Venus at greatest elongation east
2015 Jun 7
Dominic Ford – originally published on In-The-Sky.org
Venus will be well placed for observation in the evening sky, shining brightly at mag -5.0.
From London (click to change), it will become visible at around 21:37 (GMT) as the dusk sky fades, 22° above your western horizon. It will then sink towards the horizon, setting 3 hours and 19 minutes after the Sun at 00:26.
Venus in coming weeks
Over coming weeks, the distance between Venus and the Sun will decrease each night, and it will gradually sink back into the Sun’s glare, as the table below indicates (all times given in London local time).
Date | Sun sets at |
Venus sets at |
Altitude of Venus at sunset |
Direction of Venus at sunset |
30 May 2015 | 21:00 | 00:34 | 29° | west |
06 Jun 2015 | 21:07 | 00:25 | 27° | west |
13 Jun 2015 | 21:13 | 00:11 | 24° | west |
20 Jun 2015 | 21:16 | 23:51 | 22° | west |
27 Jun 2015 | 21:16 | 23:31 | 19° | west |
04 Jul 2015 | 21:14 | 23:07 | 16° | west |
11 Jul 2015 | 21:10 | 22:39 | 12° | west |
18 Jul 2015 | 21:03 | 22:07 | 9° | west |
25 Jul 2015 | 20:54 | 21:31 | 5° | west |
01 Aug 2015 | 20:44 | 20:51 | 0° | west |
08 Aug 2015 | 20:32 | 20:09 | -4° | west |
Venus’s position
The coordinates of Venus when it reaches greatest elongation will be:
Object | Right Ascension | Declination | Constellation | Magnitude | Angular Size |
Venus | 08h15m30s | +22°18′ | Cancer | -5.0 | 23.6″ |
Sun | 04h58m | +22°40′ | Taurus | -26.7 | 31’31” |
The coordinates above are given in J2000.0.
The geometry of Venus’s orbit
Venus never ventures far from the Sun in the sky since its orbit lies closer to the Sun than the Earth’s. To see it, we are always looking inwards towards the center of the solar system, close to the Sun. Venus is said to be at greatest enlongation when it passes either of the two points along its orbit where it appears at greatest separation from the Sun.
As it orbits the Sun, it appears alternately in the morning and evening skies. When it is to the east of the Sun, it rises and sets a short time after the Sun, becoming visible in early evening twilight. When it is to the west of the Sun, it rises and sets a short time before the Sun, becoming visible shortly before sunrise.
Venus is so bright and conspicuous – the third brightest object in the sky after the Sun and Moon – that it is often called the morning or evening star.
Seasonal variation
Each time it appears in the morning or evening sky, Venus reaches roughly the same angular separation from the Sun – this time peaking at a distance of 45° at greatest elongation. This angle is set by the geometry of how big Venus’s orbit is, and how far away it is from the Earth. Nonetheless, some times of the year are more favourable for viewing Venus from London than others.
It appears most favourably in the evening sky around the spring equinox, and most favourably in the morning sky around the autumn equinox.
This is because it always lies close to a line across the sky called the ecliptic. This is the line through the zodiacal constellations that the Sun follows through the year, and marks the flat plane in space in which all of the planets circle the Sun.
The altitude at which Venus appears above the horizon at sunrise or sunset depends how steeply the line of the ecliptic is inclined to the horizon. If the plane of the ecliptic meet the horizon at a very shallow angle, Venus will rise or set along a line which is almost parallel to the horizon, and a separation of 45° from the Sun along this line would correspond to a very low altitude in the sky.
The inclination of the ecliptic plane to the horizon at London varies between 61° (sunset at the spring equinox) and 15° (sunset at the autumn equinox). On June 7, the ecliptic is inclined at 38° to the western sunset horizon, as shown by the yellow line in the planetarium view above, meaning that on this occasion Venus is very favourably placed for viewing from London.
The details of this observing event were provided courtesy of In-The-Sky.org
.