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1889bra A Parade of Planets Is Marching Through the Night Sky
data de lançamento:2025-03-27 10:46    tempo visitado:214

Astute skywatchers may have already seen the striking line of planets across the night sky in January. This week Mercury joins the queue. Now every other world in our solar system will be visible among the stars at the same time — if you know where to look.

According to Gerard van Belle, director of science at Lowell Observatory in Arizona, an alignment of seven planets is neither mystical nor particularly rare.

“On the scale of supermoon to death asteroid, this is more a supermoon sort of thing,” Dr. van Belle said. Still, the planetary parade, as the event is colloquially named, “makes for a very nice excuse to go outside at night, maybe with a glass of wine, and enjoy the night sky.”

A Parade of Planets

Beginning in late February, seven planets will align in the night sky. But Uranus and Neptune may require a telescope to see.

Mars

SKY AT

SUNSET

ORION

Jupiter

Uranus

Plane of

Earth’s orbit

Venus

Neptune

Mercury

Saturn

HORIZON LOOKING

WEST

Saturn

Line of sight to

Neptune

SOLAR

SYSTEM

Line of sight to

Uranus

Jupiter

Viewed from above the solar system, the seven planets will fall within Earth’s line of sight at sunset, and will not be obscured by the sun.

Mercury

Sun

Mars

Venus

Earth

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SKY AT

SUNSET

Mars

ORION

Jupiter

Uranus

Plane of

Earth’s orbit

Venus

Neptune

Mercury

Saturn

HORIZON LOOKING

WEST

Viewed from above the solar system, the seven planets will fall within Earth’s line of sight at sunset, and will not be obscured by the sun.

Saturn

Line of sight to

Neptune

SOLAR

SYSTEM

Line of sight to

Uranus

Jupiter

Mercury

Sun

Venus

Earth

Mars

By Jonathan Corum | Source: NASA

Why are the planets aligned?

Whenever planets are visible in the night sky, they always appear roughly along the same line. This path, known as the ecliptic, is the same one that the sun travels along during the year.

This happens because the planets orbit around the sun in the same plane. Dr. van Belle likened the configuration to a vinyl record: The sun is in the center, and the grooves are the orbits of the planets around it.

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