
Mastering Astrophotography Post-Processing: From Raw Data to Stunning Images
The Digital Darkroom Astrophotography does not end when you press the shutter button. In fact, that is just the beginning. The raw data captured by your camera (for setup and capture tips, see our astrophotography beginner’s guide) contains the information needed to create stunning images of the cosmos, but it…

Meteor Showers 2026: Complete Viewing Guide for the Year’s Best Celestial Fireworks
Nature’s Light Show There are few astronomical events more accessible and awe-inspiring than a meteor shower. No telescope required. No special knowledge needed. Just step outside on the right night, look up, and watch nature put on a light show that has captivated humans since we first gazed skyward. Meteor…

James Webb Space Telescope: Revolutionary Discoveries Reshaping Our Universe
A New Window on the Universe On December 25, 2021, a new era of astronomy began. After decades of development, billions of dollars in investment, and countless engineering challenges, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) launched into space. Just six months later, it began delivering images that would fundamentally change…

Finding Dark Skies: How to Escape Light Pollution and Reclaim the Stars
The Lost Sky There was a time when every human being on Earth could look up on a clear night and see the Milky Way—a luminous river of stars arching across the sky. Our ancestors navigated by the stars, told stories about the constellations, and lived under a sky that…

Jupiter and Its Galilean Moons: A Backyard Astronomer’s Guide to the Gas Giant
The King of Planets When Galileo Galilei first pointed his telescope at Jupiter in January 1610, he changed humanity’s understanding of the cosmos forever. What he saw—four small points of light orbiting the planet—proved that not everything revolved around Earth. Those four moons, now called the Galilean satellites, were the…

Webb’s 3D Mapping of Uranus: What It Means for the Future of Astrophotography
Captured by JWST’s NIRCam instrument. Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, STScI — used under ESA Standard Licence. In early 2026, the astronomy community witnessed a defining moment in planetary imaging. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) produced the first three-dimensional atmospheric mapping of Uranus while simultaneously capturing its auroral structures in…





