News5 mins ago
Anyone heavily into astronomy?
Went outside this morning while it was still dark, and, looking out to sea, I could see something large and intensely bright in the night sky. It was far too big and bright to be a star. It was much further away than the moon, and so therefore visibly smaller. The visibility of this celestial body remained for a while after all the stars disappeared. Any ideas?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The word planet comes from the Greek meaning wandering star (i.e. a star which appears to move against the background of the other stars). There are 5 of these wandering stars visible to the naked eye Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. And if you want to take a look at this photo you'll see three of them near the moon, plus of course a bit of one other rocky planet :-)
If you want your very own planetarium to show you what's in the sky at your location then this is very good
http://www.stellarium.org/
It displays what you can curently see at your your longitude/latitude, remove the blue sky to show the stars that are not currently visible, display names, constellations, nebulae, in real time or speeded up time, and lots of other features. And it's free.
http://www.stellarium.org/
It displays what you can curently see at your your longitude/latitude, remove the blue sky to show the stars that are not currently visible, display names, constellations, nebulae, in real time or speeded up time, and lots of other features. And it's free.
lol ... Probably not a rare anything :-) At that time and from that location, Mars, Venus and Mercury were all visible, but given that it was still visible after the stars disappeared, it was almost certainly Venus.
If you have Java installed, Night vision is a nice alternative to Stellarium which Spodo suggested earlier.
If you have Java installed, Night vision is a nice alternative to Stellarium which Spodo suggested earlier.
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