The Perils Of Privatisation - Part X
News9 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Dan Glebitts. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.the brightest star in the sky is not a star but is sky lab i think .it became visible when they fitted solar panels a few years back.
if you can see only one star in a sky its more than likely man made
it could be beatleguise the red super giant at the top of orion .
also i dont think it was polaris as katie and dan mention the moon which is generaly in the southern sky[ skylab turf ] and polaris is north
and theres venus of course which gets my vote, but its a planet not a star as we know
Dilf is correct in the assertion that the brightest object visible in the sky is not a star, but is quite incorrect about it being skylab, (Skylab burnt up in the Earths atmosphere in July 1979). The likelihood is that what you saw was actually a planet (Venus in all probability), as is it is the fist 'star like' object to become visible to the naked eye in the evening.
Most of the brightest objects visible at night are actually planets, with the main ones being: Mars, Jupiter, Venus and Saturn. Mercury is also briefly visible during the day, just after the sun sets (before it gets dark).
Kags, it�s your turn to be pedantic now :-)
The point I was making (without going into the orbital cycle), is that, Venus is known as BOTH the morning, and �evening �star�, due to both it�s brightness, and it�s ability to be seen either at post sunset or pre dawn. Though not, as you correctly state, at the same time, but either one or the other.
I should have looked at time Dan posted (22.27), because if that was when he was looking out the window then Venus would not yet be up, however, if he had viewed it in the early hours of the morning, (As I did walking home from a Club at around 2.30 at the weekend) it would have been there in all its glory.