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Everything you need to know about planet Venus – Astronomy Now
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Venusian trio: ESA teams up with NASA to send another spacecraft to Venus
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Catch Venus, Mars and the moon close together in the night sky
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“It’s a very special event,” said NASA’s Dr. Jim Garvin. “Our two neighbors, Venus and Mars, will appear in the same spot, just about on top of one another in the sky, right next to the crescent moon.”
Look to the western horizon just after sunset and you should see the crescent moon, bright shining Venus and the red dot of Mars.
The planets closest approach will be Tuesday. The pair will only be about 4 degrees above the west-northwestern horizon as evening twilight ends.
Venus will continue to appear to shift to the left in the evenings to follow, moving away from Mars and toward the bright star Regulus.
Catch Venus, Mars and moon close together in the night sky
The moon flanked by three planets: Venus the brightest below, Mars, just above the Moon, and Jupiter, the bright object at top seen in Portal, Arizona, on December 6, 2015. (Photo by: Alan Dyer /VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
by: Sarah Molano and Ashley Strickland, CNN
Posted:
Jul 12, 2021 / 09:33 PM EST
(CNN) Skywatchers are in for an (inter)stellar treat this week.
Look up and you can gaze upon a dazzling view of Venus, Mars and the moon Monday and Tuesday nights, according to EarthSky.
Venus and Mars have been moving toward one another all weekend, culminating in their closest meeting during the early hours of Tuesday, July 13, around 3 a.m. ET. As seen from Earth, the planets will appear only half a degree or only a finger’s width apart, according to NASA. This meeting of planets in the sky is referred to as a planetary conjunction.