Prime Day: Skywalker Elite Lightsaber lowest price ever | Prime Day Celestron telescope & binocular deals 2024 | Best price this year on the best budget telescope in October Prime Day
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Amazon has dropped the Star Wars: Black Series Luke Skywalker Force FX Elite Lightsaber to its lowest-ever price in this Prime Day deal. It's now available for $127.04 exclusively for Prime members, reduced from its usual $149.99 Amazon price. We've tested this Luke Skywalker Force FX Elite model, and with a score of four and a half stars out of five, it's worthy of a place in our best lightsabers guide.
Prime Day in October is known as Big Deal Days and the sales event is now in full swing. We've spotted numerous top deals on Celestron telescopes and binoculars and you can find the pick of the bunch below. Celestron is renowned for quality and reliability so it's no shock that they make some of the best telescopes and best binoculars, their models are also behind some of the best telescope deals and binoculars deals. Fortunately, with the deals highlighted in this guide, you won't have to break the bank on your next bit of astronomy gear.
Pay no interest until nearly 2026 with some of the best hand-picked credit cards this year, all with no annual fee. Experts identified these top credit card of 2024 offering 0% intro APR until nearly 2026. Find out more
NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick has given us dramatic, Dragon's-eye views of Hurricane Milton churning its way toward landfall. Dominick posted a timelapse video on X (formerly Twitter) today, showing Hurricane Milton through the window of the SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule Endeavour, which is docked to the International Space Station (ISS).
NASA's troubled Mars sample-return program may have a new lifeline, in the form of a proposal from private space company Rocket Lab to help save the mission.
Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is arriving at its projected pinnacle of brightness, followed by a transition into the evening sky. Currently, it displays the classic look for a bright comet, flaunting a starlike head and a prominent tail. As we crossed over from September into October, a consensus of observations reported on the Comet Observations Database (COBS) placed the comet somewhere between first and second magnitude.
Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers have spotted the earliest powerful "galaxy-size" wind blowing from a feeding supermassive black hole-powered quasar. The powerful wind is pushing gas and dust from its galaxy at incredible speeds, supressing star birth in its host galaxy.
SpaceX is preparing to launch the fifth flight of its Starship megarocket as soon as Oct. 13, despite repeated statements from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) that the flight test would likely have to wait until November.
This year, World Space Week, celebrated globally from Oct. 4 to Oct. 10, is centered on how space technology has proactively enhanced our understanding and management of Earth's climate. For example, numerous Earth-observation satellites closely monitor greenhouse gas emissions and other climate indicators, such as extreme weather, deforestation, drought, sea level changes and coastal degradation. This data allows climate scientists to respond more effectively to natural crises. But there are many less obvious examples of the crossover between space science and climate science.
In less than seven decades, humanity went from having no active flight technology to walking on the moon. It took only a little over a century to get from the first basic computer to a pocket-size device that enables widespread access to nearly the entire body of human knowledge within seconds. Based on that technological trajectory, there is a persistent assumption that our technological capacities are unbounded.