What’s Out Tonight?

A general ASTRONOMY site to get you started exploring the night sky

Optimized for desktops and laptops. CLICK HERE FOR TABLETS

Mars will be very bright this January 2025

observing 
MArs

November 2024 Sky Chart

It’s Free
Just click on the image to the left to print this
4-page PDF doc.

Useful anywhere in the mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere including the continental US, Hawaii, Europe, Japan, etc. Optimized for 1.5 hours after sunset but can be used for several hours after that. Indicates visible planets and best objects for binoculars and telescopes. Packed with facts, mythology, Moon phases, meteor showers and more. For other months, see the archive below.

November 2024 Notes

 About 90 minutes after Sunset

Planets
Venus is low in the West and sets about 2.5 hours after the Sun. Saturn is high up in the South while Jupiter is rising due East. Saturn’s rings are almost edge on making it a little disappointing to view in a telescope. Jupiter is alway very bright and easy to spot and might be mistaken for the headlight of a commercial jet. Mars, in Gemini rises in the East around 10 PM and will rival Jupiter in brightest during January 2025.

Constellations
My highlight this month is the Pleiades or Seven Sisters. Click on any of the words Pleiades to take you to more information about this unique and beautiful cluster of stars. About an hour after dark, you will find this little knot or concentration of stars almost due east and a little above the horizon. It will get higher and higher as the evening and month progresses. It is best observed with binoculars. And, even though I have heard many people say it looks like a little dipper, it IS NOT the Little Dipper.

Sky Chart Archives

July 2024
August 2024
September 2024
October 2024
November 2024
December 2024

January 2024
February 2024
March 2024
April 2024
May 2024
June 2024

December 2023

Header Image
The celestial image used for this site's header is part of the Veil Nebula, a supernova remnant in the constellation Cygnus (the Swan) visible throughout most of the summer and fall. This triangular wedge is a fainter part somewhat between the two major sections that make up the Veil Nebula and it is called Pickering’s Triangle. I took this image using a 6-inch diameter refractor telescope.