All day
Visible night of Jun 22 – Jun 23, 2024
Mars: | ↓ Sat 2:08 pm | ↑ Sun 9:13 am |
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Saturn: | ↓ Sat 4:03 pm | ↑ Sun 12:58 am |
Neptune: | ↓ Sat 3:33 pm | ↑ Sun 2:43 am |
Recurrent Nova Due to Erupt
Sometime in the next few months, T Coronae Borealis—also known as T CrB or the Blaze Star—is expected to appear briefly in the constellation Corona Borealis as a ‘new’ star. Show Corona Borealis in the Night Sky Map below, or read more about the Blaze Star.
Tonight's Sky in Austin Valley, Jun 22 – Jun 23, 2024 (3 planets visible)
Mars rise and set in Austin Valley
Up some of the night.
Mars is visible more than 4 hours during the polar night. It is very close to the horizon, making it fainter because the light has to cover a larger distance when traveling through the Earth's atmosphere. Make sure to get an unobstructed view with as little light pollution as possible.
Sat, Jun 22 ↓2:08 pm
Sun, Jun 23 ↑9:13 am
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Saturn rise and set in Austin Valley
Up some of the night.
Saturn is visible more than 15 hours during the polar night.
Sat, Jun 22 ↓4:03 pm
Sun, Jun 23 ↑12:58 am
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Neptune rise and set in Austin Valley
Up some of the night. Use binoculars.
Neptune is visible more than 12 hours during the polar night. Very faint, use binoculars.
Sat, Jun 22 ↓3:33 pm
Sun, Jun 23 ↑2:43 am
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Planets Visible in Austin Valley
Planetrise/Planetset, Sun, Jun 23, 2024 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Planet | Rise | Set | Meridian | Comment |
Mercury | Down all day | Sat 3:58 pm | Down all night, not visible | |
Venus | Down all day | Sat 3:37 pm | Down all night, not visible | |
Mars | Sat 9:09 am | Sat 2:08 pm | Sat 11:39 am | Difficult to see |
Jupiter | Down all day | Sat 1:26 pm | Down all night, not visible | |
Saturn | Sat 1:02 am | Sat 4:03 pm | Sat 8:32 am | Fairly good visibility |
Uranus | Down all day | Sat 12:40 pm | Down all night, not visible | |
Neptune | Sat 2:47 am | Sat 3:33 pm | Sat 9:10 am | Difficult to see |