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3 Planets Performing Rare Night Sky Show:

How to See It
Three planets are coming together in the evening sky at the moment, putting on a
celestial show that won't be seen again for more than a decade.
Jupiter, Venus and Mercury are gathering low in the west-northwest evening sky, and
next week they'll form the tightest grouping of three naked-eye planets that skywatchers will see
until 2026, experts say.
"Heres a beautiful chance to see three planets all together," Alan MacRobert, a senior
editor at Sky & Telescope magazine, said in a statement. "Add the Earth under your feet, and
youre seeing half of the solar systems planets at once. Theyll be a lovely part of the spring
twilight." [Skywatching Events for May 2013]
"The view should be best about 30 to 45 minutes after sunset," MacRobert added. "And
think photo opportunity. Set up a camera on a tripod, zoom to the max, and try different time
exposures."
Venus and Jupiter are the two brightest planets in the solar system. They've been
approaching each other in the evening sky for weeks, and faint Mercury is now joining them,
appearing below and to the right of Venus.
By Friday (May 24), all three planets will fit into a circle 5 degrees wide, Sky &
Telescope officials said. (Your clenched fist held at arm's length measures about 10 degrees.)
But the trio will draw closer still. By Sunday (May 26), they'll all fit inside a 2.5-degree
circle meaning your thumb held at arm's length will nearly blot them all out.
Jupiter and Venus will sit side-by-side Monday evening (May 27), and then the solar
system's largest planet will start sliding lower and lower in the sky, disappearing completely in
early June.
Meanwhile, Venus will shine brightly as the "Evening Star" for the rest of the year.But as
Jupiter falls, Mercury soars, climbing higher and higher above Venus in its best evening
apparition of 2013, according to Sky & Telescope. Mercury's rise peaks on June 7, after which it
will start sinking back toward the horizon, fading all the while.
Mercury is the solar system's innermost planet. Because of its proximity to the sun,
Mercury is rarely in view for more than an hour after sunset or an hour before dawn. The tiny
planet can be tough to see, but its current grouping with celestial landmarks Venus and Jupiter
should help skywatchers out.
While the three planets appear tightly grouped in our night sky, in reality they're very far
away from each other. During the last week of May, Mercury, Venus and Jupiter will be about
105 million miles (169 million kilometers), 150 million miles (241 million km) and 565 million
miles (909 million km) away from Earth, respectively, Sky & Telescope officials said.
Late May also offers up another skywatching treat. On Saturday (May 25), viewers with
clear skies across much of the Americas and Africa will see a penumbral lunar eclipse, in which
the moon darkens as it passes through the outer part of Earth's shadow (known as the
penumbra).

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