Welcome to SkyEye, your guide to this month's celestial events.
Dark skies invite observations of the Leonid meteor shower mid-month. Jupiter, Saturn and the waxing crescent Moon are in close proximity on 19 November. The fourth and final penumbral lunar eclipse takes place at the end of the month.
Date | Body | Event |
---|---|---|
1 | ||
2 | Mercury | perihelion |
3 | Mercury | stationary point: retrograde → direct |
4 | Moon | ascending node |
5 | ||
6 | ||
7 | ||
8 | 3 Juno | conjunction |
Moon | last quarter | |
9 | ||
10 | Mercury | greatest elongation west: 19.1° |
11 | ||
12 | ||
13 | Moon, Mercury | 1.7° apart |
14 | Moon | perigee |
15 | Moon | new |
Mars | stationary point: retrograde → direct | |
16 | ||
17 | Earth | Leonid meteor shower |
Moon | descending node | |
18 | ||
19 | ||
20 | ||
21 | Earth | α Monocerotid meteor shower |
22 | Moon | first quarter |
23 | ||
24 | ||
25 | ||
26 | ||
27 | Moon | apogee |
28 | ||
29 | Neptune | stationary point: retrograde → direct |
30 | Earth, Moon | penumbral lunar eclipse |
Moon | full |
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.
Sun Libra → Scorpius → Ophiuchus
Although Ophiuchus is not a member of the zodiac, the ecliptic passes through it.
Mercury reaches its fourth and final perihelion this year on 2 November and reaches a stationary point the next day when it completes retrograde motion. Greatest elongation west (19.1°) occurs on 10 November and three days later the waning crescent Moon passes 1.7° north of the tiny planet. Mercury is a morning sky object and is putting on its best dawn appearance of 2020 for planet chasers in northern temperate latitudes. Conversely, this is the worst morning apparition of the year for observers in the southern hemisphere. The closest planet to the Sun is brightening throughout the month, beginning November at magnitude +1.5 and ending at −0.8.
In the northern hemisphere, the morning star continues to decline in altitude from dawn to dawn but is still around 30° or more above the horizon this month. The morning apparition is not so favourable for southern latitudes although Venus does not drop appreciably in altitude over the course of the month. When viewed through a telescope, Venus appears as a waxing gibbous globe, slowing diminishing in diameter as the planet gets farther from Earth. It remains at magnitude −4.0 for the rest of the year.
The last penumbral lunar eclipse of the year occurs on the last day of the month. This means that the Leonid meteor shower occurs during the waxing crescent phase of the Moon and the α Monocerotids around the time of First Quarter Moon. The result is very little lunar interference in the early morning observations of these two showers.
At opposition in mid-October, Mars is now receding from Earth, growing fainter and smaller in a telecopic eyepiece. It loses an entire magnitude this month, dimming from −2.1 to −1.1. On 15 November it finishes retrograde motion. The red planet is already aloft during evening twilight and sets in the early morning hours.
Jupiter is an evening sky object and sets before midnight. It is best viewed from southern latitudes where it is higher in the sky. The gas giant dims slightly this month, from magnitude −2.2 to −2.0, and has a close encounter with the waxing crescent Moon on 19 November.
Saturn is not far from the position of Jupiter in the evening sky although the ringed planet is considerably fainter at magnitude +0.5. On 19 November, the waxing crescent Moon pairs up with the two gas giants, providing a picturesque view.
Now just past opposition, the sixth-magnitude planet is visible for most of the night, setting just ahead of the rising Sun. Although technically a naked-eye object, you will need a dark moonless night to attempt to see it without optical aids.
Neptune completes its retrograde motion for the year (it began in June). A small telescope is necessary to view the most distant planet in the solar system, visible in the evening sky and setting after midnight.