This year marks 350 years since The Royal Observatory in Greenwich was founded. Take a look at four astronomically great ...
UK stargazers are in luck as next month there will be a solar eclipse visible throughout the country. The partial eclipse ...
This year Greenwich Observatory is set to celebrate its 350th anniversary, since it was first constructed in 1674.
To combat an exhaustive list of search engine options for a fun-filled day out in Greenwich, we asked Chat GPT to summarise ...
The Royal Observatory Greenwich is the home of Greenwich Mean Time and the Prime Meridian of the World. It is also home to London's only planetarium, the Harrison timekeepers and the UK's largest ...
Families looking for a fun and educational half-term activity can visit the Greenwich Planetarium throughout the school holidays.
In 1884, an international conference decided that the Prime Meridian, which runs through Greenwich, would be the starting point for timekeeping. The line runs through the Royal Observatory ...
Last year, the lights were visible from as far south as Kent and East Anglia, which was rare, as the natural phenomenon can ...
February 5 is important as it was on this day in 1924 that Greenwich Time Signal was broadcast for the first time in history. The BBC ‘pips’, as it was popularly known, was a series of six short notes ...
A SPECTACULAR Blood Moon is set to appear over the skies of Scotland soon. A partial solar eclipse will take place within weeks creating colourful shades of red, pink and even purple. When the ...
The impact on the oceans if the Moon disappeared would be much smaller tides, about one-third the size of what they are now.