Tuesday, February 08, 2022
Thursday February 10 to Thursday February 17
The Full Moon is Thursday, February 17. The evening sky is now devoid of bright planets, but the constellations of Orion in the north and Carina in the South make up for this. Mars is readily visible in the morning sky in handle of the teapot of Sagittarius. Mars is within binocular distance of the iconic globular cluster M22 at the start of the week. Venus is climbing in the morning twilight towards Mars. During the week Mercury continues to climb out of the morning twilight towards the pair.
The Full Moon is Thursday, February 17. The Moon is at apogee, when it is furthest from the Earth, on the 11th.
Similar views will be seen from the rest of Australia at the equivalent local time (90 minutes before sunrise, click to embiggen).
Similar views will be seen from the rest of Australia at the equivalent local time (90 minutes before sunrise, click to embiggen).
Elsewhere
in Australia will see a similar view at the equivalent
time (90 minutes after sunset).
Mercury climbs higher in the morning sky this week, heading towards the pair of Venus and Mars.
Venus is rising in the morning twilight towards Mars.
Star Map via Virtual sky. Use your mouse to scroll around and press 8 when your pointer is in the map to set to the current time.
Cloud cover predictions can be found at SkippySky.
Here is the near-real time satellite view of the clouds (day and night) http://satview.bom.gov.au/
Labels: weekly sky