Skywatchers will get a rare chance to see Saturn in its full glory, without chunks of ice and rock swarming around it.
Saturn's rings tilt out of view every fourteen to seventeen Earth years. In 2032, they will be at their best again during ...
The rings, believed to be made up of rocky and icy chunks that could be as large as a house, help separate Saturn from other planets in our solar system. They’re also about to perform a vanishing ...
Once its rings vanish from sight in March 2025, Saturn will look like a pale yellow sphere through most telescopes.
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope was recently used to capture direct images of four Saturn-like exoplanets in a solar system 130 light-years away.