Look to the southwest sky after sunset on Saturday, as the sliver of a waxing crescent moon nears bright Venus with Saturn ...
The night sky will feature a parade of its own in the coming weeks, with several planets visible for sky watchers to enjoy.
Within the first hour and a half hour after sunset, you can see four planets without a telescope. Mars, Jupiter, Venus, and ...
A good environment to see the stars--one of the brightest is the planet, Venus. But there are five more planets out here ...
The new moon of January will be at 7:36 a.m. Eastern Time on Jan. 29, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory, and two days ...
Six of our cosmic neighbors are expected to line up across the night sky tonight, in what has been dubbed a "planetary parade ...
The number of planets that orbit the sun depends on what you mean by “planet,” and that’s not so easy to define ...
In the southwest sky, glorious Venus was ablaze with dimmer Saturn getting closer ... At the end of the parade of planets was bright and reddish-orange Mars in the east on the horizon.
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn are visible to the naked eye this month and for part of February. Uranus and Neptune can be spotted with binoculars and telescopes.
Stargazers who haven't had a chance to check out this month's planet parade will want to look up soon because there's ...
"Mars is next brightest and will appear to viewers as very orange/red and low in the eastern sky. Saturn is faintest and is diagonally upwards and south from Venus." The more planets involved in a ...