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Today: March 14, 2025
Today: March 14, 2025

Mars and Jupiter get chummy in the night sky. The planets won't get this close again until 2033

Mars Jupiter Encounter
August 09, 2024

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) โ€” Mars and Jupiter are cozying up in the night sky for their closest rendezvous this decade.

Theyโ€™ll be so close Wednesday, at least from our perspective, that just a sliver of moon could fit between them. In reality, our solar systemโ€™s biggest planet and its dimmer, reddish neighbor will be more than 350 million miles (575 million kilometers) apart in their respective orbits.

The two planets will reach their minimum separation โ€” one-third of 1 degree or about one-third the width of the moon โ€” during daylight hours Wednesday in most of the Americas, Europe and Africa. But they wonโ€™t appear that much different hours or even a day earlier when the sky is dark, said Jon Giorgini of NASAโ€™s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

The best views will be in the eastern sky, toward constellation Taurus, before daybreak. Known as planetary conjunctions, these comic pairings happen only every three years or so.

"Such events are mostly items of curiosity and beauty for those watching the sky, wondering what the two bright objects so close together might be," he said in an email. โ€œThe science is in the ability to accurately predict the events years in advance.โ€

Their orbits havenโ€™t brought them this close together, one behind the other, since 2018. And it wonโ€™t happen again until 2033, when theyโ€™ll get even chummier.

The closest in the past 1,000 years was in 1761, when Mars and Jupiter appeared to the naked eye as a single bright object, according to Giorgini. Looking ahead, the year 2348 will be almost as close.

This latest link up of Mars and Jupiter coincides with the Perseid meteor shower, one of the year's brightest showers. No binoculars or telescopes are needed.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Instituteโ€™s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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