Venus, Jupiter and Mercury will be in conjunction his weekend. Watch the western sky Sunday beginning about 30 minutes after
sunset for the peak.
(Reuters) - Venus
and Jupiter, the two brightest planets in the sky this month, wi...
Venus, Jupiter and Mercury will be in conjunction his weekend. Watch the western sky Sunday beginning about 30 minutes after
sunset for the peak.
(Reuters) - Venus
and Jupiter, the two brightest planets in the sky this month, will be
joined by tiny Mercury for a rare celestial show this weekend.
Typically, Venus, the
second-closest planet to the sun, and Jupiter, which orbits beyond Mars,
are tens of millions of miles apart. But they have been cycling
together while moving ever closer to each other this month, joined by
the innermost planet Mercury.
The
celestial show peaks on Sunday when the trio will appear as a bright
triangle of light in the western sky beginning about 30 minutes after
sunset.
Triple conjunctions are
relatively rare, according to NASA. The last one was in May 2011 and the
next one will not occur until October 2015.
"This
triple is especially good because it involves the three brightest
planets in May's night sky," the U.S. space agency said on its website.