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This is a great week to watch the development of lunar phases. Start watching on Monday night, with a barely visible 1.5-day old thin crescent that sets about an hour after the sun; you should see it near the western horizon at 8:30 P.M. On Monday and Tuesday night, you’ll have a great display of “Earthshine.”
New Horizons is on a billion-mile cruise to MU69, a Kuiper Belt Object that’s been selected as the next object the satellite will fly by in 2019. The spacecraft left Earth in January 2006 at 36,000 mph – that’s 100 times faster than a jetliner.
By WHYYThis is a great week to watch the development of lunar phases. Start watching on Monday night, with a barely visible 1.5-day old thin crescent that sets about an hour after the sun; you should see it near the western horizon at 8:30 P.M. On Monday and Tuesday night, you’ll have a great display of “Earthshine.”
New Horizons is on a billion-mile cruise to MU69, a Kuiper Belt Object that’s been selected as the next object the satellite will fly by in 2019. The spacecraft left Earth in January 2006 at 36,000 mph – that’s 100 times faster than a jetliner.