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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.

06/05/2023 – Ephemeris Extra – Venus prepares to leave the evening sky

June 5, 2023 Comments off
my-venus-cycle
The Venus Cycle or synodic period of 584 days broken into morning and evening appearances. The grayed area is the part of the cycle when Venus is too close to the Sun to be seen with the naked eye under the most ideal conditions. Credit: the author.

Based on the article of the same name printed in the Grand Traverse Astronomical Society’s June Stellar Sentinel newsletter.

Venus will not only leave the evening sky in dramatic fashion, but will enter the morning sky in an even more dramatic fashion in the latter half of August. Venus takes 225 days to orbit the Sun, but from an Earth also orbiting the Sun, the period from successive inferior or superior conjunctions of the Sun take 584 days or 19.2 months (1 year 7.2 months), or 9.6 months in the evening and morning skies respectively.
The interval from greatest eastern elongation, and inferior conjunction, when Venus passes between the Sun and the Earth is around 70 days. On June 4th, Venus will be at its greatest eastern elongation. The sight line from the Earth to Venus will be tangent to Venus’ orbit. Any Venusians, floating above their clouds, would see the Earth at quadrature, that is 90 degrees from the Sun.
Venus, at greatest eastern elongation, is heading straight toward us, so it will grow rapidly in apparent size. Venus begins the month with an apparent diameter of 22.9”. (” means seconds of arc. 1 second of arc = 1/3600 of a degree). At the end of the month Venus will have increased in apparent size to 33.5”, as can be seen with the illustration below. For comparison, Jupiter’s average apparent diameter is around 41”.

How the size and phase of Venus will change from date of greatest eastern elongation, June 4th to July 2nd, 2023. Created using Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts) by the author.

Sometime in July Venus will appear large enough to be able to detect it’s crescent phase in seven power binoculars. At inferior conjunction its apparent size will grow to 57.8”. Pity there won’t be a transit of Venus of the Sun to see it. By the way, if you missed the transits of 2004 and 2012, you won’t see another, unless you are a small child now, and will live to a very old age. There won’t be another transit of Venus until 2117.
The Mayan culture of Central America and the Yucatan Peninsula based one of their calendars on the Venus Cycle. It turns out that five Venus cycles equals a period just shy of eight years. That’s why we had 2 Venus transits eight years apart, June 8, 2004 and June 6, 2012. The next transits will be December 11, 2117 and December 8, 2125.
The Dresden Codex is one of only a handful of surviving Mayan books. It has a whole section on the Venus Cycle and how it fits into an 8 year Sequence. 13 eight year sequences equals 104 years, a Venus Round. Well, not quite, 103.91 years actually.
Venus has been ignored by NASA since the Magellan mission in the 1990s which mapped the surface through the clouds with radar. Recent reexamination of the results have suggested that there may have been relatively recent volcanism on the planet, even during the period that Magellan was imaging the surface of the planet.
NASA plans two missions to the planet toward the end of this decade. VERITAS stands for “Venus Emissivity, Radio Science, InSAR, Topography, and Spectroscopy” it’s a satellite map the surface in much greater detail than Magellan did. It will also map infrared emissions from Venus’ surface to map rock types.
DAVINCI+ stands for “Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging” and will drop through the atmosphere taking measurements, and will take images of the surface like the Huygens probe did on Saturn’s largest moon Titan back in 2005.
In the past the Soviet Union sent landers and floated balloons in Venus’ atmosphere. The only active spacecraft that I know of orbiting Venus now is Japan’s Akatsuki, which is studying its atmosphere. However spacecraft using Venus as a gravity assist to get to Mercury or close to the Sun, have turned their instruments to Venus as they passed by.

Major Venusian events for the rest of 2023 (Eastern Time)

  • June 4, 6:59 am – Venus at greatest eastern elongation 45.4°
  • June 13, 7:05 am – Venus 0.5° north of the Beehive cluster
  • June 21, 8:47 pm – Venus 4.1° south of the Moon
  • July 1, 2:48 am – Venus in a quasi-conjunction with Mars, separation 3.6°
  • July 7 – Greatest brilliancy, magnitude -4.7 (~36 days before inferior conjunction)
  • July16, 3:49 am – Venus in a quasi-conjunction with Regulus
  • July 27, 7:00 am – Mercury 5.1° north of Venus
  • August 13, 7:10 am – Venus at inferior conjunction, 7.4° south of the Sun
  • September 19 – Greatest brilliancy. Magnitude -4.8
  • October 9, 2:10 am – Venus 2.3° south of Regulus
  • October 23, 5:59 pm – Venus greatest western elongation 46.4°
  • November 9, 4:28 am – Venus 1.1° south of the Moon
  • November 29, 5:29 am – Venus 4.2°north of Spica
  • December 9, 11:53 am – Venus 3.9° north of the Moon

Created from NASA’s SKYCAL Sky Events Calendar.

05/19/2020 – Ephemeris – Venus will leave the evening sky in 15 days

May 19, 2020 Comments off

This is Ephemeris for Tuesday, May 19th. Today the Sun will be up for 14 hours and 59 minutes, setting at 9:09, and it will rise tomorrow at 6:08. The Moon, 3 days before new, will rise at 5:25 tomorrow morning.

In 15 days Venus will leave the evening sky by passing between the Earth and the Sun in what astronomers call an inferior conjunction. Eight years ago, June 6th 2012, Venus went through another inferior conjunction. That time it passed directly between the Earth and the Sun so we could see the black spot that was Venus cross the face of the Sun as a rare Transit of Venus. Eight years before that, on June 8th 2004, we had another transit. However we will not see another in our lifetimes. The next one will occur in 2117. With the June 3rd conjunction Venus will pass north of the Sun from our vantage point, since Venus’ orbit is tilted a bit more than 3 degrees to the Earth’s orbit. So enjoy Venus while you can, unless you want to get up really early next month.

The event times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.

Addendum

Transits of Venus-Two hits and a miss

Transits of Venus-Two hits and a miss. Image created using Cartes du Ciel (Sky Charts).

Earth and Venus have a 13:8 orbital resonance.  That is Venus orbits the Sun 13 times in the same time that the Earth orbits the Sun  8 times. So Venus has the same position in our skies it had 8 years ago.  Actually the resonance is not perfect The resonance comes out 2.4 days short. So events like inferior conjunctions like the ones in the example above back track two and a fraction days from the 8 year interval.

Venus goes through a 584 day cycle from one inferior conjunction to the next.  Five of those cycles equals 7.994 years. The Maya were well aware of this and one of their calendars was based on the Venus-Earth relationship.

10/26/2018 – Ephemeris – Venus passes inferior conjunction with the Sun today

October 26, 2018 Comments off

Ephemeris for Friday, October 26th. The Sun will rise at 8:12. It’ll be up for 10 hours and 27 minutes, setting at 6:40. The Moon, 2 days past full, will rise at 8:19 this evening.

Later this morning the planet Venus will pass in inferior conjunction with the Sun, moving officially from the evening sky to the morning sky. Inferior conjunctions are when Venus is between the Earth and the Sun. We haven’t seen Venus for over a month, it setting too soon after the Sun to be spotted. It’s appearance in the morning sky will be much more sudden. On fall mornings the ecliptic, the path of the Sun and most planets is more vertical in the sky, opposite that of the evning sky, so that Venus will suddenly appear. Being south of the Sun, it will take 3 days, next Monday morning to rise with the Sun, but after that Venus will rise 8 minutes earlier each morning for a while. It should be easily visible in two weeks as the bright Morning Star

The times given are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.

Venus near solar conjunction
Venus and the Sun recorded by the Solar & Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) LASCO C3 coronagraph less than 24 hours before the actual instant of Inferior conjunction. Credit: ESA/NASA.

01/10/2014 – Ephemeris – Venus will pass inferior conjunction with the sun tomorrow.

January 10, 2014 Comments off

Ephemeris for Friday, January 10th.  The sun will rise at 8:18.  It’ll be up for 9 hours and 4 minutes, setting at 5:22.   The moon, 3 days past first quarter, will set at 4:19 tomorrow morning.

Tomorrow what has been our evening star during summer an autumn will pass between the Earth and the Sun and will enter the morning sky, where sharp-eyed observers will pick it up just before sunrise.  That passage is called inferior conjunction, because Venus moves between the Earth and the Sun.  Venus and Mercury are called inferior planets, not because of their quality, but because they orbit inside the earth’s orbit.  Mars through Neptune are then of course superior planets.  The last time Venus passed inferior conjunction, on June 5th, 2012 it passed directly in front of the sun in a rare transit.  This time it will be north of the sun by about 5 angular degrees.   There’s only a hundred and four years before the next transit.

Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan.  They may be different for your location.

Addendum

Gary's photo of the transit.

Gary Carlisle’s photo of the transit of Venus, June 5, 2012..