Stargazers will get treated to a rare view on Korean College Girl Room SalonTuesday night. Five planets — Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Uranus — will light up the sky that evening, aligning to (mostly) be visible by the naked eye.
Now, it might be best to break out a telescope or binoculars if you've got them handy, but if you have a clear sky you can see this rare sight.
You'll have to time when you go star-watching to see it all godown. In an NPR article, Rick Fienberg, senior contributing editor of Sky & Telescopemagazine, recommends that you look for the planets just after sunset.
"Wait until the sun has set and then go out and look low in that bright part of the sky where the sun has just set with binoculars, and you should see brighter Jupiter next to fainter Mercury," Fienberg told NPR.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Venus is bright and should be easier to spot higher in the sky, while Mars should be reddish and near the moon. Uranus is duller and should be spotted near Venus.
You might have just 20-25 minutes to take in the planets, so you'll want to be sure you're set up and ready come sunset. Of course, things like the brightness of twilight or the clearness of the skies will affect your ability to see the planets as well. Like most things, it'll require some luck.
But if you do get lucky, you'll have a great evening of stargazing this week.
#Librariansasteenagers, and Other News by Sadie SteinSave the Date: The Paris Review Revel by The Paris ReviewWe Have a Winner! by Sadie SteinDiego, Frida, and Me by Molly CrabappleHappy Birthday, Robert Frost by Sadie SteinJames Bond’s Breakfast, and Other News by Sadie SteinPapal Abdication: A Potpourri of Popery by Mike Duncan and Jason NovakKafka, Literally by Spencer WoodmanIndian Comics, Professor Nabokov, and Other News by Sadie SteinEmoji Classics, and Other News by Sadie SteinIn the Buff: Literary Readings, Pasties, and Jiggling Genitalia by Rae BryantCar Trouble, Part 2 by Pamela PetroReading Rooms of Your Dreams, and Other News by Sadie SteinCrusoe in California by Sophie PinkhamWhat We’re Loving: Crapalachia, Welty, Animalia by The Paris ReviewDiego, Frida, and Me by Molly CrabappleWhat We’re Loving: Romanian Cinema, African Art by The Paris ReviewChinua Achebe, 1930–2013 by Sadie SteinA Week in Culture: Tim Small, Publisher, Writer, Filmmaker by Tim SmallTeen Writers, and Other News by Sadie Stein How to Change Your Monitor's Refresh Rate in Windows Explainer: What Are Processor Threads? Lego deals: Order Lego flower building sets at Amazon for $8 5 Signs Your Storage Drive is About to Fail NYT Connections hints and answers for June 16: Tips to solve 'Connections' #736. How to Boot to BIOS in Windows 11 DisplayPort vs HDMI: What's Best for High Refresh Rate Gaming? Ancient moon volcanoes made tiny glass beads. Here's what they mean. Flamengo vs. Esperance de Tunis 2025 livestream: Watch Club World Cup for free Boca Juniors vs. Benfica 2025 livestream: Watch Club World Cup for free 5 Ways to Connect Your Old Storage Devices to a New PC GPU Availability and Pricing Update: March 2022 Enter to win a free Samsung bundle and get up to $100 off when you reserve a new smart monitor 10 Tips to Get You Started with Microsoft PC Game Pass How to Backup Your Gmail Account Today's Hurdle hints and answers for June 17, 2025 NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for June 16: Tips to solve Connections #266 Don't miss these National Orgasm Day deals [2025] Halo Infinite PC Graphics Benchmark 4K vs 1440p vs 1080p: What Monitor to Buy?
1.0018s , 8199.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Korean College Girl Room Salon】,Miracle Information Network