Des Moines Astronomical Society
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What's Up In The Sky Now?

Jupiter and one of its moons casting a shadow on Jupiter. Photo by DMAS member Scott Dearinger, 2021

April, 2026

Our Solar System - notes by DMAS member, JoAnn Cogil

Neil Armstrong, Astronaut (1930-2012): ”I remember on the trip home on Apollo 11, it suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye, and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn’t feel like a giant. I felt very, very small.” (Quote taken from www.spacecenter.org, the Space Center Houston website)

Mercury

MERCURY - rises before the Sun but will be difficult to see due to the lightening of the morning skies. On the 3rd, it has its greatest western elongation.

Venus

VENUS - mid-month we find our evening star near the Pleiades. On the 23rd, Uranus joins Venus & the Pleiades.

Earth

EARTH  - Earth Day is April 22nd. The name Earth is about 1,000 years old. All the planets, except for Earth, were named after Greek and Roman gods and goddesses. However, the name Earth is a Germanic word, which simply means “the ground.”

Mars

MARS - another planet rising shortly before the Sun this month. On the 15th, the red planet rises with Mercury, Saturn & Neptune but all may be difficult to see.

Jupiter

JUPITER - will be in our western sky after sunset and visible all evening, making it a good telescope target. On the 1st, the 4 Galilean moons will all be on one side of the planet and in order of their distance from Jupiter.

Saturn

SATURN - another planet rising shortly before the Sun, but tough to see early in the month. By month’s end, it rises sooner in the dawn twilight hours and provides us with a small window of viewing.

Uranus

URANUS - stays near the Pleiades this month.

Neptune

NEPTUNE - will be near Saturn in the early morning hours before sunrise.

The Moon

  • 01 – FULL moon at 9:11 P.M. CDT
  • 09 – 3rd / last quarter
  • 17 – NEW moon at 6:51 A.M. CDT
  • 23 – 1st quarter

This month’s full moon is the “Pink Moon” as it herald’s the appearance of the ‘moss pink’ or Phlox flower plant, one of the first spring wildflowers. It is also called the Grass Moon (time to get our lawn mowers ready) and the Egg Moon for the arrival of spring and birds beginning to lay their eggs.

On the 2nd, the Moon rises with the bright star Spica in the east-southeast. On the 22nd, the Moon and Jupiter are together in Gemini the Twins constellation in the evening hours. On the 25th, our Moon occults the star Regulus in the early evening.

Meteor Shower

  • Lyrids arrive this month as they run from April 15-29 and peaks on the night of the 21st-22nd. This shower can produce 15-20 meteors per hour and usually has swift, bright meteors, like “fireballs.” It comes from the Comet Thatcher (C/1861 G1) which has an orbital period of 415 years. The comet is currently travelling outward from our solar system and expected to reach its farthest point from our Sun about the year 2070. It then begins its return trip to our solar system and should be here about 2283. We should have favorable viewing this year due to the waxing crescent moon providing darker skies.

See a calendar of meteor showers this year

Comet Watch

  • Comet c/2025 R3 (PanSTARRS) – reaches perihelion on April 20th when it makes its closest pass to the Sun, which could make it easy to see with binoculars, or possibly with our naked eyes. On April 27th it passes close to Earth at a distance of 44 million miles and should be very bright. Look at the eastern sky about 90 minutes before sunrise as it travels through the Great square of Pegasus.

Download a Monthly Star Chart from some reliable sources

From Skymaps
From What's Out Tonight
From Astronomy League

Monthly Target List and other information from DMAS

TargetsDMAS_202604 (pdf)

Download

FirstScope (pdf)

Download

GettingStartedNorth (pdf)

Download

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Ashton Observatory is located in Ashton Wildwood County Park, Jasper County, IA

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