• February 2026: Bright Stars and Space Travel
    Feb 1 2026

    Join hosts Leon and Sharna as they guide you through the February night sky.

    From the stars Sirius and Canopus to the planet Jupiter, the night sky this month is full of bright spots. If you can find these spots, you'll also be able to find the constellation of the month!

    Additionally, Leon and Sharna fill you in on some exiting things involving our moon this month.

    Enjoy your stargazing, see you next month!

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    12 mins
  • January 2026: Dogs and Flies in the Sky
    Dec 31 2025

    Join host Sharna - on her own this episode! - as she guides you through the night sky for January.

    This month there are a bunch of fun constellations to try and spot but keep your eyes peeled because some are fainter than others. On the other hand, Jupiter is a planet for the people this month! It is shining so bright you don't even need a telescope to see it.

    Happy stargazing!

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    9 mins
  • December 2025: Your Stargazing Guide for December
    Dec 3 2025

    Join Leon and Sharna as they explore the December night sky.

    As the milky way grows fainter Jupiter and Saturn appear to steal the show this month. With a bit of squinted searching you’ll be able to spot Pisces and Neptune - do not be discouraged by their faintness! They are out there. Finally, once again this month meteors will streak across our sky in the Geminids meteor shower.

    Enjoy the December night sky. What better way to end the year than with some stargazing?

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    11 mins
  • November 2025: The Four M's
    Nov 1 2025

    Join Leon and guest host Alyshia, as they explore the Boorloo night sky this November.

    Grab your M&M's and settle in because this month's sky contains multitudes - the Milky Way, Mercury, Mars and meteors will all be visible in the western sky!

    Not too far away from these you can use a telescope to find a telescope! The constellation Telescopium is visible, but it's a faint one so make sure you have your eyes peeled.

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    11 mins
  • October 2025 - Triangles, Meteor Showers and Mercury. Oh My!
    Oct 1 2025

    The western night sky! Join Leon and Sharna as they guide you through our night sky throughout October. From sunset to the early hours of the morning, you can see triangles, meteors, Mercury and more.

    The October sky has something for everyone.

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    11 mins
  • September 2025 - Stargazing! Total Eclipse of the Blood Moon & a bad impression of a magpie.
    Sep 4 2025

    Leon is joined by guest, & producer Morgan while Beth is away.

    What's in the sky?

    Total Lunar Eclipse + Blood Moon - 7th September

    Equinox - where the days will be getting longer.

    Planets:

    Saturn's Rings (best viewed 21st September)

    Constellations:

    The Southern Birds

    Phoenix

    Grus the Crane

    Tucana the Toucan

    Pavo the Peacock

    For more stargazing stuff check out Leon's monthly blog - "The Sky Tonight"

    https://www.scitech.org.au/explore/the-sky-tonight/

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    13 mins
  • August 2025 - Stargazing! A "normal" constellation hides a fascinating galaxy cluster
    Jul 31 2025

    The Night Sky! It's all about the Milkyway in August (just look up & and maybe cover your neighbours light). Southern Hemisphere misses out on the Perseid meteor shower (lucky you if you're in the north!)

    Planets: Jupiter and Venus are visible in the morning of the 12th & 13th August.

    Constellation of the Month: Norma - The Set Square doesn't have much greek mythology, but there's something mysterious hiding out there just beyond our view called "the great attractor."

    Beth goes on an exciting new adventure!

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    16 mins
  • Milky Way Magic: Your Stargazing Guide for July
    Jul 1 2025

    July is peak galaxy appreciation month, and the Milky Way is putting on a show. This episode, we’re grabbing our stargazing snacks and heading outside to soak in that big, hazy river of light across the sky.

    Whether you're deep in the bush or just squinting past your neighbour’s porch light, we’ll help you spot it. We'll also help you find the Southern Cross and introduce you to the dark emu hiding in plain sight. Spoiler: it’s not made of stars but the dark bits between them.

    Also, on this week’s tour of the cosmos:

    • July 4th is when Earth is furthest from the Sun. No, that’s not why it’s cold
    • Venus and Jupiter are up early and looking gorgeous
    • Sagittarius is pointing straight at the centre of the galaxy. We call it the big messy spaghetti
    • The Vera Rubin Observatory has a camera the size of a small car and a mission to map the entire night sky. Every three days. For ten years. It cost a billion bucks and it’s going to change astronomy forever
    • Vera Rubin helped prove dark matter exists. She deserved a Nobel Prize and didn’t get one. We’re still salty about it
    • There are over 130 million bits of space junk out there bigger than a centimetre. Who’s watching all that? We are. Kind of

    Need more sky stuff?

    • scitech.org.au
    • theskytonight

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    12 mins