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‘Parade of planets’ dazzles in night sky — with a special, unexpected guest

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Ahoy, from the good ship Azamara Onward headed south in the Pacific Ocean for French Polynesia.

Wednesday night the “Parade of Planets” was in full and spectacular view.

In the southwest sky, glorious Venus was ablaze with dimmer Saturn getting closer for their celestial rendezvous. As an added and unexpected bonus, the zodiacal light made a stunning appearance to cap off an already awe-inspiring view.

Following the planetary parade to the east, next up was Jupiter, high and bright among the stars of Taurus the Bull and the Pleiades.

At the end of the parade of planets was bright and reddish-orange Mars in the east on the horizon. Mars was at opposition — directly opposite the sun — Wednesday night.

The red planet was lined up with the two brightest stars in Gemini, the twins — Castor and Pollux — for an eye-catching sight of the three of them.

All my photos were taken with an iPhone Pro Max 15 and no editing was done. They are straight from the sky to you.

I hope you can get outside and see the “planetary parade” for yourself as it is pretty cool to see four of the five naked eye planets from horizon to horizon. Mercury, the fifth naked eye planet, is in the predawn sky.

Follow Greg Redfern on FacebookBluesky and his daily blog to keep up with the latest news in astronomy and space exploration

How to — maybe — catch a glimpse of the northern lights this week

Editor's note: A G3 (strong) to G4 (severe) level geomagnetic storm is ongoing since early Sunday. The Space Weather Prediction Center's most recent forecast (8:30 a.m. Eastern) is that these conditions will continue Sunday night through Monday morning. For D.C.-area Aurora chasers are recommended to scan the northern horizon visually and with a smartphone/camera starting as soon as it gets dark in the evening. Favorable conditions are forecast to last through the night. Just over a year ago, on May 10, 2024, the aurora borealis lit up the skies worldwide due to an extreme geomagnetic storm. The D.C. region had several glorious nights of the northern lights in 2024.
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