When the sun goes down tonight, step outside and look south. Beaming through the twilight is one of the prettiest things you’ll ever see – a tight three-way conjunction of Venus, Jupiter and the crescent Moon. The event is visible from all parts of the world, even from light-polluted cities.
People in New York and Hong Kong will see it just as clearly as astronomers watching from remote mountaintops. Only cloudy weather or a midnight sun (sorry Antarctica!) can spoil the show.
The great conjunction offers something extra to Europeans. For more than an hour on Monday evening, the crescent Moon will actually eclipse Venus. Astronomers call such an event a “lunar occultation.” Venus emerging from the dark edge of the Moon is a remarkably beautiful sight. Sky watchers across Europe will be able to see this happen:
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For Europeans
If you have been watching the western sky after sunset the last few evenings you cannot fail to have noticed two bright lights drawing closer together. Venus and Jupiter have been playing out the most spectacular sky show of the year and on Monday, December 1st they will be closest together, just two degrees apart. What marks Monday as extra special though is that Venus will be occulted by the Moon. The planet disappears in daylight for people in western Europe and reappears in a darker sky in the early evening.
For Eastern Europeans, this eye-catching sight will be visible in complete darkness.
The disappearance can be observed in steadily held binoculars or a telescope but great care should be taken lest you accidentally sweep up the Sun when scanning the sky. The reappearance will be fascinating to watch as Venus will burst back into view from behind the Moon’s limb.
Such favorable circumstances are quite rare for any given location. For example, the last time London was treated to such a favorably placed Venus occultation was back on Oct. 7, 1961.
And after 2008, there will not be another similarly favorable Venus occultation for the United Kingdom until Jan. 10, 2032.
Conjunctions
A conjunction of the two brightest planets won’t happen again until March, 2012. During this particular Venus and Jupiter conjunction, these two brilliant worlds appear 2 degrees apart. That’s about the width of your finger at an arm length away.
It’s possible – but extremely rare – to see two planets appear to merge into a single point of light. The last time two planets met up at the same spot on the sky’s dome was in the year 1818, when Venus passed in front of Jupiter. Tonight and tomorrow night, look for Venus, Jupiter, and the crescent moon in the west after sunset.
Conjunctions of two planets are fairly common. The planets often meet and appear close together in the sky. But an occultation – or covering over – of one planet by another is very rare. Two planets won’t meet again in the sky for another 247 years – or until Venus occults Jupiter in the year 2065.
The Planets
Venus has adorned the southwestern twilight sky since late August. No other star or planet can come close to matching Venus in brilliance. During World War II, aircraft spotters sometimes mistook Venus for an enemy airplane. There were even cases in which Venus drew antiaircraft fire.
This winter, Venus is the unrivaled evening star that will soar from excellent to magnificent prominence in the southwest at nightfall. The interval by which it follows the Sun will increase from nearly three hours on Dec. 1 to almost four hours by Jan. 1.
It’s probably the first “star” you’ll see coming out after sunset. In fact, if the air is very clear and the sky a good, deep blue, try looking for Venus shortly before sunset.
Jupiter starts December just above Venus and is moving in the opposite direction, dropping progressively lower each evening. By month’s end Jupiter meets up with another planet – Mercury – but by then Jupiter is also descending deep into the glow of sunset. In January, Jupiter will be too close to the Sun to see; it’s in conjunction with the Sun on Jan. 24.
Also on Monday evening, you may be able to see the full globe of the moon, its darkened portion glowing with a bluish-gray hue interposed between the sunlit crescent and not much darker sky. This phenomenon is sometimes called “the old moon in the young moon’s arms.” Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) was the first to recognize it as what we now call “earthshine.”
As seen from the moon, the Earth would loom in the sky some 3.7 times larger than the moon does for us.
In addition, the land masses, the oceans and clouds make the Earth a far better reflector of sunlight as compared to the moon. In fact, the Earth’s reflectivity varies as clouds, which appear far more brilliant than the land and seas, cover greater or lesser parts of the visible hemisphere. The result is that the Earth shines between 45 and 100 times more brightly than the moon.
Keep in mind that this head-turning display of three celestial objects crowded together is merely an illusion of perspective: the moon will be only about 251,400 miles from Earth, while Venus is nearly 371 times farther away, at 93.2 million miles. Meanwhile, Jupiter is almost 2,150 times farther away than our natural satellite at 540.3 million miles.
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Planetary Conjunction Videos:
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Filed under: Astronomy News






Here's what you have to do:
1) Use a tripod.
2) Focus at infinity (don't use auto-focus!)
3) Bracket like crazy. Often a slightly under-exposed pic of the Moon will bring out the best lunar features — especially afterwards when using Photoshop.
4) Ensure there isn't even the slightest amount of thin clouds or haze. That will result in the appearance of blurring along the edge of the Moon.
Can't remember if this pic was from Oct '08 or '07 or whether it was through a 900mm or 480mm telescope.
http://s297.photobucket.com/albums/mm218/cdntac/?action=view¤t=Oct10Moon.jpg