by APOD Robot » Thu Jan 06, 2022 5:06 am
The Last Days of Venus as the Evening Star
Explanation: That's not a
young crescent Moon posing behind cathedral towers after sunset. It's Venus in a crescent phase. About 40 million kilometers away and
about 2 percent illuminated by sunlight, it was captured with camera and telephoto lens in this series of exposures as it set in western skies on January 1 from Veszprem, Hungary. The bright celestial beacon was languishing in the evening twilight, its days as the
Evening Star coming to a close as 2022 began. But it was also growing larger in apparent size and becoming an ever thinner crescent
in telescopic views. Heading toward a (non-judgemental)
inferior conjunction, the inner planet will be positioned
between Earth and Sun on January 9 and generally lost from view in the solar glare. A crescent Venus will soon reappear though. Rising in the east by mid-month just before the Sun as the brilliant
Morning Star.
[url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap220106.html] [img]https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/calendar/S_220106.jpg[/img] [size=150]The Last Days of Venus as the Evening Star[/size][/url]
[b] Explanation: [/b] That's not a [url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap181116.html]young crescent Moon[/url] posing behind cathedral towers after sunset. It's Venus in a crescent phase. About 40 million kilometers away and [url=http://www.astropixels.com/ephemeris/planets/venus2022.html]about 2 percent[/url] illuminated by sunlight, it was captured with camera and telephoto lens in this series of exposures as it set in western skies on January 1 from Veszprem, Hungary. The bright celestial beacon was languishing in the evening twilight, its days as the [url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap211223.html]Evening Star[/url] coming to a close as 2022 began. But it was also growing larger in apparent size and becoming an ever thinner crescent [url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap200521.html]in telescopic views[/url]. Heading toward a (non-judgemental) [url=http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/cosmos/I/Inferior+Conjunction]inferior conjunction[/url], the inner planet will be positioned [url=https://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/inferior-conjunction-venus-between-sun-and-earth/]between Earth and Sun on January 9[/url] and generally lost from view in the solar glare. A crescent Venus will soon reappear though. Rising in the east by mid-month just before the Sun as the brilliant [url=https://history.nasa.gov/SP-424/ch1.htm]Morning Star[/url].
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