Flights to cities in the line of totality for the eclipse are pricey.
You shouldn't look directly at the sun during an eclipse, just like you shouldn't any other day, it can cause eye damage.
If the moon orbits Earth about once a month, why are solar eclipses so rare?
If you're going to view the total solar eclipse this month make sure you have glasses or a filter that will protect your eyes. Here's where to buy glasses for TSE 17.
New research from NASA and the ESA shows that the sun's core actually travels four times as fast as the surface does.
NASA is sending highly resistant balloons into the stratosphere to test Mars-like conditions there during the eclipse.
NASA is asking eclipse observers to help collect data during the August 2017 total solar eclipse.
Wind companies are hoping to make 'megaturbines' as big as the Eiffel Tower.
The population of bees has been declining worldwide, here are small ways you can help.
Trump vowed to get coal mining jobs back, but solar energy will make it hard to keep that promise.
Researchers say a new alloy could help make solar panels twice as efficient and far less expensive.
Google created a simulator that models what the 2017 August eclipse will look like in any location in the United States.
Elon Musk revealed why he and other engineers started Tesla and said that soon almost all superchargers will be disconnected from the electricity grid.
Wednesday's NASA announcement was also a ceremony honoring Eugene N. Parker, for whom mission to the sun was renamed.
A NASA craft that studies the sun captured a partial solar eclipse Thursday.
Mercedes-Benz Energy and Vivint Solar are working together to bring solar home storage to U.S. customers.
The total solar eclipse in August is your last chance to see one in the United States until 2024.
Musk originally said his solar roofs would be available in 2017, but he's pushed that to 2018.
The general rule is that dark matter holds galaxies together and dark energy drives the expansion of the universe.
Eruptions on the sun look very different, but they might all be produced the same way — with energy bursting through a magnetic field.
Meet Steve, the purple streak of light that appears during the aurora borealis and, until recently, stumped astronomers.
The western swordfern may be the best model for solar storage.