom!

Wow! The giant solar eruption of 15 Feb seen by #SolarOrbiter – the largest solar prominence ever observed in a single image together with the full solar disc, thanks to the novel design of our Full Sun Imager.
https://t.co/gtF6DLfkEy #ExploreFarther #WeAreAllSolarOrbiters pic.twitter.com/VS5jqRrcPU

— ESA's Solar Orbiter (@ESASolarOrbiter) February 18, 2022

Asteroids - In the Sky
  • Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) discovered this month: 157, this year: 456 (+15), all time: 28,381 (+17)
  • Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs): 2262 (-1 updated 2022-02-22)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (MPC): 1,166,136 (-19 updated 2022-02-15)
  • Total Minor Planets discovered (NASA): 1,113,527 (updated 2021-08-17) – This value has not changed for months.

Upcoming Earth-asteroid encounters:

Asteroid Date(UT) Miss Distance Velocity (km/s) Diameter (m)
2022 CC2 2022-Feb-22 11.9 LD 11.6 44
455176 2022-Feb-22 14 LD 25.1 257
2022 BA6 2022-Feb-22 8 LD 2.7 19
2022 DJ 2022-Feb-22 18.6 LD 6.7 38
2022 CK7 2022-Feb-23 12.2 LD 9.2 40
2022 BS6 2022-Feb-23 13.5 LD 12 44
2017 CX1 2022-Feb-23 15.2 LD 5 8
2016 QJ44 2022-Feb-24 19.6 LD 8.5 319
2022 DG 2022-Feb-24 5.8 LD 5.1 13
2022 DH 2022-Feb-25 2.8 LD 7.1 10
2022 DF 2022-Feb-25 10.5 LD 7.8 47
2022 DC 2022-Feb-25 12.2 LD 6.8 36
2021 QO2 2022-Feb-25 20 LD 11 65
2020 UO4 2022-Feb-28 18.5 LD 2.1 7
138971 2022-Mar-04 12.8 LD 12 742
2021 UL7 2022-Mar-04 11.5 LD 2 25
2020 DC 2022-Mar-06 3.9 LD 4.9 16
2021 EY1 2022-Mar-10 10.1 LD 15.5 16
2015 DR215 2022-Mar-11 17.5 LD 8.3 290
2018 GY 2022-Mar-13 11.9 LD 10.7 43
2022 BX1 2022-Mar-13 20.1 LD 11 161
2016 FZ12 2022-Mar-19 2.2 LD 8.3 16
2020 SQ 2022-Mar-21 2.8 LD 6 12
2013 BO76 2022-Mar-24 13.3 LD 13.8 271
2011 GE3 2022-Mar-26 7.6 LD 7 22
2012 FX35 2022-Mar-26 13.7 LD 5.9 25
2010 GD35 2022-Mar-29 17.7 LD 12.5 43
2020 FW5 2022-Mar-30 8.9 LD 13.1 27
2007 FF1 2022-Apr-01 19.4 LD 12.8 155
2021 GN1 2022-Apr-02 14.4 LD 14.3 19
2016 GW221 2022-Apr-02 9.8 LD 5.9 41
2012 TV 2022-Apr-05 19.2 LD 18.1 32
2020 GH1 2022-Apr-09 16.8 LD 7.2 28
2017 TO2 2022-Apr-10 17.9 LD 11.6 78
363599 2022-Apr-12 19.3 LD 24.5 221
2020 TQ6 2022-Apr-18 13.4 LD 15.4 43
Notes: LD means “Lunar Distance.” 1 LD = 384,401 km, the distance between Earth and the Moon. 1 LD also equals 0.00256 AU. MAG is the visual magnitude of the asteroid on the date of closest approach.

Click here to see NASA’s interactive “Eyes on Asteroids” close approach watch

Asteroid News:

Sometimes, newly observed asteroids appear worryingly likely to strike Earth. Some days later, the chance is zero. Why? How can we trust 'meandering' numbers?

On Thurs, join us w. @AsteroidDay for "#KillingAsteroids – with the experts" 👉https://t.co/CcpgbkN0yc#SpaceConnectsUs pic.twitter.com/zOmu4m4JOF

— ESA Operations (@esaoperations) February 20, 2022

Fireballs - In the Sky

On February 14, 2022, the NASA All Sky Fireball Network reported 4 fireballs!
(4 sporadics)

In this diagram of the inner solar system, all of the fireball orbits intersect at a single point–Earth. The orbits are color-coded by velocity, from slow (red) to fast (blue). Credit: SpaceWeather.com

Fireball News:

Fireball spotted south of Houston TX this morning.

Video: Michael Dudley from Houston, YX

Event details:https://t.co/0wLBOXMIHc

If you saw this event: https://t.co/6WrVfuI28I pic.twitter.com/rMX5NHvWTQ

— AMSMETEORS (@amsmeteors) February 18, 2022

If you see a bright meteor or a fireball, please REPORT IT to the American Meteor Society and the International Meteor Organization!

The Solar System - In the Sky

Position of the planets & several spacecraft in the inner solar system on February 22nd.

Inner Solar System
Top-down view of the inner solar system on Feb. 22, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the middle solar system:

Middle Solar System
Top-down view of the middle solar system on Feb. 22, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Position of the planets in the outer solar system:

Outer Solar System
Top-down view of the outer solar system on Feb. 22, 2022. Credit: Bob Trembley / NASA Eyes on the Solar System

Solar System News

Reasons to go back to Neptune:
1. We haven't sent a spacecraft there since 1989.
2. Do we need another reason?
3. Its moon Triton is — strange.

If @NASA's Neptune Odyssey gets the green light, Neptune could get its very own orbiter. Learn more here: https://t.co/UJqTWBnmJd pic.twitter.com/qPAmTEqbQf

— Planetary Society (@exploreplanets) February 17, 2022

Spacecraft News - In the Sky

First stage in aligning the observatory’s mirrors complete

Click to see JWST on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

#Webb completed the first stage in aligning the observatory’s mirrors. The result? These 18 dots of starlight brought into hexagonal formation. This early Webb alignment image is called an “image array.”
🔗 https://t.co/kQeqAt6fDO
Credit: @NASA/ @stsci/ J. DePasquale pic.twitter.com/IVImmy4nw8

— ESA Webb Telescope (@ESA_Webb) February 18, 2022

Has it been a YEAR already?!

Click to see Perseverance on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

 

I’ve now been on Mars for a full (Earth) year! Many firsts on an ambitious to-do list:

✅ Collected first rock cores from another planet
✅ Served as base station for #MarsHelicopter
✅ Extracted oxygen from thin Martian air
✅ Set driving records

More: https://t.co/ycR7IcZe0m pic.twitter.com/ZPg8NfH169

— NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover (@NASAPersevere) February 18, 2022

HiRISE - Beautiful Mars

Click to see Mars on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

HiPOD: A Flow Intersection at Cerberus Fossae

At this location, a portion of the Cerberus Fossae seems to intersect with the edge of a lava flow or other feature nearly perpendicular to the fossae. https://t.co/vs8YGY1kyV
NASA/JPL/UArizona#Mars #science #NASA pic.twitter.com/A8lEmxMgvZ

— HiRISE: Beautiful Mars (NASA) (@HiRISE) February 22, 2022

International Space Station

Click to see the ISS on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

A phenomenal photo - @ThierryLegault is the master!
(details: https://t.co/ZAdbCy9hD7) pic.twitter.com/1Q6LYEJ5ne

— Chris Hadfield (@Cmdr_Hadfield) February 21, 2022

International Space Station

Click to see the ISS on NASA’s Solar System Orrery

.@NorthropGrumman's #Cygnus space freighter was bolted in place on the station's Unity module at 7:02am ET today. https://t.co/HSZq6FE8sv

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) February 21, 2022

Lunar Gateway

.@Astro_Alex is getting ready for lunar orbit 🌑👨‍🚀 He recently visited @Thales_Alenia_S to test out and provide feedback on accommodations for the next human outpost in space, the lunar Gateway 🏡 #ExploreFarther https://t.co/L6uKKOZpWb pic.twitter.com/muJC5xWvtz

— Human Spaceflight (@esaspaceflight) February 18, 2022

Europa Clipper

As you enjoy tonight’s full Moon, keep in mind that Earth’s Moon and Europa are about the same size! Pay a virtual visit to our favorite water world at https://t.co/Y7r7eIefCC pic.twitter.com/PExlbBhc3D

— NASA Europa Clipper (@EuropaClipper) February 16, 2022

CO2

418.57 ppm #CO2

📈 418.57 ppm #CO2 in the atmosphere February 21, 2022 📈 Up from 416.16 ppm a year ago 📈 Mauna Loa Observatory @NOAA data & graphic: https://t.co/MZIEphYygh 📈 https://t.co/DpFGQoYEwb tracking: https://t.co/PTTkLiPGm2 🙏 View & share often 🙏 pic.twitter.com/W6RUssnGy1

— CO2_Earth (@CO2_earth) February 22, 2022

NASA Climate

The Tibetan Plateau, home to tens of thousands of glaciers, is very sensitive to climate change. Water from melting glaciers has created hundreds of new lakes and enlarged existing ones, such as the main pair shown here. Learn more at our Images of Change: https://t.co/BQXOBWO7OL pic.twitter.com/hP1bzVYHZ6

— NASA Climate (@NASAClimate) February 22, 2022

Launch Alert!

March 1 @ 4:38 p.m. EST

LAUNCH ALERT!

An #AtlasV 541 rocket will launch @NOAA’s #GOEST for @NASA_LSP next Tues., March 1 from SLC-41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, FL. Liftoff time is 4:38 p.m. EST (2138 UTC) #CountdownToLaunch #ReadyToGoes

ℹ️: https://t.co/uoth3iimrB pic.twitter.com/wpr90WgTgC

— ULA (@ulalaunch) February 22, 2022

See a list of current NASA missions here: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions?mission_status=current

Exoplanets - In the Sky

ex·o·plan·et /ˈeksōˌplanət/, noun: a planet orbiting a star other than the Sun.

All Exoplanets 4933 (+19)
Confirmed Planets Discovered by Kepler 2709 (+2)
Kepler Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 2057 (-1)
Confirmed Planets Discovered by K2 477
K2 Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 1024
Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS 197 (+17)
TESS Project Candidates Integrated into Archive (2022-02-17 13:00:02) 5243
Current date TESS Project Candidates at ExoFOP 5243
TESS Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed 3494 (-11)
Data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive

* Confirmed Planets Discovered by TESS refers to the number planets that have been published in the refereed astronomical literature.
* TESS Project Candidates refers to the total number of transit-like events that appear to be astrophysical in origin, including false positives as identified by the TESS Project.
* TESS Project Candidates Yet To Be Confirmed refers to the number of TESS Project Candidates that have not yet been dispositioned as a Confirmed Planet or False Positive.

Exoplanet News:

Discovery Alert!
We've added 19 planets to the known worlds. All but two were discovered by @NASA's exoplanet hunter TESS.🛰️You can always find the latest discoveries here: https://t.co/G8HwE0mJQV pic.twitter.com/fHXXpCbdqp

— NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) February 18, 2022

Aurora - In the Sky
https://twitter.com/AstroBalrog/status/1496036968794361859

SpaceWeather.com Realtime Aurora Gallery: https://spaceweathergallery.com/aurora_gallery.html

Latest Aurora Oval Forecast

Aurora – 30 Minute forecast. Credit: NOAA. Click image to see northern and southern hemisphere Aurora forecast.
Light Pollution - In the Sky

Mt wife and I will be staying at Big Bend in early April!

McDonald Observatory is applying to the IDA to establish a Dark Sky Reserve in the Big Bend region of TX and northern Mexico. If completed, the DSR will consist of 17k mi² of public and private lands, including 2,900 mi² of protected lands in Mexico. https://t.co/FyU2HGoIRj pic.twitter.com/oCUPlE0etW

— McDonald Observatory (@mcdonaldobs) August 14, 2020

  • Visit an International Dark Sky Park: https://www.darksky.org/our-work/conservation/idsp/parks/
  • If you live in Michigan, visit the Michigan Dark Skies site: https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/darkskies/
The Universe - In the Sky

Weird and Wonderful Universe

very very excited to share I just wrote an article with @sciam!! https://t.co/3mQEXcShxi

— briley lewis (@briles_34) February 21, 2022

Messier Tour: M6

M6
Messier 6 (Butterfly Cluster). Image: Ole Nielsen

The Butterfly Cluster (cataloged as Messier 6 or M6, and as NGC 6405) is an open cluster of stars in the southern constellation of Scorpius. Its name derives from the vague resemblance of its shape to a butterfly. It is 3.5° to the northwest of Messier 7, both north of the tail of Scorpius.

The first astronomer to record the Butterfly Cluster’s existence was Giovanni Battista Hodierna in 1654. However, Robert Burnham Jr. has proposed that the 1st century astronomer Ptolemy may have seen it with the naked eye while observing its neighbor the Ptolemy Cluster (M7). Credit for the discovery is usually given to Jean-Philippe Loys de Chéseaux in 1746. Charles Messier observed the cluster on May 23, 1764 and added it to his Messier Catalog.

120 stars, ranging down to visual magnitude 15.1, have been identified as most likely cluster members. Most of the bright stars in this cluster are hot, blue B-type stars but the brightest member is a K-type orange giant star, BM Scorpii, which contrasts sharply with its blue neighbors in photographs. BM Scorpii, is classed as a semiregular variable star, its brightness varying from magnitude +5.5 to magnitude +7.0. There are also eight candidate chemically peculiar stars.- Wikipedia

M6
Artist’s depiction of the positions of the Sun and M6 in relation to the Milky Way’s core. Credit: Bob Trembley / SpaceEngine

Messier 6 is best seen in binoculars. Its apparent size is roughly the same as that of the full Moon. The cluster contains more than 300 stars. The butterfly shape appears in 7×50 or 10×50 binoculars, and more stars appear in small telescopes. The contrast between the orange BM Scorpii and other member of the cluster is quite striking.

The best time of year to observe the Butterfly Cluster is in the summer months, when Scorpius appears high in the sky for observers in southern latitudes and is visible above the horizon to observers in the northern hemisphere. M6 is much easier to observe from locations south of the equator because Scorpius never rises high in the sky for northern observers. – messier-objects.com

M6
Artist’s depiction of the position of M6, with the Milky Way seen edge-on. Credit: Bob Trembley / SpaceEngine

Click here to view M6 in the Worldwide Telescope web client

Cover Image: Messier 6 (Butterfly Cluster). Image: Ole Nielsen

Messier Object List: [Link]

Software Apps used for this post:

NASA Eyes on the Solar System: an immersive 3D solar system and space mission simulator – free for the PC /MAC.
Stellarium: a free web-based planetarium app. It’s a great tool for planning observing sessions.
SpaceEngine – Explore the universe in 3D and VR!
Worldwide Telescope – operated by the American Astronomical Society (AAS).

Feature|The Sky|The Moon|The Sun|Asteroids|Fireballs|The Solar System|Spacecraft News|Exoplanets|Aurora|Light Pollution|The Universe|

Clear skies, stay safe, be well, and look up!

Share:
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share via Email

Sacred Space Astronomy

The Vatican Observatory’s official digital community and online magazine.

Become a Member

Recent Posts

How to Pray with the Stars with Br. Guy Consolmagno, SJ – AMDG Podcast

By Robert Trembley  |  7 May 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Vatican astronomer visits Mount St Mary’s College

Independent Catholic News  |  7 May 2025  |  Press

From the Vatican Observatory Faith and Science Pages — What God “Whispers” through Radio Telescopes

By Faith and Science  |  7 May 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Science and Painful Truth

By Mr. Christopher Graney  |  3 May 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Archives

      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • August
      • June
      • March
      • January
      • November
      • October
      • December
      • November
      • April
      • May
      • January
      • December
      • September
      • May
      • March
      • December
      • November
      • February

More Posts in this Series:
"In the Sky This Week"

Nature’s “Where I Work” Photography Exhibition at King’s Cross Shows Br. Guy Consolmagno

By Robert Trembley  |  23 Apr 2024  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Press Release: New cosmological research of the Vatican Observatory

By Robert Trembley  |  26 Mar 2024  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

“Faith in Science: Catholic and Jewish Perspectives on Creation and the Cosmos.”

YouTube  |  6 Nov 2023  |  Press

Seeking God in science is part of Jesuit’s vocation

YouTube  |  25 May 2022  |  Press

Newsletter

Upcoming astronomical events, scientific breakthroughs, philosophical reflections… just a few reasons to subscribe to our newsletter!

Vatican Observatory
  • About
  • Telescopes
  • Tours
  • Latest
  • Podcast
  • Education
  • Shop
  • Calendar
  • Donate
  • Press
  • Specola Vaticana
  • Contact
Privacy Policy  |   Cookie Policy  |   Disclosure Statement  |   This website is supported by the Vatican Observatory Foundation

Podcast:

  • Apple Podcasts Listen onApple Podcasts
  • Spotify Listen onSpotify
  • Google Podcasts Listen onGoogle Podcasts
  • Stitcher Listen onStitcher
  • Amazon Alexa Listen onAmazon Alexa
  • TuneIn Listen onTuneIn
Made by Longbeard