The moon and sun figure big in the new year's lineup of cosmic wonders

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.-- The moon and sun share top billing in 2026.Kicking off the year’s cosmic wonders is the moon, drawing the first astronauts to visit in more than 50 years as well as a caravan of robotic lunar landers including Jeff Bezos’ new supersized Blue Moon.A supermoon looms on Jan.

3 and an astronomical blue moon is on the books for May.The sun will also generate buzz with a ring-of-fire eclipse at the bottom of the world in February and a total solar eclipse at the top of the world in August.Expect more auroras in unexpected places, though perhaps not as frequently as the past couple years.It’s our third known interstellar visitor.Scientists anticipate more.“I can’t believe it’s taken this long to find three,” said NASA’s Paul Chodas, who’s been on the lookout since the 1980s.

And with ever better technology, “the chance of catching another interstellar visitor will increase.”Here’s a rundown on what the universe has in store for us in 2026:Launching early in the year, the three Americans and one Canadian will zip past the moon, do a U-turn behind it, then hustle straight back to Earth to close out their 10-day mission.No stopping for a moonwalk — the boot prints will be left by the next crew in NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration program.Back for another stab at the moon, Astrobotic Technology and Intuitive Machines are also targeting 2026 landings with scientific gear.The only private entity to nail a lunar landing, Firefly Aerospace, will aim for the moon’s far side in 2026.

China is targeting the south polar region in the new year, sending a rover as well as a so-called hopper to jump into permanently shadowed craters in search of ice.Popular ReadsMan doing target practice in backyard accused of fatally shooting woman blocks awayDec 26, 7:43 PMTexas teen missing since Christmas Eve believed to be in 'imminent danger': SheriffDec 28, 4:19 PMRob Reiner's son arrested for murder in stabbing death of famed director, wifeDec 15, 6:39 PMThe cosmos pulls out all the stops with a total solar eclipse on Aug.12 that will begin in the Arctic and cross over Greenland, Iceland and Spain.Totality will last two minutes and 18 seconds as the moon moves directly between Earth and the sun to blot out the latter.

By contrast, the total solar eclipse in 2027 will offer a whopping 6 1/2 minutes of totality and pass over more countries.For 2026, the warm-up act will be a ring-of-fire eclipse in the Antarctic on Feb.17, with only a few research stations in prime viewing position.

South Africa and southernmost Chile and Argentina will have partial viewing.A total lunar eclipse will follow two weeks after February’s ring of fire, with a partial lunar eclipse closing out the action at the end of August.Six of the solar system’s eight planets will prance across the sky in a must-see lineup around Feb.28.

A nearly full moon is even getting into the act, appearing alongside Jupiter.Uranus and Neptune will require binoculars or telescopes.But Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn should be visible with the naked eye shortly after sunset, weather permitting, though Mercury and Venus will be low on the horizon.

Mars will be the lone no-show.The good news is that the red planet will join a six-planet parade in August, with Venus the holdout.Three supermoons will lighten up the night skies in 2026, the stunning result when a full moon inches closer to Earth than usual as it orbits in a not-quite-perfect circle.Appearing bigger and brighter, supermoons are a perennial crowd pleaser requiring no equipment, only your eyes.

The year's first supermoon in January coincides with a meteor shower, but the moonlight likely will obscure the dimmer fireballs.The second supermoon of 2026 won’t occur until Nov.24, with the third — the year’s final and closest supermoon — occurring the night of Dec.

23 into Dec.24.This Christmas Eve supermoon will pass within 221,668 miles (356,740 kilometers) of Earth.The sun is expected to churn out more eruptions in 2026 that could lead to geomagnetic storms here on Earth, giving rise to stunning aurora.

Solar action should start to ease, however, with the 11-year solar cycle finally on the downslide.“2026 will be an exciting year for space weather enthusiasts,” he said in an email, with this new spacecraft and others helping scientists “better understand our nearest star and forecast its impacts.”___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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