Sometimes it would help if your “sky views” indicated the “seen from” latitude. This would help in the identification of which planet we are actually seeing. Plan Your Day. Grow Your Life. Enter your email address to receive our free Newsletter!
✅ You live in an urban area: This scope has a Smart Light Pollution Reduction feature that removes light pollution, s it's a great option if you don't live near a dark sky site.✅ You want simplicity: This is an incredibly sleek, all-in-one telescope that has no need for additi...
EZ Lorenz 🇺🇸 📸Did you see the brightest planet, Venus, near the waxing crescent moon tonight? They were setting not long after sunset over Lake Washington, taken from Bellevue, WA. 11.04.24#Moon #Venus
4 years ago Very good pictures and explained very well, but what do you mean by opposition or opposite the sun Susan Higgins Reply toLiz Hohlbein 4 years ago Plan Your Day. Grow Your Life. Enter your email address to receive our free Newsletter!
The planets are hard to find too. The pretty icons on the map can help but the red text is too dark against the black background. Things near the galactic equator are hard because the Milky Way image is much too bright. Finally, the new moon is shown as black. OK, it really is ...
The planets are hard to find too. The pretty icons on the map can help but the red text is too dark against the black background. Things near the galactic equator are hard because the Milky Way image is much too bright. Finally, the new moon is shown as black. OK, it really is ...
Saturn— The ringed wonder Saturn should shine near a waning gibbous moon the morning of March 12, but there will be ample opportunity to see the planet before the end of the month. Saturn rises around 1 a.m. local daylight time and comes up sooner each night through the month. By the...
When planets are involved, their near appearance usually happens in the same right ascension. They really aren’t any closer to each other than what their orbital path dictates – it just appears that way. In the same respect, there is also conjunction in ecliptical longitude. But, if the ...
The Dance of the Planets is here yet again, with a conjunction of the planets Venus, Mars, Uranus, and the crescent Moon, all visible together tonight in the evening sky. Venus and the Moon will of course be the brightest of these, but the reddish body of Mars should be fairly visible...
The planets are hard to find too. The pretty icons on the map can help but the red text is too dark against the black background. Things near the galactic equator are hard because the Milky Way image is much too bright. Finally, the new moon is shown as black. OK, it really is bu...