10 times the sky amazed us in 2024

three panel image shows in the top left a woman watching the April 8 solar eclipse and smiling, on the top right a group of people gather to look at the sky, there is a thin crescent moon shining bright and the lower image shows vivid red and green northern lights and a person standing on a hill.
2024 has been quite the year for skywatching! Here are just 10 of the magnificent events that unfolded. (Image credit: Top left: Medios y Media/Getty Images, Top right: Ian Forsyth/Getty Images, bottom: Sacharias Rundquist / 500px via Getty Images)

What was your skywatching highlight of 2024?

The rare total solar eclipse seen from North America? A moonless Perseid meteor shower? Or did you revel in the northern lights appearing above your home?

Here's what happened in the skies above in 2024 in spectacular images.

1. 'Great American Eclipse'

total solar eclipse april 2024 showing the white corona around the sun streaming out into space.

The total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, was one of the great skywatching highlights of the year. (Image credit: Cristian Bortes via Getty Images)

When: Apr. 8, 2024

Over 50 million people had their eyes glued to the skies on a Monday in April when a rare total solar eclipse saw the moon's shadow surge across a 10,000-mile-long (16,000 kilometers) route through North America. For most of Texas — the predicted "eclipse ground zero"— it was a washout, but totality was gloriously clear across Indiana, Ohio, the far northeastern U.S. states, and Canada. When's the next one? On Aug. 12, 2026, another total solar eclipse from Greenland, Iceland, the Atlantic Ocean, and Spain will be observed.

Read more: Total solar eclipse 2024 thrills millions across North America (video, photos)

2. Northern lights in May

colorful ribbons of purple and green light fill the sky above a geyser emitting steam.

Northern lights over Yellowstone National Park on May 12, 2024. (Image credit: Jonathan Newton/Getty Images)

When: May 10-11, 2024

It was known that 2024 would see an uptick in geomagnetic activity. Still, nobody predicted the events of May when aurora was seen as far south as Florida in the U.S. and Ladakh in northern India. It may have been among the strongest aurora shows since record-keeping began.

Read more: Jaw-dropping northern lights from massive solar flares amaze skywatchers around the world. 'We have a very rare event on our hands.' (photos)

3. 'Ring of Fire'

A composite image of the annular solar eclipse 2024 above Rapa Nui (Easter Island). (Image credit: Josh Dury)

When: Oct. 2, 2024

Though barely a few thousand dedicated eclipse chasers saw it, this annular solar eclipse provided a sublime and unforgettable view of the sun as a "ring of fire." A key location was the remote Rapa Nui — also known as Easter Island — where a "micro moon" sat plumb in front of the sun for almost six minutes. It was the island's first in 236 years and its last for 321 years.

Read more: What it was like to experience the 'ring of fire' solar eclipse on Easter Island

4. Northern lights in October

Northern lights over the Boston skyline shine red and green.

Northern lights over the Boston skyline on Oct. 11. (Image credit: Stan Grossfeld/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

When: October 10-11, 2024

Five months after May's spectacular planet-wide aurora, scientists announced that the sun had reached solar maximum, a period of heightened solar activity and sunspot frequency that occurs during the sun's approximately 11-year solar cycle. Right on cue, another almost-as-good display of aurora was seen across the globe.

Read more: 'It was 3 hours of magic': Spectacular auroras thrill stargazers across the world (and internet) as intense geomagnetic storm batters Earth (photos)

5. A naked-eye comet

the long tail of a bright comet shines in a star-filled sky with figures silhouetted in the foreground.

Comet C/2023 A3 - Tsuchinshan-ATLAS in the sky above the artwork Dodekalitten at Lolland southern Zealand, Denmark on Oct. 22, 2024. (Image credit: MADS CLAUS RASMUSSEN/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images)

When: October 2024

Did you see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS? Just as predicted a year before, this long-period comet, not seen in the inner solar system for 80,000 years, became visible to the naked eye earlier in October as it flew past the sun and Earth.

Read more: See the 'comet of the century' light up the night sky in breathtaking photos

6. Perseid meteor shower

A view of the night sky as the interaction between the Earth's magnetic field and solar particles cause the Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis), and the Perseid meteor occur, observed at the Gulpe Sternenpark in Havelaue, Havelland district of Brandenburg, Germany on August 13, 2024. The sky is colored purple from the northern lights.

A Perseid meteor streaks through the skies above Brandenburg, Germany on August 13, 2024. (Image credit: Omer Sercan Karkus/Anadolu via Getty Images)

When: Aug. 11-12, 2024

The Perseid meteor shower peak is always something to get excited about, but this year, the 100+ shooting stars were joined by simultaneous northern lights as solar maximum got underway.

Read more: Rare display of northern lights and Perseid meteor shower delights skywatchers worldwide (photos, video)

7. The biggest supermoon of the year

bright full moon behind a Ferris wheel with pink lights.

The full hunter's moon rises in the night sky on Oct. 17, 2024 in Foshan, Guangdong Province of China. (Image credit: Wang Qingwu/VCG via Getty Images)

When: Oct. 17, 2024

A consequence of the moon's elliptical orbit of Earth is that one full moon each year must be the closest, so the largest in the night sky. That honor in 2024 went to October "Hunter's Moon," which appeared too early for Halloween but still managed to put out some spooky supermoon vibes.

Read more: Hunter's Moon supermoon 2024 puts on a frightfully good show for skywatchers around the world (photos)

8. Earth's shadow across the moon

a full moon colored slightly beige with a shadow covering the right side.

Full harvest supermoon rises over the sky during a partial lunar eclipse in Ankara, Turkey on Sept. 18, 2024. (Image credit: Muhammed Selim Korkutata/Anadolu via Getty Images)

When: Mar. 24 and Sept. 18, 2024

The moon drifted into Earth's fuzzy outer shadow to cause a slight penumbral lunar eclipse a couple of weeks before April's total solar eclipse and after October's annular solar eclipse. Nothing to get excited about? Perhaps when compared to a total solar eclipse, but the sight of the line of Earth's shadow moving across the lunar surface was, as ever, hypnotic.

Read more: March's Full Worm Moon wriggles its way through a subtle lunar eclipse in stunning photos

9. Taurid fireballs in the sky

A still image from a video of a meteor on Nov. 13, 2024, captured by Matthew Craig and submitted to the American Meteor Society. (Image credit: AMS/Matthew Craig)

When: November 2024

Think shooting stars are fun to see? A meteor shower can impress, but what you really want is a super-bright fireball. That's what happened in November when Earth busted through the Taurid Swarm of meteors, with a fireball was caught on camera on Nov. 9 from Colorado, Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma (though it was possibly a SpaceX Starlink satellite)) and again on Nov. 13 along the U.S.-Canada border.

Read more: Brilliant fireball explodes over North America as satellites capture flash from space (video)

10. Conjunction of Jupiter and Mars

The conjunction between Jupiter and Mars along with a Perseid meteor to the right. (Image credit: Josh Dury)

When: Aug. 14, 2024

Astrophotographers up before the sun in August captured a rare planetary "meet-up" between Jupiter and Mars. It was the first time the two planets had been so close in the night sky for over two years.

The two planets won't appear this close together in the night sky until 2033.

Read more: Astrophotographers capture rare Jupiter and Mars encounter (photos)

If these images have sparked your interest in capturing the night sky, our beginner's guide to astrophotography and top tips for composing stunning shots are great resources to get started. For those looking to explore the cosmos in more detail, don't miss our roundup of the best telescopes available.

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Jamie Carter
Contributing Writer

Jamie is an experienced science, technology and travel journalist and stargazer who writes about exploring the night sky, solar and lunar eclipses, moon-gazing, astro-travel, astronomy and space exploration. He is the editor of WhenIsTheNextEclipse.com and author of A Stargazing Program For Beginners, and is a senior contributor at Forbes. His special skill is turning tech-babble into plain English.