SkyEye

Solar System Phenomena — Venus in 2023

The path of Venus against the background stars in 2023

The upper chart shows the path of Venus across the background stars over the course of the year. Stars to magnitude +4.5 are shown with some fainter objects included to complete constellation patterns. The white circles represent the planet on the first day of the month and are scaled according to apparent magnitude. The faint paths before the first circle and after the last circle represent the planet's positions in December of last year and January of next. In general, the planet moves from right to left except when it's in retrograde and proceding in the opposite direction. As an inferior planet, Venus never strays far from the Sun so it always begins and ends the year near the constellation of Sagittarius, located about one quarter of the way in from the left side of the chart.

The lower charts show how the appearance of Venus changes over the year. Below each image is listed the date, the apparent magnitude, the apparent diameter of the disk (in arc-seconds), the geocentric distance (in au), the elongation from the Sun (in degrees) and the percentage of the disk which is illuminated. Like the Moon, Venus exhibits a complete range of phases, from new to crescent to gibbous to full and back again. Unlike the Moon, however, Venus takes over a year to complete this phase cycle. Note how Venus is at its brightest during its crescent phase, when it is relatively close to the Earth.

Venus enters 2023 as the evening star. This apparition is a good one for just about all locations on Earth, with the bright planet reaching well over 40° in altitude as seen from equatorial regions. Venus dips below the western horizon in August as it undergoes inferior conjunction, only to return as the morning star soon after. Again, tropical latitudes are favoured but Venus still puts on a good show for observers north and south of the equator.

January
1maximum declination south: −22.10°
2SagittariusCapricornus
22planetary conjunction: 0.3° north of Saturn
233.5° north of the Moon
24CapricornusAquarius
February
15planetary conjunction: 0.012° north of Neptune
16AquariusPisces
222.1° north of the Moon
26PiscesCetus
27CetusPisces
March
2planetary conjunction: 0.9° north of Jupiter
16PiscesAries
14ascending node
24lunar occultation: 0.1° north of the Moon (visible from southeast Asia)
30planetary conjunction: 1.2° south of Uranus
April
7AriesTaurus
112.5° south of the open cluster M45 (Pleiades)
17perihelion: 0.718 au
231.3° south of the Moon
May
8TaurusGemini
10maximum declination north: +25.09°
232.2° south of the Moon
June
3GeminiCancer
4dichotomy
greatest elongation east: 45.4°
130.5° north of the open cluster M44 (Praesepe)
223.7° south of the Moon
26CancerLeo
July
4descending node
161.7° south of first-magnitude α Leonis (Regulus)
207.9° south of the Moon
21stationary in right ascension: direct → retrograde
23stationary in ecliptic longitude: direct → retrograde
27planetary conjunction: 5.1° north of Mercury
August
8aphelion: 0.728 au
12LeoCancer
13inferior conjunction
1513.3° south of the Moon
September
3stationary in right ascension: retrograde → direct
4stationary in ecliptic longitude: retrograde → direct
1111.4° south of the Moon
25CancerLeo
October
92.3° south of first-magnitude α Leonis (Regulus)
106.5° south of the Moon
22dichotomy
23greatest elongation west: 46.4°
25ascending node
November
2LeoVirgo
9lunar occultation: 1.0° south of the Moon (visible from Greenland, Iceland and the Arctic)
28perihelion: 0.718 au
December
93.6° north of the Moon
11VirgoLibra
31LibraScorpius

Sources

The dates, times and circumstances of all planetary and lunar phenomena were calculated from the JPL DE406 solar system ephemeris using the same rigorous methods that are employed in the compilation of publications such as The Astronomical Almanac. Dates of dichotomy are taken from 'Theoretical Dichotomy of Venus, 2000–2040', Jean Meeus, Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 110 (2), 83 (April 2000).