Sky Digest
Export Sky Digest PDF
Include finder charts for selected objects:
Tonight at a Glance
Planet Highlights
Binocular Targets
Small Scopes (3–6 inch)
Big Scopes (8–12 inch)
The Week Ahead
| Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun | Mon | Tue |
| 🌑 0% | 🌑 1% | 🌒 4% | 🌒 10% | 🌒 18% | 🌓 28% | 🌓 39% |
| — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| New Moon | Moon occults 17 Tau | Moon occults Beta Tau |
Collimate your reflector
A well-collimated telescope shows sharper stars and more detail. Use our interactive Collimation Guide to learn how.
Collimation GuideNASA Astronomy Picture of the Day
Cygnus and the Solitary Tree
A lone tree stands in a quiet meadow in Guadalajara, Spain, silhouetted against the Cygnus region rising above like flames in the night sky. This deep night skyscape is a composite of exposures that reveals a range of brightness and color human eyes can't quite see on their own. Spanning over a thousand times the angular size of the full moon, Cygnus sets the sky afire with active star formation where clouds of gas and dust collapse under gravity until nuclear fusion ignites and new stars are born. These stars ionize the surrounding hydrogen gas, causing it to glow crimson, while tendrils of interstellar dust absorb some of that light and cast dark shadows across the sky. Cygnus is a trove of celestial treasures, notably the Veil, Crescent, and Pelican nebulae, as well as Cygnus X-1, the first confirmed black hole. Cygnus continues to yield fresh science, including a new three-dimensional model of the Cygnus Loop made possible by the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Almost Hyperspace: Random APOD Generator
Image credit: 2025 Horacio Lander / AstroHoracio Text: Keighley Rockcliffe (NASA GSFC, UMBC CSST, CRESST II) — APOD is a service of NASA and Michigan Tech. U.
View on NASA APODSign in to get this digest by email and customize it for your location.