November 7, 2026. Three cosmic objects. One geometrically perfect shape. Zero actual connection between them. Sometimes the sky looks random. And sometimes it looks like someone literally drew a shape up there.
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November 7, 2026. Three cosmic objects. One geometrically perfect shape. Zero actual connection between them. Sometimes the sky looks random. And sometimes it looks like someone literally drew a shape up there. |
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Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Mercury. All visible. Same sky. November 15, 2026 is basically a planetary group photo. Some mornings, the sky feels empty. And some mornings, you look up and think: "Wait, is the solar system having a staff meeting?" |
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Your brain is about to flag something as 'weird' before your conscious mind catches up. That's the whole point. You won't plan to notice this. |
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The solar system's innermost planet is playing hard to get. Here's how to finally catch it. Quick poll: Have you seen Jupiter? Probably. Venus? Almost certainly. Mars? Yeah, probably spotted it without even trying. |
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Spoiler: It's both. And neither. Let us explain. Every time it happens, the same fight starts: "Is the Moon actually bigger tonight?" "Or does it just look bigger?" "Or is this just one of those things people overhype every year?" |
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November 25, 2026 is your best chance to spot a planet that's 2.9 billion kilometers away. Without a telescope. Yes, really. Here's a strange fact: You might be able to see Uranus with your own eyes. |
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1 event,November 29, 2026: The morning star hits -4.7 magnitude and refuses to act like a normal celestial object. At some point, you'll notice it. Not because you were looking for it. But because it doesn't belong. |
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