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Mercury reaches its greatest elongation, 26 degrees east of the sun on July 4. From latitude 40 degrees north, the ...
Four prominent celestial objects — the moon, a bright planet and two bright stars — will come together to form a "celestial ...
Venus moves east as July progresses and stands 3° due north of Aldebaran on the 14th, after skirting the northern regions of ...
July stargazing is certainly a late show, but it’s worth losing some sleep over because it’s now prime time for summer ...
Look for them around 10 p.m. local daylight time, roughly one-quarter up in the western sky. In addition to their closeness ...
During July, magnitude 5.8 Uranus can be spotted as a blue-green speck in binoculars and as a small 3.5 arc-seconds-wide disk ...
The new moon occurs on June 25. A day later, Mercury reaches its highest point in the evening sky, and on June 27, the young ...
July stargazing is certainly a late show, but it is worth losing some sleep over because it is now prime time for summer ...
By Deane Morrison During July the morning sky hosts three bright planets, each following its own path. As the month begins, ...
Summer arrives for northern observers as the Moon visits Venus, Uranus, and Mercury. Plus: globular cluster M15, double star ...
The only evening planet for July is Mars, faint red in the west at dusk, and getting lost in the Sun’s glare by August. High ...
July stargazing is certainly a late show, but it's worth losing some sleep over because it’s prime time for summer ...