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Jupiter and Venus, the two brightest planets in our solar system, should be widely visible for much of August in the northern ...
Wake up early to witness the year's most dazzling planetary pairing as Venus and Jupiter close in for a celestial rendezvous.
Plus: The August Full Sturgeon Moon shines, the colorful double star Albireo sparkles, and Mercury reappears in the sky this ...
The planetary meet up between the two brightest planets in our solar system is known as the conjunction and takes place over ...
Dog days. These hot August nights can be great for stargazing. Here’s a look at what’s going on above us right now and later ...
This rare planetary alignment will be visible from August 10 but will be best viewed later in the month. Here’s everything ...
It is all happening in August! We are just days away from the peak of the Perseids, there is going to be a Black Moon later ...
The moon and Venus coming together in the night sky is not a rare event. It happens quite regularly because of the standard orbital movements of the moon and Venus around the Earth and the sun.
Mercury, Venus and Mars — the other three rocky planets in the solar system — will be closely grouped with a slender waxing gibbous crescent moon in the early-evening western night sky from ...
The superior Venus sun conjunction marks the halfway point between Venus’s last retrograde (which happened mid-2020) and her upcoming retrograde, set to occur at this year’s end.
Like a new moon, when Venus and the sun align, it's an ideal time to set an intention or make a wish. So as the week ends, take time to ground into your values, vision, and desires (again).
You may need binoculars to spot Mercury just west of Venus and slightly above. If you really want the best-ever view of Mercury, wait until May 17, 2021, when it will be at its greatest elongation ...