Before 2020 ends, a great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn


Two large fuzzy dots, Jupiter and Saturn, labeled, against a star field. Jupiter is about six times bigger than Saturn.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Closeup of Jupiter and Saturn, via Dr Ski. Saturn has been closely following Jupiter westward across the sky each night for most of 2020. The pair is bright in the evening sky in September. Although Saturn is easily as bright as a 1st-magnitude star, the ringed planet pales next the the king planet Jupiter, which outshines Saturn by some 15 times. Thank you, Dr Ski!

Astronomers use the word conjunction to describe meetings of planets and other objects on our sky’s dome. They use the term great conjunction to describe meetings of Jupiter and Saturn, the two biggest worlds in our solar system. The last great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn was May 28, 2000. The next one will be December 21, 2020. But don’t wait until December to start watching these worlds. They’re visible tonight and every night – near each other for the rest of 2020 – an appealing and mind-expanding sight! 

At the 2000 great conjunction, Jupiter and Saturn were near the sun in our sky and difficult to observe. We’re due for a more observable great conjunction, and we’ll get one. By December, Jupiter and Saturn will be visible in the west shortly after sunset.

That’s not where Jupiter and Saturn are now, however. In September 2020, the pair are visible in the sky when darkness falls. Jupiter is easy to spot; it’s the brightest object in the evening sky. Saturn is just to the east of Jupiter on the sky’s dome.

Edgewise view of the summer Milky Way, on a dark night, over the ocean with a few large rocks on the beach.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Javier Elias captured this image on August 21, 2020, at Costa Ballena Beach in Chipiona, Cadiz, Spain. You can see Jupiter and Saturn to the left of the Milky Way, as the 2 brightest “stars” in the photo. Thank you, Javier.

You’ll recognize Jupiter and Saturn easily. Jupiter is brighter than any star. Saturn is not as bright as Jupiter, but it’s as bright as the brightest stars and shines with a distinctly golden color.

Unlike the twinkling stars, Jupiter and Saturn both shine steadily. Your next opportunity to identify them near the moon will be later this month.

The moon goes by the planets Jupiter and Saturn in the September 2020 evening sky.

Look for the waxing gibbous moon near the planets Jupiter and Saturn for several days, centered around September 24 and 25, 2020. Read more.

Saturn, the sixth planet outward from the sun, is the farthest and slowest-moving planet that we can easily see with the eye alone. Dazzling Jupiter, the fifth planet outward from the sun, is the second-slowest bright planet, after Saturn.

For that reason, Jupiter/Saturn conjunctions are the rarest of bright-planet conjunctions, by virtue of their slow motions in front of the constellations of the zodiac. Saturn takes nearly 30 years to go around the sun full circle whereas Jupiter takes nearly 12 years.

Thus, every 20 years, Jupiter catches up to Saturn as viewed from Earth.

Crescent Earth, distant crescent moon, Jupiter and Saturn close together with their orbits, labeled constellations.

Artist’s concept of Jupiter and Saturn in December of 2020, as viewed from a space-based perspective. Their conjunction will be December 21. See the moon in this drawing? It’ll be along our line of sight to the planets on December 16, 2020. Chart via Jay Ryan at ClassicalAstronomy.com.

From the years 2000 to 2100 inclusive, as viewed from our planet Earth, these Jupiter/Saturn conjunctions (in ecliptic longitude) happen on these dates:

May 28, 2000
December 21, 2020
October 31, 2040
April 7, 2060
March 15, 2080
September 18, 2100

These great Jupiter/Saturn conjunctions recur in periods of 20 years. Each year, Saturn completes about 12 degrees of its orbit around the sun, whereas Jupiter completes about 30 degrees. Therefore, in one year, Jupiter closes the gap between itself and Saturn by about 18 degrees (30 – 12 = 18 degrees). In a period of 20 years, then, Jupiter gains 360 degrees on Saturn (18 x 20 = 360 degrees), therefore lapping the ringed planet once every 20 years.

So start watching Jupiter and Saturn now! And mark your calendar for the great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn on December 21, 2020.

Bottom line: We see great conjunctions of Jupiter and Saturn – when these two giant planets are near each other on our sky’s dome – only every 20 years. The next one will be December 21, 2020. This is a once-in-20-years event. Jupiter and Saturn are bright and easy to see now. Charts and more info here.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2WVmFCm
Two large fuzzy dots, Jupiter and Saturn, labeled, against a star field. Jupiter is about six times bigger than Saturn.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Closeup of Jupiter and Saturn, via Dr Ski. Saturn has been closely following Jupiter westward across the sky each night for most of 2020. The pair is bright in the evening sky in September. Although Saturn is easily as bright as a 1st-magnitude star, the ringed planet pales next the the king planet Jupiter, which outshines Saturn by some 15 times. Thank you, Dr Ski!

Astronomers use the word conjunction to describe meetings of planets and other objects on our sky’s dome. They use the term great conjunction to describe meetings of Jupiter and Saturn, the two biggest worlds in our solar system. The last great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn was May 28, 2000. The next one will be December 21, 2020. But don’t wait until December to start watching these worlds. They’re visible tonight and every night – near each other for the rest of 2020 – an appealing and mind-expanding sight! 

At the 2000 great conjunction, Jupiter and Saturn were near the sun in our sky and difficult to observe. We’re due for a more observable great conjunction, and we’ll get one. By December, Jupiter and Saturn will be visible in the west shortly after sunset.

That’s not where Jupiter and Saturn are now, however. In September 2020, the pair are visible in the sky when darkness falls. Jupiter is easy to spot; it’s the brightest object in the evening sky. Saturn is just to the east of Jupiter on the sky’s dome.

Edgewise view of the summer Milky Way, on a dark night, over the ocean with a few large rocks on the beach.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Javier Elias captured this image on August 21, 2020, at Costa Ballena Beach in Chipiona, Cadiz, Spain. You can see Jupiter and Saturn to the left of the Milky Way, as the 2 brightest “stars” in the photo. Thank you, Javier.

You’ll recognize Jupiter and Saturn easily. Jupiter is brighter than any star. Saturn is not as bright as Jupiter, but it’s as bright as the brightest stars and shines with a distinctly golden color.

Unlike the twinkling stars, Jupiter and Saturn both shine steadily. Your next opportunity to identify them near the moon will be later this month.

The moon goes by the planets Jupiter and Saturn in the September 2020 evening sky.

Look for the waxing gibbous moon near the planets Jupiter and Saturn for several days, centered around September 24 and 25, 2020. Read more.

Saturn, the sixth planet outward from the sun, is the farthest and slowest-moving planet that we can easily see with the eye alone. Dazzling Jupiter, the fifth planet outward from the sun, is the second-slowest bright planet, after Saturn.

For that reason, Jupiter/Saturn conjunctions are the rarest of bright-planet conjunctions, by virtue of their slow motions in front of the constellations of the zodiac. Saturn takes nearly 30 years to go around the sun full circle whereas Jupiter takes nearly 12 years.

Thus, every 20 years, Jupiter catches up to Saturn as viewed from Earth.

Crescent Earth, distant crescent moon, Jupiter and Saturn close together with their orbits, labeled constellations.

Artist’s concept of Jupiter and Saturn in December of 2020, as viewed from a space-based perspective. Their conjunction will be December 21. See the moon in this drawing? It’ll be along our line of sight to the planets on December 16, 2020. Chart via Jay Ryan at ClassicalAstronomy.com.

From the years 2000 to 2100 inclusive, as viewed from our planet Earth, these Jupiter/Saturn conjunctions (in ecliptic longitude) happen on these dates:

May 28, 2000
December 21, 2020
October 31, 2040
April 7, 2060
March 15, 2080
September 18, 2100

These great Jupiter/Saturn conjunctions recur in periods of 20 years. Each year, Saturn completes about 12 degrees of its orbit around the sun, whereas Jupiter completes about 30 degrees. Therefore, in one year, Jupiter closes the gap between itself and Saturn by about 18 degrees (30 – 12 = 18 degrees). In a period of 20 years, then, Jupiter gains 360 degrees on Saturn (18 x 20 = 360 degrees), therefore lapping the ringed planet once every 20 years.

So start watching Jupiter and Saturn now! And mark your calendar for the great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn on December 21, 2020.

Bottom line: We see great conjunctions of Jupiter and Saturn – when these two giant planets are near each other on our sky’s dome – only every 20 years. The next one will be December 21, 2020. This is a once-in-20-years event. Jupiter and Saturn are bright and easy to see now. Charts and more info here.



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