Moon Joins Three Planets in Stunning Night Sky Parade This Week
Moon Joins Three Planets in Stunning Night Sky Parade This Week

Skygazers are in for a treat as the celestial bodies are ready to put on a show once again. For thousands of years, people have stepped outside at dusk to watch these slow, silent dances happen mesmerizingly overhead. This week, the heavens are lining up for one of those moments, and the Moon will be in alignment with several other celestial bodies right after sunset.

Moon Joins the Mesmerizing Planetary Parade

This week brings a rare chance to see three planets and a slender crescent Moon clustered together in the early evening sky. According to BBC Sky at Night Magazine, the Moon is joining the ongoing planet parade, and some lucky observers will even catch a rare daylight lunar occultation of Venus on 17 June, when the planet briefly slips behind the Moon.

The timing of this event is quite important as Venus and Jupiter were at their closest this year on 9 June, and the two are now drifting apart. As the magazine notes, Venus's position is improving while Jupiter's visibility is worsening. The giant planet is sliding toward the same patch of sky as the Sun, and by the end of June 2025, it will be hard to spot. So this week is the perfect moment to look.

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What Planetary Bodies Will Be Visible in the Night Sky?

On 15 June, the three planets were lined up nearly in a straight pattern, low in the northwest just after sunset. According to BBC Sky at Night Magazine, Mercury was closest to the horizon, with Jupiter above and to its left, and Venus above Jupiter.

On the evening of 16 June, a very thin crescent Moon will appear beside a dim Mercury, low in the west-northwest. Because both are faint and lost in the horizon glow, you can use a much brighter Venus and Jupiter to guide your eye down toward them.

By the evening of 17 June, the crescent Moon will move a bit to sit near Venus, which is the brightest object in the night sky. Indians can view this conjunction of heavenly bodies on the evening of the 17th.

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