Community Corner

Parade Of 6 Planets: Hype Or Worth Getting Up Early To See In New Hampshire?

Skywatchers may see the alignment of Jupiter, Mercury, Uranus, Mars, Neptune, and Saturn in the eastern sky early Monday morning.

CONCORD, NH — Weather permitting, skywatchers in the Granite State may be able to see six of the eight planets as they align briefly in their elliptical path before sunup on Monday, June 3.

If you do get up early to see the alignment of Jupiter, Mercury, Uranus, Mars, Neptune, and Saturn in the eastern sky, conditions in New Hampshire should be partly cloudy, according to the National Weather Service. Sunrise is around 5:08 a.m. local time on Monday.

Manage your expectations, advised Joe Rao, a veteran meteorologist and skywatching columnist for Space.com. Claims on social media of a rare celestial event are bloated, he wrote in a recent column.

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The planets will align, but it will be difficult to see them all without high-powered binoculars or a telescope, according to Rao and other experts. Mercury and Jupiter will be so close to the sun that it may wash them out, and Uranus is difficult to see unless skies are very dark. And Neptune, the farthest planet from the sun, also is too faint to be seen with the naked eye, Rao wrote.

Saturn will rise in the east-southeast around 2 a.m. and hang fairly high in the sky, but the rings won’t be visible without a telescope, Rao said. Moonrise is around X:XX a.m local time. Around 4 a.m., Mars will make an appearance

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“So, if you step outside at around 3:30 or 4 a.m. on Monday morning, don’t expect to be awed by the sight of a planet parade,” Rao wrote. “What you will likely see is a crescent moon and a bright orange ‘star’ shining to its right (Mars) and farther off to the right will be another relatively bright ‘star’ glowing with a yellowish-white hue (Saturn).”

The planetary parade is a bit of a windup for a celestial alignment that should happen in the evening hours of Jan. 31 or Feb. 1 when four bright planets — Saturn, Venus, Jupiter and Mars — and a crescent moon are visible.

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