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Night Sky for June 2024: Planets, Stars, and the Moon

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Parade of planets, 2024

Tonight's Night Sky During the Month of June

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June skywatching starts big: On the 1st, the Moon, Saturn, and Mars meet! The Full Moon rises on the summer solstice this year. And what鈥檚 this about a 鈥減arade of planets鈥 in the news? Astronomer Bob Berman weighs in.

Planets on Display

Venus is visible once again as an 鈥渆vening star鈥 this month! It will be visible in the west after sunset. Some nights, it looks so bright that people in the past (and, ahem, even in the present) have mistaken it for a UFO!

June 1: Crescent Moon and Mars

June skywatching starts big. Set your alarm for 4:30 A.M. on June 1. You鈥檒l be rewarded with a captivating crescent Moon between Saturn and Mars. Both planets will have the same 1-magnitude brightness. The Moon is a 31% waning crescent.

June 3: Planet Parade or Hype?

Then, due East, on the mornings of June 2 and June 3, you can better locate Mars before sunrise. The red planet is the bright orange 鈥渟tar鈥 next to the Moon. The Moon is a 12% waning crescent so that Mars will be more visible. Saturn is also on display.

Much of the media has touted June 3 as a 鈥淧arade of the Planets,鈥 stating there will be a rare planetary alignment of six planets.

There are only 8 major planets in our solar system. One is the Earth below your feet. One is Venus, now hidden in the sun鈥檚 glare. But the internet has been buzzing with the fact that the other 6 planets 鈥 Saturn, Neptune, Mars, Uranus, Mercury, and Jupiter 鈥 all will grace the eastern sky before sunup in the first days of June. 

What鈥檚 the real story? Yes, the planets ARE truly in the sky.  No, you won鈥檛 see them with the naked eye. From our planet鈥檚 perspective, you won鈥檛 see Mercury (too close to the Sun), Jupiter (also very close to the Sun), Uranus (only with a telescope, maybe), and Neptune (ditto). 

What will you see? A couple of beautiful planets: Mars and Saturn. And don鈥檛 forget, you have to wake up before dawn. This is still an interesting event in that we 鈥渒now鈥 it鈥檚 happening, but you won鈥檛 see much during the wee hours of the day! Better observing events are on this page!

After June 15, the giant planet Jupiter returns to our naked-eye view as an early morning star. 

June 30: Planet Conjunction

On the 30th of June, mark your calendars for a brilliant conjunction, with Mars hovering halfway between the Moon and Jupiter.

Spotlight on the Moon

June 6: New Moon

Prefer to stargaze and ponder the cosmos? June 6 is your best opportunity, with the new Moon peaking at 8:38 A.M. Read more about the new Moon.

June 20: A Summer Solstice Spectacle!

The 20th (at 4:51 P.M.) marks the first day of summer for the Northern Hemisphere and the longest day of 2024 in the Northern Hemisphere. This is the day when the Sun is the highest at midday, rising from its leftmost position and setting at the year鈥檚 rightmost spot on the horizon.

June 21鈥22: Solstice Strawberry Moon

Get out the strawberries and cream! Yes, June鈥檚 Moon is traditionally called the 鈥淪trawberry Moon.鈥  Find out why on our June Full Moon page

This year鈥檚 Strawberry Moon brings with it something extra. This year, we will see an unusually amber, low-down lunar placement at 1 AM on the night of June 21 to 22. Since the Full Moon is always opposite the Sun, it uses the solstice occasion to sink to its very lowest point in the zodiac, in Sagittarius. But there鈥檚 more 鈥 due to the tilted orbit of the Moon, it will be in its LOWEST position for the next 18 years. 

So watch the Moon that night if you鈥檙e awake in the hour after midnight. While a 鈥渓ow鈥 Moon may not sound overly exciting, it really stands out when viewed in person. And, after all, such once-every-18-years events only appear a few times in one鈥檚 life. Check out our list of must-see sky-watching phenomenons for 2024 (hint, hint, this made the list). 

June Stargazing

Click here for the June Sky Map to see a start chart for this month

About The Author

Bob Berman

Bob Berman, astronomer editor for The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人, covers everything under the Sun (and Moon)! Bob is the world鈥檚 most widely read astronomer and has written ten popular books. Read More from Bob Berman