Welcome to SkyEye, your guide to this month's celestial events!
All times and dates are in UT with the time given to the nearest 30 minutes.
Planetary positions are geocentric apparent places, referred to the true equator and equinox of date.
Day | Events |
---|---|
1 | The NEW MOON occults the first-magnitude star α Sco (Antares) but the event will not be visible due to the close proximity of the Sun. The enigmatic Phoenicid meteor shower may peak today. |
2 | At 02:00, the very slender crescent Moon moves 4.9° south of Mercury. |
3 | Mars is 1.3° north of the open cluster M44 (Beehive) at 14:00. |
4 | Saturn reaches east quadrature today. At 22:30, the Moon and Venus are 2.3° apart in the evening sky. Also, look for the Puppid-Velid meteor shower which peaks around this time and will benefit from mostly moonless skies. |
5 | |
6 | Mercury is at inferior conjunction. |
7 | Jupiter is at opposition, shining at magnitude −2.8 in the constellation of Taurus. Mars enters into retrograde motion today. |
8 | The FIRST QUARTER MOON occults Saturn in an event beginning around 09:00. Neptune reaches a stationary point and returns to direct motion. |
9 | The minor σ Hydrid meteor shower peaks today and is not unduly inconvenienced by moonlight. The waxing gibbous Moon occults Neptune beginning at 08:00 and reaches its ascending node about 11 hours later. |
10 | |
11 | |
12 | The Moon is at perigee. |
13 | The Moon is 4.4° north of Uranus at 09:30 and occults the open cluster M45 (Pleiades) at 17:00. |
14 | The major meteor shower of the month, the Geminids, is largely lost to moonlight. Jupiter and the Moon are 5.5° apart at 19:00. |
15 | The instant of FULL MOON occurs at about 09:00. Mercury returns to direct motion later in the day. |
16 | |
17 | The waning gibbous Moon is 2.0° south of the first-magnitude star β Gem (Pollux) at 12:00. |
18 | Mars is occulted by the Moon at 09:00 and at 11:30, the Moon passes 2.7° north of the open cluster M44 (Beehive). Neptune reaches east quadrature. |
19 | |
20 | The waning gibbous Moon is 2.5° north of the first-magnitude star α Leo (Regulus) at 05:30. |
21 | Earth arrives at solstice, bringing the beginning of summer to the southern hemisphere and winter to the north. |
22 | The LAST QUARTER MOON passes through its descending node. The light of our satellite may interfere with observations of the Ursid meteor shower which peaks at 10:00. However, Earth may also encounter a filament of this shower the previous day. |
23 | |
24 | The waning crescent Moon occults the first-magnitude star α Vir (Spica) at 19:30. |
25 | Mercury reaches its greatest elongation west of 22.0°. |
26 | |
27 | |
28 | The Moon occults the first-magnitude star α Sco (Antares) at 14:30. |
29 | The very slender waning crescent Moon approaches Mercury to within 6.4° at 04:30. |
30 | The second NEW MOON in a month is sometimes referred to as a Black Moon. |
31 | Mars attains its maximum northerly declination for the year. |