Astronomy

See All Naked Eye Planets This Month… in Order

June 2022 offers early risers the chance to trace out the naked eye planets, from Mercury to Saturn.

Sometimes, the Universe offers up an illustration of a ready-made science lesson. Just such an alignment occurs this month, as all of the naked eye planets are in order, from innermost Mercury to outermost Saturn.

Sure, you have to awaken early (it is northern hemisphere summer, after all) but the view is worth it. And unlike many astro-events, this one requires no special equipment or gear to witness… just a good (to quote Commander Adama from Battlestar Galactica) working set of “Mark-I eyeballs.”

The June 2022 solar system from above. Credit: Heavens-Above.

This is not a true conjunction or alignment: the worlds of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn are simply laid out before our fair world in the dawn. This was the sky of the ancients, a gathering of ‘wandering stars’ represented by the planets known of since antiquity. The orderly scene was made complete once bashful Mercury appeared low in the dawn sky in late May, and Mars swapped places with Jupiter after a close conjunction on May 29th.

Mars meets Jupiter on May 29th. Credit: Shahrin Ahmad.

Planetary Dawn Patrol

This offers one of the finest astronomical views for 2022. The planets are at their closest span (just over 90 degrees) tomorrow on the morning of Saturday, June 4th. The orderly row of planets is like something out of an elementary astronomy text book… minus our slot for the Earth between Venus and Mars. The sequence isn’t broken until early July, when Mercury departs the scene.

June 4th at dawn. Credit: Stellarium.

If you’ve never caught fleeting Mercury, now is a good time to cross the timid planet off of your astronomical ‘life-list’. Mercury reaches greatest elongation 23 degrees west of the Sun on June 16th.

The planetary dawn lineup on June 22nd. Credit: Stellarium.

Of course, catching all of the naked all planets about the horizon at once isn’t super-rare, but happens once every few years. This is mainly a function of the two slowest worlds, of Jupiter overtaking Saturn which occurs about once every 20 years on their respective orbits. We had just such an event on December 21st 2020, with the ultra-close (6.1’) pass of the two gas giant worlds. This helped set us up for this summer’s dawn lay out. Connect the dots of the planets, and you can nearly trace out the ecliptic plane, the flat sheet of Earth’s path around the Sun.

The occultation footprint for the June 22nd event. Credit: Occult 2.0.

The Moon joins the scene and begins its planetary tour with a 4 degree pass near Saturn on the morning of June 18th. The waning crescent Moon gets even closer to the dawn planets in the proceeding days, actually occulting (passing in front of) Mars for the South Pacific on June 22nd and Uranus for Indonesia and Australia on June 24th. Its June 26th passage 2.6 degrees from Venus also offers up a good guidepost to see Venus in the daytime with the naked eye, using the nearby Moon as a guide.

A close conjunction of Jupiter and Venus in 2013 almost sparked conflict between India and China, when the pair was briefly suspected to be military spy drones. Remember…. astronomy and knowledge of the sky and planets can indeed save lives.

Looking ahead in the 21st century, we see grand planetary groupings that are closer still. Mark your calendars for evening of September 8th, 2040 when all of the naked eye planets (plus the Moon!) will sit just under 10 degrees apart (!) at dusk:

Dusk on the evening of September 8th, 2040. Credit: Stellarium.

Something to look forward to, for sure. In the meantime, be sure to check out the fine line up planets at dawn, for an open sky classroom view of the solar system.

Lead image credit: A solar system montage courtesy of Andrew Symes.

David Dickinson

David Dickinson is an Earth science teacher, freelance science writer, retired USAF veteran & backyard astronomer. He currently writes and ponders the universe as he travels the world with his wife.

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