With no Moon in the sky, we’re centering on M15, which stands 60° high in the southern sky around 3:30 A.M. local daylight time. (Nighttime observers can also catch this object, though it rises about an hour after sunset and continues to gain altitude all night, so the later you look, the better.) M15 isContinue reading “The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 25: Can you spot planetary nebula Pease 1?”
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