In the Sky This Month

Three bright planets stairstep up the evening sky for most of the month. Venus, the Evening Star, is the brightest, followed by Jupiter, then Mercury (see Featured Event). Scorpius arcs low across the south during the night, while the Summer Triangle—the bright stars Vega, Deneb, and Altair—is in the east at nightfall and soars high overhead in the wee hours. The Big Dipper is high in the north at nightfall early in the month, but a little lower in the northwest by June’s end.

The full Moon of June is known as the Flower Moon, Strawberry Moon, Rose Moon, or Honey Moon.

Perigee June 14
Apogee June 28

Moon phases are Central Time.

Moon Phases

June 8 5:00 am
Last Quarter Last Quarter
June 14 9:54 pm
New Moon New Moon
June 21 4:55 pm
First Quarter First Quarter
June 29 6:56 pm
Full Moon Full Moon

First Glimpse

For most American skywatchers, the star Capella is just peeking into view in the morning twilight. It’s bright, but it’s quite low as the sky brightens. You need precise timing and a clear north-northeastern horizon to spot it.

Charting a Path

Cygnus, the swan, is a signpost for charting Earth’s path through the galaxy. As you face Cygnus as it rises in the northeast, you’re looking forward in our orbit around the Milky Way. The center of the galaxy is to the right, in Sagittarius.

Vega

Vega, one of the brightest stars of summer nights, is low in the east-northeast at nightfall and soars high overhead later on. It is about 25 light-years away. It’s a bit bigger, brighter, and heavier than the Sun, but just 10 percent the Sun’s age.

Moon and Spica

Spica, the brightest star of the constellation Virgo, is close to the Moon tonight. Spica is actually two stars that are locked in a tight orbit around one another. They are so close together that they are impossible to see as individual stars.

Beta Scorpii

Beta Scorpii, a system of at least six stars, is at the left side of a row of stars that represents the head of Scorpius. It’s low in the southeast at nightfall, above Antares, the scorpion’s bright orange heart.

Scorpion’s Claws

Zubeneschamali and Zubenelgenubi skitter across the southern sky on May evenings. They are far above Antares, the bright heart of the scorpion, which climbs into view by about 10 p.m. Although they are in Libra, they represent the claws of the scorpion.

Morning Mars

Mars is working its way into the morning sky. The planet is quite low in the east during dawn twilight. It will climb a little higher day by day, however, and will be in good view this summer.

Moon and Regulus

The Moon creeps up on the heart of Leo tonight, the star Regulus. Regulus is close to the upper left of the Moon at nightfall. The Moon will move closer before they set, around 2 a.m. They will be closest together as seen from the West Coast.

Omega Centauri

About 160 known globular clusters orbit the center of the Milky Way galaxy. The biggest and brightest is Omega Centauri, which is low in the south this evening. It may be the stripped core of a smaller galaxy that the Milky Way took over long ago.

Moon and Gemini

The Moon lines up with the twins of Gemini this evening – the stars Pollux and Castor. Pollux is the brighter twin and is closer to the Moon. The brilliant planet Jupiter is to the lower right of the Moon.

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