Uranus and Mars Form July 4 Conjunction in Taurus Before 4:15 a.m.
Updated
Updated · MyEasternShoreMD · Jun 26
Uranus and Mars Form July 4 Conjunction in Taurus Before 4:15 a.m.
1 articles · Updated · MyEasternShoreMD · Jun 26
Summary
July 4 offers a rare pre-dawn pairing of Uranus and Mars in Taurus, with the two planets appearing close together low in the eastern sky before sunrise.
Around 4:15 a.m., Mars will be the bright marker above Aldebaran, while Uranus should show up through binoculars as a bluish-green point just above and right of Mars.
Saturn also improves for morning observers in July, rising around 1 a.m. on July 1 and by 11 p.m. on July 31; it sits near the last quarter moon on July 7.
Venus remains prominent after sunset and nears Regulus by July 8, while Jupiter drops quickly into twilight and will be lost in solar conjunction by July 29.
The month also brings a waning crescent moon near Mars on July 11, better telescopic Mars views by September, and a full moon on July 31.