“Saturday evening, January 18: Venus and Saturn will appear nearest to each other. As evening twilight ends at 6:15 p.m. EST, ...
Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars will appear to line up and be bright enough to see with the naked eye in the first few hours ...
This Monday night you can watch the full “Wolf Moon” rise to occult Mars ... sky after sunset for the past few weeks, you’ll have seen this coming. Saturn has been sinking and Venus rising ...
Skywatchers across the southern hemisphere will witness Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars forming a stunning lineup in the twilight sky, accompanied by the bright stars Altair and Fomalhaut.
It will also be shining at its brightest for 2025 at magnitude -1.4; just a trifle dimmer than Sirius, the brightest star in the sky. On January 13, an occultation/eclipse of Mars by the full moon ...
In January, you have the opportunity to take in four bright planets—Jupiter, Mars, Venus, and Saturn—in a single sweeping view each night. (Neptune and Uranus will also be there, but not ...
In the weeks and months that follow, Mars will become a fixture in the evening sky ... one degree north of Venus. a ringed planet in space with small moons labeled Saturn shines like a yellowish ...
Early January: Venus and Saturn begin to draw close in the southwest ... Venus, Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars will light up the ...
"What makes it significant for this January is that we actually have Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars — four bright, visible planets — in the evening sky easy to see at a comfortable time of ...
Keep an eye on the sky Monday evening to see the wolf moon, the first full moon of the year. And some sky-gazers will be able to glimpse a cosmic magic trick when the moon appears to pass in front ...
Mars isn’t the only planet to keep an eye out for this month. Sky-gazers can look forward to catching glimpses of four bright planets at the same time in the night sky. Venus and Saturn will ...