Weekly Stargazing Tips

Provided by StarDate.org. Unless otherwise specified, viewing times are local time regardless of time zone, and are good for the entire Lower 48 states (and, generally, for Alaska and Hawaii).

July 19: Moon and Pleiades

The Moon and the Seven Sisters huddle up in the wee hours of tomorrow morning. The Moon will "occult" some of the sisters, which are the brightest stars of the Pleiades star cluster. The stars form a tiny dipper at the shoulder of Taurus, the bull.

July 20: Moon and Venus

Venus is shining as the brilliant Morning Star now. It lines up close to the crescent Moon before dawn the next couple of days. Venus looks so bright in part because it's blanketed by clouds that reflect most of the sunlight that strikes them, hiding the surface. 

July 21: Moon and Planets

The brightest objects in the night sky team up early tomorrow: the Moon and the planets Venus and Jupiter. Venus is the Morning Star, to the upper right of the Moon. Slightly fainter Jupiter is to the lower left of the Moon. You will need a clear horizon to spot it.

July 22: Moon and Jupiter

Jupiter, the largest planet in the solar system, stands close to the crescent Moon in tomorrow's dawn twilight. It looks like a bright star, but it's so low in the sky that you will need a clear horizon to spot it.

July 23: Subtle Glow

The glowing band of the Milky Way arches high across the sky on summer nights. At nightfall, it stretches from almost due north, high across the east, to almost due south. It stands directly overhead by midnight. You must avoid city lights to see it.

July 24: New Moon

The Moon is new today, so it is lost from sight as it crosses between Earth and the Sun. It will return to view in a couple of nights as a thin crescent low in the western sky shortly after sunset.

July 25: Pluto at Opposition

Pluto, everyone's favorite dwarf planet, lines up opposite the Sun this week. It rises around sunset and remains in view all night, and shines brightest for the whole year. Even so, it is so faint that you need a telescope to spot it.