Welcome to SkyEye, your guide to this month's celestial events.
Date | Event | |
---|---|---|
Tuesday | 1 | |
Wednesday | 2 | Moon at apogee |
Thursday | 3 | |
Friday | 4 | |
Saturday | 5 | |
Sunday | 6 | |
Monday | 7 | Full Moon in a partial lunar eclipse |
Tuesday | 8 | |
Wednesday | 9 | Moon occults Neptune: visible from Antarctic and western Australia, beginning around 22:00 UT. |
Thursday | 10 | |
Friday | 11 | |
Saturday | 12 | The waning gibbous Moon illuminates the sky when the radiant of the Perseid meteor shower is at a reasonable altitude, interfering with observations. The traditional peak occurs between 14:00 UT today and 02:30 UT tomorrow. |
Sunday | 13 | |
Monday | 14 | |
Tuesday | 15 | Last Quarter Moon |
Wednesday | 16 | Moon occults Aldebaran: visible from northern South America and Caribbean, beginning around 04:50 UT. |
Thursday | 17 | |
Friday | 18 | Moon at perigee |
Saturday | 19 | |
Sunday | 20 | |
Monday | 21 | New Moon in a total solar eclipse |
Tuesday | 22 | |
Wednesday | 23 | |
Thursday | 24 | |
Friday | 25 | |
Saturday | 26 | Mercury at inferior conjunction |
Sunday | 27 | |
Monday | 28 | |
Tuesday | 29 | First Quarter Moon |
Wednesday | 30 | Moon at the nearest apogee of the year |
Thursday | 31 |
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.
Mercury sinks quickly in the evening sky and is gone from view early in the month for northern hemisphere observers. It lasts a little longer for those watching from southern latitudes but the tiny planet eventually disappears as it heads for inferior conjunction on 26 August.
Lingering high in the dawn sky as seen from the northern hemisphere, the morning star is rapidly losing altitude above the eastern horizon for southern latitudes.
The red planet was at conjunction with the Sun late last month and is lost to view in solar glare this month. It reappears in the morning sky in October.
Jupiter Virgo
Jupiter sets by mid-evening. Look for it in the west as the sky darkens.
Saturn Ophiuchus
The ringed planet is easier to observe than its neighbour Jupiter. Southern hemisphere observers get the best views but planet spotters in the northern hemisphere also have a chance to see Saturn before it sets around midnight.
Uranus Pisces
Uranus rises mid-evening and is aloft for the rest of the night.
Neptune Aquarius
A small telescope is necessary to view the most distant planet in the solar system and this is the best time to look because Neptune is at opposition early next month, meaning it's at its closest and brightest. Some observers in the southern hemisphere will see the Moon occult Neptune on 9 August.