Updated
Updated · National Geographic · May 28
June Skywatching Offers 9 Events, Including a 1.5-Degree Jupiter-Venus Conjunction
Updated
Updated · National Geographic · May 28

June Skywatching Offers 9 Events, Including a 1.5-Degree Jupiter-Venus Conjunction

7 articles · Updated · National Geographic · May 28
  • Nine June sky events are highlighted, led by Jupiter and Venus drawing within 1.5 degrees on June 8-9 in the northwest sky after sunset, with Mercury visible below them.
  • June 15’s new moon brings the month’s best dark-sky window for viewing the Milky Way’s bright galactic core, while Saturn pairs with the crescent moon on June 10 and joins Mars and the moon in a pre-dawn line on June 11.
  • June 27’s Bootid meteor shower is usually sparse but can briefly spike to about 100 meteors an hour, though a bright, nearly full moon may wash out much of the display.
  • June 29’s full strawberry moon rises around 8 p.m. ET, and late June also brings Mars close to the Pleiades, within about 4 to 5 degrees before sunrise.
  • All month, the Summer Triangle stays prominent, and June 21’s solstice marks summer in the Northern Hemisphere and winter aurora season in the south.
With June’s new moon offering a perfect Milky Way view, what is the secret to capturing a breathtaking galactic photograph?
As planets align this June, what is the difference between an astronomical illusion and a powerful astrological event?