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There’s a major planetary lineup coming to the early-morning sky, with the Moon joining in several times in June. First, though, let’s look at why such lineups occur. If you were to turn our ...
Friday, May 3 The Moon passes 0.8° south of Saturn at 7 P.M. EDT. Because the pair appears in the early-morning sky, stay tuned to catch them tomorrow morning, along with several other planets.
A big parade that’s on tap for Monday morning won’t feature any floats or marching bands. Instead, it will be a planetary parade up in the sky — with six of the planets in our solar system ...
Morning sky: All the planetary action this month is in the morning sky. Saturn rises around 3 a.m. in early June but by 1 a.m. late in the month. Mars rises around 4 a.m. all month long.