Sunday, 1 March 2026

April Night Skies

 A brief overview of what to see in the sky with the unaided eye during April evenings (updated April 1, 2026):

Stars and Constellations

●   Some prominent constellations visible in the evening sky are Bootes, Coma Berenices and Virgo

●   Follow the ‘handle’ stars of the Big Dipper star group southward to the star Arcturus in Bootes, and then further south to the star Spica in Virgo

●   Arcturus is a bright (first magnitude) orange star rising in the east during spring evenings

●   Spica is a bright (first magnitude) blue star lower in the southeastern sky during spring evenings

●   Coma Berenices is a small group of faint stars west of Arcturus, and nearly overhead by late evening

●   The region of sky in the direction of Virgo and Coma Berenices contains numerous galaxies that can be seen in a moderate-size telescope in a dark sky

Planets

●  Mercury is mostly not visible except with difficulty very low in the southeastern sky before sunrise and reaches greatest western elongation April 3

●  Venus shines brightly very low in the western sky after sunset

●  Mars is not practically visible, remaining close to the sun’s position in the sky

●  Jupiter is visible high in the western sky (nearly overhead) in the Gemini constellation

●  Saturn is not practically visible, being close to the sun’s position in the sky

 Moon Phases 

●  Full Moon April 1, 22:12 EDT

●  Last Quarter Moon April 10, 00:52 EDT

●  New Moon April 17, 07:52 EDT

      First Quarter Moon April 23, 22:32 EDT

 Sky Resources Online

Some website resources for sky charts, weekly sky events, and more information:

●  astrogeo.ca/skylights

●   www.heavens-above.com

●   In-the-sky.org

●  www.skyandtelescope.org

●  www.skymaps.com

Noteworthy Sky Events

 ●    April 22: peak of Lyrids meteor shower afternoon of April 22, but the shower is active from April 14-30

 ●  April 18-19: thin crescent moon and Venus close together in evening sky after sunset


Monthly Sky Chart for mid-April, mid-evening (courtesy of www.heavens-above.com):


Sunday, 1 February 2026

 

February Night Skies

A brief overview of what to see in the night sky with the unaided eye during February evenings:

Stars and Constellations

Some prominent constellations visible in the evening sky are Leo and Ursa Major (containing the Big Dipper star group)

● Leo, rising higher in the southeastern sky, is dominated by the bright star Regulus

● The Big Dipper and Ursa Major are rising high in the northeastern sky

● Two bright stars in Leo are Regulus, at the western end (and at the base of the backward “question mark”), and Denebola, at the eastern end of Leo

● South of Regulus is the red star Alphard, in the less prominent constellation Hydra

Planets

   Mercury becomes visible low in the western evening sky during mid and late February and reaches greatest eastern elongation from the sun February 19

   Venus becomes visible low in the western sky following sunset around mid-February

   Mars is not practically visible and remains close to the sun’s position

   Jupiter shines brightly in the southeastern sky during early evening during early February and high in the southern sky later in the month in the Gemini constellation

   Saturn is briefly visible low in the west-southwestern sky after sunset in the Pisces constellation

Moon Phases

   Full Moon February 1, 17:09 EST

   Last Quarter Moon February 9, 07:43 EST

   New Moon February 17, 07:01 EST

   First Quarter Moon February 24, 07:27 EST

Sky Resources Online

Some web resources for sky charts, weekly sky events, and more info:

    astrogeo.ca/skylights

    www.heavens-above.com

    In-the-sky.org

    www.skyandtelescope.org

    www.skymaps.com

Noteworthy Sky Events

   Feb. 2: full moon occults the bright star Regulus in the Leo constellation

   Feb. 18: Venus, Mercury and very thin crescent moon close together low in the western sky after sunset

Monthly Sky Chart for mid-February, mid-evening (courtesy of www.heavens-above.com):