Unfortunately, just Saturn. (See source.) Venus, Mars, and Jupiter are too closely in line with the Sun this month.
However, Mercury should be visible in the pre-dawn, later this month.
We just missed the very rare transit of the sun by Mercury on Nov. 8th (I'm kicking myself ... I saw the Venus transit a few years ago through a telescope, and it was wonderful).
And don't miss the Leonid meteor shower on Nov. 17. Unfortunately for me, this year the Leonids peak in the middle of the day in the U.S., but I imagine our European friends would get a good view.
2006-11-12 07:36:32
·
answer #1
·
answered by secretsauce 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
From the place? Do you have sparkling skies and not utilising countless sunshine pollutants? are you able to verify countless stars? With the bare eye, planets will look as tiny disks that look steadier than the "twinkling" of stars. As to while, there will be a pair tremendously much each evening, sometime throughout the time of the evening - Venus is barely seen presently after sunlight set or earlier sunlight upward push (yet not the two on an identical time) the place is continuously changing, you will could use an internet site that makes a crude image of the evening sky out of your area and exhibits you the place they're at a given time of evening - a superbly seen Saturn interior the western sky at 8 pm would be long previous with the help of lifeless night
2016-11-23 17:44:02
·
answer #2
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
MY EYE IS VERY VERY SHY....
IT WON'T LET ME OUT IN PUBLIC--REVEALING CONDITION..
BUT MARS--JUPITER--VENUS...
2006-11-12 07:32:10
·
answer #3
·
answered by cork 7
·
0⤊
0⤋