
Jupiter, Venus and Mercury last night 35 minutes after sunset low in the northwestern sky. Details: 150mm lens at f/2.8, 1/30″, ISO 400. Photo: Bob King
Last night we finally cleared off after four solid days and nights of gray and rain. Sparkling low in the northwestern sky was a most welcome sight – Venus, Jupiter and Mercury. This week they will undergo to a series of remarkable gatherings in the early evening sky.
Venus leaped out immediately as the brightest of the trio. It stood 6 degrees above the horizon; that’s three fingers held horizontally at arm’s length. Jupiter jumped out next some 5 degrees to the upper left of Venus. Mercury, the dimmest of the the bunch, was very easy in binoculars but took a bit of concentration to see with the naked eye.

I’ve highlighted several nights of the triple planet gathering over the coming nights. Jupiter is colored yellow and Mercury pink to tell which is which. Created with Stellarium
This jam has just begun. Watch over the coming nights as the three planets move closer together to form a series of ever-changing jeweled triangles. Tomorrow night Mercury and Venus will be closest (1.4 degrees); Mercury and Jupiter on Memorial Day (2.3 degrees) and Venus and Jupiter on May 28 (1 degree).
All you need to see them is an unobstructed view to the west-northwest. You can begin your search about 30 minutes after sunset; get an early start because the planets set about an hour later. Binoculars can prove most helpful in case the sky’s hazy or if you have difficulty finding Mercury.

Left: If you could hover high above Earth’s north pole today and look down on the solar system, this is how the evening planets would be laid out. You can easily see how far they are from one another. At right, viewed from the flat plane of the solar system, they appear to bunch up. These occasional bunches caused by perspective are called conjunctions. Illustration: Bob King
As you can see from the nightly maps, Mercury moves upward from the western horizon to join Venus, passes it and then teams up with Jupiter. Mercury moves rapidly because it orbits the sun most closely. Venus is also moving up from the west but more slowly, so it essentially stays in the same spot. Jupiter meanwhile drops down toward the western horizon. Earth’s motion around the sun is much faster than Jupiter’s causing the sun to literally “get in the way” between our two planets. From our perspective, Jupiter will soon disappear in the solar glare and won’t be seen again until early July when it reappears in the morning sky.
Although the trio may appear close to one another in the sky, they’re millions of miles from each other and the Earth. We see them together because they lie along the same line of sight for the coming week.



























