Posted on 06/14/2026 12:35:21 PM PDT by MtnClimber
Explanation: Venus and Jupiter may have caught your attention lately. The recent close conjunction of the two brightest planets in recent evening skies has been hard to miss. With Jupiter at the top, starting on May 30 and ending on June 8, their close approach was chronicled daily, left to right, in the featured panels from Maharashtra, India. Near the western horizon, the evening sky colors and exposures used for each panel depend on the local conditions near sunset. At their closest on June 9, the celestial pair appeared to be only about three times the width of a full moon apart. Of course, on that date, the two planets were physically separated by over 600 million kilometers in their orbits around the Sun. In the coming days, Jupiter will slowly settle into the sunset glare, but Venus will continue to move farther from the Sun in the western sky to excel in its current role as the brilliant evening star.
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For more detail go to the link and click on the image for a high definition image. You can then move the magnifying glass cursor then click to zoom in and click again to zoom out. When zoomed in you can scan by moving the side bars on the bottom and right side of the image.
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Better than 10 days of Uranus.
What an excellent sequence of photos! The photographer done good!
They were close. It is lucky Jupiter did not hit Venus! /s
LOL!
Cool.
For those living in very flat landscapes, Mercury was observable just above the horizon at the same time as the Jupiter + Venus conjunction right above, making for a planetary trifecta. I couldn’t see Mercury after sunset in my area, unfortunately.
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