Earth Reaches 94.5 Million Miles From Sun as Venus, Mars and Moon Mark July Sky
Updated
Updated · Forbes · Jul 6
Earth Reaches 94.5 Million Miles From Sun as Venus, Mars and Moon Mark July Sky
2 articles · Updated · Forbes · Jul 6
Summary
July 6 puts Earth at aphelion, 94.5 million miles from the sun, while a fading full moon opens a 12-night stretch of darker evening skies for stargazing.
July 9 brings Venus to within 1 degree of Regulus after sunset, and July 11 pairs a 13%-lit waning crescent moon with Mars, Aldebaran and the Pleiades before dawn.
Mid-northern observers also get a rare midsummer Milky Way window this week because moonlight is largely out of the evening sky; the best view comes about two hours after sunset toward the southeast.
New York City's Manhattanhenge adds a terrestrial highlight, with full sun alignment on Saturday at 8:20 p.m. EDT and half sun alignment on Sunday at 8:21 p.m. EDT.
The darker-sky run builds toward a July 14 new moon and the July 17 start of the Perseid meteor shower.