Ephemeris: 03/24/2025 – Mercury crosses over to the morning side

March 24, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Monday, March 24th. Today the Sun will be up for 12 hours and 22 minutes, setting at 8:00, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:36. The Moon, 2 days past last quarter, will rise at 5:58 tomorrow morning.

Today, Mercury is at inferior conjunction with the Sun, two days after Venus. Mercury of course, this is in the middle of its retrograde motion period, moving westward against the stars, and for astrologers Mercury in retrograde is a big deal. I consider astrology is to astronomy as tea-leaf reading is to botany, so I dismiss it. Every once in a while Mercury, when it passes inferior conjunction, crosses in front of the face of the Sun for us. These are called transits, and are fairly rare. The last time was in November 2019 and the next time will be in November 2032 which is seven years from now. Mercury will move into the morning sky, where its appearance will not be favorable for us in the Northern Hemisphere.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Here we have the retrograde loops of both Mercury and Venus. The labeled positions of the planets and Sun are for today, March 24, 2025. Venus was inferior conjunction 2 days ago. The dates shown are for the first position the year, month, and day. The month is a Roman numeral, so it started on February 27th and extend to April 16th. The horizontal grid marks are 5° apart. The Sun moves about about 1° a day towards the left along the orange line which represents the ecliptic or the Sun’s path. Saturn also is moving very slowly eastward nearly parallel to the ecliptic. This is all taking place against the stars of western Pisces. The five star loop on the right is an asterism called the Circlet which represents a loop of the rope around the tail of the western fish. Created using Stellarium.

Retrograde loops are caused by looking at a moving planet from another moving planet, the Earth.

Ephemeris: 03/21/2025 – Venus will pass inferior conjunction with the Sun tomorrow

March 21, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Friday, March 21st. Today the Sun will be up for 12 hours and 13 minutes, setting at 7:56, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:41. The Moon, 1 day before last quarter, will rise at 3:55 tomorrow morning.

Tomorrow Venus will be in inferior conjunction with the Sun. That means that Venus will be moving between the Earth and the Sun, on its way from the evening sky to the morning sky. Venus’ orbit has an inclination to the Earth’s orbit of 3.4° and when we are closest to Venus as we are now only 26 million miles (42 million kilometers) away, that inclination gets exaggerated so that Venus is almost nine degrees north of the Sun. Venus gets about 8 million miles (13 million kilometers) closer to us than Mars ever gets. Of course when Mars gets that close it is fully illuminated. When Venus is at its closest we’re looking at its night side and couldn’t see anything even if we didn’t have the glare of the Sun.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Venus and its orbit near inferior conjunction March 22, 2025.
Venus and its orbit near inferior conjunction March 22, 2025, at local solar noon for Interlochen/Traverse City, MI (1:49 PM EDT). Both Venus and the Sun are enlarged by their glare. Both would appear as dots at this scale. Venus’ orbit is 93 degrees wide. Created using Stellarium and GIMP.
The Venus Cycle as seen by the Mayans,
The Venus cycle as described by the Mayans of Central America. Their cycle started four days after inferior conjunction, when Venus was first visible before sunrise, after inferior conjunction near the bottom of the diagram. Venus would spend 263 days in the morning sky, moving quickly to its greatest western elongation before slowly moving around to the back side of the Sun, disappearing around what we call superior conjunction. Then it would slowly separate itself from the Sun and slowly move into the evening sky around to its greatest eastern elongation and within three months would disappear again towards inferior conjunction.

Ephemeris: 03/20/2025 – Spring has sprung!

March 20, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Thursday, March 20th. Today the Sun will be up for 12 hours and 10 minutes, setting at 7:55, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:43. The Moon, 2 days before last quarter, will rise at 2:57 tomorrow morning.

At 5:02 AM this morning the Sun passed overhead on the Earth’s equator heading northward beginning the season of spring. It is called the vernal or spring equinox also the March equinox if you didn’t care which hemisphere you lived in. Anyway, our daylight hours become longer and longer until June 21st the first day of summer. We have been seeing the effects of all this because all winter long the daylight hours have been getting longer and now in the last few weeks our temperatures have begun to rise, especially last Friday and Saturday. Along with the increased daylight hours the Sun is also getting higher in the sky giving us a more concentrated heating, it’s light and heat not being spread out as much as it was during the winter.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Sun's path on the equinox for TC-Interlochen
The Sun’s path through the apparent dome of the sky on an equinox day from the Traverse City/Interlochen area in Michigan. The Sun rises due east and sets due west. The Sun is plotted every 15 minutes. This is a stereographic projection which compresses the image near the zenith and enlarges the image towards the horizon. The blue azimuth and altitude marks are 15 degrees apart. Created using my LookingUp program and GIMP.

Ephemeris: 03/19/2025 – Suddenly there are only two planets visible in the evening

March 19, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Wednesday, March 19th. Today the Sun will be up for 12 hours and 7 minutes, setting at 7:54, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:45. The Moon, 3 days before last quarter, will rise at 1:53 tomorrow morning.

Let’s take our weekly look at the whereabouts of the naked-eye planets. At 9 PM this evening just two of the five naked eye planets will be out. Venus and Mercury are too close to the Sun in the twilight to be seen. Saturday and Monday Venus and then Mercury will pass between the Earth and the Sun to enter the morning sky. Jupiter, now becomes the brightest evening planet. It will be high in the southwest. Below it is the bright star Aldebaran with the stars of the Hyades, the face of Taurus the bull, and to the lower left, the great constellation of Orion, The rapidly fading Mars, with its distinctive reddish hue, is high in the south, with the stars Castor and Pollux in Gemini above it.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Jupiter, and Mars seen high in the southwest
Jupiter, and Mars seen high in the southwest with some of the constellations of winter at 9:00 PM tonight, March 19th 2025. Created using Stellarium.
The Moon tonight, March 19th 2025
The Moon tonight, March 19th 2025, in it’s 9 PM orientation, as it might appear in a small telescope. Selected features are labeled. Created using Stellarium, LibreOffice Draw, and GIMP.
Telescopic Jupiter (north up) as it would be seen in a small telescope
Telescopic Jupiter (north up) as it would be seen in a small telescope. Jupiter is shown for tonight, 9 PM, March 19, 2025. Its apparent diameter is 38.1″. Mars is 9.1″ in diameter, too small to be shown here. My lower size limit is 10″. Planetary surface detail is more subtle than shown here. Note that Io is transiting Jupiter at 9 PM. It will be nearly invisible. Its shadow will be cast on the planet trailing the moon as a black dot from 9:23 to 11:34 PM EDT. Io’s Transit will end at 10:19 PM. The ” means seconds of arc, or 1/3600th of a degree. Click or tap on the image to enlarge it. Created using Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts).
The naked-eye planets and the Moon at sunset and sunrise on a single night
The naked-eye planets and the Moon at sunset and sunrise on a single night, starting with sunset on the right on March 19, 2025. The night ends on the left with sunrise on the 20th. Click or tap on the image to enlarge it. Created using my LookingUp app and GIMP.
A low precision ephemeris of the Sun Moon and naked eye planet positions for today and tomorrow
This is a low precision ephemeris of the Sun Moon and naked eye planet positions for today and tomorrow, March 19th and 20th, 2025. Some of the columns are self-explanatory, others not. The transit column is the time that the body crosses the meridian and is due south. Elong, for elongation, is the angle between the Sun and that body. RA is right ascension, which is the object’s east-west position on the celestial sphere in hours and minutes. Dec is declination which is the north-south position of the object on the celestial sphere in degrees and minutes. R is the distance of that object from the Sun in astronomical units. An astronomical unit is about 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. And Delta is the distance of that object from the Earth, also in astronomical units. I omit the ‘m’ in am and pm for compactness. The data was generated using my LookingUp for DOS app and displayed as a table by my Ephemeris Helper app.

Ephemeris: 03/18/2025 – The Great Underwater Panther

March 18, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Tuesday, March 18th. Today the Sun will be up for 12 hours and 4 minutes, setting at 7:53, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:47. The Moon, halfway from full to last quarter, will rise at 12:47 tomorrow morning.

As Orion tilts into the southwest at 9 PM I’m reminded of our Anishinaabek native peoples here in Michigan who saw it as the Winter Maker slowly beginning to leave the scene in the southwest. At this time in the southeast is Curly Tail, the Great Panther. I first knew him as the Great Underwater Panther, which tells us where he lives… beneath the ice. He’s in the sky to warn us that the warmer weather of spring is coming, and the ice on the lakes and rivers is getting thin. Be careful to not fall through and drown, becoming a victim of the Great Panther. The stars of the panther include those of the head of Leo the lion the great backwards question mark, as his curly tail, to his head, the head of what we call Hydra the water snake.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

An animated chart for finding the Anishinaabek constellation of the Great Panther in three frames. First, the sky without any markings as you would see in the real sky at 9 PM on March 12, 2025. 2nd the three Western constellations mentioned in the text . 3rd the Anishinaabek great Panther and the Winter Maker. Also we have the name the Anishnaabek name for Sirius Gizhii’anung which means Great Star. Sirius is the brightest star in the night sky. Created using stellarium, liberty office draw, and GIMP. The Anishinaabek constellations have been gathered from numerous sources on the Internet .

Ephemeris: 03/17/2025 – When the largest telescope in the world was in Ireland

March 17, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for St. Patrick’s Day, Monday, March 17th. Today the Sun will be up for 12 hours and 1 minute, setting at 7:51, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:49. The Moon, 3 days past full, will rise at 11:40 this evening.

In the 19th century Ireland laid claim to having the largest telescope in the world.  It was a reflecting telescope with a mirror diameter of 72 inches.  It was built by William Parsons the Third Earl of Rosse.  The base of the telescope tube rested in a pit between two massive walls and could only look to either side of a north-south direction.  It saw first usage in 1847.  The telescope was called the Leviathan of Parsonstown, and was in use until 1890.  Mirrors in those days were made of a silvery alloy called speculum.  Two mirrors were used alternately because speculum tarnished.  The mirror not in use would have to be re-polished and swapped in from time to time.  It was the largest telescope until the 100 inch at Mt. Wilson was put in service in 1917.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EST, UT – 5 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Leviathan of Parsonstown
The 72 inch Leviathan of Parsonstown. Source: http://www.klima-luft.de/steinicke/ngcic/persons/rosse3.htm
M51 drawing
A drawing of the Whirlpool Galaxy, M51 (NGC 5194 & 5195) by Lord Rosse with the 72 inch telescope. Public Domain.
M51, the Whirlpool Galaxy by Daniel Dall'Olmo
A modern digital color photograph of M51, the Whirlpool Galaxy by Daniel Dall’Olmo.

Ephemeris: 03/14/2025 – Viewing today’s eclipse from the Moon

March 14, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Pi Day, Friday, March 14th. Today the Sun will be up for 11 hours and 51 minutes, setting at 7:48, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:54. The Moon, at full today, will rise at 8:27 this evening.

I hope you had a good look at the eclipse this morning I don’t know if it was clear or cloudy because I’m recording this last Sunday night. One entity got a cloudless shot at seeing the eclipse without any obstructions. That was the Blue Ghost lander on Mare Crisium on the Moon. However, it was on the Moon so it was seeing a total eclipse of the Sun. I’ll be really interested to see the photographs coming back from that. There was a satellite and one lander, the Surveyor 3 Lander on the Moon that took pictures of the Earth during the solar eclipse. Of course, we saw a lunar eclipse. It just saw a ring of light around the Earth where the Sun’s light was being bent through the Earth’s atmosphere into it’s shadow to dully illuminate the Moon.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Sorry, I couldn’t spend any time on the program to celebrate Pi day, so I’ll give it a token appreciation here:

Have a slice of Pi Day pie on 3.14

Update

Image of a total lunar eclipse from the Moon’s surface captured by Firefly’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 lunar lander on March 14, 2025. The image shows the sun about to emerge from totality behind Earth.
Firefly Aerospace
.
I hope Blue Ghost can improve on this in resolution and color. Credit: NASA.

Ephemeris: 03/13/2025 – Get ready for tomorrow morning’s total lunar eclipse

March 13, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Thursday, March 13th. Today the Sun will be up for 11 hours and 48 minutes, setting at 7:46, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:56. The Moon, 1 day before full, will set at 8:06 tomorrow morning.

Late, late, late, tonight, or actually early tomorrow morning there will be a total eclipse of the Moon. The moment of full moon, which is necessary for a lunar eclipse will occur at 2:55 AM tomorrow, and the middle of the eclipse will be 5 minutes later. The partial phase of the lunar eclipse will start at 1:10 AM. This partial phase will grow until 2:26 AM when totality will begin. During this period of time the Moon should have a dull reddish color because it is illuminated only by the light filtering through the Earth’s atmosphere from the combined sunrises and sunsets around the world at that time. The total phase will end at 3:31 AM. The ending partial phase will continue until 4:48 AM.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Total lunar eclipse: The Moon moves from right to left in relation to the Earth's shadow
The Moon moves from right to left in relation to the Earth’s shadow. Created using Stellarium, LibreOffice Draw, and GIMP.

Ephemeris Extra: 03/12/2025 – Almost everything you wanted to know about lunar eclipses

March 12, 2025 1 comment
Almost Everything You Wanted to Know About Lunar Eclipses. 
Including the Upcoming One, March 14, 2025
Based on a program I gave to the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society March 7th, 2025.

What is a lunar eclipse?

Lunar Eclipse Geometry

There are two types of eclipses. Eclipses of the Sun or solar eclipses, and eclipses of the Moon, or lunar eclipses. They are both related, in that they involve the Sun the Earth and the Moon. In the solar eclipse the Moon casts its shadow on the Earth at new moon. The lunar eclipse is the Earth casting its shadow on the full Moon. Since the Sun is an extended object, that is not a point, it has two shadows according to astronomers. If you take a look at your shadow in the sunlight cast on the ground, you will notice that your shadow is fuzzy. The fuzziness comes from the fact that your body is only blocking out part of the sunlight on the edges. That part of the shadow is called the penumbra.

There are three types of lunar eclipses. The penumbral eclipse is when the Moon is too far north or south of the umbra and just enters the penumbra. A partial eclipse is where the moon again is too far and south but close enough to have part of it skirt the umbra. And total eclipse is when the Moon becomes completely immersed inside the earth’s umbral shadow.

If one checks an almanac, one would find that eclipses generally come in pairs, one of each type, about two weeks apart separated by about six months. The times when eclipses can appear are called eclipse seasons lasting 35 days, about six months apart. They occur as often as they do, because the Moon has an orbit around the Earth that is more aligned with the Earth’s orbit of the Sun than it is the Earth’s equator like most moons of planets. The moon’s orbital plane deviates from the Earth’s orbit by 5 degrees. The intersection of those two orbital planes is called the line of the nodes. Eclipses can only occur when the Sun and the moon are near those nodes at the same time this could occur when the Sun is within 17° of the node.

Lunar eclipses throughout history

Humans have been observing eclipses both lunar and solar for millennia. And as they got more sophisticated they recorded them. The Chinese were especially good at this. The earliest recorded Chinese lunar eclipse was January 29th 1137 BCE. No, obviously they did not use the dating system we use today. It was usually in whatever year of a particular monarch’s reign that it happened in, and historians had to go back and figure out when that was. I found out that at least two that I know of the earliest lunar eclipses were actually solar eclipses. I found out using the app Stellarium by actually setting the date back to then, and finding out what kind of eclipse it was.

The Babylonians became astute observers and recorders of astronomical events including of course eclipses. By the 4th century BCE they had discovered a method to compute when eclipses occurred by a specific cycle of when they reoccurred, which I will talk about shortly.

Continuing with our early recorded or noted lunar eclipses, we have 3 eclipses in 5, 4 and 1BCE, which are related to the death of King Herod the Great in Judea, around the time of the birth of Christ. In my biennial programs to the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society at Christmastime, where I discuss the Star of Bethlehem I referenced the latter two. They are also mentioned by David Hughes in his book The Star of Bethlehem. The first one is provided by Fred Espenak, recently retired from NASA, and now owns the website called MrEclipse.com. Most historians place the death of King Herod in 4 BCE, after the March 13th 4 BCE lunar eclipse. The source for this is the Jewish historian Josephus in his work Antiquities of the Jews. In it, he relates that King Herod died after a lunar eclipse but before Passover. The Jewish Calendar is a lunar calendar and Passover occurs at full moon, so the period during when Herod died is an integral number of lunar months before Passover. The 4 BCE eclipse occurs 1 lunar month before Passover. Josephus also records two chapters worth of palace intrigue of Herod’s court between the eclipse and Passover. To my mind and to many others, that is too short a period for all the events to have taken place, and the eclipse was partial visible early in the morning. The 1 BCE eclipse is total and allows 3 to 4 months for the palace intrigue to take place as Josephus describe it. I’ll get to Columbus’ eclipse in a bit, but first we’ll take a look at how eclipses can be predicted, which is the essence of the Columbus’ eclipse.

We know the Babylonians have been observing and recording eclipses since the 8th century BCE from their cuneiform tablets. By the 4th century BCE they had figured out that eclipses repeat themselves every 18 years and 11 and a third days. It seems they did this by observing lunar eclipses because that one third day in the saros. It keeps solar eclipses from being visible from the same location until 3 saros periods elapse that’s where we get the exeligmos where three saros periods equals 54 years and a month. With lunar eclipses if one sees a lunar eclipse in the early evening, one saros later, the next eclipse of the series will be visible in the morning before dawn.

The saros happens to be the confluence of three separate kinds of lunar months. The first is the synodic month which is also called a lunar month, is from new moon to new moon. It is the period that lunar calendars are based on. The next kind of month is the anomalistic month which is perigee to perigee that is this is the closest point to the earth back to its closest point to the earth one orbit later this is two days shorter than the synodic month. The third kind of month is the draconic month, which is the moon’s orbit from one node back to the same node.

Over the period of saros these separate months coincide within a very few hours. But since they don’t coincide exactly, the eclipses of the Cerro series the moon or the moon’s shadow actually moves northward or southward each saros period. And since we see more than one set of eclipses every 18 years, actually at least two of each a year, there are 36 or so separate saros series running at the same time.

Columbus’ 4th voyage to the new world started out with four ships. After exploring the islands in I think the coast of South America, he ended up on Jamaica with no ships. At first, he had friend relations with the native Jamaicans, however over time that worsens when this crew began to harass, attack, and kill the native peoples, so they refused to give Columbus any more food or supplies. Columbus’s crew were on the brink of starvation when he checked an almanac and found out that soon there would be a total eclipse of the Moon. And on that fateful night he told the natives that unless he was given some supplies his God was going to take away the Moon. And that night the Moon did indeed begin to be devoured, that is the Moon began its entry into the Earth’s shadow. Columbus told them that unless they provided him with food and supplies his God was going to take away the Moon, and if they did provide him with supplies immediately he would consult with his God and see what he could do. The natives acquiesced and brought him food and supplies. Eventually within a couple of hours the Moon did indeed emerge from the earth’s shadow, and it was restored just as Columbus had said.

Notable modern lunar eclipses

When we have a lunar eclipse, entities on the Moon see a solar eclipse. However, the Earth is 4 times larger than the Moon so that the totality of the solar eclipse lasts a long time, and the Earth covers much more than just the disk of the Sun. The Surveyor program was a lunar exploration program in preparation for the Apollo manned landings. Surveyor 3 landed on the moon just before a lunar eclipse, so one of its photographs was to look back at the Earth and take a look at it during totality of the solar eclipse. We know the Moon appears red, generally, when it’s eclipsed, and what Surveyor saw was the Earth with a red ring around it showing the combined sunrises and sunsets all around the earth at that time. The atmosphere of the Earth bends sunlight into the earth’s shadow. Blue light is scattered out, so we have red sunsets, and sunrises, so that is the color of the light that reaches the Moon. The amount of light we see on the Moon during totality depends on how clear the Earth’s atmosphere is at that time.

Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Lander, which is spending this lunar day on the Moon will be attempting to photograph the Earth and the solar eclipse while we are enjoying our lunar eclipse this Friday morning.

There were two total lunar eclipses visible from northern Michigan in 1982. Also that year, in April, a volcano named El Chichon, in southern Mexico erupted in a massive explosion sending a great deal of volcanic ash into the stratosphere. The earth’s shadow during the July 6th total lunar eclipse, to my eyes, didn’t look as uniform as it usually did, I assume because of the amount of dust in the atmosphere, and not being spread out quite as much as it would be later on. The second lunar eclipse was in the early morning hours of December 30th. And amazingly, here in Northern Michigan the sky was clear. I got out and looked over in the west to the Moon and didn’t see it at all. There was kind of a very faint glow in the constellation of Gemini, but that was all. I went to the Joseph H Rogers observatory to observe the Moon with the telescope. The moon was there but very, very dim. I could not see any of the red that shows up in the image above with the Moon being so dark. With the Moon being in Gemini, there were a lot of background stars since it was adjacent to the Milky Way. I was able to see many occultations of the stars as the moon moved against the background stars of the sky.

Above is a chart of the heating of the ground or lack of it caused by volcanic ash in the atmosphere in the 80s and 90s. We had two massive volcanic explosions the first El Chichon, in 1982, which I’ve already mentioned, and in 1991 Mount Pinatubo in Philippines, and how the volcanic ash caused cooling. It would also cause the dark lunar eclipses we saw. Since then even though this graph only goes to 2014 our lunar eclipses have been fairly bright, the red coloring obviously showing very well during totality.

The March 14, 2025 total lunar eclipse

The image above shows the progress of the March 14th 2025 total lunar eclipse, at least the phases having to do with the Earth’s inner shadow, the umbra. The sequence moves from right to left as it moves through the Earth’s shadow. The penumbra will show itself about half an hour before the partial phase begins, as a sort of a dimming of the Moon in the side towards the umbra, so it will not appear uniformly illuminated. The partial phase begins at 1:10 AM, The next image is taken 5 minutes before totality, which will begin at 2:26 AM. We’re looking at just before totality begins, so you can tell where the shadow is. Mid eclipse is at 3:00 AM. I’ve increased the brightness of that image so it actually shows better, but it will be dimmer than the outer edges of the umbra. Totality will end at 3:31 AM and that image is what it should look like 5 minutes after that time. And the partial phase will finally end at 4:48 AM. For the next half hour you might be able to see the effects of the penumbra. Seeing the slight shading of the penumbra is easier if one uses sunglasses, which will reduce the glare of the still bright Moon and enhancing the shadow effect.

Ephemeris: 03/12/2025 – Last chance to see four naked-eye planets in the evening

March 12, 2025 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Wednesday, March 12th. Today the Sun will be up for 11 hours and 45 minutes, setting at 7:45, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:58. The Moon, 2 days before full, will set at 7:49 tomorrow morning.

Let’s take our weekly look at the whereabouts of the naked-eye planets. At 8:30 PM this evening four of the five naked eye planets will be out. Starting from the West we have Venus the brightest of all. Left and a bit below is the much dimmer Mercury. Both will rapidly disappear in evening twilight in a less than a week. Venus will pass in conjunction with the Sun on March 22nd, Mercury will do the same two days later. Jupiter, the second-brightest planet will be high in the southwest. Mars, the third-brightest planet now, with its distinctive reddish hue, is high in the south-southeast, below and right of the stars Castor and Pollux in Gemini. By the end of the month only two planets, Mars and Jupiter will be left in the evening sky.

The astronomical event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (EDT, UT – 4 hours). Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Venus and Mercury seen very low in the west at 8:30 PM this evening
Venus and Mercury seen very low in the west at 8:30 PM this evening, March 12th 2025. Created using Stellarium.
Jupiter, and Mars seen high in the South and southwest at 9:00 PM tonight
Jupiter, and Mars seen high in the South and southwest at 9:00 PM tonight, March 12th 2025. Created using Stellarium.
The Moon tonight, March 12th 2025, in it's 9 PM orientation, as it might appear in a small telescope
The Moon tonight, March 12th 2025, in it’s 9 PM orientation, as it might appear in a small telescope. Selected features are labeled. Created using Stellarium, LibreOffice Draw, and GIMP.
Telescopic Venus and Jupiter (north up) as they would be seen in a small telescope with the same magnification
Telescopic Venus and Jupiter (north up) as they would be seen in a small telescope with the same magnification. These planets are shown for tonight, 9 PM, March 12, 2025. Apparent diameters: Venus 56.8″, 4.6% illuminated, it’s now 27.3 million miles or 44.0 million kilometers from the Earth; Jupiter 38.1″. Mercury, 8.5″, and Mars 9.7″ in diameter, neither is shown. Planetary surface detail is more subtle than shown here. The ” means seconds of arc, or 1/3600th of a degree. Click or tap on the image to enlarge it. Created using Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts).
The naked-eye planets and the Moon at sunset and sunrise on a single night
The naked-eye planets and the Moon at sunset and sunrise on a single night, starting with sunset on the right on March 12, 2025. The night ends on the left with sunrise on the 13th. Saturn is close to the direction of the Sun, but south of it, and is not up at either sunrise or sunset. Click or tap on the image to enlarge it. Created using my LookingUp app and GIMP.
A low precision ephemeris of the Sun Moon and naked eye planet positions for today and tomorrow, March 12th and 13th, 2025
This is a low precision ephemeris of the Sun Moon and naked eye planet positions for today and tomorrow, March 12th and 13th, 2025. Some of the columns are self-explanatory, others not. The transit column is the time that the body crosses the meridian and is due south. Elong, for elongation, is the angle between the Sun and that body. RA is right ascension, which is the object’s east-west position on the celestial sphere in hours and minutes. Dec is declination which is the north-south position of the object on the celestial sphere in degrees and minutes. R is the distance of that object from the Sun in astronomical units. An astronomical unit is about 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. And Delta is the distance of that object from the Earth, also in astronomical units. I omit the ‘m’ in am and pm for compactness. The data was generated using my LookingUp for DOS app and displayed as a table by my Ephemeris Helper app.