Highlights
Lilo & Stitch - Frog's POV Clip
Lilo & Stitch
Thunderbolts* - Official Behind the Scenes Clip
Thunderbolts*
Cleaner - Daisy Ridley Exclusive Interview
Cleaner
Anemone - Daniel Day-Lewis and Ronan Day-Lewis at the New York Film Festival World Premiere
Anemone
Elio - Gift Bag Beam Me Write Up Clip
Elio
Black Rabbit Season 1 - Jason Bateman and Jude Law
Black Rabbit
Bosch: Legacy - Titus Welliver Exclusive Interview
Bosch: Legacy
Good Boy - Indy in the Basement
Good Boy
The Roses - Benedict Cumberbatch Premiere Interview
The Roses
Good Boy - Indy in the Woods
Good Boy
Tron: Ares - Teaser Clip
TRON: Ares
Monster: The Ed Gein Story Season 1 - Lesley Manville as Bernice Worden
Monster: The Ed Gein Story
Superman - Official Teaser Trailer
Superman
Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy - Aaron O'Connell and Shannon Thornton
Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy
A Minecraft Movie - Danielle Brooks Exclusive Interview
A Minecraft Movie
Percy Jackson and the Olympians Season 2 - Percy Character Poster
Percy Jackson and the Olympians
The Sky at Night

The Sky at Night (1957-2025) - 1977 Episodes and Ratings

1977 Episodes

1. Sirius, the Dog-Star

January 17th, 1977

Sirius is now at its best in the evening sky. It is one of our nearest stellar neighbours, and is much more luminous than the sun. It seems to flash all colours but is really a white star, it has a strange, super-dense White Dwarf companion. Patrick Moore and lain Nicolson discuss some of the questions associated with Sirius.

2. Travel in Space and Time

February 17th, 1977

How big is the universe - and does it have a boundary? Distances on the astronomer's scale are very hard to appreciate. Patrick Moore and Dr Ron Maddison discuss them in this programme, and explain how to describe them in everyday terms.

3. The Mapping of Mercury

March 16th, 1977

First detailed photographs of Mercury, the innermost planet, were obtained by the American space-probe Mariner 10. Maps of Mercury have been drawn from these photographs by Arthur Cross and in this programme he joins Patrick Moore to explain how the maps were made and what they have told us.

4. Celebrates its 20th anniversary

April 20th, 1977

In April 1957 The Sky at Night began. It could not have started at a better time; within months the Space Age opened, with the launch of Sputnik 1, and over the next few years astronomy saw some of the most spectacular advances of all time. Today, 20 years later, men have visited the moon; rockets have flown past the planets and even landed on some of them; new giant telescopes have probed further into the universe than Man has ever done before, and each year brings its new quota of discoveries. Every month, since April 1957, The Sky at Night has presented the changing scene. In this 20th anniversary programme Patrick Moore discusses the past and the future with some of Britain's leading figures in astronomy.

5. The Solar Cycle

May 18th, 1977

Sunspots are known to increase and decrease over an 11-year cycle. We have just passed through a period of minimum solar activity and the sun-spots should now be increasing, but are slow to do so. Patrick Moore and Dr Ron Maddi son discuss the possible causes of this apparent irregularity. in the solar cycle, and talk about some of the other interesting features of the sun's surface.

6. Uranus - the Second Ringed Planet?

June 15th, 1977

For centuries the ringed planet Saturn has been regarded as unique. This year the startling discovery has been reported that Uranus also has a system of rings - though as yet they have not been seen directly. Patrick Moore discusses this new development with Gordon Taylor, of the Royal Greenwich Observatory. who has made special studies of Uranus, and Dr Garry Hunt, who is closely involved with plans for Voyager, the unmanned space-craft due to bypass Uranus in the 1980s.

7. The New Infra-red Telescope

July 20th, 1977

This month an important new British telescope has been completed. It is destined to be set up in Hawaii, and it is not an ordinary telescope; it is designed to study infra-red radiation from space, which cannot be seen directly but which is all-important in modern science. Professor Vincent Reddish , Astronomer Royal for Scotland, describes the Hawaiian telescope, and Patrick Moore talks to Professor James Ring about its likely role in infra-red astronomy.

8. The Swan in the Sky

August 10th, 1977

Cygnus, the Swan, is one of the most beautiful of the constellations, and it contains some spectacular objects, including the very luminous Deneb - a star at least 10,000 times more powerful than the Sun-and the lovely coloured double star Albireo. Very recently astronomers have found a new object in Cygnus-a star surrounded by a highly luminous disc from which planets may be in the process of formation. In this programme, Patrick Moore shows where to look for Cygnus, and describes some of the interesting objects on view there.

9. The Voyager Missions

September 7th, 1977

The two Voyager probes to the outer planets are probably the most ambitious of all automatic space-craft launched up to the present time. They should send back important new information about Jupiter, Saturn and their satellites - they may even go on to study Uranus and Neptune before finally leaving the Solar System altogether. Patrick Moore discusses the Voyager projects with Dr Garry Hunt of University College London, who has been involved in the planning of the missions.

10. Stars of the Far South

September 28th, 1977

How many people living in Britain have seen the Southern Cross? It never rises over Europe, but it is a familiar sight to those who live in the Southern Hemisphere. The stars of the far south are indeed of special interest, and Patrick Moore talks about them, explaining why they are important and the reasons why they are invisible from Britain. Many of the new giant telescopes are being set up in the Southern Hemisphere to study objects of particular significance, such as the Clouds of Magellan, and in this programme PATRICK MOORE talks about these new developments with Dr David Allen , who is carrying out research at Siding Spring Observatory in Australia.

11. The Amateur Astronomer

October 24th, 1977

Astronomy is still one of the few sciences in which the amateur can play a useful part. Paul Doherty , who specialises in planetary observations, is an amateur astronomer who has built his own observatory and 16-inch reflecting telescope. Patrick Moore visits him at his observatory to discuss its construction and the observational work being carried out there.

12. Why Do the Planets Shine?

November 23rd, 1977

All the bright planets are now visible in the early morning sky. Some of them seem to outshine the stars, and yet they have no light of their own. They shine only by reflecting the light of the sun. The different ways in which they reflect the sunlight tell us a great deal about the planets themselves. Patrick Moore talks about the reflecting powers of the planets and what they can tell us with Dr Peter Cattermole of Sheffield University.

13. Suns, Space-ships, and Bug-eyed Monsters

December 14th, 1977

Ever since the days of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, science fiction and space exploration have been closely linked, and over the last 100 years science fiction has often become science fact. Rockets to the moon, orbiting stations, missions to Mars and the outer planets-all these were forecast decades ago. Patrick Moore talks to Arthur C. Clarke, science-fiction writer, who describes himself as an armchair astronaut, and The Sky at Night welcomes the return of Michael Bentine, best known as a humorist, but who is also a serious and dedicated scientist.

All Seasons

2025

2025

Apr 14, 2025
2024

2024

Apr 8, 2024
2023

2023

Apr 10, 2023
70
2022

2022

Jan 9, 2022
80
2021

2021

Jan 17, 2021
2020

2020

Jan 12, 2020
2019

2019

Jan 13, 2019
2018

2018

Jan 14, 2018
2017

2017

Jan 8, 2017
2016

2016

Feb 14, 2016
2015

2015

Jan 11, 2015
2014

2014

Feb 9, 2014
2013

2013

Jan 7, 2013
2012

2012

Jan 9, 2012
2011

2011

Jan 3, 2011
2010

2010

Jan 4, 2010
2009

2009

Jan 5, 2009
2008

2008

Jan 7, 2008
2007

2007

Jan 7, 2007
2006

2006

Jan 2, 2006
2005

2005

Jan 3, 2005
2004

2004

Jan 4, 2004
2003

2003

Jan 6, 2003
2002

2002

Jan 7, 2002
2001

2001

Jan 8, 2001
2000

2000

Jan 17, 2000
1999

1999

Jan 11, 1999
1998

1998

Jan 12, 1998
1997

1997

Jan 27, 1997
1996

1996

Jan 8, 1996
1995

1995

Jan 9, 1995
1994

1994

Jan 9, 1994
1993

1993

Jan 10, 1993
1992

1992

Jan 12, 1992
1991

1991

Jan 21, 1991
1990

1990

Jan 22, 1990
1989

1989

Jan 15, 1989
1988

1988

Jan 17, 1988
1987

1987

Jan 18, 1987
1986

1986

Jan 11, 1986
1985

1985

Jan 13, 1985
1984

1984

Jan 8, 1984
1983

1983

Sep 9, 1983
1982

1982

Jan 10, 1982
1981

1981

Jan 11, 1981
1980

1980

Jan 10, 1980
1979

1979

Jan 10, 1979
1978

1978

Jan 11, 1978
1977

1977

Jan 17, 1977
1976

1976

Jan 21, 1976
1975

1975

Jan 6, 1975
1974

1974

Jan 27, 1974
1973

1973

Jan 8, 1973
1972

1972

Jan 5, 1972
1971

1971

Jan 13, 1970
1970

1970

Jan 12, 1970
1969

1969

Jan 27, 1969
1968

1968

Jan 5, 1968
1967

1967

Jan 6, 1967
1966

1966

Jan 14, 1966
1965

1965

Jan 15, 1965
1964

1964

Jan 10, 1964
1963

1963

Jan 23, 1963
1962

1962

Jan 17, 1962
1961

1961

Jan 30, 1961
1960

1960

Jan 20, 1960
1959

1959

Jan 12, 1959
1958

1958

Jan 8, 1958
1957

1957

Apr 24, 1957
69
Specials

Specials

Aug 3, 1969