Welcome to SkyEye, your guide to this month's celestial events.
Date | Event | |
---|---|---|
1 | Thursday | The New Moon appears between the Earth and the Sun to form an annular solar eclipse which cuts across central Africa and Madagascar. |
2 | Friday | Saturn at east quadrature |
Neptune at opposition | ||
Moon occults Jupiter: daytime event | ||
3 | Saturday | Moon occults Venus: daytime event |
4 | Sunday | |
5 | Monday | |
6 | Tuesday | Moon at apogee |
7 | Wednesday | |
8 | Thursday | |
9 | Friday | First Quarter Moon |
10 | Saturday | |
11 | Sunday | |
12 | Monday | Mercury at inferior conjunction |
13 | Tuesday | Mars at east quadrature |
14 | Wednesday | |
15 | Thursday | Moon occults Neptune: visible from northern Europe and western Russia, and beginning around 18:50 UT. |
16 | Friday | The Full Moon is busy tonight! Not only is this the famed Harvest Moon, the full moon nearest to the September equinox, it also participates in a faint penumbral lunar eclipse. |
17 | Saturday | |
18 | Sunday | Moon at perigee |
19 | Monday | |
20 | Tuesday | |
21 | Wednesday | Moon occults first magnitude star Aldebaran: visible from central Africa, Middle East, and India, and beginning around 20:15 UT. |
22 | Thursday | Earth at equinox: the word equinox means 'equal night' so that on this day, the (centre of the) Sun spends an equal amount of time above and below the horizon everywhere on the planet. |
23 | Friday | Last Quarter Moon |
24 | Saturday | |
25 | Sunday | |
26 | Monday | Jupiter at conjunction |
27 | Tuesday | |
28 | Wednesday | Mercury at greatest elongation west |
29 | Thursday | Moon occults Mercury: daytime event |
30 | Friday | Moon occults Jupiter: daytime event |
The word planet is derived from the Greek word for 'wanderer'. Unlike the background stars, planets seem to move around the sky, keeping mostly to a narrow track called the ecliptic, the path of the Sun across the stars. Dwarf planets and small solar-system bodies, including comets, are not so constrained, often moving far above or below the ecliptic.
The solar north pole is most inclined toward the Earth early this month.
This tiny planet still shows up in the west after sunset for southern hemisphere observers but soon vanishes to undergo inferior conjunction on 12 September. Mercury reappears in the east before sunrise late in the month when it is best seen from northern latitudes. It attains greatest elongation west on 28 September and is occulted by the Moon the following day.
Venus Virgo
The evening star stays close to the western horizon as seen from the northern hemisphere but for southern observers, Venus gets appreciably higher in the sky as the month progresses. The Moon occults Venus during the daytime on the third day of the month.
Mars Scorpius → Ophiuchus → Sagittarius
The red planet reaches east quadrature on 13 September and sets mid-evening after Saturn.
Jupiter Virgo
At solar conjunction on 26 September, the largest planet in the solar system is lost in the Sun's glare this month. It is occulted by the Moon twice, on the second and on the last day of the month but cannot be observed in either instance. Jupiter reappears in the morning sky next month.
Saturn Ophiuchus
At east quadrature on 2 September, the interplay of shadows — disc, rings, satellites — in the Saturnian system are at their most pronounced. Saturn sets ever earlier in the evening.
Uranus Pisces
Uranus rises in mid-evening and is getting ever brighter as it approaches opposition next month.
Neptune Aquarius
A small telescope is necessary to view the most distant planet in the solar system. Opposition is on the second day of the month so this blue ice giant is aloft most of the night. Parts of Europe and Russia may see this planet occulted by the Moon on 15 September.