Planet-observing is fun and easy: Top tips here

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Jelieta Walinski of St. David, Arizona, captured this image on January 23, 2025, and wrote: “This single-exposure photo captures the Desert Bloom Observatory at its center, glowing with a warm red light. Above, a stunning planetary parade unfolds, with Saturn, Venus, Jupiter and Mars visible to the naked eye.” Thank you, Jelieta. Have you been enjoying the current planetary alignment? See planet-observing tips below.

February 2025 evening skies have a string of bright planets across the sky. Here are planet-observing tips.

Planet-observing is easy and fun

Sometimes when you’re out gazing at the brightest objects in the night sky, you’re seeing the planets without knowing it. There are five planets you can view without optical aid: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. These are the classical planets that the ancients knew. They watched these planets “wander” across the sky, seemingly unattached to the stars and constellations. The word planet is from the ancient Greek word planete, meaning wanderer.

For the outer planets (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune), the best viewing happens around their yearly oppositions, when Earth is passing between that world and the sun, placing it opposite the sun in our sky. A planet at opposition rises when the sun sets and is visible all night.

The inner planets (Venus and Mercury) are most easily seen around their greatest elongations. The inner planets stay near the sunrise or sunset. Greatest elongation is when their distance from the sun on our sky’s dome is greatest.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

When do you look for planets?

The fact is, any time you’re under the night sky, and the clouds have parted, is a great time to try to look for planets. There’s often a planet or two, or more, up in some part of the sky for much of the night (if not all night). The bright planets are often (but not always) brighter than the brightest stars. And you can see the most distant and dimmest major planets too, as long as you have a pair of binoculars.

Sometimes we are treated to special planetary pairings, such as the recent January 17-18, 2025, Venus and Saturn conjunction. Occasionally we have a planetary parade when you could see all five bright planets at once. In June of 2022 we had five bright planets lined up across the morning sky.

And in 2025, there’s been four bright planets visible in the January and February evening sky. And at month’s end, a fifth planet will be ascending in the western evening twilight while another planet slips away.

By the way, a good way to tell if it’s a planet or a star is stars twinkle, planets do not. In fact, planets generally shine as a steady light.

February finder charts for evening planets

In 2025, we’ve had four bright planets in the evening sky since the beginning of January. A fifth bright planet will join them at month’s end in the evening twilight.

Sphere with green line for the ecliptic showing the location of the planets Venus, Jupiter, Mars and Saturn in the evening sky on February 14, 2025.
Here’s the view of 4 bright planets around the evenings of February 14, 2025. They will lie along the path the sun travels in daytime (the green line on our chart). Brilliant Venus reaches greatest brilliancy on February 14 and dazzles in dark skies in the western evening sky, with the steady golden light of Saturn lower on the horizon. High overhead is bright Jupiter, and visible most of the night is the red planet, Mars. Chart via EarthSky.
Sphere with green line for the ecliptic showing the location of the planets Venus, Jupiter, Mars and Saturn in the evening sky on February 24, 2025.
Here’s the view of 3 bright planets around the evenings of February 24, 2025. They will lie along the path the sun travels in daytime (the green line on our chart). Brilliant Venus is dazzling in dark skies in the west. High overhead is bright Jupiter, and the red planet, Mars, is visible most of the night. If you are lucky and look about 20-30 minutes after sunset you might be able to catch Saturn and Mercury close to each other low in the bright western evening twilight. Chart via EarthSky.
Composite of Jupiter, Saturn, Venus and Mars through a telescope.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Najah Alsalihy captured these images from Iraq in January 2025 and wrote: “I captured images of Jupiter, Venus and Saturn on January 1, 2025, and Mars was photographed on January 16, 2025, when it was at opposition.” Thank you, Najah!

How will you know where to find planets at any given time? Visit EarthSky’s visible planets and night sky guide.

Keep reading to meet each planet and learn a few tips on what to look for.

Partly cloudy sky with crescent moon, Antares and Mercury.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Roberto Burkle of Mexico captured this image of the crescent moon, Antares and Mercury on December 28, 2024. Thank you, Roberto!

Mercury: Never far from the sun

Of the five classical planets, Mercury is the most elusive. By that we mean you have to look for it in the right place and at the right time. That’s because Mercury is innermost to the sun, so we on Earth never see Mercury stray far from the sun in our night sky. Mercury is sometimes visible after sunset, when it’s following the sun below the western horizon. Or, it’s up in the east, leading the sun up from behind the dawn horizon.

Mercury is just starting to emerge after sunset now. In fact, on February 24 and 25, 2025, it’ll have a close encounter with Saturn. You might need binoculars to find the planetary pair, but it’s worth trying to glimpse them if you have clear skies. Mercury is just beginning its best evening elongation of 2025 for the Northern Hemisphere.

TIP:

It’s fun to observe Mercury from the time it first appears – either in the west after sunset or east before dawn – through the time it’s farthest from the sun (greatest elongation) – and back to when it disappears again into the sunset or sunrise glare. During these times, Mercury makes a great loop in the morning or evening twilight sky. Every Mercury apparition is a little different, depending on the time of year, your location on Earth and other factors. Mercury is just now fresh from a greatest elongation in the morning sky. It’s now heading toward another greatest elongation in the evening sky (west after sunset), on March 7-8, 2025.

TIP:

Mercury shows phases, like the moon. Once you learn to watch Mercury with your eye, try some optical aid. Just be sure that the sun is completely below the horizon before you start searching for Mercury with binoculars or a telescope. Mercury and Venus, being inner planets, show phases like the moon. This happens around the time of their inferior conjunctions (when they pass between us and the sun). Mercury’s next inferior conjunction will be March 24, 2025. So that means you might see Mercury phases as the planet descends toward the sun starting in March. You’ll need a telescope to see the phases of Mercury.

TIP:

As Mercury comes and goes in our sky – and as we and it travel around the sun – a telescope will show you that Mercury’s angular diameter (its size as seen on our sky’s dome) varies from 4.5 to 13.0 arcseconds. That’s because, Mercury’s size in our sky depends on how close Earth and Mercury are in their respective orbits.

Dark sky, crescent moon and bright dot that is Venus.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Gerald Barney of Port Wentworth, Georgia, captured this image on February 1, 2025, and wrote: “The evening sky reveals the beauty of the waxing moon and Venus close to each other.” Thank you, Gerald!

Venus: Brightest planet

Venus is the brightest planet we can see from Earth. It outshines all the stars. When it’s close to the horizon (which it often is, being closer to the sun than Earth), people frequently mistake it for a plane with its landing lights on.

This neighboring planet is so bright because of its thick clouds and because of how close the planet is to us. It’s our nearest planetary neighbor in the solar system.

Venus is currently in the evening sky, incredibly bright, above the western horizon after sunset. It’ll grace our evening sky through the March. Then, Venus moves to the morning sky starting on March 22-23. Around then, observers in northern latitudes might be able to see Venus in both the morning and evening twilight. It’ll be visible in the morning sky through October. Plus, watch for Venus and Jupiter to have a close conjunction on August 12, 2025.

TIP:

Venus looks especially beautiful when it pairs up with a crescent moon or another planet. In fact, the moon passes close to Venus next on March 1, 2025. Visit EarthSky’s visible planets and night sky guide regularly to learn the dates of those pairings.

TIP:

Like Mercury, through a telescope, Venus shows phases. Its apparent size in our sky changes, much like Mercury, but even more dramatically than Mercury. Venus is so close and so bright that, even with steadily held binoculars, you can sometimes see that Venus is something other than round. If you looked at Venus through a telescope tonight (February 13, 2025), you’d see it in a 28%-illuminated phase. The phase of Venus will shrink between now and when it will pass between us and the sun on March 22-23, 2025. Afterwards, it’ll pop up quickly in the east before dawn.

TIP:

Venus will undergo what astronomers call greatest brilliancy on February 14, 2025. That’s when the overall largeness of its disk will balance with planet’s shrinking phase, so that we see Venus as an eerie bright light in our twilight sky. Greatest brilliancy will happen again when Venus is in the morning sky on Aoril 27, 2025.

Composite of crescent moon and crescent Venus.
View at EarthSky Community Photo. | Gwen Forrester of DeKalb County, Tennessee, captured these images on February 3, 2025. Gwen wrote: “Venus has been shining at its brightest recently, accompanied by the waxing crescent moon, as its own crescent phase wanes. Tonight they were at roughly equal illumination as viewed from Earth.” Thank you, Gwen!

Mars: The red planet

Mars is the most fascinating of the visible planets to watch with the unaided eye. That’s because it’s the planet next-outward from Earth in orbit around the sun. It’s not a very large world (smaller than Earth), and so its brightness changes dramatically throughout its visible cycle.

Mars is currently high in the evening sky, noticeably red in color but fading in brightness, setting before dawn. It lies near the twin stars of Gemini, often forming a line with Pollux and Castor or the trio forms a triangle. By April, Mars will blend in with the other 1st-magnitude stars, as it shrinks and fades after its recent opposition on January 15-16, 2025, when Earth flew between Mars and the sun. Now Earth is fleeing ahead of Mars in our smaller, faster orbit around the sun. And as a result, Mars is fading day by day.

TIP:

The most distinctive feature of Mars to the unaided eye is its reddish color. When you view Mars from a dark-sky location, its color really pops. The red color is what drew the ancients to name the planet for the god of war. Iron oxide in the rocks, the same compound that makes rust and blood reddish on Earth, makes the surface of Mars look red, too.

TIP:

Binoculars mounted in a tripod can show you Mars’ round disk shape. Binoculars will also accentuate Mars’ red color.

TIP:

If you want to see surface features on Mars, you’re going to need a telescope. White patches on Mars are generally ice caps or clouds. Percival Lowell thought the dark areas of Mars were canals built by Martians to carry water across the surface. Others thought the dark spots were a sign of vegetation. Various spacecraft that have studied the red planet revealed that the dark markings come from a variety of sources, such as dark volcanic basalt or landslides, but not from life.

Starry sky with Orion, Hyades, Gemini showing with Jupiter and Mars.
Mars forms a triangle with Pollux and Castor in this image taken on January 30, 2025. Also visible is bright Jupiter, Orion, Taurus, Auriga, Gemini, the Hyades and Pleiades plus Sirius. Image via WyoAstro all-sky camera.

Jupiter: Biggest planet with visible moons

Jupiter is high in the evening sky now, and not far from Mars. Since Jupiter is much brighter than all the stars it makes it very easy to spot. Jupiter lies in front of the constellation Gemini and is currently near the V-shaped Hyades star cluster.

Jupiter will be slipping away in the evening sunset in May, and it’ll reappear in the morning sky in July. Venus and Jupiter will have a close conjunction on August 12, 2025. Jupiter was at its brightest for 2025 in January and will be at its brightest again in January 2026.

TIP:

Even the smallest telescope will reveal the four largest moons of Jupiter. Binoculars might also let you glimpse a moon or two, if you have a dark sky. The Galilean moons, as they’re known, are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Nightly observing will show them constantly changing places as they whirl around the giant planet, sometimes passing in front of or behind Jupiter. These occultations and transits can also involve the shadows of the moons visible on the planet’s disk when viewed through a larger telescope.

Five bright white dots in a line on black background, with one of them (Jupiter) very much bigger and brighter.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Nanci McCraine at Finger Lakes, New York, took this photo on September 30, 2023, and wrote: “I noticed craggy edges around Jupiter. Zooming in, I spotted this line of 4 straight lights across the planet that I assume are satellites.” That is correct! Binoculars or a small telescope will show Jupiter’s moons.

TIP:

The surface of Jupiter is also worth a look through a telescope. You’ll need a larger size telescope to make out the Great Red Spot, but smaller scopes will still show you the light and dark belts and zones that ring the giant planet.

Two views of a banded planet, one considerably bigger. The smaller view has a white dot beside it.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Jupiter was extra bright in December 2024 when it was closest to Earth and therefore largest in our sky. Nishat Khan in Vaughan, Ontario, shared this comparison image of Jupiter from September 16 with one taken on December 14, 2024. Nishat wrote: “Comparing 2 images of Jupiter taken 3 months apart. It was about 40 arcseconds in the September image; while it is bigger, around 48 arcseconds, in the image taken around opposition time in December. Both images are taken with the exact same setup. September image shows the moon Io as well.” Thank you, Nishat!

Saturn: Golden color, magnificent rings

Saturn is the faintest of the bright planets, and it’s currently descending in the evening sky and will slip away by the end of February. You can’t see Saturn’s rings without a telescope. What can you notice about Saturn with the eye alone? Be sure to notice its golden color and steady light.

Starry background with a golden dot labeled as Saturn and a bright shape that is Venus.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Michael Flynn of Pine Mountain Club, California, captured this image of the Saturn and Venus conjunction on January 17, 2025. Thank you, Michael! Saturn’s golden color clearly shows in this image.

TIP:

Saturn is called the planet of the rings with good reason. The rings of Saturn are magnificent! As the years pass, and we and Saturn both orbit the sun, the angle of the rings changes with respect to Earth. Sometimes we see the north face of the rings, and sometimes the south face. Sometimes, the rings turn their razor-thin edge to us, and virtually disappear. We can’t overstate how glorious Saturn’s rings are to see. They make the planet look twice as big as it would without them.

On a night of good seeing, with a small telescope, you can make out a gap in the rings, called the Cassini Division. You can also look for a shadow of the rings cast onto the planet, or a shadow of the planet cast onto the rings.

Composite of Saturn and its rings taken in four different years.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | John Nelson of Puget Sound, Washington, submitted this composite image and wrote: “A composite of some of my images of Saturn over the last 6 years showing how the angle of Saturn’s rings to Earth have been slowly decreasing. A little later this year (March 2025), the angle will have decreased to the point where the rings will be edge-on but too close to the sun to see. Saturn’s ring angle towards Earth cycles over a 13 to 15 year period going from nearly fully open to edge on then back again. ” Thank you, John.

TIP:

Titan is Saturn’s brightest moon and it’s visible in telescopes. It is possible to see up to six more of Saturn’s moons through telescopes.

Uranus: A different pale blue dot

Carl Sagan described Earth as a pale blue dot when looking at a Voyager 1 image of our planet as the spacecraft sped out of the solar system. For us on Earth looking out at the solar system, the seventh planet from the sun, Uranus, appears as nothing more than a pale blue dot. And that’s through a telescope! With the eye alone, you can sometimes pick out Uranus from among the stars. But, to do it, you need absolutely pristine, dark skies.

TIP:

Uranus is easier to find when close to the moon or a bright planet. Uranus is in Taurus in the evening sky now. Then it’ll move to the morning sky in June, and be near Venus around July 4, 2025.

TIP:

With a telescope, the surface features and rings of Uranus can’t be seen. But some larger telescopes will pick up a couple of Uranus’ moons. A medium to large size telescope might show you Titania and Oberon. They are the largest moons of Uranus and orbit far enough from the planet that you can distinguish them as separate points of light.

Small fuzzy bluish dot showing Uranus through a telescope.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Chris Benoit captured this image from a video he took on January 30, 2025, from Canada and wrote: “Last night in the cold weather I located Uranus. I took the video for about 30 seconds and got back in to the house.” Thank you, Chris!

Neptune: Farthest major planet from the sun

And finally, Neptune is the biggest observing challenge on the list, but it’s not hard to see with optical aid and a guide star or planet. When Neptune is close to an object that’s easy to pick out of the night sky, say, Venus, you can pick it up easily in binoculars. If you have keen eyesight, binoculars will show it as a disk with a darker blue hue.

TIP:

Neptune in 2025 has been in the evening sky in the vicinity of Venus and moves to the morning sky in April.

Two fuzzy dots for Neptune and Triton, one blue and a smaller one brownish.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | B Martin of Riverside, California, submitted this image on October 20, 2023, and wrote: “This is Neptune and its friendly moon Triton. You can see clouds in the white areas on Neptune along with its darker south pole. North is up.” Thank you, B!

The moon can help planet-observing

If you aren’t familiar with the stars and constellations, the moon can help guide you to the planets as it orbits around the Earth each month.

For charts and further information visit EarthSky’s Visible planets and night sky guide.

Bottom line: Get our top tips for planet observing, from innermost and elusive Mercury out to faint blue Neptune … and everything in between.

Source link

Read More

Visit Our Site

Read our previous article: 40 cosmic questions and answers

Leave a Comment