06/14/2023 – Ephemeris – Let’s find out where the naked-eye planets have wandered off to this week
This is Bob Moler with Ephemeris for Flag Day, Wednesday, June 14th. Today the Sun will be up for 15 hours and 33 minutes, setting at 9:29, and it will rise tomorrow at 5:56. The Moon, half way from last quarter to new, will rise at 3:59 tomorrow morning.
Let’s find out where the naked-eye planets have wandered off to this week. Venus is our blazing Evening Star seen in the west all evening. It will set after midnight. The red planet Mars is seen left of and a bit higher than Venus by six and a half degrees, or a bit more than half the width of one’s fist held at arm’s length. Venus is closing the gap between them, but will never quite reach Mars while they are in the evening sky. The closest they will get is three and a half degrees or seven moon diameters apart, before Venus pulls back toward the Sun faster than Mars will. Both Mars and Venus are in Cancer. In the morning, Saturn will be visible low in the south-southeast at 5 am. Jupiter will be very low in the east at that hour.
The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT –4 hours). They may be different for your location.
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