The Planetary Society The Planetary Society is the largest and most effective nonprofit organization that promotes the exploration of space through education, advocacy, and…
Night Sky | The Planetary Society What’s up in the night sky: March 2026 Our monthly feature focuses on easy and fun things to see in the night sky, including eclipses, supermoons, meteor showers, planetary conjunctions, and more
About Us - The Planetary Society The Planetary Society is global, independent, nonprofit organization that promotes the exploration of space through education, advocacy, and innovative…
Articles - The Planetary Society The latest stories from The Planetary Society, featuring humanity's quest to explore worlds, find life, and defend Earth
From backyard telescopes to global reach:… | The Planetary Society AstroKobi visits Planetary Society HQ Ambre Trujillo (Planetary Society digital community manager), Kobi Brown (Astrokobi), Sarah Al-Ahmed (host of Planetary Radio), and Asa Stahl (Planetary Society science editor), seen here from left to right, during Kobi’s visit to Planetary Society HQ in Pasadena, CA Image: The Planetary Society
NASA science saved: Inside the 2026 budget… | The Planetary Society Sarah is joined by Jack Kiraly, director of government relations at The Planetary Society, and Ari Koeppel, an AAAS science technology policy fellow at The Planetary Society, to break down what passed in the FY 2026 budget, why the details matter, and how bipartisan support helped protect science programs across planetary science
IMAP and the shape of the heliosphere | The Planetary Society Transcript Sarah Al-Ahmed: Meet IMAP this week on Planetary Radio I'm Sarah Al-Ahmed of The Planetary Society, with more of the human adventure across our solar system and beyond A vast and invisible bubble surrounds our sun and planets, shielding us from much of the radiation that fills the galaxy
Uranus revealed: Solving the ice giant’s heat… | The Planetary Society Sarah Al-Ahmed Planetary Radio Host and Producer for The Planetary Society For decades, Uranus has puzzled scientists Unlike the other giant planets, Voyager 2’s 1986 flyby suggested the ice giant emitted no excess heat