
From a recent Astronomical League FB post → You know you’re a Deep Sky Observer when ….
from Steve Boerner, an Astronomical League Master Observer – “Others say you always look up when you walk out of a building.”
I know I do this, do you?
MERCURY - begins to show again as it moves away from the Sun this month. On the 18th it will be near the Moon, low in the west, at about 6 PM CST. On the 19th, it reaches its greatest elongation which is its furthest distance from the Sun. It is this action that allows it to be visible to us on Earth.
VENUS - has left our morning skies and is slowly returning as our ‘evening star’ as it is now low in the western sky at sunset but very near the Sun. Viewing of the evening star improves in March.
Earth - Fun fact: If the Sun were as tall as a typical front door, Earth would be the size of a nickel and Earth would be about the size of an average sunspot.!
MARS - remains lost in the Sun’s glare this month and should reappear in our morning sky in a couple months. Mars has a once every 26-month opposition which means it has alternating good and bad years for viewing, with 2026 being a not so good year.
JUPITER - is visible all night, will be near the Moon this month and you will find both in the constellation Gemini the Twins. Jupiter has a rotational period of just 10 hours, compared to Earth’s 24 hours. This is fast for something so big!
SATURN - sets after the Sun in the western sky, with best views early in the month. It is heading for a solar conjunction in late March.
URANUS - On the 2nd it ends its retrograde motion. It stays close to the Pleiades this month and the Moon joins the group on the 23rd.
NEPTUNE - still traveling the sky near Saturn but is only about 1/525 as bright as Saturn.
This month’s full moon is known as the Snow Moon for the typical heavy snowfall that occurs in February. It is also called the Hunger Moon, Raccoon Moon and Wolf Moon.
Some years February does not have a full moon, and this happens about once every 19 years. The last time that happened was in 2018 with the next time February won’t have a full moon expected in 2037. Some call the month without a moon a "Black Moon" month.