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1 day ago · The waning crescent moon will be near Jupiter on July 30. Jupiter will rise about two hours before the sun on July 1 and will rise over three hours before sunrise by month’s end.
- Mercury. Mercury — is at inferior conjunction with the sun on June 10 and enters the morning sky. At month's end, you might be able to glimpse Mercury with binoculars low in the east-northeast about an hour before sunrise in morning twilight.
- Venus. Venus — always a dazzling object languishes low in June's long dusks. All month it's magnitude -3.8, the dimmest it ever becomes except when passing between the Earth and the sun.
- Earth. Earth — will see the sun arrive at that point where it is farthest north of the celestial equator, on June 20 at 11:32 p.m. EDT (0332 June 21 GMT).
- Mars. Mars — in early June, sets three hours after the sun, but by month's end, it will set shortly before the close of evening twilight and will be found 18 degrees west (lower right) of the blue first magnitude star Regulus.
Jun 4, 2014 · Hovering about 5 degrees directly above the moon will be Jupiter, getting ready to relinquish its six-month run as the most prominent evening planet.
Feb 15, 2024 · Jupiter is bright and easy to spot from our vantage point on Earth, helped by its massive size and banded, reflective cloud tops. Jupiter even possesses moons the size of planets: Ganymede, its largest, is bigger than the planet Mercury.
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Jul 1, 2024 · Jupiter’s visibility improves each day as it climbs higher in the pre-dawn sky. The gas giant rises around 3:30 a.m. local daylight time on July 1, north of the Hyades star cluster in Taurus.