The upper chart shows the path of Mercury 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, Mercury 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 Mercury 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, Mercury exhibits a complete range of phases, from new to crescent to gibbous to full and back again. Because its synodic period is around four months, Mercury completes this phase cycle three times each year. Note how Mercury's magnitude varies widely, ranging (approximately) from −2.0 to +6.0 between conjunctions.
The closest planet to the Sun can be a difficult object to spot. It begins the year in the western sky after sunset but disappears in early February. After inferior conjunction it reappears in the morning sky between late February and late April, an apparition which favours observers in equatorial and southern latitudes. Mercury has a particularly close appulse with Jupiter during this time. Superior conjunction in mid-April heralds another appearance after sunset from April to mid-June. This is the best evening apparition for planet watchers in the northern hemisphere but everyone can enjoy the spectacle of Mercury and Venus only 0.4° apart at the end of May. Inferior conjunction follows, then Mercury swings back into the morning sky for the months of June and July. After superior conjunction at the beginning of August, another evening apparition begins which runs from August to early October. This appearance is almost unobservable from northern temperate latitudes but provides the best viewing opportunities for astronomers in the southern hemisphere. These observers will also be in the best place to see Mercury slip past Mars in mid-August. The final morning apparition runs from mid-October to late November which is the best dawn appearance of the planet for far northern latitudes; this is followed by the final evening apparition in December. The lunar occultation of 4 December may well be unobservable.
01 January | elongation 7.3°, illuminated fraction 98.1%, magnitude −1.0, disk diameter 4.8 arc-seconds |
08 January | Sagittarius → Capricornus |
10 January | planetary conjunction: 1.6° south of Saturn |
11 January | planetary conjunction: 1.4° south of Jupiter |
14 January | 2.3° north of the Moon |
24 January | greatest elongation east: 18.6° |
ascending node | |
29 January | perihelion |
30 January | stationary point in right ascension: direct → retrograde |
01 February | elongation 14.1°, illuminated fraction 18.2%, magnitude +1.1, disk diameter 8.8 arc-seconds |
07 February | Capricornus → Aquarius |
08 February | inferior conjunction |
13 February | planetary conjunction: 4.6° north of Venus |
14 February | planetary conjunction: 3.9° north of Jupiter |
17 February | Aquarius → Capricornus |
20 February | stationary point in right ascension: retrograde → direct |
01 March | elongation 26.5°, illuminated fraction 46.9%, magnitude +0.3, disk diameter 7.8 arc-seconds |
03 March | descending node |
05 March | planetary conjunction: 0.3° north of Jupiter |
06 March | greatest elongation west: 27.3° |
13 March | Capricornus → Aquarius |
14 March | aphelion |
29 March | 1.4° south of Neptune |
01 April | elongation 17.2°, illuminated fraction 86.0%, magnitude −0.5, disk diameter 5.3 arc-seconds |
02 April | Aquarius → Pisces |
07 April | Pisces → Cetus |
10 April | Cetus → Pisces |
11 April | 3.0° north of the Moon |
19 April | Pisces → Aries |
superior conjunction | |
22 April | ascending node |
24 April | planetary conjunction: 0.7° north of Uranus |
25 April | planetary conjunction: 1.2° north of Venus |
27 April | perihelion |
01 May | elongation 13.4°, illuminated fraction 83.4%, magnitude −1.2, disk diameter 5.6 arc-seconds |
Aries → Taurus | |
13 May | 2.1° north of the Moon |
17 May | greatest elongation east: 22.0° |
18 May | maximum declination north |
29 May | planetary conjunction: 0.4° south of Venus |
30 May | stationary point in right ascension: direct → retrograde |
descending node | |
01 June | elongation 13.8°, illuminated fraction 7.7%, magnitude +2.9, disk diameter 11.2 arc-seconds |
10 June | aphelion |
11 June | inferior conjunction |
22 June | 1.8° north of Aldebaran |
23 June | stationary point in right ascension: retrograde → direct |
01 July | elongation 21.0°, illuminated fraction 27.0%, magnitude +1.0, disk diameter 8.7 arc-seconds |
04 July | greatest elongation west: 21.6° |
10 July | Taurus → Orion |
12 July | Orion → Gemini |
19 July | ascending node |
24 July | perihelion |
27 July | Gemini → Cancer |
01 August | elongation 1.8°, illuminated fraction 100.0%, magnitude −2.2, disk diameter 5.0 arc-seconds |
superior conjunction | |
05 August | Cancer → Leo |
19 August | planetary conjunction: 0.1° south of Mars |
26 August | Leo → Virgo |
descending node | |
01 September | elongation 23.8°, illuminated fraction 74.0%, magnitude +0.0, disk diameter 5.8 arc-seconds |
06 September | aphelion |
14 September | greatest elongation east: 26.8° |
21 September | 1.2° south of Spica |
27 September | stationary point in right ascension: direct → retrograde |
01 October | elongation 1.9°, illuminated fraction 0.0%, magnitude +5.7, disk diameter 10.1 arc-seconds |
09 October | inferior conjunction |
planetary conjunction: 2.5° south of Mars | |
15 October | ascending node |
18 October | stationary point in right ascension: retrograde → direct |
20 October | perihelion |
25 October | greatest elongation west: 18.4° |
01 November | elongation 16.5°, illuminated fraction 79.1%, magnitude −0.8, disk diameter 5.8 arc-seconds |
03 November | lunar occulation: 1.2° south of the Moon |
10 November | Virgo → Libra |
planetary conjunction: 1.0° north of Mars | |
24 November | Libra → Scorpius |
22 November | descending node |
29 November | Scorpius → Ophiuchus |
superior conjunction | |
01 December | elongation 1.4°, illuminated fraction 100.0%, magnitude −1.2, disk diameter 4.6 arc-seconds |
04 December | lunar occultation: 0.02° north of the Moon |
11 December | Ophiuchus → Sagittarius |
16 December | maximum declination south |
29 December | planetary conjunction: 4.2° south of Venus |
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.