Yesterday saw the Moon near Venus, tonight will see the pair even closer. It will be hard to miss the bright pair only 5° apart. Venus will be shining brilliantly at about -4.2 magnitude next to a 17% illuminated Moon. Jupiter can be seen 16° above the pair. Mercury is visible just above the sunset.
Tag: Moon
The Moon and Venus
The nice evening planetary alignment continues tonight. This evening will feature a nice pairing of Venus and the Moon. It will be hard to miss the bright pair only 8° apart. Venus will be shining brilliantly at about -4.2 magnitude next to a 10% illuminated Moon. Jupiter can be seen 16° above the pair. Mercury is visible just above the sunset. The Moon and Venus will be even closer tomorrow night, only 5° apart.
Postcard from the Universe – The Moon and Mercury
A very thin Moon could be seen last night. Only 1.1 days old the Moon was only 1.6% illuminated, a thin crescent indeed. A few degrees away was Mercury. I did get a couple photos with a telephoto lens before the clouds moved in and obscured the view…

The Moon and Mercury
This evening a thin crescent Moon will join Mercury in the sunset. The pair will be separated by just under 6°, at about the same elevation and 15° above the horizon at sunset. The Moon will be extremely thin, only 1.7% illuminated, while Mercury is shining at -1.2 magnitude.
New Moon
The Moon and Saturn
Saturn will be about 7.5° from the Moon when they rise tonight. A 73% illuminated Moon will rise about 22:28, followed by Saturn at 22:58HST. The Moon will also be quite close to the bright star Spica, less than two degrees away from the 1st magnitude star.
The Moon and Mars
Tonight a nearly full Moon will rise together with the planet Mars. The pair will rise about 20:28 and will be about 9° apart.
Mars is approaching opposition, as the Earth draws closer to the red planet it is getting larger and brighter in our sky. It is now over 12 arc-seconds in diameter and shining at -0.8 magnitude. Opposition will occur March 3rd.
Full Moon
The Moon and Pleiades
Tonight a bright gibbous Moon will be just under 5° from the Pleiades star cluster. The Moon will be 62% illuminated, bright, but the cluster is bright enough to be seen even against a bright Moon. As the Pleiades move to the west over coming months there will be a few more lunar conjunctions, with increasingly smaller crescents.
The Moon and Jupiter
Tonight will see a brilliant Jupiter near the Moon. The pair will be separated by about 5.5° high in the evening sky. Jupiter will shine brightly at -2.4 magnitude, a nice match for a 41% illuminated Moon.