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Earthsky Tonight —Saturn closest, brightest, opposite the sun

Courtesy of EarthSky
A Clear Voice for Science
www.EarthSky.org [1]


[2]
Saturn



The planet Saturn is at opposition today.

That means Saturn is opposite the sun in Earth’s sky. At opposition, Saturn rises in the east at sunset and sets in the west at sunrise. This is when Saturn comes closest to Earth for all of 2010. As a result, it is when Saturn shines most brilliantly in our sky.

If you had a bird’s-eye view of the solar system today, you would see our planet Earth passing in between the sun and Saturn. You would see the sun, Earth and Saturn lining up in space. Only the planets that orbit the sun beyond Earth’s orbit can ever reach opposition – or be opposite the sun in Earth’s sky. The inner planets – Mercury and Venus – can never be at opposition, because they orbit the sun inside Earth’s orbit.

All the planets farther from the sun reach opposition every time our swifter-moving planet sweeps between the sun and them. Saturn, the sixth planet outward from the sun, is the most distant world that is easily visible to the unaided eye. The ringed planet returns to opposition about two weeks later every year.

That is Saturn at opposition tonight. Shining in the east at nightfall, Saturn looks like a respectably bright steady star. Saturn climbs upward throughout the night and ascends to its highest point at midnight. When it is high in the sky, where Earth’s turbulent atmosphere thins out and settles down, telescope users can view Saturn’s glorious rings.

Related:

Give me five minutes; I’ll give you Saturn for 2010 [3]

Written by Bruce McClure

Other Links:

Astronomy Picture of the Day from NASA/JPL [4]

Sky and Telescope [5]

National Geographic [6]

Space Com [7]

Amazing Space [8]

The York County Astronomical Society [9]

Scope City [10]

James S McDonnell Planetarium [11]