Planets, Fomalhaut And The Milky Way In July 2023 Skywatching Guide
Learn where to find Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn in July. The bright star Fomalhaut and the Milky Way are great skywatching targets as well.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Category
🤖
TechTranscript
00:00 What's up for July?
00:04 Mars and Venus go their separate ways.
00:07 Saturn cruises with a dusty young star, and it's prime time for the Milky Way.
00:12 You'll find Venus and Mars in the west after sunset throughout July.
00:17 The pair moved ever closer in the sky during June and they begin July appearing quite near
00:21 to each other, but it's time for them to part company.
00:24 You'll notice them trending lower as the month goes on, with Venus in particular being
00:29 noticeably lower each night.
00:31 During the second week of July, reddish-colored Mars will appear very close to the blue-white
00:35 star Regulus.
00:37 Mars is quite distant from Earth right now and appears at its dimmest for the year in
00:41 July and August.
00:43 This month it appears at about the same brightness as Regulus, and you should easily be able
00:48 to see the difference in their color with your eyes or a pair of binoculars.
00:52 They're closest together on July 9th and 10th.
00:55 And on the 20th, the Moon will pass through, appearing just next to Mars.
01:00 Mercury also pops up quite low in the sky in the second half of July for those with
01:05 views of the horizon.
01:08 During July, you'll have giant planets Jupiter and Saturn keeping you company in the late
01:13 night and early morning hours.
01:15 And notably, you'll find Jupiter shining brightly beneath the crescent moon on the
01:19 morning of July 11th.
01:21 Jupiter appears quite a bit brighter than Saturn, and it's not just because Jupiter
01:25 is a little bigger.
01:26 See, the farther away something is in space, the fainter it tends to be, and Saturn is
01:31 certainly farther away from Earth than Jupiter.
01:34 But it's also farther away from the Sun, and being more distant means it receives much
01:39 less sunlight than Jupiter to begin with.
01:42 So it's the combination of being both farther from the Sun and farther from Earth that makes
01:46 Saturn appear so much fainter.
01:49 Saturn cruises across the sky with bright star Fomalhaut in July.
01:53 At around 440 million years old, Fomalhaut is a fairly young star.
01:58 NASA's Webb Space Telescope recently revealed new details in the dusty debris disk that
02:04 surrounds it.
02:05 Webb showed that there's much more structure in the disk than was previously known, with
02:10 three distinct belts made of debris from collisions of larger bodies, probably not unlike the
02:15 asteroids and comets in our own planetary system.
02:19 And researchers think the belts most likely are carved by the gravitational forces produced
02:24 by unseen planets.
02:26 It's a nice reminder that most stars you gaze upon represent entire planetary systems.
02:32 Each one is a sun, and most have a family of worlds in orbit around them.
02:38 Finally, a reminder that July is prime time for viewing the bright core of our home galaxy,
02:44 the Milky Way.
02:46 The Milky Way core is visible looking toward the south in July as a faint, diagonal band
02:51 of light as soon as it's fully dark.
02:54 Packed with enormous numbers of stars along with dark clouds of dust, you can view its
02:59 faint glow with your own eyes from locations away from bright urban centers.
03:04 So if you have the opportunity to go camping or sky-watching away from the city, it's
03:10 truly one of the most awe-inspiring sights of the night sky, and not to be missed.
03:17 Here are the phases of the Moon for July.
03:22 Stay up to date with all of NASA's missions to explore the solar system and beyond at
03:26 NASA.gov.
03:27 I'm Preston Dyches from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and that's What's Up for this
03:32 month.
03:32 [music]
03:37 [BLANK_AUDIO]